Challenging Standardized Test Words Quiz: Vol. 1
- Question: Despite thecacophony, the student tried to study.
- Answer: Although it comes from a combination of Greek terms to mean literally “bad sound,”cacophony can now also mean “an incongruous or chaotic mixture” of other things, such as colors or smells.
- Question: The director’s latest movie has aredoubtable cast.
- Answer: Derived from the same root asdoubt,redoubtable originally referred to someone or something that causes dread. The word is now also used to describe things worthy of respect.
- Question: She's verypunctilious about grammar.
- Answer:Punctilious comes frompunctilio, which is a small point such as a minor rule or little detail of conduct in a ceremony.
- Question: The young man enjoyed onlyephemeral pleasures.
- Answer: From the Greekephēmeros (“lasting a day”),ephemeral was first used to describe short-lived fevers and animals with short life spans, such as the mayfly.
- Question: Thedemagogue easily captured everyone’s attention.
- Answer: Derived from the Greek words for “people” and “to lead,”demagogues often use prejudices and false claims in order to gain power.
- Question: The website hasgalvanized support for the project.
- Answer: Italian physician Luigi Galvani was an early experimenter of electricity on animal tissue, givinggalvanism the meaning “to stimulate or excite as if by an electric shock.”
- Question: Rediscovering the diary she kept as a teen, she found some entriesmawkish.
- Answer: Derived from the Middle English word for “maggot,”mawkish means “lacking flavor or having an unpleasant taste” as well as “exaggeratedly or childishly emotional.”
- Question: The bossupbraided her employees.
- Answer:Upbraid means “to criticize severely : find fault with.”
- Question: The waiter answered questions about the menubrusquely.
- Answer:Brusque means “blunt in manner or speech often to the point of ungracious harshness.” Early in its English usage,brusque was employed to describe tart wine.
- Question: The first time she met her future husband wasserendipity.
- Answer:Serendipity is “the faculty or phenomenon of finding valuable or agreeable things not sought for.”
- Question: The team found out their new coach wasirascible.
- Answer: Meaning “marked by hot temper and easily provoked anger,”irascible comes from the same root word asirate.
- Question: He served the fish with apiquant sauce.
- Answer:Piquant means “agreeably stimulating to the taste” and comes from the Middle French word for “to prick” or “to sting.”
- Question: He had heard manyapocryphal stories about George Washington.
- Answer:Apocrypha (with a capital A) are books of the Bible not recognized by some authorities as being official. The adjectiveapocryphal describes oft-repeated stories that have dubious sources and cannot be proven.
- Question: The Broadway show was filled withebullient performers.
- Answer:Ebullient comes from the Latin verb meaning “to bubble out.”
- Question: She dreaded sitting next to someoneloquacious on the airplane.
- Answer:Loquacious means “full of excessive talk.” It shares the Latin rootloqui, meaning “to speak,” with words such aseloquent andventriloquism.
- Question: Books in that section of the store coveredprurient topics.
- Answer: Defined as “marked by or arousing an immoderate or unwholesome interest or desire,”prurient comes from the Latin verb meaning “to itch” or “to crave.”
- Question: She knew her son had apredilection for spicy food.
- Answer:Predilection can be traced back to the Latin worddiligere, “to love,” and is related to the worddiligent.
- Question: She took a moment to review thesurfeit of options.
- Answer: From the Anglo-French verb meaning “to overdo,”surfeit can mean “an overabundant supply” or can be used as a verb to suggest overeating.
- Question: The senator got the law passed with somelegerdemain.
- Answer:Legerdemain originally referred to a magician’s sleight of hand but now can also be used to describe “a display of skill or adroitness” in other fields.
- Question: With one month left until the ceremony, the wedding plans wereinchoate.
- Answer:Inchoate means “being only partly in existence or operation” and is used especially to describe that which is imperfectly formed.
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© Chainarong Prasertthai—iStock/Getty Images
© Chainarong Prasertthai—iStock/Getty Images