1. It is true that the seeds of some plants have ---- after two hundred years of dormancy, but reports that viable seeds have been found in ancient tombs such as the pyramids are entirely---- (A) revived.. empirical (B) germinated.. unfounded (C) endured.. irrelevant (D) erupted.. reasonable (E) proliferated.. substantiated 2. Even though many persons in the audience jeered the star throughout the play, she ---- 来自www.Examw.com curtain calls. (A) refused all (B) adored some (C) delayed several (D) appeared for (E) balked at 3. The most technologically advanced societies have been responsible for the greatest ----; indeed, savagery seems to be in direct proportion to ----. (A) wars.. viciousness (B) catastrophes.. ill-will (C) atrocities.. development (D) inventions.. know-how (E) triumphs.. civilization 4. The combination of ------and ------ in Edmund’s speech can be starting, especially when he slyly slips in some juicy vulgarity amid the mellifluous circumlocutions of a gentleman of the old school. (A) tact.. innocence (B) raciness.. ribaldry (C) piousness.. modesty (D) elegance.. earthiness (E) propriety.. bashfulness 5. For many young people during the Roaring Twenties, a disgust with the excesses of American culture ---- a wanderlust to provoke an exodus abroad. (A) stymied (B) overwhelmed (C) reflected (D) combined with (E) conflicted with
1. It is true that the seeds of some plants have ---- after two hundred years of dormancy, but reports that viable seeds have been found in ancient tombs such as the pyramids are entirely---- (A) revived.. empirical (B) germinated.. unfounded (C) endured.. irrelevant (D) erupted.. reasonable (E) proliferated.. substantiated 2. Even though many persons in the audience jeered the star throughout the play, she ---- 来自www.Examw.com curtain calls. (A) refused all (B) adored some (C) delayed several (D) appeared for (E) balked at 3. The most technologically advanced societies have been responsible for the greatest ----; indeed, savagery seems to be in direct proportion to ----. (A) wars.. viciousness (B) catastrophes.. ill-will (C) atrocities.. development (D) inventions.. know-how (E) triumphs.. civilization 4. The combination of ------and ------ in Edmund’s speech can be starting, especially when he slyly slips in some juicy vulgarity amid the mellifluous circumlocutions of a gentleman of the old school. (A) tact.. innocence (B) raciness.. ribaldry (C) piousness.. modesty (D) elegance.. earthiness (E) propriety.. bashfulness 5. For many young people during the Roaring Twenties, a disgust with the excesses of American culture ---- a wanderlust to provoke an exodus abroad. (A) stymied (B) overwhelmed (C) reflected (D) combined with (E) conflicted with