English Practice Question and Answer
8 Q:Direction: In the following questions, in the following passage some of words have been left out. Read the passage carefully and choose the correct answer to each question out of the four alternatives and fill in the blanks.
I am forty year old, rather tall and I have blue eyes ___(21)__ long black hair. I wear ___(22)___ clothes as I teach students in a relaxed atmosphere. I enjoy my job __(23)__ I get to meet and help so many different people from all over the word. ___(24)___ my spare time, I like playing tennis which I __(25)___ at least three times a week.
Fill at (21).
980 06018faef65f0475903812b2c
6018faef65f0475903812b2c- 1stillfalse
- 2andtrue
- 3yetfalse
- 4butfalse
- Show AnswerHide Answer
- Workspace
- SingleChoice
Answer : 2. "and"
Q: Point out the meaning of the following proverb.
Every cloud has a silver lining.
980 0624571422300d4328a90bd55
624571422300d4328a90bd55Every cloud has a silver lining.
- 1Clouds are never without a silver liningfalse
- 2There is a positive side to every unpleasant situationtrue
- 3There is not hope in an unpleasant situationfalse
- 4Clouds always have white lines in themfalse
- Show AnswerHide Answer
- Workspace
- SingleChoice
Answer : 2. "There is a positive side to every unpleasant situation "
Q:Select the option that expresses the given sentence in indirect speech.
Sneha said to me, “I was watching TV.”
979 0649018a7f4063d472f5ee984
649018a7f4063d472f5ee984- 1Sneha told me that she had been watching TV.true
- 2Sneha said to me that I was watching TV.false
- 3Sneha told me that she was watching TV.false
- 4Sneha told me that I was watching TV.false
- Show AnswerHide Answer
- Workspace
- SingleChoice
Answer : 1. "Sneha told me that she had been watching TV."
Q:Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow it. Each question has 4 options. Choose the correct option/answer for each question:
I worked for a brief while in a college in Delhi, and among my more uncomfortable memories is a language exercise, I gave a group of eight undergraduates: I asked them to imagine that they had already graduated and wanted them to write an application for a suitable job. Seven of the eight students wrote applications for the jobs of clerks. Even in one of the good universities, and in a college that had a reputation for its academic standards, the system has snuffed out all youthful ambition.
Choose the correct option from the given passage:
What exercise did the author give the students?
He gave them___________
979 0639870d8d319b37ca1c1899f
639870d8d319b37ca1c1899fWhat exercise did the author give the students?
He gave them___________
- 1a language exercise - to write an application for a suitable job.true
- 2an exercise for testing skills in English.false
- 3an exercise to test clerical aptitude.false
- 4an exercise for the imagination.false
- Show AnswerHide Answer
- Workspace
- SingleChoice
Answer : 1. "a language exercise - to write an application for a suitable job."
Q: Select the most appropriate option to fill in the blank.
The planets are _______________ around the sun.
979 0646c7a6b45f1450a80e3d2eb
646c7a6b45f1450a80e3d2ebThe planets are _______________ around the sun.
- 1revolvingtrue
- 2circlingfalse
- 3rotatingfalse
- 4roundingfalse
- Show AnswerHide Answer
- Workspace
- SingleChoice
Answer : 1. "revolving"
Explanation :
The sentence would then read: "The planets are revolving around the sun." This choice accurately describes the movement of planets in their orbits around the sun.
Q: Select the INCORRECTLY spelt word.
979 064621779cdae930acb76ccc4
64621779cdae930acb76ccc4- 1Occurrencefalse
- 2Accommodationfalse
- 3Priviledgetrue
- 4Erroneousfalse
- Show AnswerHide Answer
- Workspace
- SingleChoice
Answer : 3. "Priviledge"
- Show AnswerHide Answer
- Workspace
- SingleChoice
Answer : 4. "Only A and C"
Q:Directions: Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions given below it. Certain words have been printed in bold to help you locate them, while answering some of the questions.
Among those suffering from the global recession are millions of workers who are not even included in the official statistics : urban recyclers – the trash pickers, sorters, traders and reprocesses who extricate paper, cardboard and plastics from garbage heaps and prepare them for reuse. Their work is both unrecorded and largely unrecognized, even though in some parts of the World they handle as much as 20% of all waste.
The World’s 15 million informal recyclers clean up cities, prevent some trash from ending in landfills and thus, reduce climate change by saving energy on waste disposal techniques like incineration. In the developed countries they are the preferred ones since they recycle waste much more cheaply and efficiently than governments or private corporations can. In the developing World, on the other hand, they provide the only recycling services except for a few big cities. But as recession hits the markets Worldwide, the price of scrap metal, paper and plastic has also fallen. Recyclers throughout the World are experiencing a sharp drop in income. Trash pickers and scrap dealers saw a decline of as much as 80% in the price of scrap from October 2007 to October 2009. In some countries scrap dealers have shuttered so quickly that researchers at the Solid Waste Management Association didn’t have a chance to record their losses. In Delhi, some 80% of families in the informal recycling business surveyed by an organization said they had cut back on “luxury foods,” which they defined as fruit, milk and meat. About 41% had stopped buying milk for their children. By this summer, most of those children, already malnourished, hadn’t had a glass of milk in nine months. Many of these children have also cut down on hours spent in school to work alongside their parents. Families have liquidated their most valuable assets – primarily copper from electrical wires – and have stopped sending remittances back to their rural villages. Many have also sold their emergency stores of grain. Their misery is not as familiar as that of the laid-off workers of big name but imploding, service sector corporation, but it is often more tragic. Few countries have adopted emergency measures to help trash pickers. Brazil, for one, is providing recyclers, or “catadores,” with cheaper food, both through arrangements with local farmers and by offering food subsidies. Other countries, with the support of non-governmental organizations and donor agencies are following Brazil’s example. Unfortunately, most trash pickers operate outside official notice and end up falling through the cracks of programmes like these. In the long run, though, these invisible workers will remain especially vulnerable to economic slowdowns unless they are integrated into the formal business sector, where they can have insurance and reliable wages. This is not hard to accomplish. Informal junk shops should have to apply for licences, and governments should create or expand doorstep waste collection programmes to employ trash pickers. Instead of sorting through haphazard trash heaps and landfills, the pickers would have access to the cleaner scrap that comes from households.
The need of the hour, however, is a more immediate solution. An efficient but temporary solution would be for governments where they’d have to pay a small subsidy to waste dealers so they could purchase scrap from trash pickers at about 20% above the current price. This increase, if well advertised and broadky utilized, would bring recyclers a higher price and eventually bring them back from the brink. Trash pickers make our cities healthier and more liveable. We all stand to gain by making sure that the work of recycling remains sustainable for years to come.
Which of the following has not been an effect of the losses observed in the informal waste recycling?
979 0618a0bee9236c01fbea869f7
618a0bee9236c01fbea869f7Among those suffering from the global recession are millions of workers who are not even included in the official statistics : urban recyclers – the trash pickers, sorters, traders and reprocesses who extricate paper, cardboard and plastics from garbage heaps and prepare them for reuse. Their work is both unrecorded and largely unrecognized, even though in some parts of the World they handle as much as 20% of all waste.
The World’s 15 million informal recyclers clean up cities, prevent some trash from ending in landfills and thus, reduce climate change by saving energy on waste disposal techniques like incineration. In the developed countries they are the preferred ones since they recycle waste much more cheaply and efficiently than governments or private corporations can. In the developing World, on the other hand, they provide the only recycling services except for a few big cities. But as recession hits the markets Worldwide, the price of scrap metal, paper and plastic has also fallen. Recyclers throughout the World are experiencing a sharp drop in income. Trash pickers and scrap dealers saw a decline of as much as 80% in the price of scrap from October 2007 to October 2009. In some countries scrap dealers have shuttered so quickly that researchers at the Solid Waste Management Association didn’t have a chance to record their losses. In Delhi, some 80% of families in the informal recycling business surveyed by an organization said they had cut back on “luxury foods,” which they defined as fruit, milk and meat. About 41% had stopped buying milk for their children. By this summer, most of those children, already malnourished, hadn’t had a glass of milk in nine months. Many of these children have also cut down on hours spent in school to work alongside their parents. Families have liquidated their most valuable assets – primarily copper from electrical wires – and have stopped sending remittances back to their rural villages. Many have also sold their emergency stores of grain. Their misery is not as familiar as that of the laid-off workers of big name but imploding, service sector corporation, but it is often more tragic. Few countries have adopted emergency measures to help trash pickers. Brazil, for one, is providing recyclers, or “catadores,” with cheaper food, both through arrangements with local farmers and by offering food subsidies. Other countries, with the support of non-governmental organizations and donor agencies are following Brazil’s example. Unfortunately, most trash pickers operate outside official notice and end up falling through the cracks of programmes like these. In the long run, though, these invisible workers will remain especially vulnerable to economic slowdowns unless they are integrated into the formal business sector, where they can have insurance and reliable wages. This is not hard to accomplish. Informal junk shops should have to apply for licences, and governments should create or expand doorstep waste collection programmes to employ trash pickers. Instead of sorting through haphazard trash heaps and landfills, the pickers would have access to the cleaner scrap that comes from households.
- 1To help their families, the children of the recyclers have started working thus compromising on their educationfalse
- 2Many scrap dealers have discontinued their businessesfalse
- 3The government in many countries has derecognized scrap dealers in view of their unprofitable business.true
- 4Governments in many countries had to take emergency steps to help the recyclers deal with the crisisfalse
- 5None of thesefalse
- Show AnswerHide Answer
- Workspace
- SingleChoice

