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Discussion Overview
The discussion revolves around a specific analogy question from the GRE, with participants sharing their thoughts on the relationships between words and the nature of such questions. The scope includes vocabulary understanding, reasoning behind choices, and critiques of standardized testing formats.
Discussion Character
- Debate/contested
- Conceptual clarification
- Meta-discussion
Main Points Raised
- Some participants suggest that "palatable is to savoury as discernible is to manifest" is a valid analogy, while others express uncertainty about the reasoning behind it.
- One participant proposes "satiable:hungry" as an alternative, arguing that both terms represent degrees of difference in meaning.
- Concerns are raised about the ambiguity of the GRE analogy questions, with some participants questioning whether they reflect the actual GRE format.
- Several participants express frustration with the nature of analogy questions, suggesting they do not effectively test important skills or knowledge.
- There is a discussion about the perceived decline in the quality of vocabulary questions compared to past experiences with standardized tests.
- Some participants reflect on their personal experiences with test preparation and the pressures associated with performing well on standardized tests.
- One participant humorously suggests that learning German might be a more valuable pursuit than mastering GRE analogies.
- Another participant critiques the educational system for relying on standardized tests that may not accurately measure knowledge or skills.
Areas of Agreement / Disagreement
Participants express a range of opinions on the validity of the analogy choices, with no clear consensus on which analogy is the best fit. There is general agreement on the frustration with the format of the GRE questions, but differing views on their effectiveness and relevance remain.
Contextual Notes
Some participants note that the GRE analogy questions may have changed over time, leading to differences in expectations and experiences. There is also mention of the ambiguity in word meanings and relationships, which complicates the task of selecting the correct analogy.
Who May Find This Useful
Individuals preparing for the GRE, educators interested in standardized testing formats, and those curious about vocabulary and analogy relationships may find this discussion relevant.
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I would say the penultimate one: palatable is to savoury as discernible is to manifest.
I'm moving this to GD, since it is not (meant to be) a brain teaser.
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cristo said:I would say the penultimate one: palatable is to savoury as discernible is to manifest.
I'm moving this to GD, since it is not (meant to be) a brain teaser.
That is correct, but why?
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cristo said:palatable is to savoury as discernible is to manifest.
I agree. ( a little : a lot )
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I'd go with satiable:hungry. Savory is a more extreme adjective than palatable, but both are similar. So you're looking for similar terms that are degrees of difference in meaning. Satiable is a more mild version of hungry.
Yeah, I'd go with discernible:manifest or the first one.
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ehrenfest said:That is correct, but why?
Beats me, I'd have gotten it wrong too but had the reasoning right apparently (see my attempt above).
ehrenfest said:That is correct, but why?
Palatable means "do-able" as far as I can tell, and savory means it's good.
Discernible means "you can tell" and "manifest" is like discernible+. You can really tell.
I don't know. English is vague and these people need to be shot, whoever makes these exams.
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Is this really a GRE question, or some site claiming to do a test prep that might not be very good at writing these? There really seems to be more than one answer to me with these choices. I don't remember GRE choices being that ambiguous. More of it was figuring out what the darn words meant when they were ones you never used in every day speech...I don't think savory or hungry would have ever shown up as choices when I took it. I remember them being more about distinguishing the antonyms from synonyms and then different parts of speech, such as nouns from adjectives.
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Moonbear said:Is this really a GRE question, or some site claiming to do a test prep that might not be very good at writing these? There really seems to be more than one answer to me with these choices. I don't remember GRE choices being that ambiguous. More of it was figuring out what the darn words meant when they were ones you never used in every day speech...I don't think savory or hungry would have ever shown up as choices when I took it. I remember them being more about distinguishing the antonyms from synonyms and then different parts of speech, such as nouns from adjectives.
This is from a practice test a downloaded from the GREs official website. I got a 630 on the practice verbal section. :(
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Moonbear said:Satiable is a more mild version of hungry.
Are you sure? I would say that satiable meant "capable of being satiated", which in turn means "capable of being given as much as one wants" (or some variant of that). Thus, whilst this would apply to hunger, it has a wider meaning.
Anyway, my reasoning for choosing the penultimate option was the same as berkeman's and MB's.
Do you guys get to do these things in exams? That's pretty cool, if so: I've not had to do things like this for over 10 years (and then the vocabulary they expected you to know was somewhat smaller!)
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We all need to learn German people. That is the lesson learned from this. Let's go back to the old language
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Moonbear said:Beats me, I'd have gotten it wrong too but had the reasoning right apparently (see my attempt above).
Pretty sure it's because of this:
berkeman said:( a little : a lot )
The order and magnitude matter.
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ARG I HATE HATE HATE these STUPID kinds of questions. They don't test you on a damn thing important.
The education system needs to catch on and throw this stupid test in the trash.
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Cyrus said:ARG I HATE HATE HATE these STUPID kinds of questions. They don't test you on a damn thing important.
The education system needs to catch on and throw this stupid test in the trash.
Yeah, I think the SAT has done that already. They threw out all the analogies (and antonyms I think) so that a large portion of the verbal section is reading comprehension and analysis. I wonder why the GRE didn't follow suit? I thought the SAT verbal was a really well-written test but judging from this practice test, I am not fond at all of the GRE verbal. They are both administered by ETS...
But anyway, I think some of these analogies are fun and that discussing them here is insightful e.g. the first one I posted.
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ehrenfest said:Yeah, I think the SAT has done that already. They threw out all the analogies (and antonyms I think) so that a large portion of the verbal section is reading comprehension and analysis. I wonder why the GRE didn't follow suit? I thought the SAT verbal was a really well-written test but judging from this practice test, I am not fond at all of the GRE verbal. They are both administered by ETS...
But anyway, I think some of these analogies are fun and that discussing them here is insightful e.g. the first one I posted.
You know what's really insightful, using your time to study things that are useful. Not word analogies. College isn't about doing the NY times crossword puzzle.
Boy am I glad I never took the GRE. I think ETS has the college system by the balls, because I can't think of any other reason why schools use this...
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Cyrus said:ARG I HATE HATE HATE these STUPID kinds of questions. They don't test you on a damn thing important.
The education system needs to catch on and throw this stupid test in the trash.
This example is an especially good one of the problem with these standardized tests. When there's more than one answer that could be right, and your task is not whether you know vocabulary or parts of speech or can identify relationships between things, but rather how well you can get into the head of the test writer to figure out which is the BETTER of the two or more good answers. It was never a test of knowledge so much as a test of how well you can identify the tricks the test writers throw at you. This is why I didn't study for the GRE. Studying doesn't help.
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Moonbear said:This is why I didn't study for the GRE. Studying doesn't help.
Yeah, I think that is probably the rational thing to do. Unfortunately me and so many other test-takers are so scared of doing poorly that we can't help but pour our money and our time into practicing for the ETS tests. I told myself I wasn't going to waste any time or money studying for it when I first decided to take it a couple weeks ago. But as my test date approaches I get worried and yesterday I threw away that plan and decided to prepare for an hour a day and I even bought the Princeton Review book. I am so insecure. :(
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I'd have gone for vulgar : offensive for the last one. My language skills are poor however.
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ehrenfest said:Here is another one that threw me off.
I'd go with adroit:ungainly on that one. I don't see any other antonym pairs. These are definitely easier vocabulary than when I took it. We would have had a starting analagy more like loquacious:taciturn::
Succinct would have been far too common a word to appear unless you had to know some obscure archaic definition for it to get it right.
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Don't look at me, I'm still trying to figure out that hand:glove one.
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So what's the point of these? What advantage does knowing some of the least frequently used words in the English language give you?
Temporary satisfaction that your BA in English or Literature isn't completely wasted. This satisfaction crumbles when you are denied a job in McDonald's after you get your degree.
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Kurdt said:So what's the point of these? What advantage does knowing some of the least frequently used words in the English language give you?
I think having a large vocabulary is important. Whether you are a scientist or a stock-broker or a high-school teacher or whatever, you need to be able to express yourself effectively and reasonably eloquently. OK maybe you don't "need" to be eloquent but I think it still a major benefit in any career that involves interpersonal interaction. As a student listening to my professor's lectures, it makes a huge difference. When a professor has an extensive vocabulary and uses interesting connections between words and uses words in creative ways and can always find that key word to go in that "crucial" spot in the sentence, learning can just be a wonderful experience. On the other hand, when a professor just throws in words to his sentences to get the bare minimum semantic value across and misuses words and misuses grammar, it just looks bad and you wonder how this professor ever go so far. Thus, I think testing vocabulary and analogies and antoyms is very appropriate on a graduate entrance exam.
As Moonbear said, these words aren't even that rare. It is just the relationships between them that are kind of subtle.
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I personally think the English language is too redundant. The reason I believe Germany produces so many good thinkers is because the language is concise and precise and having that drilled into you from birth is a good thing. These are the definitions of things, this is how you structure a sentence. What more do you need?
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Kurdt said:So what's the point of these? What advantage does knowing some of the least frequently used words in the English language give you?
A good enough score to show you can memorize tons of useless information. The stupid thing is the GRE is practically the same test as the SAT (or it was when I took it back when we had to chisel our answers into stone tablets). Hopefully one should score better on the GRE than the SAT or else it would indicate you've regressed during university study. Or at least that's my interpretation of it. Not that anybody looks back to your SAT scores when they request your GRE scores. I can see some value of SATs, because they help normalize all the range of high school backgrounds people come from and provide some indicator of whether they've earned their grades or are beneficiaries of massive grade inflation. But, I don't see what value they have going from undergrad to grad school. I might only question someone who scored horrendously low on it. On the other hand, qualifying for things like training grant funding requires a certain minimum GRE score, so even when admissions committees would prefer to ignore them entirely, they have their arms twisted to give them consideration.
It is a bizarre exam where the verbal sections require knowledge of such obscure words, which makes them the challenging sections, but then the math sections don't require anything more advanced than simple algebra, making it a horrible joke (again, other than catching the tricks they throw at you that have nothing to do with your knowledge of math, but whether you can spot the trick under the pressure of a timed test). The only section that I used to think was valuable, but I'm not even sure it still exists, was one on logic. It was basically brainteaser type questions, but it didn't require a priori knowledge, rather tested if you could reason your way through a problem.
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ehrenfest said:I think having a large vocabulary is important. Whether you are a scientist or a stock-broker or a high-school teacher or whatever, you need to be able to express yourself effectively and reasonably eloquently. OK maybe you don't "need" to be eloquent but I think it still a major benefit in any career that involves interpersonal interaction. As a student listening to my professor's lectures, it makes a huge difference. When a professor has an extensive vocabulary and uses interesting connections between words and uses words in creative ways and can always find that key word to go in that "crucial" spot in the sentence, learning can just be a wonderful experience. On the other hand, when a professor just throws in words to his sentences to get the bare minimum semantic value across and misuses words and misuses grammar, it just looks bad and you wonder how this professor ever go so far. Thus, I think testing vocabulary and analogies and antoyms is very appropriate on a graduate entrance exam.
As Moonbear said, these words aren't even that rare. It is just the relationships between them that are kind of subtle.
Actually, that's not what I said and I don't agree with this point. Using words like "loquacious" when "talkative" would suffice doesn't help with communication, it hinders it. Using 50 cent words just makes you sound pompous, and is more likely to turn off your audience than engage it. Precise wording is important in science, but that is more often accomplished by careful choice of simple words than by liberal sprinkling of obscure words people need to look up to understand.
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Moonbear said:Actually, that's not what I said and I don't agree with this point. Using words like "loquacious" when "talkative" would suffice doesn't help with communication, it hinders it. Using 50 cent words just makes you sound pompous, and is more likely to turn off your audience than engage it. Precise wording is important in science, but that is more often accomplished by careful choice of simple words than by liberal sprinkling of obscure words people need to look up to understand.
Well I disagree with that. I think decorating your speech with colorful words brings a lecture, or a conversation, or a scientific discussion alive. Moonbear, I think your writing is filled with clever words and clever sentence structures and it makes your posts really fun to read and makes me more motivated to engage you in the topic. Take for example the phrase "liberal sprinkling" or the word "pompous" in your quote above. I also remember you used the word "sleuthing" in a way I really liked in some post. For a scientific example, take David Griffith's three books "Introduction to QM", "Intro to E and M", and "Intro to Elementary Particles". If you have read any of these, you will notice that Griffith is quite an adroit linguistic acrobat. This only makes reading them more memorable and increases how much of them I remember. His use of exotic words serves as kind of a mnemonic device that helps me remember the physics.
Sure scientific progress does not require[/] about 80% of the words in our language but I think using more words can accelerate scientific progress not hinder it. Words are concepts and knowing more concepts certainly helps people do science.
But with that said, there is a time and place for words like "loquacious". I think what Moonbear described above is a good standard for publication in a scientific journal or for a reference book like an encyclopedia but it is not a good standard for normal scientific discussion. Its important to remember that scientists are human beings not machines built to perform experiments and analyze and process data. Using language that is NOT simple takes advantage of this fact by tapping into the full range of human knowledge and human experience and human emotion to communicate.
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Moonbear said:I'd go with satiable:hungry. Savory is a more extreme adjective than palatable, but both are similar. So you're looking for similar terms that are degrees of difference in meaning. Satiable is a more mild version of hungry.
I thought that too and it was based on the exact same reasoning!
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