11. In response to the follies of today's commercial and political worlds, the author does not ____ inflamed indignation, but rather ____ the detachment and smooth aphoristic prose of an eighteenth-century wit. (A) display.. rails at (B) rely on.. avoids (C) suppress.. clings to (D) express.. affects (E) resort to.. spurns 12. Vaillant, who has been particularly interested in the means by which people attain mental health, seems to be looking for ____ answers: a way to close the book on at least a few questions about human nature. (A) definitive (B) confused (C) temporary (D) personal (E) derivative 13. Imposing steep fines on employers for on-the-job injuries to workers could be an effective ____ to creating a safer workplace, especially in the case of employers with poor safety records. (A) antidote (B) alternative (C) addition (D) deterrent (E) incentive 14. In retrospect, Gordon's students appreciated her ____ assignments, realizing that such assignments were specifically designed to ____ original thought rather than to review the content of her course. (A) didactic.. ingrain (B) intimidating.. thwart (C) difficult.. discourage (D) conventional.. explicate (E) enigmatic.. stimulate 15.The insecticide proved ____; by killing the weak adults of a species, it assured that the strong ones would mate among themselves and produce offspring still more ____ to its effects. (A) ineffective.. hostile (B) cruel.. vulnerable (C) feasible.. susceptible (D) necessary.. immune (E) counterproductive.. resistant 16. She writes across generational lines, making the past so ____ that our belief that the present is the true locus of experience is undermined. (A) complex (B) distant (C) vivid (D) mysterious (E) mundane 17. The technical know-how, if not the political ____, appears already at hand to feed the world's exploding population and so to ____ at last the ancient scourges of malnutrition and famine. (A) will.. weaken (B) expertise.. articulate (C) doubt.. banish (D) power.. denounce (E) commitment.. eradicate 18. In small farming communities, accident victims rarely sue or demand compensation: transforming a personal injury into a ____ someone else is viewed as an attempt to ____ responsibility for one's own actions. (A) conspiracy against.. assume (B) claim against.. elude (C) boon for.. minimize (D) distinction for.. shift (E) trauma for.. proclaim 19. The pungent verbal give-and-take among the characters makes the novel ____ reading, and this very ____ suggests to me that some of the opinions voiced may be the author's. (A) disturbing.. flatness (B) tedious. inventiveness (C) lively.. spiritedness (D) necessary.. steadiness (E) rewarding.. frivolousness 20. The fortresslike facade of the Museum of Cartoon Art seems calculated to remind visitors that the comic strip is an art form that has often been ____ by critics. (A) charmed (B) assailed (C) unnoticed (D) exhilarated (E) overwhelmed 21. It is difficult to distinguish between the things that charismatic figures do ____ and those that are carefully contrived for effect. (A) formally (B) publicly (C) prolifically (D) spontaneously (E) willfully 22. The development of containers, possibly made from bark or the skins of animals, although this is a matter of ____, allowed the extensive sharing of forage foods in prehistoric human societies. (A) record (B) fact (C) degree (D) importance (E) conjecture DAEEE CEBCB DE |