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SAT Reading Long Passages Drill 1, Problem 2
SAT Reading 1.6 Sentence Completion 175 Views
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Description:
Sentence Completion Drill 1, Problem 6
Transcript
- 00:03
If you can correctly answer this question, you get a gold star...
- 00:07
Which words could fill in the blanks so that the sentence below makes sense?
- 00:10
Today's American public might express blank at the religious commentary and sermons that
- 00:16
filled many of the country's first newspapers, just as earlier Americans might have viewed
- 00:21
modern journalism's preoccupation with crime, scandal, sports, and entertainment as blank.
Full Transcript
- 00:32
Alright. We're happy to see the phrase "just as" hanging out in the middle of this sentence.
- 00:37
It gives us the big hint that the words in both blanks will have similar connotations.
- 00:43
So we're looking for words that get across the idea that old-school and modern Americans
- 00:47
would feel the same way about each other's newspapers.
- 00:49
(B) and (C) go on the chopping block right away, because the two words have nothing to
- 00:53
do with each other.
- 00:55
(E) gives us antonyms, which are the exact opposites of what we're looking for.
- 01:01
How about (A)? Is there any hope?
- 01:02
Nah, not really.
- 01:03
Sorry, but "intransigence" means an unwillingness to change, and "blasphemous" describes
- 01:08
something that's sacrilegious or offensive. These words don't have similar connotations,
- 01:13
so they have to go. Well, (D) is the only one left. Let's hope
- 01:17
it works.
- 01:18
Americans today might think it's "inappropriate" for newspapers to include sermons, while people
- 01:23
back then likely would have been shocked by the content of our newspapers now.
- 01:27
Yeah, that totally works. The answer is definitely (D).
- 01:30
To be fair, there are plenty of people today who are also shocked by what they find in newspapers.
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