Question 78·Hard·Words in Context
For centuries, lighthouse keepers documented the progress of nor’easters in ledgers whose language, florid yet rigorously ______, now provides meteorologists with an invaluable trove of comparative data.
Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word or phrase?
For SAT Words-in-Context questions, first ignore the answer choices and read the whole sentence carefully, especially anything after commas or conjunctions like “but” or “yet,” to see how the blanked word must relate to the rest of the ideas. Decide whether the blank should have a positive or negative tone and what role it plays (for example, describing usefulness, clarity, or reliability). Then, plug in each option mentally and ask, “Does this logically describe the noun and support the outcome the sentence states?” Eliminate words you don’t truly know or that don’t fit the context exactly, even if they sound sophisticated, and choose the one that matches both the meaning and tone demanded by the sentence.
Hints
Pay attention to the contrast word
Look closely at the phrase “florid yet rigorously ______”. The word “yet” shows that the second quality is in some tension with “florid” but still true at the same time.
Use the purpose of the ledgers
Think about why these ledgers matter: they “provide meteorologists with an invaluable trove of comparative data.” Ask yourself what kind of writing would make old storm records so valuable for scientific comparison.
Check tone and what is being described
Decide whether the missing word should feel positive or negative in this context, and remember it must logically describe language, not people or physical objects. Eliminate any choices that don’t match both the tone and what is being modified.
Step-by-step Explanation
Understand the basic structure of the sentence
Focus on the phrase “florid yet rigorously ______”. The word “yet” signals a contrast: the language is florid (ornate, elaborate), but also has another quality that might not usually go with “florid.” Both adjectives describe the language of the ledgers.
Use the second half of the sentence to infer the needed meaning
Look at the part after the comma: “now provides meteorologists with an invaluable trove of comparative data.” This tells you the records are extremely useful for scientific comparison. For the language to be that useful, it must help scientists clearly and reliably compare storms—so the blank should suggest that the writing is strict, careful, and reliable enough to support data analysis.
Test and eliminate the choices that clash with this role
Go through each option and ask: Would this kind of language help or hurt meteorologists who want clear, comparable data?
- obfuscatory: means intended to make things confusing or unclear. That would make the data less useful, contradicting “invaluable trove of comparative data.”
- credulous: means too willing to believe things; it describes people, not language, and doesn’t fit with “rigorously.”
- desiccated: means dried out or lifeless; calling language “rigorously desiccated” is odd and also clashes with “florid,” which means rich and elaborate.
None of these work with the positive, precise role the language must play, so they can be eliminated. Only one option remains, which we now check against the context.
Confirm the remaining choice fits the context
The remaining option, “fastidious,” means very attentive to and concerned about accuracy and detail; meticulous. Describing the ledgers’ language as “florid yet rigorously fastidious” perfectly fits the idea that the writing is both ornate and extremely careful, producing records that give meteorologists an “invaluable trove of comparative data.”
Therefore, the correct answer is B) fastidious.