UP TGT ENGLISH RE-EXAM SOLVED PAPER 2004
This question paper has 125 questions with their answers. It is related to the old Trained Graduate Teacher (TGT) Recruitment Examination Question paper 2004 conducted by UP SECONDARY EDUCATION SERVICE SELECTION BOARD PRAYAGRAJ (ALLAHABAD)
Question No. 1 to 5: Read the following passage and answer questions no 1 to 5 based on it:
The chief condition of happiness, then, barring certain physical prequisites, is the life of reason the specific glory and power of man. Virtue, or rather excellence will depend on clear judgment, self-control, symmetry of desire, artistry of means; it is not the possession of the simple man, nor the gift of innocent intent, but the achievement of experience in the fully developed man. Yet there is road to it, a guide to excellence, which may save many detours and delays: it is the middle way, the golden mean. The qualities of character can be arranged in triads in each of which the first and the last qualities will be extremes and vices, and the middle quality, a virtue or an excellence. So between cowardice and rashness is courage; between stinginess and extravagance is liberality; between sloth and greed is ambition; between humility and pride is modesty; between secrecy and loquacity is honesty; between quarrelsomensess and flattery is friendship; between Hamlet’s indecisiveness and Don Quixote’s impulsiveness is self-control. The right in ethics or conduct is not different from right in mathematics or engineering; it means correct, fit, what works best to the best results.
- What is the main idea of the passage?
(a) The qualities of character
three-extremes and middle.
(b) In some respects ethics and mathematics resemble.
(c) Happiness can be achieved by following the middle path.
(d) None of these
Ans- (c) - What is the implied meaning of the passage?
(a)Happiness depends upon physical and mental qualities.
(b) Self-control is necessary
(c)Excellence should be achieved.
(d) Rational approach lies in following the middle path.
Ans- (b) - The author has not said:
(a) The middle path between humility and pride is modesty.
(b) Middle path avoids delay in achieving excellence.
(c) Right in ethics means that works to the best results.
(d) Courage is the middle path of indecisiveness and impulsiveness.
Ans- (b) - Which of the following is not the middle path of different quailties?
(a) Liberality. (b) Ambition
(c) Friendship (d) Secrecy
Ans- (b) - Who, of the following, is not the writer of either Hamlet or Don Quixote?
(a) Ben Johnson (b) Shakespeare
(c) Cervantes (d) None of them
Ans- (c)
6.The true commencement of Wordsworth’s poetic career was from :
(a) 1792-1793 (b) 1795-1796
(c) 1797-1798 (d) 1790-1791
Ans- (c)
READ THE FOLLOWING ALSO-
- Wordsworth lived for 50 years among the :
(a) Cumberland dalesmen
(b) Alfoxden villagers
(c) Hawkshead countrymen
(d) French revolutions
Ans- (a) - One of the following is not by Wordsworth:
(a) Michael
(b) Resolution and Independence
(c) It is a Beauteous Evening
(d) The May Quee
Ans- (d)
9.Wordsworth learned that “verse may build a princely throne on humble truth “from:
(a) Robert Burton (b) Robert Burns
(c) Robert Bridges (d) Robert Blair
Ans- (b)
10.Which one word can be formed from the letters of the word REVERENCE?
(a) Rare(b) Vear (c) never (d) Spear
Ans- (c)
11.Which word cannot be formed from the letters of the word STRANGE?
(a) Gangster (b) Angels
(c) Ranges. (d) Grants
Ans- (b)
12.Granville Barker was responsible for the Stage of
introduction to the English Galsworthy’s following plays excepting one. Identify the odd one out:
(a) Justice (b) The Silver Box
(c) Strife (d) Loyalties
Ans- (d)
13.In his quest for true significance of life on its simpler levels, Wordsworth resembles :
(a) George Crabbe
(b) William Cowper
(c) William Blake
(d) Robert Burns
Ans-(d)
14.Tick the correct one.
(a) Ram asked Shyam how are you.
(b) Ram asked Shyam how he was.
(c) Ram asked to Shyam how he was.
(d) Ram asked to Shyam how was he?
Ans- (b)
- Who among the following was born first of all?
(a) William Shakespeare
(b) John Milton
(c) John Galsworthy
(d) William Wordsworth
Ans-(a)
16.What is the comparative form of ‘beautiful”?
(a) Beautiful (b) More beautiful
(c) Beautifuller (d) None of these
Ans- (b)
- Agitprop theatre, a well-known form in 20th century, is :
(a) A form of folk theatre in rural England
(b) Brechtian drama
(c) Marxist and/or communist propaganda using the theatre form
(d) A civil rights movement on the streets of Chicago, United States.
Ans-(d) - State the emphatic of ‘I am happy’:
(a) I am really happy
(b) I am very happy
(c) I am so very happy
(d) I am so happy
Ans-(a) - The heroic couplet generally is:
(a) Iambic dimeter
(b) Iambic trimeter
(c) Iambic pentameter
(d) Iambic tetrameter
Ans- (c)
Question No. 20 and 21: Fill in the blanks according to subject-verb concord:
- There…..three girls in the car.
(a) was (b) is (c) are (d) have
Ans- (c)
21.A pair of scissors…….. necessary for craft work.
(a) was (b) is (c) are (d) were
Ans- (b)
Question No. 22 and 23: Find the appropriate words for:
- Make hay……. the sun shines.
(a) while (b) when
(c) whence (d) where
Ans-(a)
23……..the shower was over, the sun shone out again.
(a) Unless (b) With (c) after (d) If
Ans- (c)
24.Galsworthy’s The Country House presents the
(a) the upper class
(b) the lower class
(c) the middle class
(d) the industrial class
Ans- (b)
25.Galsworthy’s masterpiece is : (a) The Patrician
(b) The Freelands
(c) The Forsyte Sega
(d) Fraternity
Ans- (c)
26.The total number of Shakespearean sonnets is:
(a) 152 (b) 156 (c) 150 (d) 154
Ans- (d)
27.The language used by Shakespeare in his dramas for the most part is:
(a) poetic prose
(b) blank verse
(c) narrative prose
(d) dramatic verse
Ans-(b)
READ THIS ALSO-
UP TGT ENGLISH EXAM SOLVED PAPER 2004
28.Shakespeare’s sonnets (1 to 126) generally show a reenaction of:
(a) general philosophy on life
(b)dramatic interchange between lovers
(c) personal relationship with a young, patron.
(d) dramatic argument with the dark lady rich
Ans-©
Question No. 29 to 33: Pick the sentence which is correctly punctuated :
29.
(a) Oh no! I forgot, I’ll phone her now.
(b)”Oh no, I forgot. I’ll phone her now.”
(c)”O, no, I forgot I’ll phone her now?”
(d) Oh no! I forgot? I’ll phone her now!”
Ans- (a)
30.
(a) If properly used however, those very skills could help.
(b) If-property used, however, those very skills could help.
(c) If properly used; however, those very skills could help.
(d) If, properly used, however, those very skills could help?
Ans- (a)
31
(a) It could lead to the kind of good life, both spiritual and material that was once the privilege of a lucky few
(b) It could lead to the third kind of good life-both spiritual and material-that was once the prevail The few
(c) It, could lead to the kind of good life; both spiritual and material; that was once, the privilege of a lucky few.
(d) It could lead-to the kind of good life, both spiritual, and material-that was once the
privilege of a bicky few.
Ans- (a)
32.
(a)”You see, she can’t forget, sir!”
(b)”You see she can’t forget, sir.”
(c) “You see she can’t forget sir.”
(d)”You see-she can’t forget-sir.”
Ans-(a)
33.
(a)By Heaven, I’ve done it at last. (b)By Heaven, I’ve done it at last!
(c)By Heaven; I’ve done it at last!
(d)By Heaven-I’ve done it at last?
Ans-(a)
- The Excursion, dated 1814, marks the beginning of:
(a) Wordsworth’s growing sensibility natural phenmena
(b) the decline of Wordsworth’s poetic genius
(c) the height of Wordsworth’s ascent to fame
(d) Wordsworth’s friendship with Coleridge
Ans- (a) - Use the Future Perfect Tense to complete the sentence:
…….this embroidery by evening.
(a) I will finish
(b) I have finished
(c) I will have finished
(d) I shall have finished
Ans-(d) - What should be the statement to the interrogative:
“Does he run a hotel in Delhi?”
(a) He is running a hotel in Delhi (b)He does not run a hotel in Delhi
(c) He does run a hotel in Delhi
(d) He runs a hotel in Delhi.
Ans- (d)
37.Use the correct phrasal verb in the gap in the following sentence:
The audience………the speaker.
(a) turned out (b) turned on
(c) turned in (d) turned off
Ans- (a)
38.The word ‘sadism’ is derived from:
(a) a Greek pathological term
(b) a native cult in medieval Florence
(c) notorious French erotic writer Marquis de Sade
(d) a Scottish secret society
Ans- (c)
39.Commence the statement with a distributive adjective:
boy was excused
(a) excused. (b) Each
(c) One (d) Excellent
Ans- (b)
40.Match the meaning with the idiom to put off :
(a) to instigate (b) to irritate
(c) to turn down(d) To be very angry
Ans- (c)
41.The influence of class is depicted:
(a) Escape (b) The Pigeon
(c) The Skin Game (d) Loyalties
Ans-(d)
42.The finest of Galsworthy’s later dramas is:
(a) Escape. (b) Pigeon
(c) The Skin Game. (d) Loyalties
Ans-(b)
Question No. 43 to 47: Read the following passage and answer the questions given below:
The sad demise of Mother Teresa left the world weighed down by an unprecedented grief. The Yugoslave-bor nun was the first person in India after M.K. Gandhi to be given al state funeral despite never holding any public office. What she will be remembered for is what she stood for. She symbolized the ultimate idestructible memorandum of love lying beyond all contentions.
The saint of the gutters was almost synonymous with the slums and the poverty of Calcutta. She adopted and loved the city as her own. She managed to make shrines out of the grimmest of penurial circumstances. Her saintliness did not have the conventional detachment from society. She was a personification of mercy and charity. Her charity was sublime and mellow, never keen to project godliness. She spurred us on to be simply humane. She held the human life with all its trauma in a compassionate embrace.
A realization dawned on her early that love and the assurance of being cared for were what people needed most. Here was a simple message of concern, hope and new life for the unfed, unclothed and the unsheltered. It was the her conviction that all is willed by God and it is our duty to serve Him by serving humanity.
Malcolm Muggeride, one of Mohter Teressa’s early biographers, was so moved by the mission which cuts across all limitations that he told the whole world about her. Thus she was catapulated to fame. People responded warmly and her arduous struggle to keep going was considerably eased as funds poured in. It was also the time that Mother started travelling to places in order to meet people and spread her word of God. Dominique Lapierre went about making a film on her and this hurt her very much.
This great woman could not avoid eyebrows being raised at her. She disapproved of abortion because it signified double killing, of the foetus and the conscience of the mother. She took her children to be the gift of God. She was also accused of almost making a fetish of human misery and using it as a ploy to raise funds. It is always simpler to criticize, it is much harder to defend: mother did it unequivocally in her own fashion.
- Mother Teresa :
(a) was the first to be given a state funeral in spite of holding no public office.
(b) was the first to be given a state funeral for holding a public office. (c) was the second unofficial person to be given a state funeral.
(d) was given a state funeral next of Gandhi.
Ans-(a) - Mother Teresa was :
(a) indifferent to criticism.
(b) defenceless against criticism.
(c) above criticism.
(d) the target of criticism.
Ans-(b) - Mother Teresa identified herself with:
(a)the poverty-stricken slum-dwellers of Calcutta,
(b) the Christian community of Calcutta.
(c) the foreign visitors of Calcutta.
(d) the elite of Calcutta.
Ans-(a)
46.Mother Teresa was not an advocate of abortion:
(a) because it kills the foetus.
(b) because it does not affirm the mother’s love for children.
(c) because it involves killing of the foetus and the mother’s conscience. (d) because it kills the conscience of the mother
Ans- (c)
47.Mother Teresa understood that people had utmost need for:
(a) hearth and home.
(b) food and clothing.
(c) monetary help and protection.
(d) love and care.
Ans- (c)
- Galsworthy is:
(a) a pessimist both cynical and demotivating.
(b) a passivist.
(c) a realist, both minute and delicate.
(d) a reactionist revolutionary.
Ans-(d)
Question No. 49 to 52: Choose the correct form of narration (reported speech) of the following direct speeches :
- He said, “I want to talk to you”. (a) He said he wanted to talk to you.
(b) He said that he wanted to talk to him.
(c) He says that he wanted to talk to you.
(d) He had said that he wanted to talk with him.
Ans- (b)
50.”I am going to Delhi, “he declared
(a) He said that he was going to Delhi.
(b) He was going to Delhi he declared.
(c) He declared that he was going to Delhi.
(d) He declares that he is going to Delhi.
Ans- (c)
- Ram said “Good morning, Sir”.
(a) Ram wished a good morning to Sir.
(b) Ram said Sir good morning.
(c)Ram declared it was a good morning.
(d)Ram wished his sir a good morning.
Ans-(d) - Esha said, “Please lend me the book, Asha.”
(a) Esha requested Asha to lend her the book.
(b) Esha said that the book be lent to her.
(c) Esha requested for the book.
(d) Esha demanded from Asha the book.
Ans- (a) - John Galsworthy’s novels are chiefly occupied with the effect and conflict of:
(a) individual and the universe.
(b) Feudalism upon monarchy.
(c) class traditions upon society.
(d) class traditions upon religion.
Ans- (c) - In matric movement, enjoyment means:
(a) Jambing thoughts
(b) a striding-over
(c) stopping short (d) a caesura
Ans-(b)
55.De Doctrina Christiana casts doubt on the orthodoxy of:
(a) Paradise Lost
(b) History of Britain
(c) Paradise Regained
(d) Pro Se Defensio
Ans- (c)
- The verse lines:
“She gave me eyes, she gave me ears;
And humble cares, and delicate fears……
were in reference to
(a) River Wye (b) Annette Vallon
(c) Dorothy Wordsworth
(d) Ancestral Scotland
Ans- (c) - The Prelude was written in the ……. and published after the death of Wordsworth.
(a) 1802 (b) 1805 (c) 1807 (d) 1806
Ans- (b)
Question No. 58 to 64: Use the correct grammatic form in the following sentences:
- The baby was…………. up.
(a) waken (b) awaken
(c) awoken. (d) awakened
Ans-(b)
59.They are still working.They ……..finished.
(a) haven’t (b) hadn’t
(c) hasn’t (d) didn’t
Ans- (a)
- I haven’t been to the cinema for ages.
We…….. go a lot :
(a) were to (b) has to
(c) used to (d) are to
Ans- (c)
61.Our house was…….a few days ago.
(a) broked into (b) broken into
(c) broke open. (d) breaken into
Ans- (b)
62.A bus collided………….a car.
(a) to (b) into (c) with (d) against
Ans-(b)
- A bus crashed…………..a car.
(a) to (b) into (c) with (d) against
Ans- (b)
64.The Chinese ….invented printing
(a) have (b) has. (c) hasn’t
(d) none to be put in the blank
Ans- (a)
- Persona, tone and voice reflect, in recent criticism:
(a) the tendency to highlight Characterization
(b) the tendency to disregard plot in modern novels.
(c) the tendency to infuse music as a major literary tool.
(d)the tendency to think of all narrative and lyric works of literature as discourse.
Ans- (a)
66.William Wordsworth was in 1791 in France where he was witness to the middle stages:
(a) the French poetic practices
(b) the French drama.
(c) the French culture of art
(d) the French Revolution
Ans- (d)
- The ubi sunt motif means:
(a) the dawn song for the beloved
(b) a guiding motif
(c) the ‘where-are’ formula for lamenting the past
(d) the ‘loathy lady formula
Ans-(c)
68.Myth comes from Greek ‘mythos’ signifying:
(a) imagination (b) children stories
(c) a story/plot, true or invented
(d) characters from the past
Ans- (c)
- The comedy of Errors is an adaptation of a Latin comedy which is:
(a) Novum Organum(b) Filostrato
(c) Cursor Mundi (d) Menoechmi
Ans-(c)
70.Shakespeare dedicated his youthful poems, Venus and Adonis and Lucrece to:
(a) The Earl of Southey
(b) The Earl of Southampton
(c) The Earl of Surrey
(d) The Earl of Saxony
Ans-(b)
Question No. 71 to 73: Select the item nearest in meaning to the underlined words in the sentence below:
- The residents are protesting against the move to set up an abattoir in their campus :
(a) a toilet complex (b) a fish market
(c) a vegetable go down
(d) a slaughterhouse
Ans-(d) - The patient has been prescribed an emetic drug:
(a) that induces sleep
(b) that induces allergy
(c) that induces vomiting
(d) that induces cramps
Ans-(c) - We are visiting a satellite town:
(a) a town near a satellite station
(b) a town economically otherwise dependent
(c) a town beside another town
(d) a town having scientists in the majority
Ans- (d) - Camus by John Milton is in the form of a:
(a) Masque (b) Hymn
(c) Epic (d) Lyric
Ans- (a) - “He doesn’t work much” much “much sentence is used:
(a) to show emphasis in the positive degree
(b) to modify adverb
(c) to modify verb in a negative sentence
(d) to show the comparative
Ans- (c) - Milton was appointed to the position of Secretary to Cromwell’s Government chiefly of Latin due to his work:
(a) Paradise Lost
(b) Reason of Church Government
(c) On the Tenure of Kings and Magistrates
(d) Defensio Secunda
Ans-(c) - The term for the novel in most European languages is:
(a) Epistolary. (b) Roman
(c) Novelette (d) Picaresque
Ans-(a)
78.Samson Agonistes shows Milton’s desire to bring over into English:
(a) the methodology of Samson for all to know
(b) the gravity and calm dignity of the Greek tragedies
(c) the story of Samson was akin to his own life
(d) the bitter irony with which he could write
Ans-(b)
Questions No. 79 to 80: Choose the correct forms om the following sentences:
- To smoke cigarettes is injurious to health (begin with It is…….):
(a) It is injurious to health smoking cigarettes.
(b) It is injurious to health to smoke cigarettes,
(c) It is so injurious to smoke cigarettes.
(d) It is very injurious to health to smoke cigarettes.
Ans-(a) - He was so tired that he just on the bed (begin with He was tired enough….)
(a) He was tired enough he just lay on the bed.
(b) He was tired enough lying on the bed.
(c) He was tired enough just to lie on the bed.
(d) He was tired enough to lie on the bed.
Ans- (c)
Question No. 81 and 82 Identify the type of underlined adverb in the following sentences:
- Ram rarely goes to the bazar:
(a) Relative Adverb
(b) Adverb of Time
(c) Adverb of Frequency
(d) Adverb of Manner
Ans-(c) - I nearly had an accident:
(a) Adverb of Degree
(b) Adverb of Manner
(c) Sentence Adverb
(d) Adverb of Place
Ans-(b)
83.’Pathetic Fallacy is a phrase invented by:
(a) Shakespeare in 1591
(b) John Ruskin in 1856
(c) Oliver Goldsmith in 1761
(d) Carlyle in 1823
Ans- (b)
- L’Allegro and II Penseros mean:
(a) ‘the blind’ and ‘the unhappy man’
(b)’the desperate man’ and ‘the pensive man’
(c)’the joyous man’ and ‘the meditative man’
(d)’the philosopher’ and ‘the stalwart
Ans- (c)
Questions No. 85 to 89: Choose the correct preposition to fill the blanks in the following sentences:
- We get out……..life just what we put into it:
(a) from (b) to (c) of (d) in
Ans-(a)
86.A wise person always avail himself ….. opportunities provided:
(a) with. (b) of (c) about (d) in
Ans-(b)
- The law is not concerned………. political status of the accused:
(a) for. (b) in (c) about. (d) of
Ans- (c) - Bob can run 100 metres….20 minutes:
(a) at about. (b) in about
(c) in around (d) at in
Ans- (b)
89.Will you be here…the weekend?
(a) in (b) on. (c) about (d) at
Ans-(b)
Question No. 90 and 91: Insert the correct form of participle in the sentences below:
- He is a……………… teacher.
(a) retiring (b) retired
(c) retire (d) retirant
Ans-(b)
91.The…….object turned out to be a spinning top.
(a) movement. (b) moved
(c) moving (d) movable
Ans-(c)
- Identify the correct gerund form to rewrite the sentence-
“If a person cheats at business, he will never get anywhere, as business as thrives only on honesty”:
(a) cheated. (b) by cheating
(c) cheating. (d) as cheating
Ans-(c)
93.The Paradise Lost was completed by:
(a) 1666 (b) 1667(c) 1665 (d) 1663
Ans-(d)
- Complete the sentence with the correct infinitive:
……….there is difficult.
(a) When reaching (b) Reaching to
(c) Reaching for (d) To reach
Ans-(d) - John Milton’s magnificent ode On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity was written when the poet’s age was:
(a) 24 years (b) 21 years
(c) 26 years (d) 35 years
Ans- (b) - Which is the ‘verb form’ in the underlined part of the sentence?
She is going to attend a wedding.
(a) adverb (b) gerund
(c) infinitive (d) participate
Ans-(c) - Julius Caesar falls in point to time between:
(a) the comedies and histories
(b) the comedies and tragedies
(c) the histories and tragedies
(d) the tragedies and romances
Ans- (b) - Select the correct ‘gerund form’ from the following sentences:
(a) When painting stopped. The artist had looked up.
(b) Having painting stopped. The artist looking up.
(c) The paint stopped. The artist looked up.
(d) The painting had stopped. The artist looked up.
Ans- (d)
99.William Shakespeare was the third child of:
(a) Joseph Shakespeare and Mary John
(b) William Shakespeare and Mary Arden
(c) John Shakespeare and Mary Arden
(d) Jack Shakespeare and Mary William
Ans. (c)
100.Heroic drama was a form mainly specific to :
(a) Anglo-Saxon Heroic period
(b) Romantic period
(c) Restoration period
(d) Elizabethan period
Ans. (c)
- ‘The Pulitzer Prize’ is awarded by:
(a) The American Government
(b) The Council of American Arts and Letters
(c) The Ford Foundation
(d) Columbia University, New York
Ans. (d)
102.Give the meaning of DIFFIDENCE:
(a) Imperfect (b) Discouraging
(c) Lacking self-confidence
(d) Humility
Ans.(c)
Question No. 103 to 107: Tick the correct antonym of the words given blow:
- Celibacy
(a) marriagable (b) marriage
(c) matrimony. (d) matrimonial
Ans. (c) - Ecstasy:
(a) happiness (b) agony
(c) ailment (d) amiable
Ans. (b)
105.Exonerate
(a) affect (b) accuse
(c) acclaim (d) abdicate
Ans.(b)
- Frugal:
(a) little. (b) uplifting
(c) petty (d) lavish
Ans.(d)
107.Unbiase
(a) progressive (b) preference
(c) prejudiced (d) cowardice
Ans. (c)
- The meaning of the idiom ‘to keep one’s shirt on’ is:
(a) to be in trouble
(b) to praise oneself
(c) to control one’s temper
(d) to explore every alternative
Ans.(c)
109.One of the following is an ‘epistolary novel’:
(a) Pamela or Virtue Rewarded
(b) Gil Blas
(c) The House of the Seven Gables
(d) Moll Flanders
Ans. (a)
110.The plural for ‘woman doctor is:
(a) Women doctors
(b) Women doctor
(c) Woman doctor (d) None of these
Ans.(a)
- Zounds’ is an euphemism for:
(a) Zairre sounds (b) Gosh darn
(c) God’s love (d) God’s wounds
Ans.(d) - The singular for ‘diagnoses’:
(a) diegnoses (b) diagnosis
(c) diagnose. (d) diagnosie
Ans. (b)
113.The correct lexical form in the singular of ‘phenomena’ is:
(a) phenomenis (b) phenomenanon
(c) phenamena. (d) phenomenon
Ans.(d)
- She sang and danced happily. Identify the nature of the underlined verbs
(a) Transitive verbs
(b) Intransitive verbs
(c) Verbs of incomplete predication
(d) Regular verbs
Ans. (b)
Questions No. 115 to 124: Tick the correct spelling:
(a) Macaber (b) Macabre
(c)Macebre. (d) Macbre
Ans.(b)
116.
(a) Occasion (b) Ocassion
(c) Occassion (d) Occasion
Ans.(a)
(a) Acommodete (b) Acommodait
(c)Accommodate (d) Accomodate
Ans.(c)
(a) Beisige (b) Besiege
(c) Beseige (d) Bisiege
Ans (b)
(a) Dielemma (b) Dilemma
(c) Dilema (d) Dillema
Ans (b)
120.
(a) Coroborete (b) Corobborate
(c) Coroborate (d) Corroborate
Ans. (d)
121
(a) Disappear (b) Dissappear
(c) Dissapear (d) Dissapeare
Ans.(a)
122.
(a) Hmmorhage (b) Hemorrhage
(c) Heimorage (d) Heimorrhage
Ans. (b)
123.
(a) Liaizone (b) Liasion
(c) Liaison. (d) Liason
Ans. (c)
124.
(a) Pronunceable (b) Pronounceable
(c) Prounciable (d) Pronounciable
Ans. (b)- Strife dramatizes:
(a) a drama between lovers
(b) an interpersonal rlationship
(c) a strike (d) a war
Ans. (c)