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Playlist AP® English Language and Composition 17 videos
AP® English Language and Composition: Comprehension Drill 1, Problem 1. The speaker would agree with all of the following statements except what?
AP English Language and Composition: Comprehension Drill 1, Problem 10. The metaphor used in lines 62 and 63 is best interpreted to mean which...
AP English Language and Composition: Comprehension Drill 1, Problem 3. What can the "personality" that the speaker describes be characterized as?
AP English Language and Composition 1.2 Persona, Tone, and Point of View 643 Views
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AP English Language and Composition: Persona, Tone, and Point of View Drill 1, Problem 2. In context, which of the following is the best interpretation of the word "condescension"?
Transcript
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:03
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by all the king's men.
- 00:06
They've really been down on themselves since
- 00:08
that whole Humpty Dumpty situation.
- 00:11
Well, check out the following passage.
Full Transcript
- 00:12
[ mumbles ]
- 00:19
[ mumbling continues ] Ugh, that was a mouthful. All right.
- 00:26
In context, which of the following is the best interpretation of
- 00:30
the word "condescension" in line ten?
- 00:33
Here are the potential answers.
- 00:35
[ mumbles ] Sounds like how we feel when we get our grades.
- 00:39
All right, so what's this question asking?
- 00:41
Well, it starts out with "in context,"
- 00:44
so, yeah, we can't just look up "condescension" in the dictionary.
- 00:48
Meaning we gotta check out the context in which we read the word, right?
- 00:51
So we're gonna need to figure out how it applies specifically to this passage.
- 00:55
All right, well, let's check out the lines in question.
- 00:58
"...two houses, assuming a tone of conscious superiority,
- 01:01
replied that they could receive no message from a prince
- 01:04
who had raised his standard against his parliament,
- 01:06
and had pronounced their general a traitor.
- 01:09
Charles (and his condescension may be taken as proof
- 01:11
of his wish to avoid hostilities)
- 01:13
offered to withdraw his proclamation, provided they on their part
- 01:17
would rescind their votes against his adherents." [ chuckles ]
- 01:20
Good thing we didn't go with the first dictionary definition,
- 01:23
because it really doesn't fit here.
- 01:26
No one is condescending to anyone else.
- 01:28
Not in the way we usually think of it, anyway.
- 01:30
If someone were being all snooty and talking down to a person
- 01:33
as if they were dirt on their shoe, well then, A - disdain
- 01:35
or E - haughtiness might work.
- 01:37
But it looks like we're dealing with a different version of the word here.
- 01:39
In this passage, the king is showing condescension because
- 01:42
he wants to avoid hostilities.
- 01:44
Okay, so, he's not a super fan of confrontation,
- 01:46
and he's acting in such a way that he doesn't have to
- 01:49
whip out the big guns if you know what we mean.
- 01:51
Then is he degrading people?
- 01:53
Well, in our experience, degradation isn't the best way to make nice with somebody.
- 01:57
Is he being humble?
- 01:58
Well, yeah, sorta. But the key here is that the king is yielding to the houses,
- 02:03
which takes a certain degree of humility,
- 02:05
but it's more of an example of acquiescence.
- 02:08
So, yeah, in this instance, "condescension" implies that someone is
- 02:11
acquiescing, or giving into another's wishes
- 02:14
or commands, answer D.
- 02:17
The king may be bummed that we're calling him out so badly,
- 02:19
but at least "doormat" wasn't one of the answer choices.
- 02:22
[ buzzer ]
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