Permit : __________ :: Enforce : Relax (By word meaning)
Step 1: Determine the needed relation for the first pair
We must choose a word so that Permit : ( ? ) forms an antonym pair, mirroring Enforce : Relax.
Step 2: Evaluate each option against "permit"
(A) Allow — near-synonym of permit (same meaning), not an antonym $\Rightarrow$ reject.
(B) Forbid — direct antonym of permit (permit = allow; forbid = prohibit) $\Rightarrow$ fits.
(C) License — also a synonym/closely related (to grant permission) $\Rightarrow$ reject.
(D) Reinforce — means strengthen/support; not the opposite of permit, and pairs conceptually with enforce rather than relax $\Rightarrow$ reject.
Step 3: State the completed analogy
\[
\boxed{\text{Permit : Forbid :: Enforce : Relax}}
\]
In the given text, the blanks are numbered (i)--(iv). Select the best match for all the blanks.
From the ancient Athenian arena to the modern Olympic stadiums, athletics (i) _____the potential for a spectacle. The crowd (ii) ______ with bated breath as the Olympian artist twists his body, stretching the javelin behind him. Twelve strides in, he begins to cross-step. Six cross-steps (iii) _________ in an abrupt stop on his left foot. As his body (iv) ________ like a door turning on a hinge, the javelin is launched skyward at a precise angle.
Fill in the blanks by choosing the correct sequence for the following passage:
I am wearing for the first time some (i)______ that I have never been able to wear for long at a time, as they are horribly tight. I usually put them on just before giving a lecture. The painful pressure they exert on my feet goads my oratorical capacities to their utmost. This sharp and overwhelming pain makes me sing like a nightingale or like one of those Neapolitan singers who also wear (ii) _______ that are too tight. The visceral physical longing, the overwhelming torture provoked by my (iii)_______, forces me to extract from words distilled and sublime truths, generalized by the supreme inquisition of the pain my (iv) _______suffer.