ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Spanish Subtitled Videos 358 videos

SAT Reading 1.1 Long Passages
380 Views

SAT Reading: Long Passages Drill 1, Problem 1

SAT Reading 1.1 Passage Comparison
210 Views

SAT Reading Passage Comparison Drill 1, Problem

SAT Reading 1.10 Long Passages
172 Views

SAT Reading: Long Passages Drill 1, Problem 10

See All

SAT Reading 1.6 Sentence Completion 175 Views


Share It!


Description:

Sentence Completion Drill 1, Problem 6

Language:
English Language

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.

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.

Related Videos

SAT Reading: Classifying the Relationship Between Two Passages
179 Views

How was the Beanie Baby era parallel to the Tulip Bubble? Similar events, only the TulipMania almost bankrupted Holland. Bean Babies only bankrupte...

SAT Reading: Citing Evidence to Identify a Theme in Walden
35 Views

Contemplating one's life is key to fulfilled happiness. Thoreau's theme revolves around the simple life well lived. He clearly never tried virtual...

SAT Reading: Why Does Thoreau Use the Phrase "Mechanical Aids" in this Passage?
58 Views

Thoreau was all about simplicity; anything that took away from his vision was the enemy. Mechanical aids were one of them. Guess he had to train a...

What Does the Author Mean by "Front" in this Context?
26 Views

Thoreau uses "front" to mean "face". He wants to face The Facts of Life without shying away from our natural tendencies, roots, and the simply way...

SAT Reading: Using Context to Define a Word
12 Views

What does "frittered away" mean in this context? Wasted. Wasted by the way. Thoreau claims we fritter away our lives praying to modern complex dist...