ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
SAT Reading Videos 212 videos
SAT Reading Section: Sentence Completion Drill 1, Problem 1
SAT Reading 2.5 Long Passages 169 Views
Share It!
Description:
Reading Long Passages: Drill 2, Problem 5
Transcript
- 00:03
Friends, Shmoopers, countrymen, lend us your ears...
- 00:08
Surprise, surprise...the prodigal passage returns. Just pause if you haven't gotten
- 00:11
enough of it.
- 00:47
It is evident from the narrator's statement about Aunt Georgiana in lines 40 through 44
- 00:52
that... what?
Full Transcript
- 00:54
And here are the potential answers...
- 00:59
In lines 40 through 44, the narrator compares
- 01:02
Aunt Georgiana to daredevil explorers who visit places where they lose body parts and
- 01:07
catch serious illnesses.
- 01:08
Ooh, sounds like fun.
- 01:10
He doesn't say anything about his Aunt having frostbite like one of these explorers might.
- 01:14
So (B) is totally wrong.
- 01:15
He isn't saying that she actually travels a lot. In fact, the rest of passage makes
- 01:19
it seem like she hasn't left the vicinity of the farm in a long, long time.
- 01:23
Therefore (A) isn't right either. Are they serious about this one? He doesn't
- 01:27
say he wishes his life were more like hers...
- 01:30
And we can't say we blame him for that one. There's no way (D) is correct.
- 01:34
The narrator specifically says that he looks on his aunt with "awe and respect," right?
- 01:40
This lets us know that he understands the significance of her hard-core life.
- 01:44
Armed with that information, we can get choice (E) out of our faces.
- 01:47
That leaves us with answer (C).
- 01:49
If the narrator is viewing his aunt with "awe and respect," we know that he is viewing
- 01:53
her as a person who's lived a life much different from his own.
- 01:57
Combine that with this description of extreme explorers--whose lives make your average Bostonian's
- 02:02
look like child's play--and we're sure as sure can be that (C) is the correct answer.
- 02:06
Go get em', Auntie G.
Related Videos
How was the Beanie Baby era parallel to the Tulip Bubble? Similar events, only the TulipMania almost bankrupted Holland. Bean Babies only bankrupte...
Contemplating one's life is key to fulfilled happiness. Thoreau's theme revolves around the simple life well lived. He clearly never tried virtual...
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...
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...
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...