[Video] Q6: As used in line 54, “right” most nearly means

Answer Choices

  • A) favorably.

  • precisely.

  • reasonably.

  • normally.

Explanation for Question 6 From the Reading Section on the 2021 May Sat (International)

Hey guys. So question six asks us as used in line 54. 2 Right? Most nearly means blank. So I want to do for this question is 3 go back to line 54. We read the sentence with a right and I 4 want to fill in what we think works there. 5 So let's take a look at 54 over 6 here. Um, 7 so let's just read the whole thing for our context and episode locally pronounced 8 S APOE of cereal, in which every week a noble cowboy was brought to 9 the point of a horrible death by remorseless villains who sought the Rob Herman 10 of the equally noble girl. He had loved. Of course it all came out 11 right at the end of SFO 12, 12 and then another great adventure was announced for the weeks to follow. 13 So they're saying here is that the events, 14 all this bad stuff going on, it all came out right at the end. 15 So even if all this bad stuff was going on, 16 things still all turned out. Okay. 17 So I think what we're looking for is right here is it all came 18 out. Okay. Something agreeing with like, okay, 19 you're all came out. Well, something like that. 20 So our answer choices, um, 21 seem to go, normally doesn't really fit it's I'm not coming out. 22 Normally it, that things coming out well, 23 reasonably again, not to my reasonability here or talking about like someone that's positive, 24 precisely. You know, we're not talking about the preciseness of anything right here. 25 We're just talking about favorably. We're saying things all came out. 26 Well, it came out. Okay. So things came out favorably and that's gonna be 27 the fitting work. Put it in here.

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