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Tiêu đề Explanations – SAT practice test 2 verbal
Trường học Tai Lieu Du Hoc
Chuyên ngành SAT verbal
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The author of Passage 1 believes that the writer experiences his writing as an “act of discovery” which is not in his power to control.. C The author of Passage 1 says that unless a writ

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Explanations – SAT Practice Test 2

VERBAL

1 C The important idea in this sentence is that the woman “lost herself in her

work,” which means it must have been “inspiring” (A), “complex” (B) or

“absorbing”(C), not “exhausting” (D) or “repetitive”(E) If she were really

involved in her work, she would have been ignorant of the noise around her

This rules out (A) and (B); if the work were “inspiring” or “complex” she

wouldn’t be “annoyed by” or “involved in” the noise (C) works: her work

was so “absorbing” that she was completely “oblivious to” the noise

2 C “In contrast to” is the signal; that there is the difference between the piranhas’

image and the reality that many species of piranha are vegetarian The word in

the blank has to emphasize the piranha’s image as a carnivore (C),

“voracious,” or “greedy, ravenous, having a huge appetite,” works best

“Nomadic” (A) means “moving from place to place”; “lugubrious” (B) means

“mournful”; (D) “covetous” means “eagerly desiring something belonging to

someone else.” (E) might have been tempting, but the fact that piranhas seem

“exotic” has nothing to do with their diet

3 A This sentence has quite a bit of verbiage that you can ignore The important

thing to see is that there is a contrast between the “modern, subway

stations” and the “graceful curves” of the old buildings The word in the blank,

therefore, has to be something like “rectangular.” (A), “rectilinear,” which

means “characterized by straight lines” is the only one of the choices that

provides the necessary contrast

4 B The structural clue “while” alerts you that vetiver does not have a disruptive

impact on the local ecology like kudzu does A good prediction for th blank

would then b “negative,” because vetiver has “no negative effects.“ The only

good match for this prediction among the choices is (B), “adverse,” which

means “unfavorable.” Vetiver clearly has “foreseeable” (A) and

“advantageous” (E) effects because it controls soil erosion, so these choices are

wrong (C), “domestic,” doesn’t make sense in the sentence Since you don’t

know whether kudzu’s impact on the ecology is permanent, (D) doesn’t fit

either

5 E Concentrate on the second blank first It stands to reason that Douglass would

pattern his autobiography after Equiano’s own “autobiography” or “life story.”

The only choice that has a second-blank word coming even close to this

prediction is (E), “consciously narrative,” “Consciously” fits well into the first

blank, too; Gates think that Douglass patterned his autobiography after

Equiano’s narrative “consciously,” or “on purpose.” (E) is the correct answer

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“patronizingly” (A) means “condescendingly.” An “epitaph” (D) is the

“inscription on a tomb or grave.”

6 D The first blank has to be consistent with “lived a lonely life”; you can predict a

word like “uncommunicativeness.” This rules out (B) “career” and (E)

“gregariousness,” which means “sociability.” SInce Houseman did let a few

close friends into his life, these friends must have been able to “get past” the

“uncommunicativeness.” The choice that matches these predictions is (D),

“reserve penetrate.” “Reserve” is restraint in one”s words and actions.” (A)

is out because close friends would not “spurn,” or disdainfully reject,”

Houseman “Seclusion” works in (C), but “observe” doesn’t make any sense in

the second blank

7 B Narrowing your focus helps with this sentence Look at the phrase “patriotic

and other cliches.” The first blank has to be a word for a category that

“patriotic” falls into, such as “ideological” (B) For the second blank, you can

infer that in an impersonal world, relief will come from occasional “displays”

of emotion (B), “ideological manifestations,” has what you need to fill the

blanks “Pragmatic,” which mens “practical,” doesn’t work in the first blank,

and “absences” is the opposite of what we want in the second blank

“Ephemeral” (D) means “lasting a very short time,” while “vestiges” (E) means

“trace or makes left by something.”

8 C The semi-colon in the middle of the sentence tells you that the two halves of

the sentence have similar meanings If a plan has “caused widespread

resentment,” then it has few elements that will “make the party popular” with

the electorate We need a word that means “make popular.” “Ingratiate” )C)

means “to gain favor or acceptance”; it’s the only choice that has the predicted

meaning To “consolidate” (B) is to “join together into one whole or to

strengthen,” and the party doesn’t want to merge with the electorate, so (B)’s

out “Involve” (A) gives you a strange sentence when you plug it in A

political party is always involved with the electorate “Deprecate” (D), to

“express disapproval,” doesn’t make sense in the context of the sentence (E)

“impeach,” “to charge with a crime, especially the crime of misconduct in a

public office” might have tricked you because it’s a word that fits in with the

political subject matter of the sentence But it doesn’t fit in with the meaning

of the sentence

9 C This is particularly difficult question, which you can anticipate because it

comes at the end of the set Several of the choices look good at first, which is

why you have to look carefully at the sentence You need an adjective

describing the students who founded the literacy movement They all had

come from French-speaking colonies to live in France; so they were

“expatriate” students, (C), which means “exiled from or living outside of one”s

country.” The word “expatriate” derives from the root PATER, or “father”

which is also found in “paternal.” And the prefix “EX” means “out.” So to

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move out from your “fatherland” or native country is to “EX-patriate.”

“Laconic” (B) means “not talkative” and doesn’t fit the context The students

may have been “radical” (D) or “sophisticated” (E), but the evidence in the

sentence that they were “expatriated” is much stronger

10 C The WRIST is the joint that attaches the HAND to the rest of the body, in the

same way that the ANKLE is the joint that attaches the FOOT to the rest of the

body None of the other pairs of words int he choices fits into the stem bridge

11 E A good stem bridge here is “to REVERE someone is to ADMIRE that person

intensely.” Analogously, to “scrutinize” something is to “examine” it

intensely “Think” and “ponder,” in (C), are synonyms; there is no difference

in degree of intensity In (B), to “delay” something a great deal is not to

“cancel” it

12 A A HEDONIST is primarily occupied with the pursuit of PLEASURE; a

“philosopher” is primarily occupied with the pursuit of “knowledge.” In (B), a

“stenographer,” knows “shorthand” and in (C), a “physicist” studies

“energy,” but they are not, by definition, primary occupied with these things In

(D) a “progressive” wants social improvement through government action, not

necessarily “liberty.”

13 E When something is being UNEARTHed, the process is called EXCAVATION

(digging something out and removing it) Similarly, “imprisoning” someone is

the process of INCARCERATION In (A), the process of “addition” does not

always involve “constructing.” In (D), “imposition” is “the act of imposing.”

“Demanding” something is not imposing something on someone, so this pair of

words doesn’t work

14 C Something that is ABSTRUSE is by definition difficult to UNDERSTAND.

Likewise, something that is OBSCURED is difficult to SEE Things that are

“unusable” (A) can still be changed; things that are “faulty” are not always

difficult to “fix” (B); things that are “irrelevant” (D) may be easy to “prove.”

None of these has a bridge that matches the stem bridge “Tepid” (A) means

“lukewarm,” not “difficult to heat.”

15 B You may have been tempted to pick the wrong answer if you didn’t make your

stem bridge specific enough To say that “s SILO is a place that holds GRAIN”

leaves you with both (B) and (E) as possible right answers The bridge you

need is “a SILO is a place where GRAIN is stored.” Nobody stores water in a

well, which eliminates (E), but a “pantry” is a place where “food” is stored, so

(B)’s bridge is the one that matches the stem bridge

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Writer Pair

Just a reminder about general strategy: read the first passage and do the

questions relating to it (questions 1-5 in this case), then read the second passage

and do the rest of the questions These two passages are not that difficult to get

through, and the authors’ points of view on the process of writing contrast

clearly and sharply The author of Passage 1 believes that the writer

experiences his writing as an “act of discovery” which is not in his power to

control When the writer finds the proper tone of voice for his writing, he enters

some sort of magical state in which “sentences mysteriously shape themselves”

right before his eyes After he is finished, he will feel “that there is an order to

things, and that he himself is part of that order.” The author of Passage 2, on

the other hand, approaches his writing “as if it were a job like any other.” He

ascribes “dangerous” notions like that of the author of Passage 1 to the

influence of the nineteenth-century Romantic movement Writing to him is

“hard labor with no guaranteed reward.” Although being a good writer takes

talent, it also requires a lot of difficult learning and, for him at least, “an

enormous amount of bruising self-questioning.”

16 C The author of Passage 1 says that unless a writer is “writing mechanically,” he

experiences his writing as an act of discovery “Mechanically” is used here in

the sense of “unimaginatively” (C) None of the other choices works in the

context of the sentence

17 E Reading a few lines up from the reference to “unlocking the floodgates,” you

find the author asserting that creative writing is “not within the power of [the

writer’s] will to summon forth” or to resist When he talks about how to

“unlock the floodgates,” then, he is suggesting that creative writing is “in part

beyond the writer’s conscious control” (E) The author of Passage 1 never says

that almost anyone can be a writer (A), that writing derives its power from

depicting dramatic events (C), or that it requires a rigid sense of structure and

form (D) He does suggest that writing can be very difficult (B), but not until

the end of the passage

18 C In lines 16-25, the author describes his vision of what happens when the writer

finds the right tone of voice for his writing: he sits and watches as sentences

and paragraphs mysteriously form themselves, etc What is being conveyed

here is the writer’s sense of “wonder at the seemingly magical process of

creation” (C) You probably could have picked out (C) without going back to

the passage, simply by eliminating the other choices The author of Passage 1

never talks about “frustration at the unpredictability of writing” (A) or about

“discovering an unsuspected talent” (D) A writer is driven by a “dim vision”

and does not seem to need to plan a project (B) Writing is “hard labor” (E) to

the author of Passage 2, not the author of Passage 1

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19 A Look at the context in which “dim” appears The author is poetically describing

what happens during creative writing: “ paragraphs begin to shape themselves

into an organically coherent pattern that corresponds only better, much better to

the dim vision which had driven him to his desk in the first place.” Cutting

through the flowery language, you see that the writer only has a vague idea of

what he wants to write when he sits down, but things get much clearer once he

starts to write “Dim” is used in the sense of “vague” (A)

20 A Re-reading the sentence at the end of the third paragraph should be enough to

enable you to pick out the right choice It is “the writer’s search for order,”

according to the author, “ which exists not only in poems and stories, but in

any form of writing, however humble or trivial.” (A) paraphrases this nicely

The other choices may seem to be plausible general reasons for referring to

different forms of writing, but they don’t work in the context of Passage 1

21 B As with the previous question, all of the choices here seem like plausible

reasons for adopting a “professional attitude to writing.” Only one can fit what

the author actually says, though–which is that the only way he can “ensure a

consistent output is to approach writing as if it were a job like any other.” He

wants to “maintain a high level of productivity” (B)

22 D In lines 50-68, the author of Passage 2 attacks the “dangerous misconceptions”

that many people have about the creative process of writing The problem, he

states, is that we still believe the “fanciful notions” of the Romantic movement

“Fanciful” clearly has a negative connotation here, which makes “unrealistic”

(D) the best choice

23 B As we saw in the last question, the author of Passage 2 launches an attack on

the Romantics and their fanciful notions about artistic creativity His main

target is Coleridge, whose work led to the belief “that the creation of art is

unlike every other form of human productivity”–an idea the author doesn’t

agree with at all The author is suggesting, therefore, that Coleridge’s writings

“propagated erroneous ideas about artistic creativity” (B) The author himself,

not Coleridge, emphasizes the “role of maturity in an artist,” so (A) is out (C)

is wrong because the author thinks that Coleridge spread false ideas about art,

not that Coleridge “exaggerated the importance of the arts.” Furthermore, there

is no suggestion in the passage that Coleridge ignored how long it takes to learn

writing skills (D) or that he exalted experience over talent (E)

24 D The author of Passage 2 compares writing to “breaking rocks to look for gold”

in emphasizing that writing is hard work with no guaranteed reward Looking

through the answer choices, the one that echoes this sentiment most reasonably

is (D) The author does think that writing requires unusual talent (A), but that

has nothing to do with his analogy (B) is far too extreme, while (C) is out

because the author is not considering here what other people think of writers

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Nor is he concentrating on the possible rewards of writing (E), although such

rewards do, no doubt, exist

25 D When he says that “writers are born rather than made,” the author means that

some people feel compelled to write by their “response to narrative sensitivity

towards language, and curiosity about human nature.” These are “innate

abilities” that “play an important role in determining who will become a writer”

(D) (A) contradicts the author’s continual stress on writing as hard labor (B)

is reasonable but does not explain the author’s statement (C) and (E) both

contradict the idea that writers are born, not made; if childhood experiences

make someone a writer, then a writer would be made, not born

26 A Several of the choices here look good, especially (E), until you re-read the last

paragraph of Passage 2 The author criticizes the publishing world for

overlooking “craft and maturity of vision” in favor of “novelty and originality.”

(A) is therefore the right answer None of the other choices, plausible as it may

seem to be, is mentioned by the author in his criticism of the publishing world

27 A The second paragraph of Passage 1 has been the subject of several questions so

far It’s the description of creative writing as a kind of blissful mystical

experience in which sentences and paragraphs form before the writer’s eyes

Look through the choices to see which one jumps out–you know enough at this

point to predict what Passage 2’s author would say He would see this

description of the writing process as overly romantic, and point out that it “does

not reflect the hard work that writing involves” (A) The author of Passage 2

doesn’t give an opinion about the musicality of words (B) or the structure of a

work (E) His idea that writers are “born, not made” (C) is not his main

concern; the true nature of writing is As for (D), this criticism simply doesn’t

apply to the description of the writing process in Passage 1

28 E The author of Passage 1 spends his last paragraph discussing the terror that a

writer faces staring a blank page, and the fact that a writer has to be willing to

risk suffering in the process of writing The author of Passage 2 talks about the

“enormous amount of bruising self-questioning” he had to undertake before he

started to write Judging from this, the two authors would agree that writing

entails a lot of “emotional pain” (E) The author of Passage 2, but not the

author of Passage 1, stresses the importance of “life experience” (A),

“background reading” (C) and “maturity” (D) Only the author of Passage 1

emphasizes the importance of “inspiration” (B)

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