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Sentence Completion Videos 54 videos

SAT Reading 1.1 Sentence Completion
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SAT Reading Section: Sentence Completion Drill 1, Problem 1

SAT Reading 1.2 Sentence Completion
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Sentence Completion Drill 1, Problem 2

SAT Reading 1.3 Sentence Completion
192 Views

SAT Reading Sentence Completion Drill 1, Problem 3

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SAT Reading 6.9 Sentence Completion 170 Views


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Description:

Reading Sentence Completion: Drill 6, Problem 9

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

Feel better, live longer--with vitamin Shmoop. Which word could fill in the blank so that

00:08

the sentence below makes sense?

00:09

Brenda had always considered herself a paragon of good health, so she was shocked when the

00:14

doctor told her that the disease had been lying blank in her body.

00:18

And here are the potential answers...

00:24

We always thought that "paragon" sounded like

00:25

a particularly fancy cooking spice...

00:28

...or at least two gons. But it's not.

00:31

The context of this sentence lets us know that it means a person who seems perfect in

00:35

some way.

00:36

So we know that poor Brenda used to think she was the picture of perfection when it

00:41

came to health. Brenda had no idea she was sick before she

00:44

went to the doctor, so neither "active" nor "developed" work.

00:48

She'd have to be pretty unobservant to not notice that she was infected with an active,

00:53

developed disease. Something is "conscious" when it's awake

00:56

and/or knows it exists. If diseases were conscious we'd all be in a lot of trouble.

01:05

If they were "attentive," conscious germs, we'd be in even more trouble.

01:11

Luckily, Conscious Attentive Disease don't exist, so we can eliminate (D) and (C).

01:17

Since "lying dormant" means being inactive,

01:19

(B) is the best answer.

01:22

As in "Get well soon, Brenda!"

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