Text Completion Practice Questions

61. Although nothing could be further from the truth, freight railroads have been of the nation’s shift from oil to coal by charging exorbitant fees to transport coal.

(A) accused … impeding
(B) proud … accelerating
(C) guilty … delaying
(D) conscious … contributing to
(E) wary … interfering with

62. Although the revelation that one of the contestants was a friend left the judge open to charges of lack of , the judge remained adamant in her assertion that acquaintance did not necessarily imply .

(A) prudence … tolerance
(B) detachment … foreknowledge
(C) exoneration … impropriety
(D) prejudice … preference
(E) disinterestedness … partiality

63. Within the next decade, sophisticated telescopes now orbiting the Earth will determine whether the continents really are moving, the incipient among geologists about the validity of the theory of continental drift.

(A) obviating … consensus
(B) forestalling … rift
(C) escalating … debates
(D) engendering … speculation
(E) resolving … rumors

64. The commissions criticized the legislature for making college attendance dependent on the ability to pay, charging that, as a result, hundreds of qualified young people would be further education.

(A) entitled to
(B) striving for
(C) deprived of
(D) uninterested in
(E) participating in

65. In most Native American cultures, an article used in prayer or ritual is made with extraordinary attention to and richness of detail: it is decorated more than a similar article intended for use.

(A) delicately … vocational
(B) colorfully … festive
(C) creatively … religious
(D) subtly … commercial
(E) lavishly … everyday

66. Having no sense of moral obligation, Shipler was as little subject to the of conscience after he acted as he was motivated by its before he acted.

(A) rewards … chastisement
(B) balm … eloquence
(C) reproaches … promptings
(D) ridicule … allure
(E) qualms … atonement

67. Freud derived psychoanalytic knowledge of childhood indirectly: he childhood processes from adult .

(A) reconstructed … memory
(B) condoned … experience
(C) incorporated … behavior
(D) released … monotony
(E) inferred … anticipation

68. While she initially suffered the fate of many pioneers – the incomprehension of her colleagues – octogenarian Nobel laureate Barbara McClintock has lived to the triumph of her once scientific theories.

(A) descry innovative
(B) regret insignificant
(C) perpetuate tentative
(D) enjoy authoritative
(E) savor heterodox

69. Broadway audiences have become inured to and so to be pleased as to make their ready ovations meaningless as an indicator of the quality of the production before them.

(A) sentimentality … reluctant
(B) condescension … disinclined
(C) histrionics … unlikely
(D) cleverness … eager
(E) mediocrity … desperate

70. Any language is a conspiracy against experience in the sense that it is a collective attempt to experience by reducing it into discrete parcels.

(A) extrapolate
(B) transcribe
(C) complicate
(D) amplify
(E) manage

71. By divesting himself of all regalities, the former king the consideration that customarily protects monarchs.

(A) merited
(B) forfeited
(C) debased
(D) concealed
(E) extended

72. A perennial goal in zoology is to infer function from , relating the of an organism to its physical form and cellular organization.

(A) age … ancestry
(B) classification … appearance
(C) size … movement
(D) structure … behavior
(E) location … habitat

73. The sociologist responded to the charge that her new theory was by pointing out that it did not in fact contradict accepted sociological principles.

(A) banal
(B) heretical
(C) unproven
(D) complex
(E) superficial

74. Industrialists seized economic power only after industry had agriculture as the preeminent form of production; previously such power had land ownership.

(A) sabotaged … threatened
(B) overtaken … produced
(C) toppled … culminated in
(D) joined … relied on
(E) supplanted … resided in

75. Rumors, embroidered with detail, live on for years, neither denied nor confirmed, until they become accepted as fact even among people not known for their .

(A) insight
(B) obstinacy
(C) introspection
(D) tolerance
(E) credulity

76. No longer by the belief that the world around us was expressly designed for humanity, many people try to find intellectual for that lost certainty in astrology and in mysticism.

(A) satisfied … reasons
(B) sustained … substitutes
(C) reassured … justifications
(D) hampered … equivalents
(E) restricted … parallels

77. People should not be praised for their virtue if they lack the energy to be ; in such cases, goodness is merely the effect of .

(A) depraved … hesitation
(B) cruel … effortlessness
(C) wicked … indolence
(D) unjust … boredom
(E) iniquitous … impiety

78. Animals that have tasted unpalatable plants tend to them afterward on the basis of their most conspicuous features, such as their flowers.

(A) recognize
(B) hoard
(C) trample
(D) retrieve
(E) approach

79. As for the alleged value of expert opinion, one need only government records to see evidence of the failure of such opinions in many fields.

(A) inspect … questionable
(B) retain … circumstantial
(C) distribute … possible
(D) consult … strong
(E) evaluate … problematic

80. In scientific inquiry, it becomes a matter of duty to expose a hypothesis to every possible kind of .

(A) tentative … examination
(B) debatable … approximation
(C) well-established … rationalization
(D) logical … elaboration
(E) suspect … correlation

81. Charlotte Salomon’s biography is a reminder that the currents of private life, however diverted, dislodged, or twisted by public events, retain their hold on the _ recording them.

(A) transitory … culture
(B) dramatic … majority
(C) overpowering … individual
(D) conventional … audience
(E) relentless … institution

82. Philosophical problems arise when people ask questions that, though very _ , have certain characteristics in common.

(A) relevant
(B) elementary
(C) abstract
(D) diverse
(E) controversial

83. Although Johnson great enthusiasm for his employees’ project, in reality his interest in the project was so as to be almost non-existent.

(A) generated … redundant
(B) displayed … preemptive
(C) expected … indiscriminate
(D) feigned … perfunctory
(E) demanded … dispassionate

84. Not all the indicators necessary to convey the effect of depth in a picture work simultaneously; the picture’s illusion of three-dimensional appearance must therefore result from the viewer’s integration of various indicators perceived .

(A) imitative … coincidentally
(B) uniform … successively
(C) temporary … comprehensively
(D) expressive … sympathetically
(E) schematic … passively

85. Her should not be confused with miserliness; as long as I have known her, she has always been willing to assist those who are in need.

(A) intemperance
(B) intolerance
(C) apprehension
(D) diffidence
(E) frugality

86. Natural selection tends to eliminate genes that cause inherited diseases, acting most strongly against the most severe diseases; consequently, hereditary diseases that are would be expected to be very , but, surprisingly, they are not.

(A) lethal … rare
(B) untreated … dangerous
(C) unusual … refractory
(D) new … perplexing
(E) widespread … acute

87. Unfortunately, his damaging attacks on the ramifications of the economic policy have been by his wholehearted acceptance of that policy’s underlying assumptions.

(A) supplemented
(B) undermined
(C) wasted
(D) diverted
(E) redeemed

88. During the opera’s most famous aria the tempo chosen by the orchestra’s conductor seemed , without necessary relation to what had gone before.

(A) tedious
(B) melodious
(C) capricious
(D) compelling
(E) cautious

89. In the machinelike world of classical physics, the human intellect appears , since the mechanical nature of classical physics does not creative reasoning, the very ability that had made the formulation of classical principles possible.

(A) anomalous … allow for
(B) abstract … speak to
(C) anachronistic … deny
(D) enduring … value
(E) contradictory … exclude

90. During the 1960’s assessments of the family shifted remarkably, from general endorsement of it as a worthwhile, stable institution to widespread it as an oppressive and bankrupt one whose was both imminent and welcome.

(A) flight from … restitution
(B) fascination with … corruption
(C) rejection of … vogue
(D) censure of … dissolution
(E) relinquishment of … ascent

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