The GRE, the big brother of the pre-'94 SAT, is broadly recognized by graduate schools and venerated as a robust measure of intelligence akin to a high-range IQ test. Like the SAT, it boasts a strong correlation with cognitive performance and is considered a the most accurate predictor of success in graduate programs, with a g-loading on par with traditional gold standard IQ tests. The GRE evaluates a wide spectrum of cognitive abilities through three subtests and accurately measures IQ up to its monstrous ceiling of 172.
The test has been meticulously normed over decades on millions of test takers to ensure consistency and fairness in scoring, making it impervious to the Flynn effect and maintaining its relevance and precision throughout its history. A variety of test forms prevents the compromise of its validity through form leakage. Consisting of three subtests, this test will comprehensively measure your Verbal, Quantitative, and Fluid Reasoning, allowing you to understand your multifaceted cognitive profile in depth.
Please confirm that you have reviewed the provided math formulas, are proficient in English, and understand all instructions to optimize your test performance. This subtest contains two 30 minute sections and will take approximately one hour to complete. This test is completely free to take.
1. The Chinese, who began systematic astronomical and weather observations shortly after the ancient Egyptians, were assiduous record-keepers, and because of this, can claim humanity's longest continuous ------- of natural events.
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1. Nearly two-thirds of the country's mushroom crop is produced by 160 growers in a single county, the greatest ------- growers anywhere.
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2. Because many of the minerals found on the ocean floor are still ------- on land, where mining is relatively inexpensive, mining the ocean floor has yet to become a ------- enterprise.
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2. The disjunction between educational objectives that stress independence and individuality and those that emphasize obedience to rules and cooperation with others reflects a ------- that arises from the values on which these objectives are based.
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3. The valedictory address, as it has developed in American colleges and universities over the years, has become a very strict form, a literary ------- that permits very little -------.
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3. It is ------- for a government to fail to do whatever it can to eliminate a totally ------- disease.
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4. A human being is quite ------- creature, for the gloss of rationality that covers his or her fears and ------- is thin and often easily breached.
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4. Dramatic literature often ------- the history of a culture in that it takes as its subject matter the important events that have shaped and guided the culture.
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5. Although the passage of years has softened the initially hostile reaction to his poetry, even now only a few independent observers ------- his works.
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5. The legislators of 1563 realized the ------- of trying to regulate the flow of labor without securing its reasonable remuneration, and so the second part of the statute dealt with establishing wages.
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6. Unlike philosophers who constructed theoretically ideal states, she built a theory based on -------; thus, although her constructs may have been inelegant, they were ------- sound.
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6. Scientists who are on the cutting edge of research must often violate common sense and make seemingly ------- assumptions because existing theories simply do not ------- newly observed phenomena.
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7. Once a duckling has identified a parent, the instinctive bond becomes a powerful ------- for additional learning since, by ------- the parent, the duckling can acquire further information that is not genetically transmitted.
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7. The ------- with which the French aristocracy greeted the middle-class Rousseau was all the more ------- because he showed so little respect for them.
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8. INFLATE : BURST ::
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8. BRUSH : PAINTING ::
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9. FLIP : RESPECT ::
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9. DECIBEL : SOUND ::
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10. REQUEST : COMMAND ::
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10. DIPLOMAT : TACT ::
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11. BOUNDLESS : LIMIT ::
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11. ATTORNEY : DISBAR ::
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12. MOLT : BIRD ::
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12. DIRGE : MUSIC ::
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13. RENOUNCE : PLEDGE ::
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13. LOG : SHIP ::
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14. COWARD : CRAVEN ::
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14. APOLOGIZE : CONTRITE ::
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15. ENFRANCHISE : VOTE ::
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15. EUPHEMISM : OFFENSE ::
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16. STRUT : WING ::
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16. SENSITIZATION : ALLERGIC ::
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17. The author of the passage is primarily concerned with
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17. The author considers the contentions made by the recent historians discussed in the passage to be
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18. It can be inferred from the passage that the author considers the dichotomy discussed in the second paragraph to be
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18. The author most likely refers to "historians such as Beard and Becker" (end of first-paragraph) in order to
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19. Which of the following statements can be inferred from the last paragraph?
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19. According to the passage, Loyalism during the American Revolutionary War served the function of
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20. According to the passage, which of the following is a true statement about density-dependent factors in population growth?
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20. The passage suggests that the author would be likely to agree with which of the following statements about the social structure of eighteenth-century American society?
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21. According to the passage, all of the following behaviors have been exhibited by different populations EXCEPT
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21. It can be inferred from the passage that the author would be most likely to agree with which of the following statements regarding socioeconomic class and support for the rebel and Loyalist causes during the American Revolutionary War?
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22. The discussion concerning population in the passage lines in bold serves primarily to
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22. The author suggests which of the following about the representatives of colonial or state governments in America from 1763 to 1789?
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23. In the passage, the author does all of the following EXCEPT
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23. According to the passage, which of the following is a true statement about sectional conflicts in America between 1763 and 1789?
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24. The author's primary purpose in this passage is to
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24. According to the passage, which of the following can be inferred about the process by which the chemical constituents of life were synthesized under primitive Earth conditions?
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25. It can be inferred from the passage that the author believes which of the following about Hansberrys use of irony in Raisin in the Sun?
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25. The primary purpose of the passage is to
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26. In which of the following does the author of the passage reinforce his criticism of responses such as Isaacs to Raisin in the Sun?
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26. It can be inferred from the passage that "some scientists" assume which of the following concerning "larger, more complex molecules" (bolded sentence)?
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27. The author of the passage would probably consider which of the following judgments to be most similar to the reasoning of critics described in lines 8-12?
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27. The author's reaction to the attempts that have been made to explain the development of the first self-duplicating organisms can best be described as one of
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28. ADVOCATE:
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28. MINIMIZE :
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29. CORRUGATED:
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29. VARIATION :
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30. COVERT:
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30. DEFAULT :
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31. EXTRANEOUS:
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31. SUBSTANTIVE:
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32. DISTENSION:
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32. METEORIC:
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33. CONVERSANCE:
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33. CENSURE:
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34. EMBOSS:
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34. INCHOATE:
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35. QUOTIDIAN:
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35. APOCRYPHA:
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36. TORRIDNESS:
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36. ABSCISSION:
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37. OPPROBRIUM:
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37. EQUANIMITY:
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38. DISABUSE:
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38. ONEROUS:
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