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SAT Reading & Writing: Hard Rhetorical Synthesis (Drill 9)

Drill 9 ยท Reading & Writing ยท Hard Rhetorical Synthesis

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About This Drill

SAT Reading & Writing: Hard Rhetorical Synthesis (Drill 9) is a Reading & Writing practice drill covering Hard Rhetorical Synthesis. It contains 5 original questions created by Brian Stewart, a Barron's test prep author with over 20 years of tutoring experience.

Hard Rhetorical Synthesis questions present a set of research notes and a specific writing goal, then ask you to choose the sentence that best accomplishes that goal using only the notes. The wrong answers are usually accurate statements that serve a different purpose than the one asked for, or that subtly misstate the notes. Match the rhetorical task exactly.

Questions in This Drill

  1. The student wants to convey the aim of the research team's study. Which choice most effectively uses relevant information from the notes to accomplish this goal?
  2. The student wants to compare the two ways of building terraces. Which choice most effectively uses relevant information from the notes to accomplish this goal?
  3. The student wants to write an engaging opening sentence for a narrative about the weaver and her workshop. Which choice most effectively uses relevant information from the notes to accomplish this goal?
  4. The student wants to explain a drawback of sundials specifically for travelers crossing into different regions. Which choice most effectively uses relevant information from the notes to accomplish this goal?
  5. The student wants to include a quotation that challenges the long-held assumption about how heavy stone loads were moved. Which choice most effectively uses relevant information from the notes to accomplish this goal?