Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Woody Allen often shows artists as self-centered and obsessed with their own feelings, and Deconstructing Harry pushes that idea to an extreme. The passage argues this is a steady theme in his movies: some characters say artists just turn private pain into “art,” many artist characters end up lonely or unhappy (e.g., Crimes and Misdemeanors; Husbands and Wives; Celebrity), while plain, nonartistic characters (e.g., Zelig; Broadway Danny Rose) tend to have happier endings.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: infer the word's meaning from nearby wording. The passage says, 'Deconstructing Harry may be the most unequivocally peevish of Allen's depictions of artists,' and shortly after labels another film 'Stardust Memories, Allen's sourest portrait of artists before Harry.' The explicit use of 'sourest' signals that 'peevish' here means 'sour' (irritable, acidly critical).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage10.Which one of the following most accurately captures the meaning of the word "peevish" as it is used in the last sentence of the first paragraph?
Correct Answer
E
'Peevish' describes the film's tone as bitter/irritable rather than a personality trait. Support: 'Deconstructing Harry may be the most unequivocally peevish of Allen's depictions of artists' and the direct parallel, 'Stardust Memories, Allen's sourest portrait of artists before Harry.' The author’s use of 'sourest' immediately after establishes that 'peevish' is being used in the sense of 'sour.'
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