Daniel Tapia
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Inglés I GRE - Cualitativo (Inglés IV) Quiz on Inglés IV, created by Daniel Tapia on 04/07/2016.

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Daniel Tapia
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Inglés IV

Question 1 of 15

1

Directions: for each blank select one entry from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in the way that best completes the text.

Susan ___________ the theater; she bought tickets for all the shows put on by the local drama group.

Select one of the following:

  • abhorred

  • cherished

  • owned

  • loathed

  • managed

Explanation

Question 2 of 15

1

The so-called “thieves’ cant” was a ____________(i) language created by thieves, beggars, and swindlers in England in the 1530s to allow them to communicate without the authorities knowing what was going on. Although the cant was widely used by criminal subcultures five hundred years ago, it is now mostly ___________(ii) found only in literature and fantasy role-playing games.

Select one or more of the following:

  • blank (i)
    clandestine

  • blank (i)
    bourgeois

  • blank (i)
    sacrilegious

  • blank (ii)
    obsolete

  • blank (ii)
    pervasive

  • blank (ii)
    contemporary

Explanation

Question 3 of 15

1

Currently __________ in philately, Roger decided to pursue his new hobby because he had already become an expert numismatist.

Select one of the following:

  • a dilettante

  • a philanderer

  • a mentor

  • a specialist

  • a eccentric

Explanation

Question 4 of 15

1

While the ___________(i) structures of Lego projects are often impressive, it’s the internal __________(ii) such as flower pots, sinks fixtures, and working windows that make them truly magical.

Select one or more of the following:

  • blank (i)
    august

  • blank (i)
    external

  • blank (i)
    incidental

  • blank (ii)
    minutiae

  • blank (ii)
    stratagems

  • blank (ii)
    proboscises

Explanation

Question 5 of 15

1

Prior to taking on the new invader, the defending army had engaged in arduous combat; it is likely that the ___________ resulting from waging two battles in two days played a part in its subsequent defeat.

Select one of the following:

  • bellicosity

  • pugnacity

  • pacification

  • enervation

  • aggravation

Explanation

Question 6 of 15

1

Often considered one of the best films in cinematic history, Breakfast at Tiffany’s faced several __________(i) during production. The film’s star, Audrey Hepburn, almost refused the part, afraid it would __________(ii) her pristine image; further, the film faced intense scrutiny from censors, and the director had to make several compromises to _____________(iii) them.

Select one or more of the following:

  • blank (i)
    complications

  • blank (i)
    harbingers

  • blank (i)
    advancements

  • blank (ii)
    augment

  • blank (ii)
    tarnish

  • blank (ii)
    peruse

  • blank (iii)
    assuage

  • blank (iii)
    refute

  • blank (iii)
    discomfit

Explanation

Question 7 of 15

1

The _________(i) of medieval papal power was the pontificate of Innocent III, whose immense personal prestige cowed monarchs from the powerful Philip II “Augustus” of France to the ___________(ii) John of England, who earned such derisive epithets as “Lackland” and “Softsword”. Even before Innocent’s tenure, though, the involvement of Pope Henry IV in the Investiture Conflict had begun to hint at the tension between spiritual and __________ (iii) leadership that would eventually boil over in the Protestant Reformation.

Select one or more of the following:

  • blank (i)
    zenith

  • blank (i)
    perigee

  • blank (i)
    antipathy

  • blank (ii)
    feckless

  • blank (ii)
    intemperate

  • blank (ii)
    resplendent

  • blank (iii)
    archaic

  • blank (iii)
    temporal

  • blank (iii)
    consecrated

Explanation

Question 8 of 15

1

Ironically, the myth of Martin Van Buren’s ___________ was due largely to circumstances that had little to do with Van Buren himself; in reality, of all the U.S. presidents since Andrew Jackson, Van Buren exceeded the average in education, intellect, and experience.

Select one of the following:

  • profundity

  • stoicism

  • mediocrity

  • aptitude

  • malleability

Explanation

Question 9 of 15

1

Some argue that profiting from terrible suffering by publishing photographic books about natural disasters is shameless ____________(i), but perhaps the practice has the ________(ii) effect of helping us to appreciate the humanity of people living far away.

Select one or more of the following:

  • blank (i)
    presumptuous

  • blank (i)
    idolatrous

  • blank (i)
    profiteering

  • blank (ii)
    salutary

  • blank (ii)
    specious

  • blank (ii)
    sedulous

Explanation

Question 10 of 15

1

While she may have answered him truthfully – in the strictest sense of the word – it became clear to Sergei after the incident that Sheryl had actually been trying to _________.

Select one of the following:

  • vituperate

  • obfuscate

  • illuminate

  • covet

  • desiccate

Explanation

Question 11 of 15

1

Certainly a roundabout narrative, the book –much like the other in the author’s pseudo autobiographical series- proved to be unpopular among those who preferred __________ to loquaciousness.

Select one of the following:

  • succinctness

  • enlargement

  • garrulousness

  • gregariousness

  • perspicacity

Explanation

Question 12 of 15

1

During training to handle ___________(i) arguments, the students on the debate team practiced techniques for quickly coming up with remarks that were _________(ii) even when they might know very little about the topic and would have only a few minutes to prepare.

Select one or more of the following:

  • blank (i)
    spurious

  • blank (i)
    extemporaneous

  • blank (i)
    contentious

  • blank (ii)
    sanctimonious

  • blank (ii)
    germane

  • blank (ii)
    seditious

Explanation

Question 13 of 15

1

Although they stood with congressman in a tenuous display of solidarity, the incensed commissioners could not conceal their _______________.

Select one of the following:

  • camaraderie

  • rancor

  • adulation

  • facetiousness

  • hubris

Explanation

Question 14 of 15

1

The __________ (i) with which the second-string quarterback managed to turn the tide of the game shocked even those who were familiar with his skills. Previously, he was more infamous for his deceitful _____________ (ii) off the field than for anything he had accomplished with a ball in his hand, but his immediate impact on the decisive game is likely to turn some of his erstwhile doubters into ________ (iii) fans.

Select one or more of the following:

  • blank (i)
    indolence

  • blank (i)
    alacrity

  • blank (i)
    probity

  • blank (ii)
    petulance

  • blank (ii)
    chicanery

  • blank (ii)
    recidivism

  • blank (iii)
    recumbent

  • blank (iii)
    ardent

  • blank (iii)
    fetid

Explanation

Question 15 of 15

1

The magazine article was _____________ (i) about the police commissioner’s accomplishments. Although some lawyers’ groups argued against the appropriateness of his tactics, the double-digit drop in the crime rate since his appointment suggests that all the journalist’s praise was _____________ (ii).

Select one or more of the following:

  • blank (i)
    effusive

  • blank (i)
    tentative

  • blank (i)
    bombastic

  • blank (ii)
    specious

  • blank (ii)
    presumptuous

  • blank (ii)
    apposite

Explanation