English Practice Question and Answer
8 Q:Read the following passage carefully and give the answer of following questions.
Art both reflects and interprets the notion that produced it. Portraiture was the dominant theme of British painting up to the end of the eighteenth century because of a persistent demand for it. It would be unfair to say that human vanity and pride of possessions were the only reasons for this persistent demand, but certainly these motives played their part in shaping the course of British painting. Generally speaking, it is the artist's enthusiasm that accounts for the vitality of the picture, but it is the client who dictates its subject-matter. The history of national enthusiasms can be pretty accurately estimated by examining the subject-matter of a nation's art.
There is one type of subject which recurs again and again in British painting of the late eighteenth century and the jart half of the nineteenth and which is hardly met with in the jart of any other country ---- the sporting picture, or rather the picture in which a love of outdoor life is directed into the channel of sport. The sporting picture is really an extension of the conversation piece. In it the emphasis is even more firmly based on the descriptive side of painting. It made severe demands on the artist and it must be-confessed that painters capable of satisfying these demands were rare. The ability to paint a reasonably convincing landscape is not often combined with the necessary knowledge of horses and dogs in movement and the power to introduce a portrait when necessary. To weld such diverse elements into a satisfactory aesthetic unity requires exceptional ability. It is not surprising, therefore, that while sporting pictures abound in England, especially in the private collections of country squires, not many of them are of real importance as works of art. What makes the sporting picture worth noting in, a history of British painting is the fact that it is as truly indigenous and as truly popular a form of art in England as was the religious ikon in Russia.
The vitality of the picture depends on
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5f3a25bde2e6e42e42b7cd31There is one type of subject which recurs again and again in British painting of the late eighteenth century and the jart half of the nineteenth and which is hardly met with in the jart of any other country ---- the sporting picture, or rather the picture in which a love of outdoor life is directed into the channel of sport. The sporting picture is really an extension of the conversation piece. In it the emphasis is even more firmly based on the descriptive side of painting. It made severe demands on the artist and it must be-confessed that painters capable of satisfying these demands were rare. The ability to paint a reasonably convincing landscape is not often combined with the necessary knowledge of horses and dogs in movement and the power to introduce a portrait when necessary. To weld such diverse elements into a satisfactory aesthetic unity requires exceptional ability. It is not surprising, therefore, that while sporting pictures abound in England, especially in the private collections of country squires, not many of them are of real importance as works of art. What makes the sporting picture worth noting in, a history of British painting is the fact that it is as truly indigenous and as truly popular a form of art in England as was the religious ikon in Russia.
- 1the strength of the artistfalse
- 2the incentive given to him for his workfalse
- 3the persistent demand for his workfalse
- 4the enthusiasm of the artisttrue
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Answer : 4. "the enthusiasm of the artist"
Q:Direction: In the following questions, some part of the sentence is underlined. Which of the options given below the sentence should replace the part underlined to make the sentence grammatically correct? If the sentence is correct as it is given then choose option E ‘No Correction required’ as the answer.
The Prime Minister’s casual remarks about the role of ethnicity in unemployment numbers has predictably put the cat among the pigeons on both sides of the political spectrum
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62f0d9ca06679c6dabc5bbe8- 1Put the dog among horsesfalse
- 2Put the cat among micefalse
- 3Put the cat among pigeonstrue
- 4Put the pigeons among catfalse
- 5No Correction Requiredfalse
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Answer : 3. "Put the cat among pigeons"
Q: Select the most appropriate option to fill in the blank.
In space it is possible to identify and ________ some unique characteristics of human physiology and biology.
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644b95c06b39d4ce23d6afe1- 1isolatetrue
- 2excessfalse
- 3repletefalse
- 4partitionfalse
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Answer : 1. "isolate"
Q: Select the most appropriate meaning of the given idiom.
Back on one’s feet
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6422458e2b960e1a41808d42- 1To support the losing sidefalse
- 2Relive previous momentsfalse
- 3Well or successful againtrue
- 4Forced to begin something againfalse
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Answer : 3. "Well or successful again"
Q:Select the option that expresses the given sentence in passive voice.
I am training a new batch of officers now.
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6462222dcdae930acb770006- 1A new batch of officers are trained now.false
- 2A new batch of officers were being trained by me now.false
- 3A new batch of officers are training me now.false
- 4A new batch of officers is being trained by me.true
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Answer : 4. "A new batch of officers is being trained by me."
Q:Rewrite the sentence in direct speech.
They said that they played cricket.
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632b02a3751e5310a5c237be- 1They said, "They plays cricket"false
- 2They said, "They are playing cricket"false
- 3They said, "They have been playing cricket"false
- 4They said, "We play cricket"true
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Answer : 4. "They said, "We play cricket""
Q:Direction: In the following questions, a sentence has been given in Active voice. Out of the four alternatives suggested, select the one which best expresses the same sentence in Passive voice.
The telephone had been invented by Graham Bell.
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632c70cd751e5310a5cacc5f- 1Graham Bell should have invented the telephonefalse
- 2Graham Bell has invented the telephonefalse
- 3Graham Bell had invented the telephonetrue
- 4Graham Bell invented the telephonefalse
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Answer : 3. "Graham Bell had invented the telephone "
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