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WE:Business Development (Energy and Utilities)
Re: Even thrill-seeking visitors to amusement parks will avoid
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17 Nov 2017, 19:58
Explanation
Even suggests that first word describes the sort of thing you might otherwise expect a thrill seeker to find attractive. You want something bad — a meaning like, “too thrilling, in a bad way.”
You are also told that these patrons want not danger, so you might anticipate a word as simple as “danger.” Peril is the best choice. Although “titillation” does describe a sort of thrill, it is neither negative, nor does it suggest danger.
The third word is probably easier to anticipate than the second, so let’s skip ahead. “In fact” suggests that you want a word that means “seems to be unsafe,” and the earlier “thrill-seeking visitors” suggests that you want something, well, thrilling. So anticipate “seems unsafe, thrills,” and take terrifies as your closest synonym. Satisfies yields a perfectly fine sentence, but there is no reason to anticipate quite that meaning. To return to your second word, you now know you want a word that means something like “imitation,” and simulacrum is the closest synonym among your answers.
Peril, simulacrum, terrifies