Easy Tutorial
For Competitive Exams

Select the correct option that fills the blank(s) to make the sentence
meaningfully complete. : Unlike other examples of . . . . verse, Miltons Lycidas
does more than merely mourn the death of Edward King; it also denounces
corruption in the Church in which King was ordained.

satiric
elegiac
free
humorous
didactic
Additional Questions

Select the correct option that fills the blank(s) to make the sentence meaningfully complete. :
In Japanese art, profound emotion is frequently couched in images of nature, observed with . . . . conditioned
by life in a land of dramatic seasonal change, where perils of earthquake and typhoon make natures bounty .
. . . and its processes awesome and beautiful.

Answer

Select the correct option that fills the blank(s) to make the sentence
meaningfully complete. : Because it arrives so early in the season, before many
other birds, the robin has been called the . . . . of spring.

Answer

Select the correct option that fills the blank(s) to make the sentence
meaningfully complete. : In place of the more general debate about abstract
principles of government that most delegates probably expected, the
Constitutional Convention put . . . . proposals on the table.

Answer

In the question, there is a sentence of which some parts have been jumbled
up. Re-arrange these parts which are labelled P, Q, R and S to produce the correct
sentence. Choose the proper sequence. : It is easy to excuse
P: but it is hard
Q: in a boy of fourteen
R: the mischief of early childhood
S: to tolerate even unavoidable faults

Answer

In the question, there is a sentence of which some parts have been jumbled
up. Re-arrange these parts which are labelled P, Q, R and S to produce the correct
sentence. Choose the proper sequence. : I saw that
P: but seeing my host in this mood
Q: I deemed it proper to take leave
R: as I had frequently done before
S: it had been my intention to pass the night there

Answer

In the question, there is a sentence of which some parts have been jumbled
up. Re-arrange these parts which are labelled P, Q, R and S to produce the correct
sentence. Choose the proper sequence. : People
P: at his dispensary
Q: went to him
R: of all professions
S: for medicine and treatment

Answer

In the question, there is a sentence of which some parts have been jumbled
up. Re-arrange these parts which are labelled P, Q, R and S to produce the correct
sentence. Choose the proper sequence. : He told us that
P: and enjoyed it immensely
Q:in a prose translation
R: he had read Milton
S: which he had borrowed from his teacher

Answer

In the question, there is a sentence of which some parts have been jumbled
up. Re-arrange these parts which are labelled P, Q, R and S to produce the correct
sentence. Choose the proper sequence. : We have to
P: as we see it
Q: speak the truth
R: there is falsehood and darkness
S: even if all around us

Answer

In the question, there is a sentence of which some parts have been jumbled
up. Re-arrange these parts which are labelled P, Q, R and S to produce the correct
sentence. Choose the proper sequence. : It was
P: in keeping with my mood
Q: a soft summer evening
R: as I walked sedately
S: in the direction of the new house

Answer

In the question each passage consists of six sentences. The first and the
sixth sentences are given in the beginning. The middle four sentences have been
removed and jumbled up. These are labelled P, Q, R and S. Select the proper
order for the four sentences. : S1: Metals are today being replaced by polymers in
many applications.
S6: Many Indian Institutes of Science and Technology run special programmes on
polymer science.
P: Above all, they are cheaper and easier to process, making them a viable
alternative to metals.
Q: Polymers are essentially long chains of hydrocarbon molecules.
R: Today polymers are as strong as metals.
S: These have replaced the traditional chromium-plated metallic bumpers in cars.

Answer
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