Question 75·Hard·Words in Context
In early drafts of her treatise on economic resilience, Martinez uses the term "risk" so expansively that its meaning becomes ______, encompassing events as trivial as a delayed shipment and as catastrophic as a currency collapse.
Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word or phrase?
For SAT Words-in-Context questions, always read the entire sentence (and nearby sentences if provided) to understand the situation and tone before looking at the choices. Ask yourself: what role does the missing word play—does it describe a problem, a benefit, an attitude, or a degree (like small vs. large)? Put your own simple phrase in the blank (e.g., "less clear" or "too broad"), then eliminate choices whose core meanings do not match that idea. Be wary of words that sound sophisticated but don’t fit the sentence’s specific complaint or logic.
Hints
Locate the key clue in the sentence
Pay close attention to the phrase "uses the term "risk" so expansively that its meaning becomes ______." What kind of problem is the writer pointing out about how the word is being used?
Use the examples after the comma
Think about what it means to use the same word for "a delayed shipment" and "a currency collapse." How does that affect how sharply the word separates minor from major situations?
Compare the general ideas behind the options
Ask yourself for each choice: does it describe (1) something being able to change, (2) something being very important, (3) something being unnecessary or repetitive, or (4) a problem with how clearly a meaning can be grasped? Which of these matches the author's complaint about "risk"?
Step-by-step Explanation
Understand the situation in the sentence
Focus on the key clause: Martinez "uses the term "risk" so expansively that its meaning becomes ______." Then notice the examples that follow: "events as trivial as a delayed shipment and as catastrophic as a currency collapse." The author is saying the word "risk" is being applied to almost everything, from very small problems to huge disasters.
Infer what happens to meaning when a word is used too broadly
If a single word is used for both a small delay and a massive economic crisis, its meaning stops being sharp and precise. The problem is not that "risk" is more important, or more frequently repeated; it is that the concept becomes broad and hard to pin down. So the blank needs a word that describes a meaning becoming unclear or poorly defined because it covers too much.
Test each answer choice against that idea
• protean: means changeable or able to take many forms.
• momentous: means very important or significant.
• redundant: means unnecessarily repetitive or no longer needed.
Only one option among the choices describes a meaning that becomes unclear or indistinct, which matches the idea of an overexpanded term that loses precision.
Select the word that matches the context
"Nebulous" means vague, unclear, or ill-defined. This fits the sentence: by using "risk" so expansively, Martinez makes its meaning nebulous—too fuzzy to distinguish between trivial delays and catastrophic collapses. The correct answer is B) nebulous.