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He opens in a style that is notably contentious for a scientific paper, _______ previous works that, in his dim view, have too quickly drawn analogies between human thought and animal thought.
Literary salons and coffeehouses (i)_______ the class-based systems of social hierarchies prevalent at the time. Meritocratic appreciation of wit and brilliance, wherever it might issue, replaced (ii)_______ to establish power.
At its best, the storytelling in this television series manages to accommodate a sense of historical (i)_______. The narrative shows that American independence was not (ii)_______. It was debated. It didn't happen overnight. No one was sure how it would turn out.
The flood of new candidates, including newcomers, party veterans, and the first female candidate, is a startling (i)_______ Japan's (ii)_______ political successions. The crowded field means that the selection of the new prime minister, instead of being the customary (iii)_______, backroom affair, has become a source of intense public excitement.
In the early twentieth century, some _______ the environmental benefits of a motor designed to harness the power of the ocean's waves, pointing out that the motor did not create the smoke or soot associated with burning oil.
In the nineteenth century, the dish known as lobster Newburg was sometimes associated with the culinary accessory known as the chafing dish, but Welsh rarebit was considered the truly _______ chafing dish recipe.
Because carbon is a relatively _______ element, much of the original carbon available to be incorporated in the Earth may have escaped during the accretion of the planet.
Although weeds often (i)_______ and are (ii)_______ human activities, their cussedness and refusal to play by human rules makes them subversive and the very essence of wildness.
The poem is not nearly as (i)_______ as it has often been said to be. Granted, it would be (ii)_______ to claim that the poem is self-contained or that its proliferating allusions are self-explanatory. But the poem is more self-contained than it appears when you read only fragments of it, and its allusions are often (iii)_______ by their contexts or by their repeated appearances in changing contexts.
Because the fundamental nature of language is so intangible, because there is no agreed-upon way to determine its existence, it is easy to dismiss new evidence of ostensible animal language as inadequate—quite _______, but insufficient.
Far from (i)_______ the actions taken by the newspaper's executives. Willes praised the executives' resistance to corruption—yet he doubted that their policies were practical enough to warrant (ii)_______ by other papers.
Her argument, though stimulating, is far from being proof against all reproach: several of its most crucial hypotheses are rather more (i)_______ than (ii)________.
Phrenology was _______ in taking tentative steps to connect personality traits with the brain at a time when other nineteenth-century investigators considered the heart, liver, or spleen as the anatomical repository of psychological characteristics.
Accustomed to the author's ponderous prose, readers will likely be startled by the _______ that characterizes his new work.
Once Plowright's research is complete, she will be prepared to talk about it (i)_______, but for now, because she is discussing theories rather than facts and does not want to commit herself to an unsubstantiated claim, she prefers to make only the most (ii)_______ comments.
The so-called "sensation novel", popular in mid-nineteenth-century Britain, was dismissed by some as _______ form of fiction, partly because these spine-tingling novels often appeared as serials in cheap, disposable periodicals.
Bridges are often offered as _______ examples of engineering, given that a bridge's structure is out in the open for all to see.
The legislators didn't merely sell out to business; they retreated to _______ style of governing whereby the interest group that is currently lobbying the hardest on an issue determines the party's position.
Because organisms can't _______ sodium, as they can do with nitrogen, carbon, and phosphorus, they need external sources to replenish this vital element constantly.

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