Section 1: Vocabulary in Context
Read the passage and answer Questions 1–10.
In discussions about urban life, people often assume that faster growth automatically leads to better services, more opportunity, and stronger communities. In reality, cities are frequently constrained by limited budgets, aging infrastructure, and competing political priorities. A new transit line or housing project may be widely praised in principle, yet difficult to complete on time because the demands placed on public institutions are now so pervasive . Growth, then, is not simply a technical matter; it is also a question of judgment, sequencing, and public trust.
One reason these debates become so heated is that many decisions carry implicit trade-offs. A policy that promises lower costs may require slower implementation. A project intended to improve access may also produce disruption for nearby residents. Officials therefore face the difficult task of presenting plans that are both honest about limitations and robust enough to retain public support. When they fail to explain those tensions clearly, frustration tends to grow—not only because people dislike inconvenience, but because they feel they were not treated as capable of understanding complexity.
Public communication can either mitigate or intensify that frustration. When leaders acknowledge uncertainty, explain alternatives, and set out a realistic timetable, even unpopular decisions may seem legitimate. But vague promises and overly confident forecasts often have the opposite effect. A proposal may sound appealing at first yet later prove financially or politically unworkable. At that point, critics do not merely question the plan itself; they begin to doubt whether the entire process was ever viable .
The challenge is made harder by the way modern debate is filtered through headlines, clips, and fragments of commentary. Policies that are already difficult to explain can become almost opaque once reduced to slogans. In that environment, one ambiguous statement can overshadow pages of careful analysis. Subtle distinctions are easily lost, and a decision that was originally cautious or conditional may be presented as reckless or absolute. In other words, the policy has not necessarily changed, but public understanding of it may have been distorted .
None of this means that officials should speak in vague, technical language. On the contrary, the best public communication often manages to reconcile clarity with honesty. It avoids drama without becoming evasive. It gives reasons without pretending that every consequence can be predicted in advance. Most importantly, it treats citizens as people who can handle complexity if complexity is explained with respect. That kind of candid communication may not eliminate disagreement, but it can make disagreement more informed and less destructive.
1. In the first paragraph, constrained most nearly means:
A) carefully encouraged by policy
B) limited or controlled by practical conditions
C) made attractive to a wider audience
D) protected from public criticism
2. In the first paragraph, pervasive most nearly means:
A) temporary and reversible
B) difficult to measure accurately
C) mainly limited to professionals
D) spread widely through many parts of life
3. In the second paragraph, implicit most nearly means:
A) not clearly shown, but understood
B) stated in legal language
C) easy to challenge directly
D) based on older traditions
4. In the second paragraph, robust most nearly means:
A) cheap to maintain
B) highly controversial
C) likely to continue in a strong and effective way
D) slow to attract public support
5. In the third paragraph, mitigate most nearly means:
A) hide completely
B) make something less harmful or severe
C) measure in detail
D) replace with something newer
6. In the third paragraph, viable most nearly means:
A) acceptable and workable in practice
B) easy to defend emotionally
C) officially approved in writing
D) widely misunderstood by experts
7. In the fourth paragraph, opaque most nearly means:
A) politically unpopular
B) based on weak evidence
C) morally inconsistent
D) not clear or easy to understand
8. In the fourth paragraph, distorted most nearly means:
A) made something legally invalid
B) made something more detailed
C) made something seem less accurate or fair
D) made something appear more urgent than before
9. In the final paragraph, reconcile most nearly means:
A) balance two things that seem difficult to combine
B) separate issues into smaller parts
C) criticize a proposal in detail
D) announce a final decision publicly
10. In the final paragraph, candid most nearly means:
A) cautious and noncommittal
B) honest and direct in a sincere way
C) deliberately formal
D) uncertain but optimistic
Section 2: Sentence Completion
Choose the correct choice A, B, C, or D as the correct answer.
11. After reviewing the condominium corporation's reserve fund study, the buyers decided not to proceed, partly because the report suggested that several major repairs had merely been ______ rather than properly budgeted for, making future special assessments much more likely.
A) anticipated
B) deferred
C) offset
D) waived
12. When the insurer finally responded to the homeowner's claim, the letter did not deny liability outright; instead, it used cautious language that seemed designed to ______ responsibility while still leaving room for later negotiation.
A) disclaim
B) mitigate
C) broaden
D) assign
13. The manager's apology sounded polished, but staff remained frustrated because it carefully acknowledged that communication "could have been better" without ever ______ who had made the decision or why the warning signs had been ignored.
A) vindicating
B) specifying
C) conceding
D) exonerating
14. Although the article was written for a general audience, its tone was not sensational. It was measured, evidence-based, and at times almost ______, asking readers to consider complexity rather than rush toward outrage.
A) trenchant
B) dispassionate
C) caustic
D) flippant
15. At the branch, the advisor explained that the investment was not risk-free, but he also stressed that short-term volatility should not be confused with permanent loss. His point was that the client's reaction, though understandable, was somewhat ______.
A) premature
B) prudent
C) irreversible
D) methodical
16. By the time the meeting ended, everyone understood that the committee had not reached a final decision. What it had produced was a provisional framework: specific enough to guide the next step, but still ______ in several important respects.
A) binding
B) lucid
C) tentative
D) uniform
17. The landlord had every legal right to enter with proper notice, but the tenant objected because the repeated inspections no longer seemed connected to maintenance. In context, the visits felt less routine than ______.
A) intrusive
B) incidental
C) expedient
D) customary
18. The profile of the candidate was impressive, yet the hiring panel hesitated. Her answers were polished, but they often sounded memorized, and when pressed on practical trade-offs she became noticeably ______.
A) combative
B) evasive
C) forthcoming
D) succinct
19. A good editor does more than correct grammar. In this case, the revisions clarified the argument by removing repetition, tightening transitions, and cutting a few claims that were rhetorically appealing but ultimately ______.
A) superfluous
B) coherent
C) corroborated
D) salient
20. The speaker did not attack the proposal directly. Instead, she asked a sequence of calm, precise questions that exposed its weak assumptions one by one. Her method was more ______ than confrontational.
A) didactic
B) decorative
C) surgical
D) ceremonial
21. Although the neighbours had complained for months, the city only acted after local media picked up the story. To residents, the sudden enforcement campaign looked less like principle than a ______ response to public embarrassment.
A) pre-emptive
B) systemic
C) impartial
D) reactive
22. In the novel, the father's kindness is genuine, but it is also tinged with condescension; he gives generously, yet seems unable to imagine that others might refuse his help. The portrayal is therefore affectionate but not entirely ______.
A) episodic
B) derivative
C) opaque
D) hagiographic
23. The closing paragraph was elegant, but the lawyer recommended removing it from the formal response because its irony, though subtle, could be read as ______ and might needlessly inflame the dispute.
A) conciliatory
B) gratuitous
C) facetious
D) unequivocal
24. The data were not fabricated, but the chart was still misleading because the scale had been compressed in a way that made small differences appear dramatic. The criticism, then, was not that the graphic was false, but that it was ______.
A) selective
B) redundant
C) illegible
D) cursory
25. During the performance review, the supervisor did not question the employee's intelligence or effort. Her concern was narrower: he often produced capable work, but only after deadlines were extended and priorities were repeatedly clarified. In other words, his main weakness was not talent but ______.
A) compliance
B) ambition
C) fluency
D) consistency
26. By the second paragraph, it was clear that the columnist was not merely disagreeing with the minister's policy. She was challenging the intellectual framework behind it, arguing that the entire premise rested on a ______ understanding of public responsibility.
A) nuanced
B) compelling
C) reductive
D) charitable
27. The settlement spared both sides a long trial, but neither party described it as a victory. The outcome was better understood as a ______: imperfect, expensive, and accepted mainly because the alternatives were worse.
A) windfall
B) compromise
C) vindication
D) precedent
28. The professor warned students against quoting the article as if it were neutral scholarship. Its evidence was real, but the selection and framing were plainly ______, advancing a viewpoint while maintaining the appearance of detachment.
A) polemical
B) tentative
C) pedestrian
D) incidental
29. At first, the policy sounded generous: flexible deadlines, informal check-ins, and broad discretion for managers. In practice, however, employees found the system difficult to navigate because expectations were never explicit and enforcement was highly ______.
A) transparent
B) condescending
C) incremental
D) arbitrary
30. Her review of the exhibition was severe, but not careless. Even when she dismissed the curator's central claim, she did so with enough textual and historical support to make the critique feel rigorous rather than merely ______.
A) acerbic
B) capricious
C) exhaustive
D) reverent