Harbinger Final
Harbinger Final
2
A. having B. has C. have D. had E. will have
49. The line is busy, someone ___________ be using the telephone now.
A. should B. must C. will D. shall E. has to
50. Jubaer has not been able to recall where ______ .
A. does she live B. did she live C. she lives D. lived the girl E. she did live
51. The Dean informed us that ____________ by the faculty because of his past academic record.
A. the applicant had not and never will be accepted B. the applicant had not been and never would be accepted
C. the applicant had not been and never will be excepted D. the applicant had not been and never would be excepted
E. the applicant had not and never would be accepted
52. With the exception of ________ assignment by the stipulated (w÷wcD&‡jB&‡UW& - cÖ`Ë) time schedule (UvB&g& †¯‹wRD&j& - mgqmxgv)
A. Farzad and I, all the students finished their B. Farzad and I, all the students have finished their
C. Farzad and me, all the students had been finished their D. Farzad and me, all the students finished their
E. Farzad and me, all the students had finished their
53. People are found reluctant (wijvK&U¨vb&U& - Awb”QzK) to ________________ the habit of using play bag.
A. give in B. give up C. give away D. give on E. give off
54. A good entrepreneur starts a business with ______ and ______.
A. quality ..... product B. commitment (A½xKvi; cÖwZkÖ“wZ) ..... responsibility C. courage (g‡bvej) ............. energy
D. magnanimity (g¨vM&b¨vwbwgwU - gnvbyfeZv) ..... repertory (†icvi&‡Uvix) E. sustainability, success
55. The rebels sought to overcome (Ifvi&Kvg& - civf~Z Kiv) the _______ of strength of the government forces by guerilla tactics.
A. opposition B. superiority C. absence D. adequacy(G¨v‡W‡Kv‡qB&wm - ch©vßZv) E. humanity
56. Money to a potential campaign should be used for political purposes and nothing else.
A. attracted B. forwarded C. contributed D. donated E. channeled
57. You cannot stop me __________ what I want.
A. do B. doing C. to do D. that I do E. from doing
58. The star athlete’s decision to take ______ was due to his loss of _______.
A. medicine ..... earnings B. time-off ..... form C. advice ..... memory
D. flight ..... weight E. counseling ..... common sense
59. The politician’s speech was __, overflowing with praise for the work he has done for his constituency (wbR GjvKvi RbMY).
A. credible (wek¦vm‡hvM¨) B. sensitive C. legitimate (AvBbm½Z) D. effusive (D”Q¡vmc~Y©) E. obligatory
60. To answer accurately is more important than___ .
A. a quick finish B. to finish quickly C. finishing quickly D. you finish quickly E. be finish quickly
61. He is the ________ of the five brothers.
A. older B. oldest C. eldest D. elder E. much older
62. He talks as if he ____ mad.
A. was B. were C. has been D. had been E. is
63. _______ the very dawn of history, the wealthy have dominated (cÖvavb¨ we¯—vi Kiv) ______ weak.
A. Since ..... over B. Since ..... on C. From ..... on D. From ..... against E. In ..... to
64. Learners of language often fail to _____ between unfamiliar (AcwiwPZ) sounds in that language.
A. understand B. differ C. separate D. distinguish (cv_©K¨ Kiv) E. solve
65. Each political party has traditionally viewed the constitution in the light of its own _______ .
A. feeling B. trial C. philosophy (a¨vb-aviYv) D. emotion E. decision
66. The store owner said that he would not be _____ for the damages if the appliances (hš¿cvwZ) were improperly installed.
A. depressed B. responsible C. delivered D. attenuated E. making profit
67. The manager tried to retain (eRvq ivLv) control of the situation in the enterprise (e¨emvq), but his attempt was _________
by the trade union leaders.
A. frustrated (e¨_© nIqv) B. justified C. witnessed D. disclosed E. endorsed
68. The antonym for ‘Recalcitrant’ (Aeva¨)
A. Compliant B. Passive C. Indifferent D. Careful
69. The antonym of ‘inimical’(kΓZv)-
A. Hostile B. Friendly C. Indifferent D. Angry
70. The opposite word of ‘sluggish’(wb¯Œxq)-
A. Animated B. Dull C. Heavy D. Slow
71. The antonym of ‘indifference’(D`vmxbZv) is-
A. Ardour B. compassion C. Anxiety D. concern
72. What is the antonym of ‘famous’ (weL¨vZ, cÖwm×)?
A. Opaque B. Illiterate C. Obscure D. Immature
Choose the correct synonym of the followings:
73. The meaning of word ‘obese’ (†gvUv) is........
A. very fat B. ugly C. tardy D. obnoxious
74. The word ‘bounty’ (D`viZv) is closest in meaning to
A. generosity B. familiar C. dividing line D. sympathy
75. Identify the correct synonym for the word ‘magnanimous’ (gnvbyfe).
3
A. generous B. unkind C. revengeful D. friendly
76. The synonym for ‘obdurate’ (GK¸‡q)-
A. Deceitful B. Stubborn C. Sly (†Mvc‡b) D. Swindler (cÖZviYv Kiv)
77. A synonym for ‘Resentment’ (weiw³) is-
A. Fear B. anger C. Indignation D. panic(AvZ¼)
mZK©xKiY: wb‡P cÖ`Ë DËimg~‡ni wmwiqvj b¤^‡i †hgb-‘a’ ¯’‡j ‘b’, ‘b’ ¯’‡j ‘c’ BZ¨vw` wcÖw›Us wgm&†UK n‡Z cv‡i| ‡m‡¶‡Î a/b/c/d wmwiqvj
b¤^i wgjv‡bvi cvkvcvwk evsjv e¨vL¨vUv fvj K‡i c‡o mwVK wmwiqvj b¤^iwU wbwðZ nIqvi Rb¨ QvÎ-QvÎx‡`i Aby‡iva Kiv †Mj|
1 (c) look forward to Gi ci †h verb e‡m Zvi mv‡_ Aek¨B ing hy³ nq| ZvB GLv‡b go bv n‡q going n‡e|
2. (c) verb Gi Av‡M pronoun Gi subjective form em‡e|
3. (b) going verb Gi subjcet wn‡m‡e pronoun Gi objective form us bv e‡m subjective form we em‡e|
4. (d) conditional sentence-G if hy³ AskwU present tense-G n‡j c‡ii As‡k will, may, must I can e‡m|
5. (d) If hy³ sentence-wU hw` ÒˆeÁvwbKfv‡e mZ¨Ó Ggb A_© †`q Z‡e If Qvov AskwU future indefinite I present tense `yB-B n‡Z cv‡i|
6. (c) If Qvov AskwU future indefinite tense-G n‡j If hy³ AskwU present tense-G nq|
7. (d) If hy&³ AskwU past indefinite tense-G n‡j if Qvov As‡k would, could, might e‡m|
8. (d) Dc‡ii wbq‡g n‡q‡Q|
9. (a) If Gi b¨vq unless w`‡q I conditional sentence MwVZ nq| ZvB GKB sentence-G Giv GKB mv‡_ em‡Z cv‡i bv| nq If bv nq unless n‡e|
10. (d) As if/As though Gi Av‡Mi Ask present tense-Gi n‡j Gi c‡ii AskwU past indefinite tense-G nq|
11. (a) wish mvaviYZ Aev¯—e m¤¢vebvi †¶‡Î e¨eüZ nq| GLv‡b ejv n‡”Q, Bk& Avwg hw` cvwU©‡Z Dcw¯’Z _vKZvg A_©vr Zvic‡¶ GLb _vKv m¤¢e bq| GRb¨
wish-Gi ci mvaviYZ Past indefinite ev Past perfect tense e¨eüZ nq| ZvB GLv‡b were n‡e| D‡j- L¨, Am¤¢e ev KvíwbK †¶‡Î Be verb Gi
mv‡_ was bv e‡m always were e‡m|
12. (c) Preposition Gi ci Pronoun-Gi Objective form e‡m ZvB GLv‡b he bv e‡m him em‡e|
13. (b) be verb (am, is, are, was, were) Gici Pronoun Gi Subjective form e‡m| ZvB GLv‡b me bv e‡m I em‡e|
14. (d) GLv‡b relative pronoun who wb‡`©k Ki‡Q I ‡K Avi I Gi ci am e‡m ZvB GLv‡b who Gi ci am em‡e|
15. (d) GLv‡b than that of Dhaka ej‡Z the weather of Dhaka ‡evSv‡”Q|
16. (b) Comparative degree Gi †¶‡Î hw` ev‡K¨ Of the two K_vwU _v‡K Zvn‡j Comparative degree Gi c~‡e© the em‡e| ZvB mwVK DËi n‡e the
better.
17. (b) and w`‡q hy³ `ywU noun w`‡q GKB aviYv cÖKvk Ki‡j Giv singular wn‡m‡e KvR K‡i| Avi singular subject Gi mv‡_ doesn’t e‡m, don’t bq|
18. (c) Fraction (fMœvsk) Gici uncountable noun ‘work’ _vKvq verb ‘have’ bv n‡q ‘has’ n‡e|
19. (b) mg‡qi cwigvb, `~i‡Z¡i cwigvb Ges UvKvi cwigvb subject wn‡m‡e em‡j G‡`i ci verb singular nq| ZvB GLv‡b are bv n‡q is n‡e|
20. (c) A number of w`‡q †Kvb clause ïi“ n‡j Gi ci plural noun Ges plural verb nq| ZvB GLv‡b has bv n‡q have n‡e|
21. (c) of his eyes n‡”Q middleman. GLv‡b g~j subject n‡”Q the colour hv singular ZvB Gi verb wU-I singular n‡e|
22. (d) Neither ---- nor Ges either ----or GB ai‡bi Congunction-Gi †¶‡Î nor Ges or Gi c‡ii noun ev Pronoun Abyhvqx verb-Gi form
wba©vwiZ nq| ZvB GLv‡b †h‡nZz nor Gici his brothers A_©vr plural noun ‡`qv Av‡Q ZvB verb I plural A_©vr are n‡e|
23. (c) Many a w`‡q evK¨ ïi“ n‡j many a-Gici singular noun n‡e Ges Gi verb I Singular n‡e| ZvB GLv‡b have bv e‡m has em‡e|
24. (c) indefinite pronoun eacy/every sentence-G subject wn‡m‡e em‡j verb singular nq|
25. (a) And Øviv hy³ `yBwU noun Gi GKwUi c~‡e© article em‡j `yBwU noun-‡K GKB e¨w³ ev e¯—y ai‡Z n‡e Ges G‡`i ci singular verb n‡e| ZvB
GLv‡b has n‡e|
26. (a) lest (GB Avk¼vq) hy³ sentence-G subject Gi ci shuould/might e‡m|
27. (a) ev‡K¨ along with, accompanied by, accompanied with, as well as BZ¨vw` _vK‡j G‡`i Av‡M Aew¯’Z noun ev pronoun Øviv verb
wbav©wiZ nq| GLv‡b †h‡nZz along with Gi c~‡e© singular noun Sumon ‡`qv Av‡Q, ZvB Gi verb n‡e singular.
28. (d) make Gi ci person _vK‡j c‡ii verb Gi present form nq| G ai‡bi sentence negative Ki‡Z n‡j do not, does not, did not bv
ewm‡q ïay not emv‡Z n‡e|
29. (c) get verb hLb causative verb wn‡m‡e e¨eüZ n‡e, ZLb Zvi c‡i e¨w³ em‡j Aci verb wUi c~‡e© to e‡m| ZvB GLv‡b Change bv n‡q to
change n‡e|
30. (a) have hLb-causative verb wn‡m‡e e¨eüZ n‡e ZLb Gici e¯‘ _vK‡j cieZx© verb-wUi past participle form nq|
31. (b) ev‡K¨ need _vK‡j cieZx© verb Gi mv‡_ ing hy³ n‡e A_ev to be + verb-Gi past participle form em‡e| ZvB GLv‡b nq washing ev to be
washed n‡e|
32. (c) Principle clause G subjective verb (‡hgb : advice, ask, suggest, command ev recommand) _vK‡j Aci clause (subordinate)-
Gi be verb (am, is, are, was, were) Gi base form e‡m| ZvB GLv‡b is verb Gi base form wn‡m‡e be n‡e|
33. (c) Principle clause-G necessary, essential, important etc hw` adjective wn‡m‡e _v‡K, Z‡e Aci clause (subordinate)-Gi verb
(auxiliary _v‡K bv) n‡e base form-G| ZvB GLv‡b are bv n‡q be n‡e|
34. (c) hw` principle clause-Gi object wn‡m‡e proposal, preference, request, requirement etc _v‡K Z‡e subordinate clause Gi verb
(auxiliary hw` _v‡K) me mgq base form-G em‡e| ZvB GLv‡b is bv n‡q be n‡e|
35. (c) hw` †Kvb clause-G high time kãwU _v‡K Z‡e cieZ©x clause-wU past indefinite-G nq| ZvB GLv‡b will go bv n‡q ïay went n‡e|
36. (c) would that w`‡q †Kvb sentence ïi“ n‡j subject Gici could e‡m|
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37. (d) worth (†hvM¨) Gi ciewZ© verb Gi mv‡_ ing hy³ nq|
38. (b) used to Gici verb Gi present form Avi Get/Be used to Gi ci verb Gi mv‡_ ing hy³ nq|
39. (d) Since-Gi c~‡e©i clause-wU hw` present tense-G nq Z‡e since-Gi cieZx© clause wUi past indefinite tense n‡e|
40. (c) would rather Gi ci verb Gi present form e‡m|
41. (d) so do I nq wKš—y I do so nq bv|
42. (d) I don’t either ev neither do I nq|
43. (d) RvwZi bv‡gi c~‡e© article e‡m wKš—y fvlvi bv‡gi c~‡e© †Kvb article e‡m bv| GLv‡b ïay English n‡e|
44. (d) Book Gi f~wgKv‡K preface (f~wgKv) e‡j, constitution (kvmbZš¿) Gi f~wgKv‡K preamble (g~LeÜ, f~wgKv) e‡j|
45. (a) msm` ev AvBb mfvi mwVK evbvb parliament.
46. (a) Flexible-Gi A_© bgbxq| Stubborn Gi A_© †R`x, Costly Gi A_© `vgx, Impoverished Gi A_© `wi`ª Ges Few A_© Aí ÔbgbxqÕ Gi wecixZ
iƒc n‡”Q †R`x| ZvB mwVK DËi n‡e (a).
47. (c) Vacillate Gi A_© †`vUvbvq cov| Assauge-Gi A_© Dckg Kiv| Aggravate-Gi A_© AebwZ nIq| Waver-Gi A_© †`vUvbvq cov| Chastise Gi
A_© wZi®‹vi Kiv|
48. (B) A_©vr †h eBwU Avwg †Zvgv‡K avi w`‡qwQjvg, †mwU‡Z GKwU fvj bibliography (wee&wjI&MÖvwd gv‡b †Kv‡bv †jL‡Ki iwPZ MÖš’vejxi ZvwjKv) Av‡Q|
Sentence-wUi subject the book singular nIqv‡Z verb singular (has) n‡e| avi w`‡qwQj c~‡e© wKš‘ eBwUi good bibligraphy GL‡bvI eZ©gvb|
ZvB Present tense-G (has) n‡e|
49. (B) eZ©gv‡b telephone jvBb busy Av‡Q; ZvB C, D I E ev`| (B)-Gi must Øviv correct sentence n‡e| †hgb must be ........ing correct
structure|
50. (C) where-Gi c~‡e©i independent clause-wUI present tense-G Av‡Q e‡j, Gi c‡ii dependent clause-wU present form-G n‡e| ZvB
Answer (C) n‡e|
51. (B) GLv‡b gap-Gi ci by the faculty _vKv‡Z eySv hvq blank-G sentence-Gi passive form em‡e| (A), (C) ev`, KviY will be-Gi ¯’v‡b
would be n‡e| (D) sentence-Gi meaning-Gi mv‡_ Lvc hvq bv| Answer choice (E)-Gi cÖ_g Ask passive form-G bq| Answer choice
(B)-B grammatically Ges sentence-Gi A_© Abyhvqx Lvc Lvq|
52. (D) exception _vKv‡Z ‘I’-Gi cwie‡Z© objective pronoun me n‡e| d‡j A I B ev`| C-‡Z h_vµ‡g verb-Gi passive form had been I past
perfect form ‘had finished’ _vKv‡Z G¸wjI incorrect| wba©vwiZ mg‡qi g‡a¨ assignment †kl K‡iwQj e‡j GwU past indefinite form-G n‡e|
myZivs Answer n‡e D| Answer choice E past perfect form-G Av‡Q| GwU fyj|
53. (B) GLv‡b give in gv‡b bwZ¯^xKvi Kiv; give up cwiZ¨vM Kiv; give away gv‡b weZiY Kiv; give off gv‡b †avuqv; MÜ BZ¨vw` wbtm„Z Kiv| sentence-
Gi reluctant to (Awb”QyK)-Gi ci †Kvb wKQy MÖnY ev Z¨vM Kiv n‡e| gv‡b ‡Kvb habit MÖnY ev Z¨vM Kiv n‡e| Answer choice-Gi B-Gi give up
emv‡j evK¨wUi A_©c~Y© nq|
54. (B) Commitment and responsibility gv‡b cÖwZkÖ“wZ I `vwq‡Z¡i mwnZ GKRb fvj D‡`¨v³v Zvi e¨emv ïi“ K‡ib| Avi quality and product
emv‡j evK¨ A_©c~Y© nq bv| A_©vr word choice-Gi w`K we‡ePbv Ki‡j Answer choice B-B Lv‡U|
55. (B) Sentence-Gi †k‡l Av‡Q by guerrilla (†Mwijv) tactics gv‡b ¸ß`‡j wef³ n‡q kΓc‡¶i ms‡M hy× Kivi †KŠkj| G‡Z eySv hvq rebel ev
we‡`ªvnx‡`i kw³ miKvix ˆmb¨evwnbxi †P‡q Kg Ges Kg ¶gZv wb‡q †ekx strength ev ¶gZvi wei“‡× hy× Ki‡Z ev Rq Ki‡Z D³ tactics Aej¤^b
K‡iwQj| myZivs gap-G (B)-Gi superiority n‡e| gv‡b superiority of strength of the govt. (kw³ ev ¶gZvi w`K w`‡q miKvix evwnbxi †kªôZ¡)
overcome Kivi Rb¨ guerrilla tactics-Gi Øviv †Póv K‡iwQj|
56. (C), (D) GLv‡b C, D-Gi contribute, donate gv‡b †Kvb msMV‡b Pvu`v ev mvnvh¨ Kiv eySvq ev UvKv cqmv `vb Kiv eySvq| Sentence-G political D‡Ï‡k¨
cwiPvwjZ campaign (cÖPvivwfhvb)-G money donate Ges contribute `ywU-B nq| myZivs Answer n‡e C, D|
57. (E) stop-Gi mv‡_ someone Ges c‡i doing _vKvq gv‡S from emv‡Z n‡e| A_©vr from doing n‡e| myZivs Answer (E)|
58. (B) time-off gv‡b Kg©weiwZ (wb‡Ri KvR †_‡K weiZ _vKv)| form gv‡b n‡jv Kv‡Ri gvb ev level|
59. (D) effusive speech gv‡b Av‡e‡M Avc- yZ n‡q †h K_v ejv nq|
60. (B) To answer accurately _vKvq parallel to finish quickly n‡e|
61. (C) cvuP fvB‡qi g‡a¨ eo nIqvq oldest bv n‡q eldest n‡e|
62. (B) Abygvb ev Kíbv ev Aev¯—e NUbv eySv‡Z were e‡m|
63. (A) KviI Dci cÖvavb¨ we¯—vi Kiv eySv‡Z dominate over nq|
64. (D) distinguish-Gi c‡i between e‡m|
65. (C) cÖ‡Z¨K party-B Zv‡`i wbR¯^ a¨vb-aviYvi Av‡jv‡K msweavb‡K †`‡L|
66. (B) Responsible for n‡e|
67. (A) Passive form-G _vKvq was frustrated by n‡e|
68. (A) 69. (B) 70. (A) 71. (D) 72. (C) 73. (A) 74. (A) 75. (A) 76. (B) 77. (C)
Suggestion Level # 02
1. Congress, acting on the recommendations of special subcommittees, decides how much money_________ in education.
A. The government which is spending. B. The government will spend. C. Will the government spend.
D. The Spending of the government. E. The government which will spend
2. When population is not checked by artificial means (K…wÎg Dcv‡q) ____________ increases putting more strain (Pressure-
Pvc) on limited natural resources.
A. Then B. than C. So D. It E. it is
3. Public transportation vehicles (fvBKj-Mvwo/hvb) are what________ as a chief cause of the deterioration (WxwUwiq‡iU-Ae¯’v
5
AwaKZi Lvivc Kiv ev nIqv/AebwZ) of ozone (I‡Rvb-NwbfyZ Av¤vRvb/welv³ M¨vm)|
A. have identified many ecologists. B. have many ecologists identified. C. many ecologists have identified
D. have many identified ecologists. E. many identified ecologists have.
4. Every year Canada’s __________ approximately (A¨vcÖKwm‡gUwj-cÖvq/KvQvKvwQ) One and a half million tons of fish and
seafood products.
A. Seafood industry that Produces B. Producing seafood industry. C. Seafood industry produces.
D. that produces to seafood industry. E. Seafood industry that Produces.
5. The number of hispanic (wnm&‡cwbK - ‡¯úwbk we‡klZ: j¨vwUb Av‡gwiKvi †jvKRb|) children enrolled (Gb‡ivj& - ZvwjKve× Kiv / wj‡LivLv)
in the new York Public School System in the year 2000 depend on whether__________.
A. will the immigration (Awfevmb) will continue. B. continues the immigration rate.
C. the immigration rate what will continue. D. will continue the immigration rate. E. the immigration rate will continue.
Sample Comprehension-1
Sample Comprehension-2
Questions 30-38 are based on the following passage.
Walt Whitman, born in New York in 1819, was one of America’s unusual literary figures. An individualist, he rambled (Ny‡i
†eov‡bv) through the countryside seeing people & making them his own. His experiences at earning a living were varied: times in
his life he was a printer, a teacher, a carpenter, a nurse, & a newspaper editor. He was a big-hearted man, open & accepting. He
gave freely of his time by caring for the wounded during the Civil War. Though he lived in the city he often spent time in the
country, developing a strong sense of nature that carried through to his poems. In 1855 he collected many of the verses he had
written and published them in one thin volume, Leaves of Grass, a book that he revised & rewrote all the rest of his life. The book
was not well received at the time; it was ridiculed by some poets & generally ignored by others, probably because his verse forms
were not traditional. Whitman broke from tradition because he felt that it was necessary to achieve a new poetic form in order to
communicate his views. His reputation didn’t grow until after his death, & it reached a high point in the 1920s. Since then,
Whitman’s style has greatly influenced modern poets.
accepted until they have been duplicated (cybivq cix¶v Kiv) in other laboratories. No error
(B) (C) (D) (E)
1. (B) verb ‘decides’ Gi object wn‡m‡e GKwU noun clause jvM‡e| Avi noun clause G GKwU clause marker, GKwU subject I GKwU
verb jv‡M| mwVK DËi: (B)
2. (D) verb ‘increase’ Gi GKwU subject jvM‡e|
3. (C) GLv‡bI GKwU noun clause jvM‡e| noun clause-G GKwU clause marker, GKwU subject I GKwU verb jv‡M| Question-G already
clause marker _vKvq GLb ïay GKwU subject I verb jvM‡e|mwVK DËi (C)
4. (C) Sentence wU‡Z †Kvb Subject I verb †bB| ZvB Sentence-wU mwVK Kivi Rb¨ GKwU subject I verb cÖ‡qvRb| myZivs (C)-B mwVK DËi|
5. (E) GLv‡bI GKwU noun clause jvM‡e| Clause marker ‘whether’ _vKvq GKwU Subject I verb cÖ‡qvRb| GKgvÎ E-†ZB Subject I verb
i‡q‡Q| ZvB mwVK DËi (E)
6. (B) Passage-G †jLK bZzb GKwU hš¿ m¤ú©‡K Information ev Z_¨ w`‡”Qb|
7. (A) Device A_© †Kvb we‡kl D‡Ïk¨ mva‡bi Rb¨ hš¿
8. (C) hold in place Gi hold Gi RvqMvq keep ewm‡q keep in place ejv hvq; A_©- RvqMv gZ a‡i ivLv|
9. (B) Detachable A_© miv‡bv ev bov‡bv hvq Ggb|
10. (A) Inference Questions. Device Uv unique nIqv‡Z †evSv hv‡”Q Magnet- Gi G ai‡bi e¨envi Av‡M nq wb|
11. (B) 5th line-G ejv n‡jv, device-Uv kªeYmgm¨vq Avµvš— †jv‡Ki gvÎ 20%-‡K mvnvh¨ Ki‡e| ZvB (B) wVK bq|
12. (D) inference question. sound-processing unit Avi magnet wKš‘ Avjv`v Avjv`v wRwbm|
13. (D) persistent A_© bv‡Qvoev›`v = constant= AweiZ|
14. (A) relief- (Kó †_‡K †invB)| less distress – K‡ói KgwZ|
15. (C) A‡bK ACTS (A¨vKUm-ce© ev AsK) wg‡j PLAY (bvUK) nq| A‡bK chapters (P¨vcUvi Ask ev `„k¨) wg‡j GKUv novel nq|
16. (D) COPYRIGHT (MÖš’¯^Ë¡) Øviv eB‡qi Dci AUTHOR (A_vi) GK‡PwUqv AwaKvi cÖwZwôZ nq| Patent Øviv D™¢vweZ wRwb‡mi Dci
inventor-Gi GK‡PwUqv AwaKvi cÖwZwôZ nq|
17. (A) CHANNEL (Rjc_)- G mwVK c_ wb‡`©‡ki Rb¨ BUOY (eqv-b`xc‡_ fvmgvb w`K wb‡`©kK/Av‡jvK wb‡`©kK jv‡M|) Society-‡Z mwVK c_
wb‡`©‡ki Rb¨ laws (AvBb/ixwZbxwZ) jv‡M|
18. (D) INDIFFERENT (D`vmxb) Ges CONCERN (`ywðš—v) n‡jv wecixZ| Arrogant Ges Modest n‡jv wecixZ kã|
19. (C) Amusement Gi d‡j smile (nvwm) Av‡m| Boredom Gi d‡j yawn (nvB) Av‡m|
20. (D) Heart Gi KvR Pump Kiv| Stomach Gi KvR Digest (nRg Kiv)
21. (A) Wave (†XD) Gi kxl©‡K Crest (P~ov) e‡j| Tree Gi kxl©‡K Crown (P~ov) e‡j|
22. (E) Entrepreneur (e¨emvwqK D‡`¨v³v) †Luv‡R Profits. Scholar (cwÛZ e¨w³) †Luv‡R knowledge
23. (D) AZ¨š— †ewk dislike n‡jv abhor (cÖPÛ N„Yv) AZ¨š— †ewk damage n‡jv ruin (aŸsm Kiv)
24. (B) Affluent (abx) Ges Impoverished (`wi`ª) n‡jv wecixZ kã| Rich Ges Poor n‡jv wecixZ kã |
25. (A) sentence Gi ïi“‡Z †h clause nq †m clause wU noun clause nq| GB clause wU‡Z already GKwU clause marker ‘what’ I verb
‘look’ _vKvq ïay GKwU Subject jvM‡e|
26. (D) ‘The Portion of a mountain is called the trees line’ I ‘trees will no longer grow’ G `ywU Clause-†K Join Kivi Rb¨ Clause
marker jvM‡e| Avi G‡¶‡Î Suitable clause marker n‡”Q ‘where’
27. (B) GKwU clause wb‡q evK¨wU MwVZ| ZvB Sentence wUi †k‡l questions mark (?) _vKvq Sentence wUI question order- G n‡e|
28. (D) Subject People Gi verb jvM‡e|
mwVK DËi (D)
8
29. (A) instigate A_© KvD‡K cÖ‡ivwPZ ev D¯‹vwb †`qv| Gi opposite word n‡e inhibit (evav cÖ`vb Kiv)
30. (B) POE (Process of Elimination) e¨envi K‡i mn‡RB DËi cvIqv hvq| (A) Ges (C) n‡jv AwZwi³ narrow| Avevi, D n‡jv AwZwi³
broad ev general|
31. (A) figures ej‡Z GB passage-G e¨w³ eySv‡bv n‡q‡Q|
32. (D) ramble-D‡Ïk¨nxbfv‡e †NvivNywi Kiv|
33. (C) making them his own A_© ü`q w`‡q Dcjw× K‡i Avcb K‡i †bqv|
34. (B) ‡Kv‡bv wKQz Ki‡Z †KD hw` Zvi mgq e¨q K‡i I wewbg‡q wKQzB bv †bq, Z‡e †m generously (D`vifv‡e) mgq w`‡”Q)|
35. (C) inference question| passage-G ejv n‡jv †h, Whit man wQ‡jv big-hearted; Avi Gi cÖgvY wn‡m‡eB ejv n‡jv, wZwb AvnZ‡`i (the
wounded) †mev-hZœ K‡i‡Qb|
36. (A) passage-G Av‡Q, vb¨ Kweiv Zv‡K ridicule K‡iwQ‡jv| Ridicule A_© Dcnvm/we`ª“c Kiv| Laugh at (someone) A_© (KvD‡K) we`ª“c Kiv|
37. (D) inference question. Whitman- Gi verbs form-¸‡jv traditional (A_©vr cÖPwjZ Hwn‡n¨i Abymvix) wQ‡jv bv; Zvi gv‡b I¸‡jv wbðB bZzb
ai‡Yi wQ‡jv|
38. (C) a high point ej‡Z †Kv‡bv wKQzi kxl©we›`y eySvq| passage-G ejv n‡”Q Whitman-Gi reputation (L¨vwZ) high point (kxl©) †cuŠQv‡jv
1920-Gi `k‡K|
39. (B) GKwU adjective clause jvM‡e| Blind fish singular noun bq eis Plural noun. Avi ZvB ‘That spends’ bv n‡q ‘that spend’ n‡q‡Q|
40. (D) ‘When’ clause marker _vKvq GKwU Subject I verb jvM‡e| ïaygvÎ (C) I (D)-†Z Subject + verb i‡q‡Q| G `ywUi g‡a¨ (C) n‡e bv|
†Kbbv Sentence wU AwZ‡Zi NUbv wb‡`©k Ki‡Q| mwVK DËit (D)
41. (A) Gratify A_© KvD‡K mš‘ó Kiv, Opposite word n‡e displease.
42. (E) what’ is used to ask about things and ‘who’ is used to ask people. Avi wØZxqZ subordinate clause wU KL‡bv question
order- G nqbv| mwVK DËi (E)
42. (D) Exit (cÖ¯’vb) A_© outlet (‡ei nevi cÎ)
43. (B)
44. (E) k~Y¨¯’v‡b Ans (E) emv‡jv Sentence wU A_©c~Y¨ nq †hLv‡b Subject, verb `y‡Uv-B Av‡Q|
45. (C) ‘Black sheep’ (Kzjv½vi) gv‡b bad character
46. (D) At one’s wits end gv‡b nZeyw×; nZf¤¢|
47. (D) ‘in high spirits’ A_© cÖvYeš—/D”Q¡j
48. (E) GwU A‡b‡KB fyj Ki‡e Play a major role (GKwU cÖavb f~wgKv cvjb Ki‡e) †_‡K †evSv hv‡”Q †h, ‘Play’ main verb wUi GKwU Subject
jvM‡e| G‡¶‡Î GKgvÎ (E)-B Lvc Lvq| mwVK DËi (E)
49. (C) GwU †ek mnR! Gauhar Jamil Gici GKwU adjective clause jvM‡e| mwVK DËi (C)
50. (E) GwUI †ek mnR! They subject Gi ci GKwU verb jvM‡e|
51. (E) Sentence wU‡Z †Kvb fyj †bB|
52. (D) WOODPILE (Kv‡Vi ¸”Q/Mv`v) is made of LOGS (Kv‡Vi ¸wo/LÛ) and bouquet (dz‡ji †Zvov) is made of flowers.
53. (B) †Kvb EVENT (NUbv) Gi c‡i MEMORIES i‡q hvq| Fire Gi c‡i ashes i‡q hvq|
Suggestion Level # 03
Each of the following items contains a pair of words in capital letters, followed by five pair of words. Choose the pair that
BEST expresses a relationship similar to the one expressed by the capitalized pair
(Questions 43 through 46)
43. TICKET : ADMISSION
A. Story : Moral B. Sandwich : Bread C. Enemies : Friends D. Crying : Sympathy E. Wealth : Lusuries
44. Mentor : Counsel
A. Poet : Criticism B. Plea : Mercy C. Body Guard : Protection D. Sermon : Conscience E. Judge : Lawyer
45. NOD : ASSENT
A. Glance : Beneficence B. Shudder : Rudeness C. Wink : Mystification D. Shrug : Indifference E. Frown : Capriciousness
46. CHAOS : DISORDER
A. Tranquility : Peace B. Retraction : Indictment C. Combustion : Waste D. Miracle : Belief E. Tension : Relation
Answer
01 A 02 C 03 A 04 D 05 C
06 B 07 C 08 D 09 C 10 D
11 A 12 C 13 B 14 A 15 D
16 A 17 B 18 A 19 A 20 B
21 C 22 D 23 D 24 C 25 B
26 B 27 B 28 A 29 B 30 D
31 B 32 C 33 A 34 C 35 A
36 D 37 D 38 A 39 B 40 B
41 C 42 E 43 E 44 C 45 D
46 A
11
Suggestion Level # 04
01. A desert receives less than twenty five ------------- of rainfall every year.
A. centimeter B. a centimeter C. centimeters D. of centimeters E. a centimeters
02. ––––––––– the out come of this dispute our two nations will remain staunch (÷bP-wek¦¯—) allies.
A. Irregardless of B. Regardless of how C. with regard to D. Regardless of E. Disregarding
03. The development of the atom bomb depended upon the ––––– of the particle ( Kbv) accelerator (A¨vK‡mj¨v‡iUi- ‡eMea©K e¯‘)
A. invention B. inventing C. invent D. invented E. the invention
04. Maps have lines, words ––––––––– and colors, that show the distribution and arrangement of the Earth’s geographical
features.
A. Symbolic B. Symbol C. Symbols D. Symbolize E. Symbolization
05. The American burnet, a native Perennial (wPiRxwe), grows from six inches in –––– to as much as five feet.
A. high B. hight C. too high D. highting E. Both (A) and (B)
Comprehension-1
Reliable knowledge of early civilizations of the Americans is limited to archeological records since so many of the original
artifacts were destroyed by early conquerors. Nevertheless, we have evidence of impressive (‡Pv‡L covi g‡Zv) achievements in
monumental architecture as well as in the art of healing, astronomy, mathematics, and engineering. The knowledge that we have
gained commands respect for these cultures as well as regret for the loss of this knowledge. In the field of agriculture, these
civilizations left a heritage that has greatly enriched the food of today’s planet. White potatoes, corn, beans, tomatoes, squash,
chocolate, tapioca, vanilla, & turkey are just some of the foods that were originally developed by Native American Civilizations.
Lost, however, are the secrets of the Mayan astronomers & the Inca builders as well as many medicinal practices. Perhaps the
greatest casualty, however, has been the Native American attitude towered life & the universe, since people in these civilizations
seldom warred with nature. Instead, they adapted to it. Our present concern (mswkó) with ecology causes us to respect the people
of these civilizations even more for this attitude.
06. The author’s main point is that
(A) we have lost respect for the Native American attitude toward life and nature.
(B) we have discovered new information about the early American civilizations.
(C) archeology has given us reliable records of the great achievements of early American civilizations.
(D) it is unfortunate that we have lost so much of the early American culture and knowledge .
07. The word “ nevertheless” in lines 3 is most similar to which of the following?
(A) because of that (B) In spite of that (C) in a similar manner (D) on the whole
08. In line 4“Monumental” is closest in meaning to
(A) pretty (B) kingly (C) massive (D) memory
09. Which of the following has probably benefited the most form the discoveries of the early American Civilizations?
(A) Research in astronomy (B) agriculture (C) the building industry (D) environmental groups
10. According to the passage, which of the following can NOT be traced back to early American civilizations?
(A) tapioca pudding (B) a vanilla bean (C) chocolate bar (D) a strawberry
11. According to the author, the biggest loss has been
(A) an attitude toward nature (B) knowledge of early astronomy (C) chocolate bar (D) a strawberry
12. Which can you infer that the people of these civilizations would be least likely to do?
(A) plan a monument (B) cook a turkey (C) cut down tress (D) use medicine
13. The word “casualty’ in line 12 from the end is closest in meaning to which of the following?
(A) loss (B) victim (C) catastrophe (D) reward
14. In line 10, warred with most likely (me‡P‡q m¤¢ve¨) means
(A) had armed conflicts with (B) were hostile with (C) invaded (D) accepted
15. Form the passage, you can infer that-
(A) astronomers kept their art a secret (B) builders built great structures
(C) conquerors kept early records (D) doctors had little knowledge of medicine
16. Toshi speaks –––––– at home.
A. The Japanese B. Japanese C. Japan D. Japan’s
17. –––––– at 212 degrees F, and freezes at 32 degrees F.
A. Waters boils B. The water boils. C. Water boils D. Waters boil E. The waters boil.
18. –––––– attempts (cÖ‡Póvejx) to clarify mankind’s relationship with a superhuman (ˆ`e) Power.
A. The religion B. Religions C. A Religion D. The religions E. Religion
19. She need to find –––––––.
A. a work B. works C. the works D. work E. The work
20. It is generally believed that an M.B.A degree is good preparation for a career in –––––––.
A. a business B. business C. businesses D. one business E. the businesses
21. Unemployment compensation is money to support an unemployed Person while he or she is looking for –––––––.
A. Job B. a job C. Jobs D. the jobs E. Both (B) and (C)
22. Find the similar words of the following:
12
INDIFERENT (D`vmxb)
A. frank (Avš—wiK) B. apathetic (D`vmxb) C. pressing Ri“ix) D. moral (ˆbwZK) E. valiant ( mvnmx)
23. SCANDAL (Kj¼)
A. disgrace( Acgvb B. joy (Avb›`) C. eager( B”QvK…Z) D. kind ( AbyMZ) E. frankness (cÖk¯—)
24. CANDOR (mij)
A. donor(`vZv B. Signed (`¯—LZK…Z) C. eager e¨MÖ) D. kind (`qvjy) E. frankness (AKcUZv)
25. RELEVANT (cÖvmvw½K)
A. poverty B. timely C. Joy D. huge (weivU) E. pertinent (cÖvmw½K)
26. COUNTERFEIT (†gwK/fyqv)
A. risk B. excessive C. dull (GK‡hv‡M) D. fake (f~qv/Rvj) E. frailty (`ye©jZv)
27. Counselors are available to give you ––––– before you register for classes.
A. An advice B. a advice C. advice D. advices E. advise
28. Did you get ––––– to take the Placement test?
A. a permission B. Permission C. an Permission D. Permit E. Permissions
29. –––––– released about the hostage.
A. A news was B. A news were C. News were D. News was E. Newses were
30. Fire resistant materials are used to retard (evav †`Iqv) ––––––– of modern aircraft in case of accidents.
A. a damage to the passenger cabin B. that damages to the Passenger cabin
C. damage to the Passenger cabin D. Passenger cabin’s damages E. damages of Passengers cabin
Choose the incorrect word of the followings:
31. In 1950 it was naively (mv`vwmavfv‡e) Predicted that eight or ten computer would be
A B C
sufficient to handle all of the scientific and business needs in the united states.
D E
32. A space is the last frontier (mxgvbv) for man to conquer (Rq Kiv)
A B C D
33. A Progress has been made toward finding a cure for AIDS.
A B C D E
34. A few tiles on sky lab were the only equipment’s that failed to perform well in outer space.
A B C D E
35. One kinds of tool that was Popular during the stone Age was a flake, used for cutting and scraping (PvQv, †Qvjv)
A B C D E
13
Comprehension-2
Another sign stimulus, of course, is sound. A male bird’s song attracts females & repels competitors. Thus, it acts as a signal to
birds of the same species. Male grasshoppers (dwos) also attract females with a song. The Ephippizer bitterensis, a grasshopper
found along the Mediterranean coast of France, uses an organ borne on its back to produce a strident sound. Modified wing-like
structures are scraped against each other to produce a sound, which in then amplified by a small shell. When females hear this
sound, they scramble toward it, climbing over any obstacles that are in their way, & speeding up as they come close to their
mates. Scientists who have studied the sound made by the Ephippizer bitterensis have found that females respond to almost any
sharp sound, even hand clapping. Copping the exact sound is not necessary; what matters is the sharpness & the quickness with
which the sound is interrupted and resumed.
46. The author’s main point is to-
(A) discuss ways that females attract males (B) compare sounds of birds
(C) describe the sound produced (D) introduce sound as a sign stimulus
47. Bird songs are mentioned in the beginning-
(A) to provide an illustration (B) to point out differences (C) to argue a point (D) to compare two animals
48. The previous paragraphs most likely discussed
(A) how bird songs attract mates (B) how other grasshoppers produce sound
(C) how competitors are repelled (D) how color and smell are attractions
49. The male Ephippizer bitterensis produces sound form a device on its
(A) legs (B) back (C) head (D) wings
50. The word “strident’ in line 5 means
(A) gentle (B) harsh (C) loud (D) repulsive
51. The word “scramble” in line 7 is most similar to the meaning of which of the following?
(A) rush (B) scream (C) amble (D) wander
52. According to the passage, a female grasshopper
(A) has a difficult time going over obstacles (B) flies to its mate
(C) has tiny wings (D) goes faster when it gets close to the sound
53. “Sharp” in line 10 could best be replaced by
(A) clever (B) piercing (C) pointed (D) severe
54. It can be inferred that a female grasshopper might be most attracted to
A) a man crying (B) a cow (C) a dog barking (D) a bee humming
55. The word “resumed” in last line is most similar in meaning the to which of the following?
(A) intensified (B) exposed (C) continued (D) ended
56. Choose the correct spelling of the following.
A. Separation B. Abhorence C. Accelaration D. Acuracy E. Address
57. What is the meaning of above board?
A. board which is on above B. beyond description. C. beyond knowledge D. beyond douvt E. beyond expect
58. What is the meaning of ‘Achilles heel’?
A. Strong heel B. week pint C. Strong point D. very strong point E. Both (c) and (d)
59. Choose the correct answer of the followings;
–––––––––––––– is not a new idea.
A. The Planning of cities. B. Cities to Plan them C. Plan cities D. To Planning cities. D. Planning of cities.
60. Choose the incorrect word of the following.
That an earthquake of magnitude eight on the Richter scale occurs once every five or ten years.
A B C D E
Answer Sheet
1. (c) Units of measurement (†hgbt inch, Pound, dollar, degree) MYbv Kiv hvq e‡j Giv Plural n‡Z cv‡i|
2. (D) ïi“‡Z Aek¨B noun em‡e| Irregardless e‡j †Kvb kã †bB|
3. (A) the Gi ci noun jvM‡e| incretion n‡e|
4. (C) ‘Symbolic’ ‘have’ verb-Gi object wn‡m‡e KvR Kivq adjective ‘Symbolic’ Gi noun form symbols n‡e|
5. (B) Preposition in Gici noun ‘hight’ n‡e
6. (D) passage G †jLK `ytL K‡i‡Qb regret for the loss Ges the greatest casualty (¶wZ)
......cÖf„wZ K_vi gva¨‡g| †evSv hv‡”Q, D-UvB n‡jv author Gi main e³e¨|
7. (B) nevertheless I in spite of that A_© Z_vwc/m‡Ë¡I|
8. (C) monumental Ges massive A_© wekvj ev weivU|
9. (B) inference question GLv‡bI POE (Process of Elimination) LvUv‡bv hvq| A Ges C f~j
†h‡nZz passage- G ejv Av‡Q, Mayan astronomy (†R¨vwZwe©`¨v) I Inca builder- ‡`i wewfbœ secrets (†Mvcb Z_¨) nvwi‡q wM‡q‡Q| d‡j, GLvbKvi
astronomy ev building industry ‡KvbUvB early (cÖ_g w`KKvi) American civilization-Gi Avwe®K…Z wewfbœ wRwbm w`‡q benefited nqwb| (D)-
I f~j, †h‡nZz environment group- ¸‡jv jvfevb n‡q‡Q, G ai‡Yi K_v GLv‡b †bB| Native American Civilization-‡`i Øviv D™¢vweZ wewfbœ
ai‡Yi Lv‡`¨i bvg †`qv Av‡Q, GB me D™¢ve‡bi Øviv eZ©gv‡bi agriculture DcK…Z n‡q‡Q|
10. (D) GLv‡bI POE (Process of Elimination) LvUv‡Z n‡e| cÖvPxb American civilization Øviv D™¢vweZ Tapioca, vanilla Ges chocolate- Gi
K_v Passage- G Av‡Q| Strawberry-i K_v ejv nqwb|
11. (A) beg jvBb t The greatest casualty.... has been the Native American attitude toward life.....
14
12. (C) 10th line- G Av‡Q t People in these civilizations seldom warred (hy× Kiv) with
nature| Zvi gv‡b, MvQ †K‡U †djvi gZ KvR Gme mf¨Zvi †jvK‡`i Øviv nIqvi m¤¢vebv LyeB Kg|
13. (A) Casualty A_© †Kv‡bv `yN©Pbvq AvnZ ev wbnZ e¨w³, A_ev ¶wZMÖ¯— m¤ú` BZ¨vw`| Zvi gv‡b †Kvb NUbvq †h ¶wZ ev loss, ‡mUvB Casualty|
14. (B) war with A_© hy× Kiv ev we‡ivwaZv Kiv| were hostile with A_© kΓZv _vKv|
15. (B) 3rd line- Gi impressive achievements in monumental architecture ‡_‡K †evSv hvq ZLbKvi builder (wbgv©Zv)-iv eo eo structure ‰Zwi
Ki‡Zv|
16. (B) Name of language (Arabic, spanish etc) Gi Av‡M article e‡m bv|
17. (C) Water non count nIqvq GwU Plural ev Gi mv‡_ article (a, an) em‡Z cv‡i bv| wKš‘ article the em‡Z cv‡i|
18. (E) Religion non count nIqvq Gi mv‡_ article e‡m bv| attempts verb wU singular n‡e|
19. (D) Work GLv‡b non count Noun wn‡m‡e KvR Ki‡Q|
20. (B) GLv‡b business ej‡Z all business ‡K †evSv‡bv n‡q‡Q|
21. (E) Job count noun nIqvq Gi mv‡_ article ev Gi Plural n‡Z cv‡i|
22. (B) 23. (A) 24. (E) 25. (E) 26. (D)
27. (C) advice non count noun
28. (B) ,,
29. (D) ,,
30. ( C) ,,
31. (C) computer count noun Gi Av‡M eight or ten _vKvq GiI Plural n‡e|
32. (A) A space/ Spaces A_© n‡”Q blank. ïay space n‡e| hvi A_© Universe (c„w_ex)
33. (A) Progress n‡”Q non count noun Gi Av‡M article a, an em‡Z cv‡i bv|
34. (D) Furniture non count noun nIqvq Gi mv‡_ Plural n‡Z cv‡i bv|
35. (A) cÖ_‡g One _vKvq kind n‡e|
36. (D) 37. (E) 38. (A) 39. (C) 40. (B)
41. (D) information n‡”Q non count noun-Gi mv‡_ article wKsev s em‡Z cv‡i bv|
42. (E) Weather non nount nIqvq Gi article a, an em‡Z cv‡i bv| wKš‘ climate count noun nIqvq Gi mv‡_ article a, an em‡Z cv‡i Ges Gi
Plural I n‡Z cv‡i|
43. (E) traffic Gi mv‡_ article a, an em‡Z cv‡i bv| †Kbbv, GwU GKwU non count noun, wKš‘ traffic jam count noun nIqvq Gi mv‡_ article (a,
an) em‡Z cv‡i Ges Gi Plural I n‡Z cv‡i|
44. (B) furniture GKwU non count e‡j it can’t take article (a, an) and S/es. Z‡e G‡K Singular/ Plural Ki‡Z n‡j singular ev Plural
idiomatic expression (†hgbt A Piece of ---- , two Pieces of ----, each Piece of --------) e¨envi Ki‡Z nq| Each singular ediom
nIqvq Piece Gi mv‡_ S †hvM n‡e bv|
45. (C) The Plant trees ev Ò†ivwcZ PvivÓ †Kvb custom ev HwZn¨ bq eis Pviv †ivcb Kivi KvRwU GKwU HwZn¨ cwibZ n‡q‡Q| ZvB planting trees n‡e|
46. (D) 1st sentence-GB Sound-‡K sign stimulus wn‡m‡e D‡j- L Kiv n‡q‡Q|
47. (A) stimulus (DwÏcK) wn‡m‡e sound- Gi GKUv D`vniY (illustration) ‡`qvi Rb¨ †jLK bird songs-Gi K_v ej‡jb|
48. (D) previous-topic question| G ai‡Yi cÖ‡kœi DËi w`‡Z n‡j memgq cÖ`Ë passage-Gi cÖ_g jvBb wKfv‡e ïi“ n‡iv, Zv †Lqvj Ki‡Z n‡e|
another w`‡q cÖ_g evK¨Uv ïi“ nIqv‡Z †evSv hvq Zvi Av‡M Ab¨vb¨ ai‡Yi sign stimulus-Gi K_v Av‡jvwPZ n‡q‡Q| †mRb¨ A Ges B DËi n‡e bv,
†h‡nZz GB`y‡Uv‡Z sound-Gi K_vB Avevi G‡m‡Q| (C)-‡Z repel A_©vr `~‡i miv‡bvi K_v Av‡Q| ZvB GUvI ev`|
49. (B) 3rd line-G answer Av‡Q t Òan organ borne (enbK…Z) on its back”
50. (B) strident sound A_© KK©k kã|
51. (A) scramble A_© `ª“Z‡e‡M †Kv‡bv wKQz‡K †e‡q IVv ev AwZµg Kiv| rush gv‡bI `ªyZ‡e‡M hvIqv|
52. (D) 6th line-G Av‡Q t Ò Speeding up as they come close to their mates” |
53. (B) Sound-‡K sharp ejv gv‡b KK©k, Zxeª kã †evSv‡bv|
54. (C) Inference question| POE (Process of Elimination) e¨envi K‡i DËi †ei Kiv hvq|
passage- Gi †kl Sentence- G ejv n‡jv †h, †h‡Kvb k‡ãi Sharpness Ges quickness _vK‡jB n‡jv, female grasshopper mvov w`‡eB| (C)
ev‡` evKx k㸇jv Long Ges steady sound, sharp Ges quick bq|
55. (C) resume A_© †Kvb wKQz _vgvi c‡i Avevi ïi“ Kiv; Zvi gv‡b continue Kiv|
56. (A)
57. (D) Above board A_© n‡”Q Ôm‡›`nvZxZÕ ZvB (D)-B mwVK DËi
58. (B) A Chilles heel Phrase wUi A_© Ô‡`vl ev ΓwU| myZivs mwVK DËi n‡e (B)
59. (A) ing form of a noun Gi mv‡_ mvaviYZ article (The) use Kiv hvq bv| wKš‘ hLb ing hy³ noun is followed by a qualifying Phrase ZLb
Gi mv‡_ ‘The em‡Z cv‡i| D`vniYwU‡Z ‘of cities’ n‡”Q qualifying Phrase.
60. (A) That subject wUi †Kvb verb bv _vKvq that n‡e bv|
Suggestion Level # 05
01 C 02 A 03 A 04 B 05 C 06 B 07 B 08 B 09 A
10 C 11 B 12 B 13 B 14 C 15 A 16 A 17 C 18 B
19 C 20 C 21 A 22 B 23 B 24 C 25 D 26 B 27 B
28 C 29 A 30 C 31 B 32 A 33 D 34 B 35 B 36 C
37 B 38 C 39 C 40 A 41 B 42 B 43 B 44 B 45 D
46 B 47 B 48 D 49 B 50 B 51 B 52 C 53 B 54 C
55 C 56 C 57 D 58 B 59 C 60 B 61 B
Suggestion Level # 06
1. Frank and ----- are going to join the same conference (Kbdv‡iÝ-mvsevw`K m‡¤§jb)
(a) our (b) we (c) us (d) we are (e) none of the above.
2. Through elected officials, a representative democracy includes citizens like you and ----------------- in the decision-
making process.
(a) me (b) my (c) mine (d) I (e) myself
3. In a parliamentary system, it is not the monarch (gb¨vK©-ivRv) but the Prime Minister_________.
(a) whom the real power. (b) whom has the real power. (c) who the real power.
(d) who has the real power. (e) who have the real power.
4. He didn’t know ------------------ to the party.
(a) who he would take to the party. (b) whose he would take to the party. (c) whoever he would take.
(d) whomever he would take. (e) whom he would take.
5. People abominate (G‡evwg‡bBU-cÖPÛfv‡e N„Yv Kiv) the authors who ------.
(a) copies from other books. (b) coping from other books. (c) copy from other books.
(d) is coping from other books. (e) none of the above.
6. Mr. Brown will hire a new employee, either Rashid or ---------------.
(a) she (b) her (c) whose (d) I (e) he.
7. Choose the correct sentence :
(a) The people cheated on the examination who had to leave the room.
(b) The people cheated on the examination whom had to leave the room.
(c) The people whom cheated on the examination had to leave the room.
(d) The people who cheated on the examination had to leave the room.
(e) Both (a) and (d).
8. Choose the correct sentence:
(a) The man that said that was a fool. (b) The man who said that was a fool. (c) The man that said that, was a fool.
(d) The man which said that was a fool. (e) None of the above.
9. ---------------- who are industrious (cwikªgx) get success in their life.
(a) they (b) them (c) those (d) their (e) a and c
10. ---------- thinking over the issue went awry (AvivB- †f‡¯— †Mj ev e¨_© nj Ggb)
(a) he (b) she (c) him (d) his (e) he is
Comprehension # 1
The American Architect and Engineer Buckminster Fuller was born in 1895 in Massachusetts. He devoted his life to the invention
of revolutionary technological designs to solve problems of modern living. He is best known for his development of the geodesic
dome, an extremely light yet enormously strong spherical structure composed of triangular pieces. The geodesic dome is an
application of his principle of deriving maximum output from a minimum input of material and energy. In the 1950s many of
these domes were built for military and industrial uses. A considerable number of homes also have been build using geodesic
dome structures. Fuller was also a controversial writer. Among his many books are Nine Chains to the Moon (1938), Ideas and
Integrities (1963-an autobiography), Utopia Oblivion (1970) and Earth, Inc. (1973).
11. What does this passage mainly discuss?
(a) geodesic domes (b) an American Architect (c) American Architecture (d) revolutionary designs
12. The word “devoted” in line 1 is similar in meaning to which of the following?
(A) dedicated (B) bounded (C) charmed (D) aspired
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13. As used in line 2, “revolutionary” refers to
(A) warring (B) revolving (C) innovative (D) pragmatic
14. “Enormously” in line 3 could best be replaced by
(A) hardly (B) somewhat (C) very (D) quite
15. A geodesic dome is closest in shape to
(A) A tube (B) the end of a box (C) one half of a ball (D) the tip of a triangle
16. Which statement best describes the dome?
(A) It uses a lot of material, but takes less energy to construct than traditional structures.
(B) It puts out maximum energy for its size.
(C) It uses very little material even though it is spacious
(D) It takes less material and energy than traditional structures of the same size.
17. “ Composed of” in line 4 is most similar to
(A) covered by (B) filled with (C) struck by (D) made of
18. The phrase “a considerable number of” in line 6 could best be replaced by which of the following?
(A) many (B) an unusual number of (C) a few (D) an increasing number of
19. As used in line 8, the phrase “a controversial writer” indicates that Fuller’s writings were
(A) unknown by the general public (B) discussed but not agreed upon
(C) disliked by most people (D) very popular among his readers
20. Fuller wrote about his life in his book
(A) Ideas and Integrities (B) Utopia or Oblivion (C) Nine Chains to the Moon (D) Earth, Inc.
21. The meaning of the Phrase “in the blink of an eye”------.
(a) eye which is blinking. (b) irritation (R¡vjv‡cvov) of eye. (c) in a short time. (d) short time irritation. (e) very short time.
22. The synonym of the word “indiscriminate”
(a) imprudent (AweP¶Y) (b) Prudent (weP¶Y) (c) Undistinguishable (d) distinguishable.
(Avjv`v Kiv hvq bv Ggb) (e) indictment (wjwLZ Awf‡hvM cÎ)
23. The synonym of ‘AFFLUENCE’ (cÖvPzh© ev Hk¦h©)
(a) fluent (evKcUz) (b) affinity (Nwbô m¤^Ü) (c) wealth (d) acute (Zxeª e¨v_v, †ivM/NvUwZ cÖfw„ Z) (e) suffrage (‡fvUvwaKvi)
24. The synonym of ‘SUMPTUOUS’ (eûg~j¨/wejvmeûj)?
(a) sums (b) vociferous (†Mvjgvjc~Y©) (c) superstitious (Kzms¯‹viv”Qbœ) (d) refuse (e) lavish (Ace¨qx)
25. ‘UTOPIAN’ means--------.
(a) Polite (b) idealistic (c) zenith (d) suburban (e) opaque
26. I would be glad to take a massage for -------.
(a) he (b) him (c) his (d) she (e) they
27. Didn’t you know that it was --------- who played the joke?
(a) we (b) us (c) our (d) ours (e) ourselves
28. Choose the correct sentence:
(a) Selim, you and I shall be punished. (b) I, you and Selim shall be punished. (c) You, me and Selim shall be punished.
(d) You, Selim and I shall be punished. (e) Both (b) and (d)
29. Sports medicine experts agree that ice should be applied immediately when an athlete suffers an injury to --------- leg.
(a) Its (b) a (c) the (d) his (e) an
30. Spain has little good farmland and lacks many --------- raw materials.
(a) important and industry. (b) important and industrious. (c) important industrial.
(d) important industries. (e) importance industrial.
31. The whole story sounds -----------.
(a) stranged (b) strangely (c) stranger (d) stranging (e) strange
32. --------------- is cheaper for students who maintain a B average because they are a better risk than average or below-
average students.
(a) automobile’s insurance. (b) insurance of automobiles. (c) automobile insurance.
(d) insurance automobile. (e) the insurances of automobiles.
33. Choose the incorrect word:
I have to write a one thousand-words paper this weekend.
(a) (b) (c) (d) (e)
Comprehension # 2
Water on the earth is being recycled continuously in a process known as hydrologic cycle. The 1st step if the cycle is the
evaporation of water in the oceans. Evaporation is the process of water turning into vapor, which then forms clouds in the sky.
The second step is the water returning to the earth in the form of precipitation (Zzlvi cvZ), rain, snow, or ice. When the water
reaches the earth’s surface, it runs off into the rivers, lakes, & oceans where the cycle begins again. Not all water, however, stays
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on the surface of the earth in the hydrologic cycle. Some of it seeps into the ground through infiltration and collects under the
earth’s surface as groundwater. This groundwater is extremely important to life on earth, since 95 percent on land, only 0.05
percent is above ground in rivers or lakes. The rest is underground water. This groundwater is plentiful and dependable because it
doesn’t depend on seasonal rain or snow. It is the major source of water for many cities. But as the population increases and the
need for water also increases, the groundwater in some areas is getting dangerously low. Added to this problem is an increasing
amount of pollution that seeps into the groundwater. In the future, with a growing population and more toxic waste the hydrologic
cycle we depend on could become dangerously imbalanced.
36. The main subject of this passage is-
(A) water conservation (B) the hydrologic cycle (C) underground water (D) polluted groundwater
37. Clouds are formed from
(A) water vapor (B) evaporation (C) hydrological (D) groundwater
38. According to passage, water returns to earth
(A) by infiltration (B) by pollution (C) by precipitation (D) by evaporation
39. The phrase “runs off” in line 4 is most similar in meaning to which of the following?
(A) escapes (B) races (C) flows (D) solidifies
40. Groundwater______.
(A) depends on seasonal rain (B) comes from toxic waste (C) is 0.05 percent of all water (D) collects under the earth
41. The amount of groundwater is
(A) about 95 percent of all water (B) less than 5 percent of all water
(C) .05 percent of above-ground water (D) 95 percent of above-ground water
42. The supply of groundwater is getting low because of
(A) conservation (B) pollution (C) toxic waste (D) population increase
43. The word “seeps’ in line 6 refers to
(A) rushes in quickly (B) trickles in slowly (C) soaks in deeply (D) pours in thoroughly
44. Which of the following words best describes the tone of this passage?
(A) wonder (B) regret (C) concern (D) admiration
Choose the correct meaning of the following Phrases :
45. ‘Be in the same boat’ means ---------------.
(a) The boat which is same. (b) To be in the same difficult. (c) unfortunate situation.
(d) to be in the same fortunate. (e) both (b) and (c)
46. ‘Beat about the bush’ means-------------.
(a) talk irrelevantly (b) ill felling (c) beat something. (d) talk so much. (e) talk so less.
47. ‘At one’s back and call’ means-----------.
(a) one who is in back (b) one who always calls for help. (c) one who is disobedient.
(d) one who is obedient (e) none of the above.
48. ‘Beat black and blue’ means-----------------.
(a) beat with black and blue color. (b) beat moderately (Aí/gvSvwi ai‡bi) (c) beat severely (cÖPÛ fv‡e)
(d) beat anyone (e) beat none
49. ‘By and by’ means ------------.
(a) one after another (b) soon (c) late (d) it is two by (e) the course of talking.
Find the correct analogy of the followings:
50. HEART : HUMAN
(a) Tail : Dog (b) Hand : Child (c) Kitchen : House (d) Brick : Wall (e) Engine : Car
51. LIABILITY : IMMUNITY
(a) Debit : Credit (b) Pardon : Amnesty (c) Real estate : Property (d) Fidelity : Honesty (e) Equinox : Winter
52. ANGLE : DEGREE
(a) Letter : Alphabet (b) Milk : Quart (c) Area : Square inch (d) Time : Minute (e) Society : Classes
53. Choose the incorrect part :
When there is a few money remaining after all expenses have been paid, we say that a small
(a) (b) (c)
Answer sheet
1. (b). Pronoun ev‡K¨i Subject wn‡m‡e em‡j Gi nominative form use nq|
2. (a) ev‡K¨i object wn‡m‡e em‡j pronoun Gi objective form use nq|
3 (d) A‡b‡KB f~j Ki‡e!!! who Gi antecedent n‡”Q Õthe prime minister’ hv Singular. ZvB (e) mwVK DËi bv n‡q (d) n‡q‡Q|
4. (e) Relative pronoun, noun ev pronoun Gi wVK Av‡M em‡j G‡`i objective form nq| Z‡e G‡¶‡Î (d) Gi Whom ever (hv‡K Zv‡K) n‡e
bv| †Kbbv GUv emv‡j Sentence wU meaningful nq bv|
5. (c) KwVb!!! ‘who’ relative pronoun wUi antecedent n‡”Q authors (MÖš’Kvi) hv Plural| Avi ZvB who Gi ciI plural verb em‡e|
6. (b) ‘hire’ verb wUi object wn‡m‡e pronoun Gi objective form e¨eüZ n‡e| Avi ZvB mwVK DËi (b)
7. (d) relative pronoun memgq antecedent Gi wVK c‡i e‡m|
8. (b) people Gi relative pronoun wn‡m‡e who e‡m| that bq|
9. (c) relative pronoun Gi antecedent wn‡m‡e KL‡bv B they em‡Z cv‡i bv| those e‡m|
10. (d) Gerund Gi Av‡M pronoun em‡j Gi possessive form nq| ZvB Õhis’ n‡q‡Q|
11. (b) passage G Fuller- Gi Rxe‡bi wKQz As‡ki Av‡jvPbvB cÖvavb¨ †c‡q‡Q| A-‡Z Fuller-Gi D‡j- L bv _vKv‡Z wVK bv| C-Uv AwZwi³ broad; †Kbbv,
passage-G gvÎ GK ai‡Yi architectural style wb‡q Av‡jvPbv n‡q‡Q| D f~j †h‡nZz gvÎ GK ai‡Yi design wb‡q passage-G Av‡jvPbv n‡q‡Q|
12. (a) devote I dedicate A_© †Kvb KvR GKvMÖwP‡Ë Kiv|
13. (b) revolutionary- ‰ecweK| revolutionary wRwbm D™¢veb gv‡b bZzb wRwbm D™¢veb Kiv |
innovative A_©I bZzb|
14. (c) enormously A_© †Kvb KvR GKvMÖwP‡Ë Ki|
15. (c) inference question| spherical A_© e‡ji gZ †MvjvKvi| geodesic dome (¸¤^yR) GKUv e‡ji A‡a©‡Ki gZ AvKvi wewkó|
16. (d) inference question| passage-G Av‡Q, geodesic dome ‰Zwii mgq minimum cwigvY material I energy e¨envi K‡i maximum
output cvIqv principle e¨envi Kiv nq| Avi †h‡nZz GB dome-Uv revolutionary ‡evSv hvq, traditional structure-Gi †R‡q GB dome-G Kg
material I energy jv‡M|
17. (d) composed of (something) Ges made of (something) A_© (†Kvb wKQz w`‡q) MwVZ|
18. (a) a considerable number A_© cÖPzi|
19. (b) Controversial A_© weZwK©Z; Zvi gv‡b Fuller-Gi †jLv wb‡q A‡bK Av‡jvPbv Ges ZK©-weZK© n‡Zv|
20. (a) passage-G ejv Av‡Q †h, Ideas and Integrities n‡jv autobiography ev AvZœRxebx|
21. (c) ‘in the blink of an eye’ Phrase wUi A_© n‡”Q †Pv‡Li cj‡K A_©vr LyeB `ª“Z|
22.(c) Indiscriminate kãwUi A_© n‡”Q Ôc„_K ev Avjv`v Kiv hvq bv Ggb/wek„sLj|
23. (c) ‘wealth’ kãwUi A_©I Hk¦h¨©/ cÖvPzh©¨|
24. (e) ‘Lavish’ kãwUi A_©I wejvm eûj/Aee¨qx|
25. (b) ‘utopian’ gv‡b n‡jv KvíwbK/Aev¯—e| Idealistic gv‡b I Aev¯—e|
26. (b) Preposition Gi ci Pronoun Gi Objective form nq|
27. (a) Be verb (am, is, are, was, were) Gi ci Pronoun Gi nominative form nq|
28. (d) wewfbœ Person Gi Pronoun ¸‡jv GKmv‡_ em‡j Giv 231 order A_©vr cÖ_‡g 2nd person. c‡i 3rd person Ges me‡k‡l 1st person e‡m|
29. (d) ‡`‡ni wewfbœ A½ cÖZ¨‡½i Av‡M Pronoun Gi Possessive form nq| KwVb!
30. (c) Lye KwVb !!! ‘raw materials’ noun Gi Av‡M adjective jvM‡e| ïaygvÎ (b) I (c) ‡Z adjective i‡q‡Q| wKš‘ ( b) mwVK DËi n‡e bv| †Kbbv (b)
Gi industrious adjective wU e¨w³i †¶‡Î cÖ‡hvR¨| hv Sentence G AmvgÄm¨c~Y©| ZvB mwVK DËi (c).
31. (e) ‘Sound’ n‡”Q linking verb. Gi ci adverb bv e‡m adjective e‡m|
32. (c) `y‡Uv noun GKmv‡_ em‡j cÖ_g noun wU adjective wn‡m‡e we‡ewPZ nq| hv KL‡bvI Plural nq bv| (e)I mwVK DËi n‡e bv| †Kbbv ‘the
insurance’ subject wU Plural hv verb ‘is’ Gi mv‡_ agree K‡i bv|
33. (d) Hyphen Øviv GKvwaK adjective hy³ n‡j hyphenated adjective plural nq bv|
34. (e) ‘Enough’ kãwU noun Gi Dfqcv‡k A_©vr Av‡M ev c‡i em‡Z cv‡i|
35. (c) ‘Enough’ kãwUi Position n‡”Q adjective Gi c‡i|
36. (b) cÖ_g I †kl ev‡K¨ hydrologic cycle-Gi D‡j- L _vKvUvB passage-Uvi main subject wbY©‡q h‡_ó cwigvb Clue |
37. (a) passage- G Av‡Q t water returns into vapor, which then forms clouds A_©vr water vapor Øviv Clouds ‰Zwi nq|
38. (c) passage-G Av‡Q t water returns ..... by precipitation|
39. (c) runs off A_© e‡q P‡j hvIqv (flows) |
40. (d) passage- G Av‡Q t Ò some of it [water) seeps into the ground surface as
groundwater” |
41. (b) mg¯— cvwbi 95 % mgy‡`ª| evKx 5%-Gi g‡a¨ 0.05% n‡jv gvwUi Dc‡i| myZivs (5-0.05%) = 4.95% A_©vr less than gvwUi bx‡P|
42. (d) as the population ....... low ‡_‡K DËi cvIqv hvq|
43. (b) seep-Pz‡q Pz‡q cÖ‡ek Kiv| trickles ‡dvUv †dvUvq cÖ‡ek Ki|
44. (c) inference question| †jLK Zvi Concern (D‡ÏM) cÖKvk Kivi Rb¨ passage-Gi †kl w`‡K wewfbœ words Ges phrase e¨envi K‡i‡Qb; †hgb t
dangerously low, the problem Ges dangerously imbalanced|
21
45. ‘Be in the same boat’ Phrase wUi A_© n‡”Q ÔGKB wec‡` covÕ|
46. (a) ‘Beat about the bush’ Phrase wUi A_© n‡”Q- ÔAcÖvmw½K welq wb‡q Av‡jvPbv KivÕ|
47. (d) ‘At one’s back and call’ Phrase wUi A_© n‡”Q Ôeva¨Õ|
48. (c) ‘Beat black and blue’ A_© ÔcÖPÛfv‡e cÖnvi KivÕ|
49. (b) ‘By and by’ A_© ÔLye kxNÖÕ|
50. (e) Human ‡K mwµq iv‡L Heart. Avi car †K mwµq iv‡L engine.
51. (a) Liability gv‡b `vq `vwqZ¡| Gi wecixZ Immunity A_©vr †Kvb wKQz †_‡K Ae¨vnwZ/gyw³/wbivcËv| Avi Debit Gi wecixZ credit.
52. (c) Angle gvcvi GKK n‡jv Degree. Area gvcvi GKK n‡jv Squire inch.
53. (b) Money n‡jv Uncountable noun. Avi ZvB Gi c~‡e© a few em‡Z cv‡i bv| A little n‡e|
54. (a) Few I Little Gi mv‡_ Only em‡j Aek¨B Only Gici Ôa’ em‡e| Avi crops countable noun e‡j Gi mv‡_ few n‡e, little bq|
55. (c) ‘Small number’ Gi ci Plural count noun e‡m| ÔThe breeds of cattle’ n‡”Q Plural count noun.
56. (c) ‘most’ Gi ci Countable/Uncountable Dfq-B em‡Z cv‡i| ‘Most’ noun Gi c~‡e© em‡j nq Most of the A_ev ïay most n‡e|
57. (d) wZbwU noun ‡K avivevwnKfv‡e organize Kivi Rb¨ one, another and the other n‡e|
58. (c) ïay Plural verb Gi Av‡M Subject wn‡m‡e Other e‡m|
59. (c) test n‡”Q linking verb. Gi ci adjective e‡m| wKš‘ ‘well’ n‡”Q adverb. ZvB (c) B fyj |
Suggestion Level # 07
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20. It was _____ who first noticed the difference.
A. me B. I C. myself D. meself E. B + C
21. They are talking among _____.
A. their B. theirself C. them D. themselves E. A or C
22. _______ comes is welcome.
A. Who B. Whoever C. Whom D. Whichever E. Whom so ever
23. Morning classes have been opened for people_____ during the evening of the day.
A. which work B. whom work C. who work D. who works E. None of these.
24. Your name comes after ______ on the list.
A. I B. your C. my D. mine E. mines
25. We think _____ to be a dolt.
A. he B. him C. his D. they E. Both B+C
26. Garments workers are doing well together to meet_____ stipulated production level.
A. his B. them C. her D. their E. his
27. Wait for Hamid and .......
a. me b. I c. my d. mine
Choose The Correct Sentense Of the followings:
28. a. I like scott’s poem who was a great poet. b. I like the poems of Scott who was a great poet.
c. I like the poem of Scott who was a great poet. d. I like the poem.
29. a. The weather of Chittagong is better than of Dhaka.
b. The weather of Chittagong is better than that of Dhaka
c. The weather of Chittagong is better than those of Dhaka. d. a and c.
30. a. The roads of Dhaka are wider than Rajshahi that of Dhaka.
b. The roads of Dhaka are wider than of Rajshahi. c. The roads of Dhaka are wider than those of Rajshahi. d. All the above.
31. a. The girl’s name is Nima. b. The names of the girl is Nima. c. The girls name is Nima. d. a + c
32. a. The children park is fine. b. The children’s park is fine. c. The park of the children is fine. d. The children’s park is fine.
33. a. The school gate was open. b. The school’s gate’s was open. c. The school gate’s was open. d. All the above.
34. a. They who are late will be fined. b. Those who are late will be fined.
c. Those whom are late will be fined. d. All the above.
35. I can’t reply .... he asks because his questions are tough.
a. who b. whom c. which d. what
36. He is the first boy ......I am seeking for.
a. who b. whom. c. that d. which
37. I know the girl .........mother teachers you.
a. who b. whom c. whose d. what
38. He is Mr. Sayeed ........ I think is the manager.
a. who b. whom c. whose d. what
39. One should be attentive to ........ studies.
a. his b. her c. one d. one’s
40. One of the students has finished ......... work.
a. his b. him c. one d. one’s
41. The owner and the manager are writing ...... reports.
a. his b. their. c. her d. hers
42. The manager and owner is writing ...... reports.
a. his b. her c. their d. none
43. Either they or the students are doing ........ jobs.
a. his b. their c. her d. none
44. Neither I nor my brothers demand ...... rights.
a. my b. his c. their d. none
45. The cow gives us ......... milk.
a. her b. his c. their d. their
46. The secretary has met with other .........
a. teacher b. a teacher c. teachers d. the teacher.
47. Many people hate to eat in restaurants by ........
a. themselves b. their selves c. himself d. ourselves.
48. ........... shortens and thickens the muscles on either side of the jaw.
a. The teeth clenching b. Clenching the teeth c. That clenching the teeth d. The teeth clenched
49. .............. from the leaves of the rare weeping tree even though the sky may be cloudless.
a. Great drops of water dripping b. Great drops of water drip
c. Water dripping in great drops d. That great drops of eater are dripping.
50. .......... with strong flippers, seals gracefully glide through the sea.
a. Paddle and steer b. It is paddling and steering c. That they paddle and steer d. Paddling and steering.
51. ........... from horseback is a valid form of pest control has come under attack.
a. That the hunting of foxes b. the hunting of foxes c. It is the hunting of foxes d. There is fox hunting.
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52. The antonym of the “Plaintiff” (ev`x, Awf‡hv³v) is _____
a. complaint b. defendant c. sorrowful d. witness
53. The antonym of the ‘Radical’ (cÖMwZev`x)
a. Fashionable b. Diabolic c. Myopic d. Extreme e. Conservative
54. The antonym of ‘Sagacity’ (weP¶b)
a. Incredulity b. Belligerence c. Stupidity d. Tolerance e. Independence
55. The antonym of “Flamboyant’ (eY©vX¨, D¾¡j)
a. lateral b. Dull c. Maverick d. sadness e. tensed
56. What is the antonym of ‘segregation’ (c„_K Kiv)?
a. integration b. separation c. depression d. sadness e. tensed
57. The opposite meaning form the word ‘Decorous’ (myi“wP m¤úbœ)
a. Appropriate b. Afraid c. Befitting d. Decent e. Unsuitable
58. An antonym of ‘abstract’ (wb®‹vkb Kiv) is _____
a. Abase b. Concrete c. Abstruse d. Refrain
59. An antonym of concrete (ev¯Íe) is.
a. Cement b. Refrain c. Abstract d. Alloy e. Soild
60. The correct antonym of the word “amazing” (we¯§qvwff~Z) is
a. Clever b. Deceitful c. Ordinary d. Shocking
61. The antonym of “Hazardous” (wec`RbK) is.
a. Certainb. Clear c. Safe d. Risky
62. Synonym of word –“Panacia”’- (me© †ivMwbeviK Jla)
a. inactivity b. cure all c. Panack d. Prevail
63. “Obnoxious” (N„Y¨, weiw³Ki) ej‡Z wK †evSvq?
a. very dangerous b. very pleasant c. very ugly d. very unpleasant
64. “Incredible” (Awek¦vm¨) k‡ãi synonym wK n‡e?
a. unbelievable b. unthinkable c. unmanageable d. unlikely
65. “Custodian” (AwffveK, ZË¡veavqK) k‡ãi gv‡b-
a. Personal storage room b. Caretaker c. Announcer d. Doorman
66. “Unequivocal” (my®úó, mywbw`©ó) means
a. Not protesting b. Low voice c. Unequal d. Clear
67. Synonym of the word “Sequel” (†Rvi, cwiYvg)-
a. Continuance b. Prologue c. Preamble d. Prelude
68. Which is the synonym of the word ‘unerring’ (wbfy©j)?
a. infallible b. ultimate c. incorrect d. nervous
69. The synonym of ‘satisfaction’ (Drcv`b Kiv) is:
a. triumph b. achievement c. conquer d. contentment e. Pleasure
70. The synonym of ‘satisfaction’ (m‡š—vl) is:
a. man b. overturn c. trick d. female e. produce
71. The synonym of ‘termination’ (mgvwß) is:
a. end b. rare c. cultivation d. activation e. modification
Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow. Mark on your Answer Sheet.
One phase of the business cycle is the expansion phase. This phase is a two-fold one, including recovery and
prosperity. During the recover- period there is ever-growing expansion of existing facilities, and new facilities for
production are created. %lore businesses are created & older ones expanded. Improvements of various kinds are
made. There is an ever increasing optimism about the future of economic growth. Much capital is invested in
machinery or heavy industry. More labor is employed. More raw materials are required. As one part of the economy
develops, other parts are affected. For example, a great expansion is automobiles results in an expansion of the steel,
glass and rubber industries. Roads are required-, thus the cement and machinery industries are stimulated. Demand for labor
& materials results in greater prosperity for workers & suppliers of raw materials including farmers. This increases
purchasing power and the volume of goods bought and sold. Thus prosperity is diffused among the various segments of the
population. This prosperity period may continue to rise and rise without an apparent end. However, a time comes when
this reaches a peak and stops spiraling upwards. This is the end of the expansion phase.
72. We may assume that in the next paragraph the writer will discuss-
A. cyclical industries B. union demands C. the status of the farmers D. the higher cost of living E. the recession period
73. The title below that best expresses the ideas of this passage is---
A. The Business Cycle B. The Recovery Stage C. Attaining Prosperity
D. An Expanding Society E. The Period of Good Times
74. Prosperity in one industry----
A. reflects itself in many other industries B. will spiral upwards C. will affect the steel industry
D. will end abruptly E. Will help all segments of society except the farmers.
75. Which of the following industries will probably be a good indicator of a period of expansion?
A. Toys B. Machine tools C. Foodstuffs D. Cosmetics E. Farming
24
76. During the period of prosperity, people regard the future
A. cautiously B. in a confident manner C. opportunely D. indifferently E. bearishly
Find the similary to the one expressed by the capitalized pair (Questions 77 through 79)
77. MASTER: VASSAL
A. Soldier: Civilian B. Captain: Tar C. Policeman: Prisoner D. Native: Alien E. Owner: Slave
78. GRADUATION: STUDIES
A. contract: agreement B. Retirement: service C. exchange: communication D. arrangement: flowers E. employment: salary
79. WEARISOME : REFRESHING
A. Wrathful: Irrational B. Tedious: Dull C. Original : Scintillating D. Lengthy : Brief E. Truthful: Courageous
Answer Keys
01.C 02.D 03.B 04.A 05.B 06.C 07.B 08.C 09.B 10.D 11.D 12.D
21.D 22.B 23.C 24.D 13.C 14.A 15.B 16.B 17.C 18.B 19.C 20.B
31.A 32.A 33.A 34.B 35.D 36.B 25.B 26.D 27.A 28.B 29.B 30.C
37.C 38.A 39.D 40.A 41.B 42.A 43.B 44.C 45.C 46.C 47.A 48.B
49.B 50.D 51.A 52.B 53.E 54.C 55.B 56.A 57.E 58.B 59.C 60.C
61.C 62.B 63.D 64.A 65.B 66.D 67.A 68.A 69.D 70.E 71.A 72.E
73.E 74.A 75.B 76.B 77.C 78.B 79.D
Suggestion Level # 08
in the white house were shocked by the president’s insistence that they be invited into the mansion.
(D) (E)
7. The average elevation (D”PZv) of the Himalayas is twenty thousand feet, and
(A) (B)
Mount Everest raises to more then twenty nine thousand feet at it’s apex (P~ov)
(C) (D) (E)
8. Melanin (a dark substance in the skin and the lair) a Pigment (iÄK c`v_©) that lays under the skin,
(A)
is responsible for skin color, including the variations that occur among different races.
(B) (C) (D) (E)
9. Hyde Park, the family estate of Franklin D. Roosevelt, sets on top of a bluff overlooking the Hudson river.
(A) (B) (C) (D) (E)
10. Either a saving and loan company or a bank can borrow money to
those People who want to buy a home. No error. (A)
(B) (C) (D) (E)
22. When a child, Barbara Mandrell Played the guitar, banjo, and saxophone in her family’s band,
(A) (B)
but in 1981 she was named Entertainer of the year for her singing, and she has continued her successful
(C) (D)
23. When the chemicals inside a cell (†Kvl) no longer produce ions, the cell stops functioning. no error.
(A) (B) (C) (D) (E)
24. Although there are exceptions, as whole the male of the bird species is more brilliantly colored.
(A) (B) (C) (D) (E)
26. ––––––– the Gulf stream is warmer (Eò) than the ocean water surrounding it.
A. Wholly B. Whole C. As a whole D. A whole as E. A wholly as
27. One of the least effective ways of storing information is learning –––––– it.
A. how repeat B. repeating C. to repeat D. repeat E. to repeating
28. Many people have stopped –––––– because they are afraid that it may be harmful to their health.
A. to smoke B. smoking C. smoke D. to smoking E. smoking to
29. Many modern architects insist on –––––– materials native to the region that will blend into the surrounding landscape
(¯’j fv‡Mi `„k¨)
A. use B. to use C. the use D. using E. to using
30. _____ a bridge builder, Gustav Eiffel designed the Eiffel Tower for the Paris exposition (cÖ`k©bx) of 1889.
A. while B. when C. It was when D. It when was E. It while was.
Find out the wrong option.
31. Below one’s breath: silently-
A. Jurn a blind eye: ignore B. Black and blue: Severely C. Bird eyed: quick sighted
D. Flesh and blood: human being E. High explosive: very interesting person
32. A double dealer: a deceitful person-
A. Bolt from the blue: an unexpected attack B. Bread and butter: livelihood C. Joturn a deaf ear: to agree to listen
D. the evening star: decline E. Chalk out: trace
33. A French leave: leave without permission-
A. Put a yoke on: Joint together B. In a nutshell: in detailed C. Give vent to: express
D. Red tape: official formality E. A hard nut to crack: a difficult problem
34. What is the synonym of “Lackluster”
26
A. inept (A`¶) B. meager (`y®cÖvc¨) C. deleterious (¶wZKi) D. humdrum (wb®cÖvY)
35. What is the synonym of “Didactic ”
A. educational B. detrimental (¶wZKi) C. laudatory D. squander (AcPq Kiv)
36. What is the antonym of “Infinitesimal”
A. Colossal (wekvj) B. everlasting (wPi¯’vqx) C. Peripheral (†PŠnwÏ) D. Conviction
37. What is the antonym of “Surreptitious”
A. luxurious B. veracious (mZ¨ev`x) C. open D. archaic (cÖvPxb)
38. Demolish: Damage
A. Ineluctable: Avoidable B. Abhor: Dislike C. Inebriated: Sober D. indigenous
39. Perturb: Calm
A. Petulant: Peevish B. Plethora: Surplus C. Probity: Duplicity D. Reprehensible: Culpable
Answer Sheet
1. (A) GKwU sentence grammatically mwVK n‡Z n‡j Aek¨B GKwU subject I verb jv‡M| sentence wU‡Z subject Av‡Q wKš‘ verb †bB| so
Avgv‡`i verb hy³ option wU Lyu‡R †ei Ki‡Z n‡e| GKgvÎ (A) option wU‡ZB verb i‡q‡Q|
2. (C) ‘Likely’ Gi ci infinitive hy³ verb e‡m|
3. (D) ‘continue’ Gi ci ing hy³ verb e‡m|
4. (B) ‘tend’ verb wUi ci wØZxq Av‡KiwU verb em‡j †mUv infinitive nq|
5. (D) ‘finish’ Gi ci verb Gi mv‡_ ing hy³ nq|
6. (C) ‘approve of’ n‡”Q GKwU verb Phrase Gi ci ing hy³ verb e‡m|
myZivs Permit bv n‡q Permitting n‡e|
7. (C) ‘raise’ verb Gi †Kvb object †bB| ZvB raise bv n‡q rise n‡e| GLv‡b ‘rise’ Gi A_© n‡”Q ‘to go up’ (Dc‡ii w`‡K hvIqv)
8. (A) ‘Lay’ n‡”Q GKwU transitive verb hvi ci GKwU object jv‡M| Avgiv ÔwKÕ w`‡q cÖkœ K‡i object cvB| wKš‘ sentence-G ‘lays’ verb Gi †Kvb
object bv _vKvq lays bv n‡q lies n‡e| Lies ÔA_© †Kv_vI †Kvb wKQz ivLv/wbnxZ _vKvÕ|
9. (B) ‘set’ transitive verb Gi ci object jv‡M| object bv _vKvq intransitive verb ‘sit’ n‡e hvi object jv‡M bv| Set A_© ‡Kvb wKQz ¯’vcb
Kiv/emv‡bv Avi sit A_© emv/†Kvb ¯’vb `Lj K‡i ivLv|
10. (A) Borrow A_© avi Kiv Avi lend A_© avi †`Iqv| Sentence wU‡Z ‘to those people’ _vKvq †evSv hv‡”Q Bank avi Ki‡Q bv eis People †`i
avi w`‡”Q| ZvB borrow bv n‡q lend n‡e| Z‡e ‘to those people’ bv n‡q ‘from those people’ n‡j borrow n‡Zv|
11. (B) verb †_‡K D™¢yZ †Kvb word Gi mv‡_ make e‡m| ‘Statement’ noun wU verb ‘state’ †_‡K D™¢yZ n‡q‡Q|
12. (F) M„n¯’vjx †Kvb KvR †evSv‡j ‘Do’ e‡m| make bq|
13. (A) Kv‡iv KvQ †_‡K Ôavi KivÕ †evSv‡Z borrow e‡m| lend bq|
14. (B) sat n‡”Q sit verb Gi past form hv GKwU intransitive verb nIqvq Gi ci object em‡Z cv‡i bv| wKš‘ ‘set transitive verb Gi ci
object em‡Z cv‡i| GLv‡b ‘them’ object _vKvq sit ev sat bv n‡q set n‡e|
15. (D) ‘Seem’ verb Gi Ab¨ Av‡iKwU verb em‡j infinitive hy³ verb e‡m|
16. (C) Verb ‡K modify Kivi Rb¨ adverb jv‡M|
myZivs ‘burns’ verb Gi ci adverb ‘continuously’ n‡e|
17. (E) ‘become’ n‡”Q GKwU linking verb hvi ci adverb bv e‡m adjective e‡m| GLv‡b option ¸‡jvi g‡a¨ ïaygvÎ late-B adjective. myZivs
mwVK DËi (E)
18. (C) fast late hard GB wZbwU k‡ãi adjective I ajverb-G GKB iƒc| A_©vr GLv‡b ‘fast’ wb‡RB adverb ZvB bZzb K‡i ly †hvM Kivi cÖ‡qvRb
†bB|
19. (D) Sometime A_© ÔwKQz mgqÕ Avi ‘sometimes’ gv‡b gv‡S gv‡S; GLv‡b Ôgv‡S gv‡S A_© cÖKvk Kivq sometimes n‡e| GQvovI ‘sometimes’
sentence Gi ïi“‡Z e‡m Ges ‘sometime’ sentence-G verb Gi ci e‡m|
20. (B) ‘Not Until’ sentence Gi ïi“‡Z †Rvi †`qvi Rb¨ em‡j sentence wU question order G cwibZ nq| A_©vr Av‡M verb c‡i subject e‡m|
21. (B) only rarely sentence Gi ïi“‡Z em‡j sentencewU †h‡nZz question order -G cwiYZ nq, ZvB GLv‡b ‘does the same major league
baseball team win’ n‡e|
22. (A) when Gi ci clause e‡m A_©vr Gi ci GKwU subject I verb jv‡M| wKš‘ GLv‡b when Gi ci noun i‡q‡Q| ZvB GLv‡b when bv e‡m
while em‡e|
23. (E) Sentence wU mwVK| when Gi ci clause jv‡M GLv‡b clause e‡m‡Q| Ges stops verb Gi ci Ab¨ verb Gi mv‡_ ing †hvM nq| GLv‡b
ing hy³ n‡q‡Q|
24. (B) As whole Gi cwie‡Z© as a whole n‡e|
25. (C) accustomed to Gi ci verb mv‡_ ing hy³ nq| ZvB sleep bv n‡q sleeping n‡e|
26. (C) ‘As a whole’ A_© mvaviYZ Avi wholly A_© m¤ú~Y©iƒ‡c| sentence wU‡Z ÔmvaviYZ ev generally’ A_© cÖKvk Kivq ‘As a whole’ n‡e|
GQvovI ‘As a whole’ sentence Gi ïi“‡Z e‡m Ges ‘wholly’ verb Gi ci e‡m|
27. (C) ‘learn’ verb Gi ci infinitive hy³ verb e‡m|
28. (B) Stop Gi ci verb Gi mv‡_ ing hy³ nq
29. (D) ‘insist on’ verb phrase Gi ci verb Gi mv‡_ ing hy³ nq|
30. (A) ‘when’ clause Gi Av‡M e‡m| Avi ‘while’ clause I noun phrase `ywUi Av‡MB e‡m| GLv‡b ‘a bridge builder’ n‡”Q noun phrase ZvB
Gi c~‡e© ‘while’ em‡e|
31. (e) GLv‡b cÖ‡kœ GKwU idiom (below one’s breath) Ges Zvi mwVK A_© (Silently) †`qv Av‡Q| wb‡Pi options Gi me idioms Ges Zv‡`i mwVK
27
A_© †`qv Av‡Q ïaygvÎ (e) option e¨ZxZ| High explosive Gi A_© n‡”Q very irritable man.
32. (c) GLv‡b cÖ‡kœ GKwU idiom (a double dealer) Ges Zvi mwVZ A_© (a deceitful person) †`qv Av‡Q, wb‡Pi options Gi me idioms Ges Zv‡`i
mwVK A_© †`qv Av‡Q ïaygvÎ (c) option e¨Zxq| Joturn a deaf ear idioms Gi mwVK A_© n‡”Q to refuse to listen.
33. (B) GLv‡b cÖ‡kœ GKwU idiom (A French leave) Ges Zvi mwVK DËi (leave without permission) †`qv Av‡Q| wb‡Pi Options-Gi me idioms
Ges Zv‡`i mwVK A_© †`qv Av‡Q ïaygvÎ (b) option e¨ZxZ| In a nutshell-Gi mwVK A_© n‡”Q in brief.
34. (D) Lackluster Gi A_© GK‡N‡q ev wb®cÖvY Ges humdrum-Gi A_© I GK‡N‡q| ZvB Giv G‡K Ac‡ii mgv_©K kã|
35. (A) Didactic-Gi A_© wk¶vg~jK Ges educational-Gi A_© wk¶vg~jK ZvB Giv G‡K Ac‡ii mgv_©K kã|
36. (A) Infinitesimal-Gi A_© n‡”Q ¶z`ª Aciw`‡K Colossal-Gi A_© n‡”Q weivU| ZvB Giv G‡K Ac‡ii wecixZ (antonym) kã|
37. (C) Surreptitious-Gi A_© n‡”Q †Mvc‡b Avi open Gi A_© n‡”Q cÖKv‡k¨| ZvB Giv G‡K Ac‡ii wecix‡Z (antonym) kã|
38. (B) ‡ewk ¶wZ (damage) n‡j Avgiv Zv‡K aŸsm (demolish) ewj, Avevi Lye †ewk AcQ›`‡K (dislike) Avigv N„Yv (abhor) ewj|
39. (C) GLv‡b Perturb-Gi A_© we¶z× Kiv Avi calm Gi A_© kvš— Kiv| Giv G‡K Ac‡ii wecixZ kã (antonym) wVK †Zgwb option C †Z Probity
Gi A_© mZZv Avi Duplicity Gi A_© Qjbv, A_©vr GivI G‡K Ac‡ii wecixZ kã (antonym) ZvB GwU n‡e mwVK DËi|
Suggestion Level # 09
01. People who are ______ cannot tell light from dark.
A. blind totally B. a total blind C. totally blind D. totally blindly
02. Edgar Degas was ______ visual information about faces, movement, and light.
A. constant accumulation B. constantly accumulate C. constantly accumulating D. constant, accumulated
03. Beethoven’s nephew became his pupil, but this relationship turned out _______.
A. bad B. badly C. worst D. more badly
04. The elder person whose spouse dies may find it ____ to adjust to living alone.
A. particularly hard B. particular, hard C. hardly particular D. hard, particularly
05. Knight Dunlop conducted his famous photography experiment ____ sixty years ago.
A. nearing B. nears C. near C. nearly
06. Saul Bellow has _____ life in Chicago where he spent his childhood.
A. vivid portrayed B. vividly portrayed C. vividly portrays D. vivid portrait
07. None of the exercise provides students with practice in understanding ____ questions.
A. really difficult B. real difficult C. reality, difficulty D. really, difficulty
08. Pilots who prepare for military careers train on the ground ___ in the air.
A. as good as B. as well as C. well as D. good as
09. Because so much of the Sudan is dry land, irrigation_____ for farming.
A. essentially B. is essential C. has essentially D. has essential
10. By the end of the 1950s, portions of the Atlantic around New York had become_____.
A. extremely dirty B. extreme dirtiness C. more dirty D. extremely dirtily
11. She looked up _____ on particularly that occasion than she had ever done.
A. much beautifully B. much more beautiful C. much more beautifully D. more beautiful E. far beautifully
12. The risks of developing cancer can _____ by not smoking and by drinking in moderation.
A. be significantly reduced B. to be significantly reduced C. significantly reduce D. to reduce significantly E. none
13. Pesticides do not break down easily, _____ concentrated in the food chain.
A. particularly, becoming B. becoming particularly C. becoming particularly D. becoming particular E. None
14. The sunflower _______ around and face in the direction of the sun.
A. can turn is slowly B. can slowly turn C. slowly, it can turn D. slowly turn and E. can turn slow
15. We have _____ to decide, what action to take.
A. yet B. already C. since D. just E. Nearly
16. Choose the correct sentence
A. I couldn’t hardly do this B. I could never do this hardly C. I could hardly do this
D. Hardly could I do this E. C + D
17. Choose the correct sentence.
A. Rarely she does well in the examination. B. Rarely does she well in the examination.
C. Rarely she did does not well in the examination. D. Rarely she does not well in the examination.
E. Rarely does she not well in the examination.
18. Choose the correct usage of adverb.
A. Britney called aloud for help B. We barely had no time to catch the train
C. You have to simply change your attitude D. That night the house seemed abnormal quite E. Both B + C
19. Which sentence isn’t correct?
A. She looks beautiful. B. She looks up beautiful C. She looks up beautifully D. I saw a beautiful cottage girl.
20. Which of the following is a correct sentence?
A. Rarely are you found in the room B. He always used to agree with me
C. You have hardly never seen a cheque of five lac taka D. Both A+B E. Rarely you are found in the room
21. In which sentence adverb is placed properly?
A. The man has to arrive always 9 O’ clock at the office.
28
B. Always the man has to arrive at the office at 9 O’clock.
C. The man has to arrive at the office at 9 O’clock always.
D. The man has to arrive at 9 O’clock always at the office.
E. The man always has to arrive at the office at 9 O’clock.
22. Choose the correct option.
A. She behaved with me in friendly way B. She behaved with me friendly. C. She behaved with me in a friendly way.
D. She behaved with me friendly way. E. She behaved with me in a friendly.
23. Choose the correct option.
A. Rarely you are found in the room B. Rarely are you found in the room C. You are rarely found in the room
D. Both B + C E. both A + B
24. Antonym of the word, “Ominous” (Aïf) is _____
a. Auspicious b. portent c. Unlucky d. Spacious
25. What is the correct antonym of ‘panic’ (AvZ¼)-
a. sit b. laugh c. dence d. relax
26. Find out the correct antonym of ‘superficial’ (fvmv-fvmv)
a. artificial b. sufficient c. indifferent d. deep
27. An antonym of ‘advancing’ (AMÖmi nIqv) is
a. forwarding b. retreating c. running d. progressing
28. Opposite word ‘Deter’ (evav †`Iqv) is _____
a. surpass b. hesitate c. encourage d. exchange
29. What is the antonym of ‘Fantasy’ (AjxK Kíbv)?
a. doctor b. nurse c. impertient d. inpatient
30. What is the antonym of ‘Fantasy’ (AjxK Kíbv)?
a. Dream b. Illusion c. Fact d. Credit
31. The antonym of the word ‘Blame’ (†`vlv‡ivc Kiv) is _____
a. thank b. graceful c. condemn d. handicap
32. The antonym of ‘Volatile’ (cwieZ©bkxj) is ______
a. hamper b. help c. awesome d. stable
33. Opposite word ‘Gentle’ (f`ª) is ______
a. Rude b. Harsh c. Clever d. Modest
34. The synonym of ‘desultory’ (G‡jv‡g‡jv) is:
a. organized b. disorganized c. drive d. romantic e. methodical
35. The synonym of ‘Squander’ (Ace¨q Kiv) is:
a. improve b. solve c. travel d. waste
36. The synonym of ‘Subterfuge’ (†avKv, PvZzix) is:
a. deception b. smartness c. very clever d. frank
37. The synonym of ‘interconnected’ (ci¯úi mshy³) is:
a. intricacy b. interdependent c. combined d. interlinked
38. The correct synonym of the word “astute” (Zx¶èeyw×, a~Z©) is:
a. autistic b. shrewd c. economic d. acute
39. Choose the correct synonym for “buccaneer” (Rj`my¨) (D.U. D-Unit (2007-08)
a. bachelor b. presenter c. pirate d. butcher
40. ‘Competent’ (m¶g, Dchy³) means (D.U. A-Unit 2004-05)
a. competitive b. communicative c. forceful d. able
41. A synonym for ‘faithful’ (wek¦vmx) is _____ (D.U. A-Unit 2005-06)
a. loyal b. deceitful c. extravagant d. hateful
42. A synonym of ‘gaily’ (Dj- vmnKv‡i) is ______ (D.U. A-Unit- 2000-01)
a. quickly b. eagerly c. sadly d. happily
43. The word ‘lucrative’ (jvfRbK) means _____ (D.U. B-Unit 2005-06)
a. good looking b. only c. professional d. profitable
Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow. Mark on your Answer Sheet.
The eyes of a human beings are not sensitive to all light, but only that between wavelengths of 380 —760 milli microns. This fact
prevents us from being aware that our bodies emit electromagnetic waves. These waves are mostly longer than that we are
sensitive to. but thermo graphic techniques can translate them into extraordinary colored pictures. Atoms generate infra-red rays
since are constantly in motion. The warmer the atoms are, the more active they become. This results in thermo graphic
pictures revealing different parts of the body in different colors: black and blue for the cold parts, green yellow for the cool
and slightly warm ones and orange and red for those which are hot. All this has health applications for such problems as tumors,
arthritis, and cancer which show up as isolated red areas on the thermo graphic portraits.
44. According to the article_____.
A. the eyes of human beings are not all sensitive to light. B. light wavelengths vary between 380 and 760 mill microns
C. some light cannot be seen by the human eye D. some people's bodies emit electro magnetic waves
29
E. Some eves emit electromagnetic waves
45. Atoms generate rays of light____.
A. because they are infrared B. if they are active C. due to constant motion
D. when they become warm E. when they become dry
46. The majority of electromagnetic waves emitted by the human body
A. are above 760 milli microns in length B. vary between 380 and 760 milli microns in length
C. translate into thermo graphic techniques D. are below 380 milli microns in length E. are colorless at high temperatures
47. Thermo graphic portraits show the body in different colors___
A. only if the patient is suffering from tumors or cancer
B. according to the activity of atoms in the different parts.
C. because some parts are black and blue and others orange and red
D. when the atoms are active
E. whenever there is health application
48. The atoms in tumors or cancerous areas are
A. problems B. isolated C. red D. very active E. blue
Each of the following items contains a pair of words in capital letters, followed by five pair of words. Choose the pair that
BEST expresses a relationship similar to the one expressed by the capitalized pair (Questions 6 through 10)
49. WORDS: TYPEWRITER
A. Stamping: Noise B. Water: Ocean C. Windows: House D. Music: Guitar E. Tears: Sorrow
50. T RO UP E : ACT O RS
A. Prison : Bars B. Assembly : Speaker C. Constellation : Stars D. Mountain : Peak E. Flock : Shepherds
51. S URG EO M DE XT E RO US
A. Clown: Fat B. Actress: Beautiful C. Athlete: Tall D. Acrobat: Agile E. Man: Strong
52. MORALITY : LEGALITY
A. House : Court B. Man: Law C. Mayoralty : Gubernatorial D. Priest : Jury E. Sin : Crime
53. SKETCH : PAINTING
A. Original : Replica B. Camera : Photo C. Scene : Play D. Draft : Thesis E. Illustration : Cartoon
Answer Keys
1.c 2.c 3.b 4.a 5.d 6.b 7.a 8.b 9.b 10.a 11.c 12.a
13.c 14.b 15.a 16.e 17.b 18.a 19.b 20.d 21.e 22.c 23.d 24.a
25.d 26.d 27.b 28.c 29.d 30.c 31.a 32.d 33.a 34.b 35.d 36.a
37.d 38.b 39.c 40.d 41.a 42.d 43.d 44.c 45.c 46.a 47.d 48.d
49.d 50.c 51.d 52.e 53.d
Suggestion Level # 10
30
13. Jack is not as benevolent as paul.
A. not as benevolent as Paul B. Not so benevolent as paul C. Not so more benevolent as Paul D. not too benevolent as paul
14. He is comparatively better today.
A. comparatively better today B. comparatively well today C. better today D. B+C E. None
15. David is intelligent and taller than Alex.
A. intelligent and taller B. more intelligent and taller C. intelligent and taller D. more intelligent & more tall.
16. he tried, it became.
A. The hard, the easy B. The harder, the easier C. The more hard, easier D. The hard, the more easy.
17. Day by day, Alex is getting __________.
A. old and old B. old and older C. older and older D. elder and elder.
18. Tom’s car is much luxurious than the Alex’s car.
A. much luxurious B. much more luxurious C. much many luxurious D. much most luxurious.
19. He drives much than he used to. (B unit – 1999-2000)
A. careful B. carefully C. more careful D. more carefully.
20. Sundarban is one of the largest mangrove forest in the world.
A. largest mangrove forest B. larger mangrove forest C. large mangrove forests D. largest mangrove forests.
21. One of the baskets full of rotten apples –––––– thrown away
A. was B. were C. have been D. have
22. Which of the following sentence is correct.
A. One of my friends are a lawyer. B. One of my friends is a lawyer.
C. One of my friend is a lawyer. D. One of my friends is a lawyers.
23. The patient is much well today.
A. much well B today very well today C. much better today D. B + C E. None
24. Going by train is much less expensive than to go by plane.
A. to go by plane B. going by plane C. go by plane D. None
25. It will be better to stay than going back.
A. to stay than going back B. to stay than to go back C. staying than going back D. B + C
26. Sarah is benevolenter than richer
A. benevolenter than richer B. to stay than to go back C. more benevolent than more rich D. more benevolent than rich
27. Nobody else but Jack has performed his duty
A. Nobody else but B. Nobody else than Jack C. Nobody else except D. Nobody else without Jack
28. There was no other alternative but a fight
A. alternative but a fight B. alternative to a fight C. alternative than a fight D. alternative to a fights
29. Rosy prepares her work than Shaumminer
A. careful B. carefully C. more carefully D. So carefully
30. I ate three times as much apples as he ate.
A. as much apples as B. as many apples as C. so much apples as D. so many apples as
Find the correct analogy of the followings
31. CARPENTER: SAW
A. Painter : brush B. Lawyer: brief C. Seamstress : Scissors D. Stenographer : typewriter E. runner : Sneakers
32. JUDGE: COURT HOUSE
A. Carpenter : Bench B. Lawyer : Law C. landlord : Studio D. Architect : blue print E. Physician : infirmary
33. INTEREST: USUARY
A. Situation: Position B. Pleasure : Use C. thought : enjoyment D. frugality : Parsimony E. anger : wrath
34. OCEAN: BAY
A. archipelago: land B. Salt water: Sweet water C. Blared: Sea D. Continent : Peninsula E. Sea: River
35. AUTHOR COPYRIGHT
A. paper: metal B. book: factory C. plot : machine D. inventor: Patent E. Novel : reward
Answer Sheet
01. Ans: C. `yB‡qi g‡a¨ Zzjbv †evSv‡bvi Kvi‡Y bad-Gi irregular comparative form ‘worse’ n‡q‡Q| Avgiv Rvwb, bad – worse – worst.
02. Ans: D. superior, inferior, senior, Junior, Ulterior BZ¨vw`i †¶‡Î Zzjbvq than bv n‡q to nq Ges to preposition nIqv‡Z Gi c‡i
pronoun-Gi objective form n‡q‡Q,
03. Ans: B. Preferable A‡bKUv Zzjbv †evSvq Gi ci them bv n‡q to nq|
04. Ans: B. wewfbœ AvK…wZevPK Adjectives †hgb round, square, triangular, rectangular, essential, parallel BZ¨vw`i †Kvb comparison
Bs‡iwR evK¨ Abyhvqx Kiv hvq bv, ZvB G‡`i mv‡_ than n‡e bv|
05. Ans: C. Dc‡iv³ GKB Kvi‡b than n‡Z cvi‡e bv|
06. Ans: A. `yB‡qi Awa‡Ki g‡a¨ Zzjbv Av‡m superlative degree nh Ges G‡`i superlative-Gi c~‡e© me©`vB the e¨eüZ nq|
07. Ans: B. comparative degree-Gi c~‡e© the e‡m bv| wKš‘ of the two ev of the twice _vK‡j the em‡e|
08. Ans: B. Dc‡iv³ GKB Kvi‡b of the twice _vKvq comparative-Gi c~‡e© the e‡m‡Q|
09. Ans: B. GLv‡b GKwU engine-Gi speed-Gi mv‡_ Av‡iKwU engine-Gi Speed-Gi comparison n‡e ZvB 2q engine-Gi Speed †evSv‡Z the
31
speed of the old on-Gi cwie‡Z© that of the old one n‡q‡Q|
10. Ans: C. Comparison-Gi †¶‡Î different-Gi c‡i than bv n‡q from nq ZvB form n‡q‡Q Ges c~‡e©i wbqg Abyhvqx evsjv‡`‡ki mv‡_ Ab¨ †`‡ki
Jute-Gi Zzjbv †evSv‡Z that of e¨eüZ n‡q‡Q|
11. Ans: C. Dc‡iv³ wbqg Abyhvqx Bangladesh-Gi cvwLi mv‡_ Ab¨ †`‡ki cvwLi Zzjbvq Plural nIqvi Kvi‡b those of e¨eüZ n‡q‡Q| that of bv n‡q|
12. Ans: B. affirmative Sentence-G as ............. as e¨eüZ nq equal comparison wn‡m‡e| G‡¶‡Î as-Gi ci Adj-Gi positive form nq, ZvB
ïay as beautiful as Jan n‡e|
13. Ans: B. Equal comparsion-Gi negative Sentence So + adj/adv+ as e¨eüZ nq| Ges So Gi c‡i adj. Gi positive form nq|
14. Ans: D. Double comparative Ges double superlative KLbI English Sentence-G mwVK bq, ZvB nq comparatively well ev better n‡e|
15. Ans: B. GKB noun †K qualify Kivi Rb¨ GKvwaK adj. n‡j Df‡qi degree of comparison Ki‡Z nq| ZvB intelligent and tall Df‡qi degree
of comparison n‡e| more intelligent and taller.
16. Ans: B. GKB †¶‡Î hZUzKz e„w× ev n«vm ‡evSvq, Av‡iK †¶‡Î wVK ZZUzKz e„w× ev n«vm †evSv‡j the + comparative + sub + v, the + comparative
+ Sub + verb nq|
17. Ans: C. µ‡g µ‡g e„w× ev n«vm †evSv‡j comparative +and + comparative nq|
18. Ans : B. Comparative-wU Avi `„p ev cÖej K‡i †`Lv‡Z PvB‡j far ev much comparative-Gi Av‡M e‡m|
19. Ans: D. GLv‡b ‘drive’ verb-Gi complement wn‡m‡e Adverb n‡e| Adverb-Gi comparison n‡q more carefully.
20. Ans: D. One of the + superlative form. one of the Gi ci noun Gi plural form wKš‘ verb Gi singular form nq|
21. Ans: A. One of the Gi c‡i noun-Gi plural form wKš‘ verb-Gi singular form e¨eüZ nq| ZvB was n‡q‡Q|
22. Ans: B. one of the + plural noun + Singular verb| GB wbq‡g n‡q‡Q|
23. Ans: D. (B I C) DfqB correct.
24. Ans: B. verb-Gi comparison Kivi mgq, verb-Gi GKB iƒc e¨envi Ki‡Z nq| ‘Going’ Gerund-Gi Zzjbv Gerund-Gi mv‡_B n‡e ZvB Ans:
B.
25. Ans: D. verb-Gi Zzjbvq verb-Gi GKB iƒc e¨eüZ n‡e| ZvB nq DfqB Gerund (V+ing) n‡e Zv bv n‡j DfqB infinitive (to + verb) n‡e|
26. Ans: D. GLv‡b GKB e¨w³i `ywU ¸‡bi comparison ev ZviZg¨ †`Lv‡bv n‡”Q| A_¨vr GLv‡b `ywU e¨w³i g‡a¨ Zzjbv †evSv‡”Q bv| Giƒc fv‡e GKB e¨w³i
¸b ev †`v‡li Zzjbv †evSv‡j, comparative Kivi wbqg n‡”Q cÖ_g Adjective Gi c~‡e© more emv‡Z n‡e Zv †h‡Kvb syllable GB †nvK bv †Kb, Ges ‡m
Adjective-Gi †Kvb cwieZ©b n‡e bv| A_©vr comparative-G em‡e bv| ZvB more benevolent Ges ïay rich n‡q‡Q richer bv n‡q|
27. Ans: B. else, Gi Øviv hw`I comparison †evSvq bv ZeyI G‡`i c‡i but ev except bv n‡q than e‡m without A‡_©|
28. Ans: C. Dc‡ii wbq‡g n‡q‡Q|
29. Ans: C. verb Gi complement wn‡m‡e adverb e‡m| sentence wU comparative -G nIqvq adverb ‘carefully’ Gi Av‡M comparative
sign ‘more’ jvM‡e|
30. Ans: B. sentence G multiple number (twice tree time BZ¨vw`) _vK‡j sentence wU wbgœwjwLZ structure G nq|
Sub + V + Multiple number + as many (count) / as much (non count) + noun) + as + S + V.
GLv‡b apples countable nIqv‡Z Zvi c~‡e© many n‡e|
31. Ans: C. Carpenter – (KvVwg¯¿x) - saw (KivZ) w`‡q KvV Kv‡U, Seamstress (gwnjv `wR©) : Scissors (KuvwP) w`‡q Kvco Kv‡U|
32. Ans: E. Judge (wePviKviK) Kv‡Ri ¯’vb courthouse (Av`vjZ) physician (wPwKrmK) Gi Kv‡Ri ¯’v‡b infirmary (nvmcvZvj)
33. Ans: D. Usuary (Pov my`) nj †ewk Interest (my`) Parsimony (Kvc©Y¨) nj †ewk frugality (wgZe¨wqZv)
34. Ans: D. Bay (DcmvMi) Gi †P‡q Ocean (gnvmMi) A‡bK eo| Peninsula (DcØxc) Gi †P‡q continent (gnv‡`k) A‡bK eo|
35. Ans: D. Copyright (A_© ¯^Ë^) Øviv author Gi GK‡PwUqv AwaKvi _v‡K| Patent Øviv inventor Gi GK‡PwUqv AwaKvi _v‡K|
Suggestion Level # 11
33
40. ‘Epilogue’ (bvU‡Ki †k‡l e³…Zv)
a. dialogue b. analogue c. prologue d. monologue
Find the correct synonym of the followings (Q 41 through 55):
41. “serene” (kvšÍ, wbg©j) (D.U. B-Unit 2004-05)
a. severe b. Dar c. Calm d. Serious
42. “impromptu” (AwPšÍc~e©, cÖ¯‘wZnxb) (D.U. B-Unit 2003-04)
a. extempore b. prepared c. improper d. direct
43. Exclusively (†Kej) (D.U. B-Unit 2000-01)
a. mainly b. solely c. exactly d chiefly
44. ‘appropriate’ (h‡_vchy³)(D.U. B-Unit 1998-99)
a. approximate b. exact c. suitable d. common
45. ‘strengthen’ (k³ Kiv) (D.U. B-Unit 1997-98)
a. toughen b. reconstruct c. weaken d. powerful
46. 'impediment' (evu av) ? (C-Unit, D.U. (2006-07)
a. solution b . barrier c. answer d. criticize e. opportunity
47. Skepticism (mskqev`) : (C-Unit, D.U (2004-05)
a. doubt b. skating people c. symptoms d. diminutive e.wonderful
48. ' Ab s orb ed ' ( M fxif v ‡e Av K… ó) ______ (C-Unit, D.U (2004-05)
a. fatigued b. disturbed c. engrossed d. successful
49. ‘Shun’ (ev` †`Iqv) (C-Unit, D.U (1996-97)
a. Proud b. Avoid c. Skill d. None of these.
50. ‘ridiculous’ (nvm¨Ki) (C-Unit, D.U (1995-96)
a. impossible b. knowledgeable c. laughable d. mad
51. ‘hostility’ (kΓZv) D.U. (C-Unit) 2000
(a) enmity (b) cruelty (c) hospitality (d) friendship
52. ‘appraise’ (g~ j ¨ wba©viY Kiv) D.U. (C-Unit) 2001
(a) explain (b) perceive (c) elaborate (d) criticize (e) none of these
53. Trivial (bMb¨, Zz”Q)? D.U. (C-Unit) 2004
(a) solution (b) uncertain (c) unusual (d) unimportant (e) healthy
54. hindrance (cÖw ZeÜK) D.U. (C-Unit) 2004
(a) solution (b) barrier (c) answer (d) criticize (e) opportunity
55. “menacing” (fq cÖ`k©bKvix)
(a) pleasing (b) displeasing (c) threatening (d) well meaning
56. This one is prettier, but it costs twice ________ the other one.
A. so much B. as much as C. as many as D. more than
57. The rent at College Apartment is only half ______ you pay here.
A. so much as B. as much as C. as many as D. more than
58. Bob found a job that paid twice ______ he made working at the library.
A. so much as B. as much as C. as many as D. more than
59. The prince was very reasonable; I would gladly have paid three times ________ he asked.
A. so much as B. as much as C. as many as D. more than
60. We didn’t buy the car because they wanted twice _______ it was worth.
A. so much as B. as much as C. as many as D. more than
61. Wild strawberries are _________ as cultivated strawberries.
A. not so sweet B. not as sweet C. less sweeter D. not as sweeter
62. Sea bass __________freshwater bass.
A. are larger than B. are larger the C. are as large D. are larger
63. Automobile, airplanes, and busses use more energy per passenger__________ .
A. as do trains B. than trains do C. trains do D. like trains
64. The larger a drop of water, ____________ freezing temperature.
A. the higher its B. its higher C. higher than its D. higher of its
65. ______________ San Diego and San Francisco, Los Angeles has no natural harbor.
A. Dissimilar B. Unlike C. Dislike D. Different
66. The water of the Great Salt Lake is ___________ seawater.
A. saltier than that of B. as salty as that of C. saltier than D. so salty as
67. A psychosis is a sever mental disorder, _________ than a neurosis.
A. the most serious B. as serious C. more D. as though serious
68. The social system of bumblebees is not as complex ________.
A. than honeybees B. as honeybees C. that honeybees are D. as that of honeybees
69. The administration of private colleges is nearly ________ that of public colleges.
A. same B. just as C. the same as D. similar
70. _____________ a river on land, and ocean current does not flow in a straight line
34
A. Alike B. Like C. Likewise D. Likely
71. The skin temperature of humans is ____________ their internal temperature.
A. not high as B. not so high C. as low D. lower than
72. A butterfly _____________ a moth in a number of ways.
A. is different from B. is different C. the difference is D. differing from
Each of the following items contains a pair of words in capital letters, followed by five pair of words. Choose the pair that
BEST expresses a relationship similar to the one expressed by the capitalized pair (Questions 73 through 75)
73. TEACHER : INSTRUCTION
A. Lawyer : Crime B. Army : Regiment C. Doctor : Disease D. Guard : Protection E. Student : Learning
74. PSYCHIATRIST : MALADJUSTMENT
A. Symptom : Cure B. Headmaster: Teachers C. Doctor: Disease D. Broker : Stock E. Lawyer: Crime
75. SHIP: HARBOUR A. Flower: Garden B. Village: People
C. Nest: Bird D. Editor: Newspaper E. Car: Garage
Answer Sheet
1 b 2 a 3 a 4 c 5 d 6 D 7 b 8 b 9 a 10 c
11 b 12 c 13 c 14 a 15 d 16 A 17 b 18 c 19 c 20 c
21 b 22 c 23 b 24 b 25 d 26 C 27 c 28 a 29 a 30 d
31 d 32 d 33 d 34 a 35 d 36 a 37 b 38 b 39 d 40 c
41 c 42 a 43 b 44 c 45 a 46 b 47 a 48 c 49 b 50 c
51 a 52 d 53 d 54 b 55 c 56 b 57 b 58 b 59 b 60 b
61 b 62 a 63 b 64 a 65 b 66 c 67 c 68 d 69 c 70 b
71 d 72 a 73 d 74 c 75 e 76 c 77 d 78 a 79 e 80 a
Suggestion Level # 12
13. Accountants are always busiest on April because both federal and state taxes are due on the fifteenth.
(A) (B) (C) (D) (E)
14. To receive a degree from an American University, one must take many
(A) (B)
15. There are no Pouched animals in the united states but only the opossum.
(A) (B) (C) (D) (E)
From the questions (20-25) find out the incorrect part on word of the following.
20. The deadbolt is the best lock for entry doors because it is not only inexpensive but installation is easy.
(A) (B) (C) (D) (E)
22. The government raises money to operate by tax cigarettes, liquor, gasoline, tires and telephone calls
(A) (B) (C) (D) (E)
23. Led by Daniel Webster, the wing party was one of the two major Political
(A) (B) (C)
24. Agronomists study crop disease, selective breeding, crop rotation, and
(A) (B) (C) (D)
25. Before the invention of the musical staff, People passed musical compositions on toeach other
(A) (B)
not by writing them down but other not by writing them down by also remembering them.
(C) (D) (E)
Answer sheet
Suggestion Level # 13
The following items contains a pair of words in capital letters, followed by five pair of words.
Choose the pair that BEST expresses a relationship similar to the one expressed by the capitalized pair (Questions 68 through
72)
68. STATIC : MOVEMENT
A. Humdrum: Excitement B. Chromic: Timeliness C. Ecstatic : Decay D. Diligent: Industry E. Prestigious: Wealth
69. GUSTATORY : TONGUE
A. Peripheral : Eyes B. Olfactory : Nose C. Ambulatory : Patient D. Tactile : Ears E. Perfunctory : Skin.
70. BARTER: COMMODITIES
A. Arbitrate: Disputes B. Invade : Boundaries C. Debate : Issues D. Correspond: Letters E. Promote : Ranks
71. COTTON: RAYON
A. Sheets: Dresses B. Synthetic : Natural C. Summer : Winter D. Natural: Synthetic E. Gin : Laboratory
72. FOOD: MENU
A. Accounting: Inventory B. Index: Foreword C. Silverware: Spoon D. Merchandise : Catalogue E. Films : Credits
Answer Keys
1 C 2 D 3 B 4 B 5 E 6 A 7 B 8 A 9 E 10 B
11 A 12 B 13 D 14 B 15 C 16 A 17 A 18 C 19 B 20 D
21 B 22 D 23 D 24 C 25 B 26 A 27 B 28 D 29 B 30 A
31 B 32 C 33 A 34 A 35 B 36 C 37 C 38 C 39 C 40 A
41 A 42 C 43 B 44 D 45 A 46 C 47 A 48 C 49 C 50 D
51 B 52 D 53 D 54 C 55 D 56 C 57 D 58 C 59 C 60 C
61 B 62 C 63 C 64 C 65 D 66 B 67 D 68 A 69 B 70 D
71 D 72 D
Suggestion Level # 14
1. If orange blossoms are exposed (Abve„Z Kiv) to very cold temperatures, ______ wither (ïwK‡q hvIqv/S‡o cov) and die.
A. They will B. It will C. They would D. They are E. They would be.
2. If water is heated to 212 degree F _____ as steam (ev®úxqvKv‡i).
A. It will boil (Zv‡c dzwUqv DVv) and escape (D‡o hvIqv) B. It is boiling and escaping. C. It boil and escape.
D. It would boil and escape. E. It boils and escape.
3. If the norman’s had not invaded (AvµgY Kiv) England in the tenth century, the English language ____ in a very
different way.
A. develop B. developed C. would develop D. would have developed E. would developes.
4. If teaching ____ more, fewer teachers would leave the profession.
A. pays B. is paying C. paid D. had paid E. were paid.
5. If baby geese (ivRnsmx) are hatched (wWg †_‡K †ei nIqv) in the absence of their mother, ____ the first moving object they
see.
A. They would follow. B. They will follow. C. It will follow. D. It would follow. E. They would have followed.
6. If the cerebellum (gw¯—‡®‹i cðvrfv‡Mi wb‡Pi Ask) of a pigeon (GK ai‡Yi cvwL) ____ the bird would not be able to fly.
A. destroyed B. was destroyed C. destroy D. were destroyed. E. were destroy.
Choose the incorrect word from 7 to 10.
7. If we were to consider all of the (A) different kinds of motion in discussing the movement of (B) an object, it (C) is (D) very
confusing, because even an object at rest is moving (E) as the earth turns.
8. If I (A) would have realized (B) the danger in this work, I would not have (C) asked you (D) to undertake (E) it.
9. (A) Had I been (B) at (C) the scene of (D) the accident I could have administered first aid to the victims. (E) no error.
10. (A) If I would have (B) known about (C) the traffic jam (D) at the bridge, I would have taken (E) an alternative route.
41
Find out the odd (A™¢yZ/†egvbvb) word from each list from 36 to 40
36. A. Placid B. Docile C. subservient D. Serene E. Defiant
37. A. Lackadaisical B. Apathy C. Zeal D. Disinterest E. Nonchalance.
38. A. Macabre B. Gruesome C. Morose D. Horrid E. Sinister.
39. A. Atypical B. Prosaic C. Dull D. Ordinary E. Commonplace
40. A. Voracious B. Avid C. Fervent D. Industrious E. Ardent
41. A. Avarice B. Judicious C. Capricious D. Fickle E. Unpredictable
ANSWER SHEET
1. (A) If hy³ clause-wU present tense n‡j wØZxq subject orange blossoms plural nIqvq they e‡m‡Q|
2. (A) Scientific fact-Gi †¶‡Î if clause-wU present tense Ges wØZxq clause-wU future simple ev present tense `yB-B n‡Z cv‡i| GKgvÎ (A)
‡ZB future simple i‡q‡Q|
(E) †Z present tense i‡q‡Q| Z‡e escape bv n‡q escapes n‡j (E)- I mwVK DËi n‡Zv|
3. (D) If clause-wU past perfect nIqvq wØZxq clause-wU perfect conditional-G n‡e| D-B mwVK DËi|
4. (C) wØZxq clause-wU conditional tense-G nIqvq If clause-wU past indefinite-G n‡e|
5. (B) If clause-wU present tense-G nIqvq Aci clause-wU future simple-G n‡e| Avi goose (nuvm) Gi plural n‡”Q geese. ZvB it bv n‡q they
n‡e|
6. (D) Lye KwVb !!! Cerebellum wb‡RB wb‡R‡K aŸsm Ki‡Z cv‡i bv| †KD aŸsm K‡i| So Sentence-wU Passive form-G n‡e| G‡¶‡Î `ywU answer
option (B) & (D)-†Z Passive form †`qv Av‡Q| wKš‘ (B) mwVK DËi n‡e bv| †Kbbv unreal condition-G be verb always were nq|
7. (C) If clause-wU past indefinite-G nIqvq c‡ii clause-wU Aek¨B conditional tense- G nevi K_v| wKš‘ (C) †Z present tense †`qv Av‡Q|
(C)- B Incorrect
8. (A) wØZxq clause-wU perfect conditional-G Av‡Q e‡j If clause-wU past perfect-G n‡Z n‡e| A_P GLv‡b Av‡Q would have hv fyj|
9. (E) wØZxq clause-wU perfect conditional-G Av‡Q Ges If clause-wU I past perfect-G Av‡Q. So there is no error.
10. (A) Aci clause-wU perfect conditional-Gi Av‡Q e‡j If clause-wU past perfect-G n‡Z n‡e| A_©vr had known n‡e|
11. (D) should modals-Gi ci GKwU main verb jvM‡e| Avi main verb-Gi Av‡M infinitive em‡Z cv‡i bv| So cÖ_‡gB (A) Ges (C) ev`| (B) &
(E)-I n‡Z cv‡i bv| †Kbbv able verb bq adjective.
12. (A) continental drift (Øxccy‡Äi ¯’vb cwieZ©b)-Gi Dci wfwË AZxZ †Kvb wel‡qi Dci wm×v‡š— DcbxZ n‡q‡Q e‡j Aek¨B modal must have
em‡e| Ges must have-Gi ci †Kvb verb bv _vKvq (C) mwVK DËi nq wb|
13. (C) ‡Kvb evidence-Gi Dci wfwË K‡i eZ©gv‡b †Kvb †hŠw³K wm×v‡š— DcbxZ n‡j modal must be use Ki‡Z nq|
14. (A) had better-Gi ci verb-Gi present form nq| had better-Gi ci verb-Gi mv‡_ ing ev infinitive n‡Z cv‡i bv| (E)- †Z must use †`qv
Av‡Q| had better wb‡RB modal ZvB bZzb K‡i must modal em‡Z cv‡i bv|
15. (D) would rather-Gi ci verb-Gi past form nq|
16. (B) used to-Gi ci verb-Gi present form nq| Avi used to KL‡bvB Gi form change Ki‡Z cv‡i bv| A_©vr use to ev uses to n‡Z cv‡i bv|
17. (C) be used to Gi ci verb-Gi mv‡_ ing hy³ nq|
18. (D) As if-Gi Av‡M past tense _vK‡j as though clause-wU past indefinite-G nq|
19. (C) AS though-Gi Av‡M present tense _vK‡j as though clause-wU past indefinite- G nq|
20. (A) wish w`‡q present wish ‡evSv‡j c‡ii clause-wU past indefinite-G nq| Avi unreal condition-G be verb wn‡m‡e KL‡bvI were bv e‡m
was em‡Z cv‡i bv|
21. (B) unreal condition-G be verb wn‡m‡e were e‡m| was bq|
22. (A) Sentence-wU mwVK|
23. (E) AZx‡Z †KD †Kvb KvR Ki‡Z cvi‡Zv wKš‘ K‡iwb Ggb †evSv‡Z could have e‡m| Would have bq|
24. (B) ‡Kvb wKQz Kiv DwPZ wQ‡jv wKš‘ K‡iwb Ggb †evSv‡Z should have e‡m| Would have bq|
25. (C) Unless gv‡b if not (hw` bv)| Gi ØvivI conditional sentence MwVZ nq| Z‡e Avcbv‡`i g‡b ivL‡Z n‡e, unless Gici Aek¨B GKwU subject
I verb jvM‡e| Ges verb-wU present tense-G n‡e|
26. (A) COBBLER (gywP) repairs shoes Avi mechanic repairs automobiles.
27. (E) Frown (å“ KzPKv‡bv) indicates DISPLEASURE (Amš‘wó). sneer (e¨½ Kiv) indicates contempt (N„Yv)
28. (E) A very Amusing thing is UPROARIOUS.
A very puzzling thing is dumbfounding.
29. (C) Dampen(Av`ª/mvgvb¨ wf‡R hvIqv) ; Drench (wf‡R RyeRy‡e n‡q hvIqv), Simmer (Aí Mig nIqv); boil(wm× nIqv).
30. (A) Wince (e¨v_vq KzP‡K hvIqv) is a result of pain
Blush is a result of embarrassment.
31. (A) Slim - A_© cvZjv/nvjKv| Slender A_© I nvjKv/cvZjv|
32. (C) Detect - A_© †`L‡Z cvIqv|
33. (D) Diversity - A_© wewfbœ ai‡Yi/ A_© ˆewPΨ|
34. (B) ‘hardly’ - gv‡b cÖvq bq/ G‡Kev‡i Aí|
35. (D) startling - A_© PgKcÖ`/ we®§qKi|
36. ‡_‡K 41 ch©š— odd ev †eLvàv kãwU ‡ei Ki‡Z n‡e| †evSvB hv‡”Q, cÖ`Ë word ¸‡jvq A_© bv Rvb‡j correct answer †ei Kiv Amyweav n‡e|
36. (E)
e¨vL¨v:-
42
(A) placid - kvš—, mn‡R D‡ËwRZ ev ivMvwš^Z nq bv Ggb|
(B) Docile - eva¨
(C) Subservient = Docile
(D) Serene - kvš—
(E) defiant - A_© Aeva¨ mwVK DËi (E)
37. (C)
e¨vL¨v:-
(A) lackadaisical - A_© Aemv`MÖ¯—
(B) Apathy - A_© D`vmxbZv
(C) Zeal - A_© cÖej AvMÖn
(D) disinterest - A_© AvMÖ‡ni Afve
(E) Nonchalance - A_© J`vkxb¨| mwVK DËi (C)
38. (C)
e¨vL¨v:-
(A) macabre - A_© fqsKi|
(B) gruesome - A_© fqven|
(C) morose - A_© †Mvgov, wLUwL‡U ev AmvgvwRK
(D) Horrid - A_© fqvbK
(E) Sinister - A_© Aïf, Ag½jRbK ïay morose-Gi m‡½ f‡qi †Kvb m¤úK© †bB|
mwVK DËi (C)
39. (A)
e¨vL¨v:-
(A) Atypical-A_© not typical ev MZvbyMwZK bq Ggb|
(B) prosaic- A_© MZvbyMwZK|
(C) Dull- A_© MZvbyMwZK/wbim|
(D) Ordinary- A_© mvaviY/ MZvbyMwZK|
(E) common place-A_© MZvbyMwZK| GKgvÎ (A)-†ZB MZvbyMwZK Gi mv‡_ wgj †bB|
mwVK DËi (A)
40. (D)
e¨vL¨v:-
(A) Voracious-A_© ¶zavZ© ev †jvfx, me©MÖvmx gv‡b Lvev‡ii e¨vcv‡i cÖej AvMÖnx|
(B) Avid-A_© †Kvb wKQzi e¨vcv‡i LyeB Drmvnx|
(C) Fervent- A_© AZ¨š— Drmvnx/AvMÖnx|
(D) Industrious-A_© cwikªgx|
(E) Ardent-A_© AZ¨š— Drmvnx/AvMÖnx| GKgvÎ (D) ‡ZB Drmv‡ni mv‡_ †Kvb wgj †bB|
mwVK DËi (D)
41. (B)
e¨vL¨v:-
(A) Avarice-A_© †jvf, m¤ú‡`i Rb¨ cÖej AvMÖn|
(B) Judicious-A_© weP¶Y; mywe‡ePbv c~Y|©
(C) Capricious-A_© Lvg‡Lqvwj|
(D) Fickle-A_© fwel¨Øvbx Kiv hvq bv Ggb| GKgvÎ (B) †ZB Lvg‡Lqvjx c~Y© wPš—v fvebv ev AvPi‡Yi mv‡_ wgj †bB| mwVK DËi (B)
Suggestion Level # 15
01. The__________ predictions of greatly decreased revenues next year have frightened lawmakers into ___________
budget reductions.
(A) encouraging.....sizable (B) convincing.....minute (C) alarming....negligible (D) dire....drastic (E) none
02. Again and again, out of indifference or sheer stupidity, we have __________ our resources, assuming that there was no
end to the earth’s _____________ to recover from our mistakes.
(A) invested ..... resolve (B) wasted ..... failure (C) squandered ..... capacity (D) expanded ..... ability (E) none of these
03. It is _____________ to assume that if aspirin can prevent second heart attack, it can also _____________ an attack in
the first place.
(A) fanciful ..... eliminate (B) logical ..... ward off (C) sensible ..... encourage
(D) reasonable ..... foment (E) none of these
04. The reason for reduced spending on arms throughout the world is not _____, but _____, not a change in thinking, but a
shortage of money.
(A) ideological ......... economic (B) personal ........... political (C) local ............ universal
(D) liberal ............. conservative (E) none of these
05. If both political parties can abandon _________ positions in the face of economic realities, a ________ may be achieved
43
that will permit the government to function.
(A) sensible.....compromise (B) dogmatic.....consensus (C) irrational.....dichotomy
(D) reasoned.....decision (E) none of these
06. Mr. X was walking _______ a wood ______ a rainy day.
(A) to ... of (B) through ... on (C) of ... through (D) by ... in (E) in ... through
07. You must get some fresh _______ for our visitor; this loaf is terribly ______ .
(A) milk ... salty (B) fruits ... sweet (C) biscuit ... crunchy (D) bread ...stale (E) butter ... good
08. In times past, society suffered from a _______ of information about diet and exercise, but recently, we have been ____
reams of information on both topics.
(A) deluge....deprived of (B) dearth .....intimated with (C) paucity ....... denied the
(D) plethora..... showered with (E) misdirection ... given
09. It is unfortunate _________ that the countries most in need of restructuring their economic systems are the ones
whose history, customs or rules have _________ the acquisition of modern education and technology.
(A) situation......... encouraged (B) error............. frustrated (C) paradox ...... inhibited
(D) concern........ realized (E) situation......... promoted
10. In his address, the principal exhorted the teachers to discover and _____ each student’s ________ talents.
(A) suppress.......unrecognized (B) redirect ..... spacious (C) belittle........... dormant
(D) justify ........... gratuitous (E) develop ......... intrinsic
11. That is the person _____ I was speaking _____.
(A) whom, with (B) whom, to (C) who, with (D) who, to (E) which, with\
12. I have been _______ to swim since I was six but I never ________ to like swimming very much
(A) able......... learned (B) sure........wished (C) able.......used (D) capable......learned (E) good........tried
13. We like people _______ speak _______ people of Bangladesh.
(A) who, absolute (B) whom, whole (C) whose, always (D) whom, the (E) who, the
14. Bengali is __________ language of __________ people of Bangladesh.
(A) common, the (B) difficult, million (C) the, the (D) typical, many (E) none of these
15. One day Mr. A was walking ________ a wood ________ the rain.
(A) in, through (B) through, in (C) under, in (D) in, under (E) in, in
16. The reasoning in this editorial is so _________ that we cannot see how anyone can be deceived by it.
(A) cogent (†KЇRb&U& - †Rviv‡jv) (B) specious (C) coherent (D) dispassionate (E) astute (A¨vm&wUD&U& - m~²eyw×)
17. The sugar dissolved in water ____; finally all that remained was an almost ________ residue on the bottom of the glass.
(A) subsequently ...... glassy (B) gradually ...... imperceptible (C) quickly ...... lumpy(jvg&wc - LÊ LÊ)
(D) spectacularly(†¯úK&U¨vwKD&jvi&wj - PgrKvifv‡e; RuvK RgKc~Y©fv‡e cÖ`k©bxq) ..... opaque (E) immediately ...... fragrant
18. The manager tried to retain control of the situation in the mill, but his attempt was _______ by union leaders.
(A) frustrated (B) witnessed (C) justified (D) endorsed (E) disclosed
19. The _______ of time had left the fort ________ , it towered above the village, looking much as it must have done in
King Gupta’s time.
(A) ravages ...... untouched (B) remoteness ..... alone (C) lack ...... defended
(D) repairs ..... destroyed (E) status ...... lonely
20. Unable to ____ her distaste for media events and unnecessary publicity, Afroza Rahim continued to make ____
comments throughout the entire ceremony.
(A) conceal ..... effusive(Av‡eMcÖeY) (B) express ..... vitriolic (C) maintain .... copious(‡KŠwcAvm& - cÖvP~h©c~Y©)
(D) control ... garbled (E) disguise ..... caustic
21. We must try to understand her momentary ________ for she has ______ more strain and anxiety than any among us.
(A) senility(†mwbwjwU - RivMÖ¯—Zv) ..... understood (B) aberration .... undergone (C) generosity .... desired
(D) outcry ... described (E) vision ..... forgotten
22. Not only the ________ are fooled by propaganda; we can all be misled if we are not __________.
(A) fatuous(d¨vwPD&Avm& - †evKv) ...... intelligent (B) illiterate ...... mature (C) credulous ...... headstrong(GK¸u‡q)
(D) gullible ..... wary (E) ignorant ..... cynical(wmwbKvj& - m‡›`ncÖeY)
23. Japan’s industrial success is _______ in part to its tradition of group effort and ______ , as opposed to the emphasis
on personal achievement that is a prominent aspect of other industrial nations.
(A) related ...... introspection(Bb&‡Uªv‡¯úK&k&b& - wb‡R wb‡R wPš—v Kiv) (B) equivalent .... solidarity
(C) attributed... cooperation (D) responsive ..... independence (E) subordinate ..... individuality
24. There is an essential _____ in human gestures, and when someone raises the palm of his hands together, we do not
know whether it is to bury himself in prayer or throw himself into the sea.
(A) dignity (B) reverence(†ifv‡ib&m& - Mfxi kª×v) (C) ambiguity (D) economy (E) insincerity
25. We need more men of culture and enlightenment; we have too many ________ among us.
(A) philistines (B) pragmatists (C) visionaries (D) philosophers (E) students
26. The company aimed to become ________ within two years.
(A) degenerate (B) profitable (C) alienated (D) fiscal (E) treasured
27. The general public ________ a large number of TV sets now, because prices are beginning to decrease.
(A) must buying (B) must have ought (C) must buy (D) must be buying (E) none of these
28. In an admission test, to answer accurately is more important than _________.
44
(A) you finish quickly (B) finishing quickly (C) a quick finish (D) to finish quickly (E) none of these
29. The Test Manager made us _______ our identification before we were allowed to enter the test center.
(A) showed (B) showing (C) shown (D) show (E) to show
30. he income of a college teacher is must less _________.
(A) in comparison with the salary of a doctor (B) to compare as a doctor (C) than that of a doctor
(D) than a doctor (E) none of the these
31. The Institute _____ offer only the MBA program, but it now also has a BBA program.
(A) was (B) was used to be (C) had used to (D) used to (E) was used to
32. Fast-food restaurants have become popular in Dhaka city because many working people want ___________________ .
(A) the eat quickly and cheaply (B) eating quickly and cheaply (C) to eat quickly and cheaply
(D) eat quickly and cheaply (E) none of these
33. During his outstanding career as a teacher, Mr. X ___________ the lives of thousands of students.
(A) enriched (B) explored (C) eased (D) lessened (E) attracted
34. The storeowner said that he would not be ______________ for damages if the appliance was improperly installed.
(A) depressed (B) delivered (C) responsible (D) attenuated (E) repaired
35. Some employers may require that job candidates have not only a degree ____________.
(A) also two years experience (B) but no experience (C) but also two years experience
(D) but two years experience (E) but more two years experience
36. After such ________ meal, we were all quick to _______ Marium for her delicious (my¯^v`y) cooking.
(A) a fearful ..... congratulate (B) an enormous ..... console (C) a delightful ..... avoid
(D) a heavy ..... thank (E) a wonderful ..... applaud
37. The ______of the Titanic could have been avoided if more safety ______ had been taken.
(A) tragedy ..... precautions (B) embargo ..... preservers (C) disaster ..... reservations
(D) crew ..... measures (E) fiasco ..... inspectors
38. He should be ________ to complain, because his salary is __________ with his productivity.
(A) right ..... proportionate (B) brought ..... balanced (C) foolish ..... gratuitous
(D) reluctant ..... commensurate (E) entitled ..... alleviated
39. ______________ discovery of fire, our ancestors used to eat uncooked food.
(A) Prior to the (B) Prior (C) A prior (D) The prior (E) Top prior
40. Recently, there have been several outbreaks of disease like Dengue, and doctors don’t know ______________
(A) what is the cause (B) the cause is what (C) is what the cause (D) what the cause is (E) none of these.
41. Why is it that even the most ___________ of students occasionally ________ a seemingly simple question, and finds
himself/herself unable to determine the correct answer?
(A) conscientious ............. balks at (B) dogged ............. proposes (C) intuitive ............. resolve
(D) erudite ............. overlooks (E) competent ............. stumbles over(÷vg&e&j& - †nvuPU ‡L‡q cov)
42. The bank cashier’s _______ of the funds was not discovered until the auditors examined the accounts.
(A) extradition (B) embezzlement (C) patronage (D) an ingenious (E) verification
43. In sharp contrast (Kb&Uvª m&U& - ˆecixZ¨) to the previous night’s revelry, the wedding was ________ affair.
(A) a fervent(Drmvnx) (B) a dignified (C) a chaotic(K¨v-A-wUK& - wek„•Lj) (D) an ingenious (E) a jubilant
44. Many experts argue that a _______ grouping of students would improve instruction because it would limit the range of
student abilities in the classroom.
(A) heterogeneous (B) systematic (C) homogenous (D) sporadic(‡_‡g †_‡g) (E) fragmentary
45. The psychologist set up the experiment to test the rat’s _______; he wanted to see how well the rat adjusted to the
changing conditions it had to face.
(A) reflexes (B) stamina (C) communicability (D) adaptability (E) sociability
Answer Sheet:
mgvavbt
01. (D) †h‡nZz Predictions (fwel¨ØvYx)-Uv wQ‡jv †h revenues (Avq) A‡bK K‡g hv‡e; cÖ_g k~b¨¯’v‡b Ggb GKUv kã em‡e hv‡Z †evSv hvq †h,
predictions-Uv GKUv `ytmsev` w`‡qwQ‡jv| cÖ_g k~b¨¯’v‡b (C)-Gi alarming (wec`vk¼vc~Y©) Ges (D)-Gi dire (fqven) Lvc Lvq| GLb ev‡K¨i
evKx As‡k †`Lv hv‡”Q †h, lawmaker (AvBbcÖ‡YZv)-iv fq †c‡q budget Kwg‡q w`‡q‡Qb| AZGe, wØZxq blank space-G Ggb GKUv kã em‡e hv‡Z
†evSv hvq †h budget reduction-Uv wQ‡jv †ek eo iK‡gi| (C)-†Z Av‡Q negligible hvi A_© hrmvgvb¨| ¯úóZB, negligible n‡e bv| (D)-Gi
drastic (eo ai‡bi) wØZxq blank-G my›`ifv‡e Lvc †L‡q hvq|
DËi n‡jv (D)|
02. (C) Our resources (Avgv‡`i m¤ú` )-‡K wb‡q Ggb wKQy Kiv n‡jv, †hUv indifference (D`vwmbZv) ev sheer stupidity (Pig †evKvgx)-i cwiPq|
AZGe, cÖ_g blank-G (B)-Gi wasted (AcPq Kiv) Ges (C)-Gi squandered (Ace¨q Kiv) Lvc Lvq| ev‡K¨i c‡ii As‡k Av‡Q †h, GUv a‡i †bqv
n‡qwQ‡jv (assume) ‡h Avgv‡`i fzj †_‡K cybi“×vi nIqvi e¨vcv‡i c„w_exi ____ Gi †Kv‡bv †kl †bB| ¯úóZBt k~b¨¯’v‡b (B)-Gi failure Ges (C)-
Gi capacity †_‡K ïaygvÎ capacity kãUvB Lvc Lvq| DËi n‡jv (C)|
03. (B) `y‡Uv blank-G GKB mv‡_ kã ewm‡q wPš—v Ki‡Z n‡e, †Kbbv ïay cÖ_g blank-G A-Gi fanciful, B-Gi logical, C-Gi sensible Ges D-Gi
reasonable emv‡j PviwUB Kg-†ekx Lvc Lvq| `y‡Uv blank space-G answer choice-¸‡jvi `y‡Uv kã emv‡j ïay (B)-Gi logical Ges ward off
45
w`‡q A_©c~Y© evK¨ ˆZix nqt Aspirin ‡h‡nZz wØZxq heart attack-‡K euvav †`q, GUv a‡i †bqv logical (hyw³ms½Z) ‡h, (aspirin) cÖ_gev‡ii AvµgbI
ward off (cÖwZnZ Kiv) Ki‡Z cvi‡e| Ab¨vb¨ choice-Gi k㸇jv‡K emv‡j H ev‡K¨i †Kv‡bv A_©c~Y© e³e¨ †Zix nq bv| †hgbt (D)-Gi reasonable
cÖ_g blank-G wVKB Lvc Lvq| wKš‘ foment (Dm‡K †`qv) kãUv wØZxq blank space-G Av‡`Š A_©c~Y© nq bv|
04. (A) cÖ_g blank space-G Ggb GKUv kã em‡e †hUv 'thinking'-Gi mv‡_ m¤úK©hy³, Ges wØZxq k~b¨¯’v‡b Ggb GKUv kã em‡e †hUv money-Gi mv‡_
m¤úK©hy³| GKgvÎ choice (A)-Gi ideological (gZev` msµvš—) Ges economic kã `y‡Uv blank space-G Lvc Lvq|
05. (B) cy‡iv evK¨Uv c‡o eySv hvq †h, political parties-Gi g‡bvfv‡ei Kvi‡Y government wVKg‡Zv function Ki‡Z cvi‡Q bv| AZGe, cÖ_g blank-G
GKUv negative meaning hy³ kã em‡e| G‡¶‡Î (B)-Gi dogmatic( GKMuy‡q, hyw³nxb c¶ Aej¤^b) Ges (C)-Gi irrational (A‡hŠw³K) Lvc Lvq|
GLb wØZxq blank-G Ggb GKUv kã emv‡Z n‡e †hUv achieve (AR©b Kiv) Ki‡j government-Gi c‡¶ function Kiv m¤fe n‡e| (B)-Gi
consensus (HK¨gZ) wØZxq blank-G Lvc †L‡q hvq| †Kbbv, ZLb cy‡iv ev‡K¨i A_© nq, hw` economic realities (A_©‰bwZK ev¯—eZv)-Gi gy‡L
political party-¸‡jv Zv‡`i dogmatic (GKMuy‡q) Ae¯’vb Z¨vM K‡i, Z‡eB HK¨gZ AR©b n‡Z cv‡i hvi d‡j miKv‡ii c‡¶ function Kiv m¤¢e n‡e|
(C)-Gi dichotomy ( `yB fv‡M wef³ nIqv) wØ&Zxq blank-G Av‡`Š Lvc Lvq bv|
06. (B) appropriate preposition: through a wood on a rainy day
07. (D) ‡gngv‡bi Rb¨ fresh wKQy Avb‡Z ejv‡Z †evSv hv‡”Q Av‡MiUv fresh (ZvRv) bq| wØZxq k~b¨¯’v‡b fresh-Gi wecixZ kã em‡e| ïay D-Gi stale
(evmx/cPv) Lvc Lvq| Loaf _vKv‡Z †evSv hv‡”Q wRwbmUv wQj i“wU| cÖ_g k~b¨¯’v‡b D-Gi bread em‡e|
08. (B) GKUz wPš—v Ki‡j †evSv hvq c~‡e©i hy‡M diet Ges exercise m¤ú‡K© Z_¨ wbðq Kg wQj| AZGe cÖ_g k~b¨¯’v‡b Ggb kã em‡e †hUv Øviv ¯^íZv †evSvq|
AZGe (B)-Gi dearth Ges (C)-Gi paucity `yUvB Lvc Lvq| wKš‘ wØZxq k~b¨¯’v‡b ïay gvÎ (B)-Gi intimated with (fvjfv‡e Rvbv) Lvc Lvq|
09. (A/E)
10. (E)
11. (B)who bv whom n‡e, Zv †ei Kivi mnR Dcvq n‡jv, who/whom-Gi c‡i verb-Gi subject †ei Kiv|
G‡¶‡Î was speaking-Gi subject n‡jv I| who/ whom w`‡q †h clause ïi“ n‡jv, †mB clause-Gi subject (I) I verb(was speaking)
DfqB Av‡Q| who/ whom-Gi subjective form bv n‡q objective form whom n‡e| Avi speaking-Gi to n‡jv appropriate
preposition|
12. (C) evKx¸‡jv w`‡q sentence c~iY Ki‡j †Kv‡bv correct wKsev meaningful (A_©en) evK¨ ˆZwi nq bv|
13. (E) cÖ‡kœcÖ‡YZv g‡b nq who/whom-†K Lye cQ›` K‡ib! cÖ_g blank-G who/whom bv whose n‡e Zv †ei Kivi Rb¨ Avevi 16-Gi g‡Zv ïi“ Kiv
hvKt who/whom/whose w`‡q †h clause ïi“ n‡jv, †mUvi verb n‡jv speak| Avi speak-Gi subject bv _vKv‡Z who/whom/whose-Gi g‡a¨
†_‡KB subject-Uv Avm‡e| who n‡e| Avi truth-Gi Av‡M the nq|
14. (C) wbw`©ófv‡e evsjv fvlvi K_v nIqv‡Z the language n‡e| Avi wbw`©ófv‡e evsjv‡`‡ki gvbyl wb‡q K_v ejv‡Z the people n‡e|
15. (B)cÖ_g k~Y¨¯’v‡b ïaygvÎ through Lvc Lvq - †m e‡bi wfZi w`‡q nvuUwQ‡jv|
16. (B) word meaning: (A) cogent (†Kv‡R›U) - convincing, AKvU¨ hyw³c~Y©| (C) coherent (†KŠwn‡ib&U&) - mvgÄm¨c~Y© ev †MvQv‡jv (e³e¨, ZK© cÖf…wZ)| (D)
dispassionate - Av‡eMnxb, c¶cvZnxb| (E) astute-a~Z©| editorial (cwÎKvi m¤úv`‡Ki †jLv cÖeÜ, m¤úv`Kxq)-Gi reasoning (hyw³-Z‡K©i aviv) GZ‡ekx
_____ †h, Avgiv fve‡ZB cvwi bv †h, †KD GUv Øviv deceived (cÖZvwiZ) n‡Z cv‡i| Zvi gv‡b, reasoning-Gi fzj-åvw𗏇jv AZ¨š— †ekx iKg cÖKU ev
my¯úó| Zvi gv‡b, negative A_©en GKUv kã GLv‡b em‡e| specious A_© Ggb wKQy †hUv AvcvZt `„wó‡Z mZ¨, wKš‘ Avm‡j wg_¨v (seemingly reasonable but
actually incorrect)|
17. (B) cvwb‡Z sugar gradually dissolved (M‡j hvIqv) n‡jv; Ae‡k‡l ïay hv _vK‡jv Zv n‡”Q M- v‡mi bx‡Pi cÖvq imperceptible(Dcw¯’wZ †evSvB hvq
bv GZ m~² ev Aí, A‡evaMg¨) residue(Aewkóvsk, Zjvwb)| (A) subsequently – Zvici, glassy – Kv‡Pi gZ (C) lumpy – LÛ LÛ (D)
spectacularly – PgKcÖ`fv‡e, opaque (I‡cK& – A¯^”Q) (E) fragrant(d¨vM&i¨vb&U& - myMÜhy³|
18. (A) justified - †Kv‡bv wKQy‡K †hŠw³K cÖgvY Kiv| (D) endorse – Aby‡gv`b Kiv (E) disclose – cÖKvk / e¨³ K‡i †`qv| wg‡ji cwiw¯’wZi Dci control
(wbqš¿Y) retain (eRvq/wUwK‡q ivLv) Kivi Rb¨ manager-Gi †Póv trade union †bZv‡`i Øviv frustrate (e¨vnZ/e¨_©) nq|
19. (A) MÖv‡gi g‡a¨ DuPz n‡q `yM©Uv `vuwo‡qwQ‡jv; A‡bK eQi Av‡M mgªvU ¸‡ßi mgq `yM©Uv †hgb wQ‡jv, GLbI †mUv cÖvq †miKgB †`L‡Z| Zvi gv‡b, kZ kZ eQi
AwZµvš— n‡jI `yM©Uvi †Kv‡bv ¶wZ nqwb| ravages A_© aŸsm/D‡”Q`|
20. (E) Zvi distaste(weZ…òv/weivM)-‡K conceal (jyKv‡bv) ev disguise(†Mvcb Kiv) Ki‡Z bv †c‡i, Afroza (A) effusive(BwdD&wmf& - evavnxbfv‡e, D”QwmZ
K_v) wKsev (E) caustic (e¨½uvZ¥K/‡klvZ¥K) gš—e¨ KiwQ‡jv| ïaygvÎ caustic-UvB wØZxq k~b¨¯’v‡b Lvc Lvq| (E) DËi| (B) vitriolic - Zxeª
AvµgYvZ¥K| (C)-G copious (†KŠwcAvm&) - cÖPzi| (B)-G garbled- G‡jv‡g‡jv|
21. (B) aberration (G¨vev‡iB&kb& – ˆbwZK AebwZ; undergo (†Kv‡bv AwfÁZv) mn¨ Kiv; †Kv‡bv wKQyi m¤§~Lxb nIqv|
22. (D) propaganda (e¨vcK cÖPvi) Øviv ïay gullible (AwZwi³ wek¦vmcÖeY)-ivB †evKv e‡b bv, AvgivI (A_©vr PvjvKivI) fzjc‡_ PvwjZ n‡Z cvwi hw` Avgiv
wary bv _vwK| (A): fatuous (d¨vwPD&Avm& - gyL©| (C) credulous - AwZwi³ wek¦vmcÖeY; headstrong - †R`x, GK¸u‡q| (E) cynical - m‡›`n cÖeY|
23. (C) Rvcv‡bi industrial success-Gi Rb¨ attribute (KviY wn‡m‡e Av‡ivc Kiv/`vqx Kiv) Kiv nq group effort-†K| co-operation(wg‡j wg‡k
KvR Kiv) wØZxq k~b¨¯’v‡b Lvc Lvq|
24. (C) †KD Zvi `ynv‡Zi palms (Zvjy) GK‡Î Dc‡i DVv‡j Avgiv Rvwbbv †h, †m wK Dcvmbv Ki‡Q, bv cvwb‡Z Svc w`‡Z cÖ¯‘wZ wb‡”Q| Zvi gv‡b gvby‡li
gestures (A½xf½x)-Gi g‡a¨ GKUv ambiguity (ب_©‡evaKZv) i‡q wM‡q‡Q|
25. (A) philistine A_© wk¶v I mvs¯‹…wZK g~j¨‡evanxb e¨w³|
26. (B)
27. (C)
28. (D)
46
29. (D)
30. (C)
31. (D)
32. (C)
33. (A)
34. (C)
35. (C)
36. (E) delicious(†Wwjkvm&) cooking A_© AZ¨š— my¯v^ `y ivbœv| wØZxq blank-G wbðqB GKwU positive kã A_©vr G‡¶‡Î cÖksmvm~PK kã em‡e|
DËi¸‡jvi g‡a¨ (A)-Gi congratulate, (D)-Gi thank Ges (E)-Gi applaud Lvc Lvq| cÖ_g k~b¨¯’v‡bI GKwU positive adjective em‡e|
(A)-Gi a fearful (fxwZKi) Ges (D)-Gi a heavy Lvc Lvq bv| ïay (E)-Gi a wonderful Lvc Lvq| DËi n‡e (E)|
37. (A) The ___ of the Titanic could have been avoided ‡_‡K †evSv hv‡”Q, †h wRwbmwU avoid(G¨vf‡qW&-Gov‡bv) Kivi K_v n‡”Q, †mwU wbðqB
negative A_©‡evaK †Kv‡bv kã| Answer choice-¸‡jvi g‡a¨ (A)-Gi tragedy(Uª¨v‡RWx - we‡qvMvš—K NUbv) Ges (C)-Gi disaster(wWS¨vm&Uvi&-
wech©q) fvjfv‡eB Lvc Lvq| (E)-Gi fiasco(wdq¨vm&‡Kv - e¨_©Zv) wKQyUv Lvc Lvq| wØZxq Blank-G mZK©Zv ev GB ai‡Yi †Kv‡bv kã em‡e|
ïay (A)-Gi precautions Lvc Lvq| DËi (A)|
38. (D) GUv‡Z Aek¨ `y‡Uv Blank-G GKB mv‡_ ewm‡q wPš—v Ki‡Z n‡e| cÖ_‡g Aek¨ k~Y¨¯’v‡b wK ai‡Yi kã em‡Z cv‡i †mwU wPš—v K‡i wb‡j mywe‡a n‡e :
Zvi productivity-Gi mv‡_ Zvi salary mvgÄm¨cyY© n‡j, complain KivUv †evKvgx ev Ab¨vq n‡e Zvi Rb¨| Avi, Zvi productivity-i Zzjbvq Zvi
salary Kg n‡j complain KivUv ¯^vfvweK ev hyw³m½Z n‡Zv| (A) Lvc Lvq bv| †Kbbv Zvi productivity-i mv‡_ Zvi salary hw`
proportionate A_©vr mgvbycvwZK nq, Z‡e complain KivUv Zvi Rb¨ right ev wVK n‡e bv| GBfv‡e wPš—v Ki‡j †evSv hvq †h ïay D Lvc Lvq|
commensurate(K‡gb&kv‡iB&U&) A_© h_vcwigvY ev h‡_vchy³ nIqv| ev‡K¨i A_© `vuovq: Zvi productivity-i mv‡_ Zvi salary mg ch©v‡qi nIqv‡Z
†Kv‡bv complain Kivi e¨vcv‡i Zvi g‡a¨ Abxnv ev Awb”Qv _vKvi K_v|
39. (A) Prior-Gi mv‡_ to jv‡M| Prior to A_© c~‡e©| Avi the jvM‡e, †h‡nZz discovering of fire n‡jv GKwU wbw`©ó NUbv| ZvB, definite article the
jvM‡e| ev‡K¨i A_© n‡jv: Av¸b Avwe®‹v‡ii Av‡M Avgv‡`i c~e©cyi“liv KvPuv Lv`¨ †L‡Z Af¨¯’ wQ‡jv|
40. (D) and-Gi c‡ii clause-wU Avm‡j cÖkœ bq| ZvB (D)-G what the cause is n‡e|
41. (E)
42. (B)
43. (B) revelry(†i‡fj&ix) = cÖPÛ ˆn nj- vc~Y© Av‡gv`-cÖ‡gv`| contrast = cv_©K¨; wfbœZv; ˆecixZ¨; ˆelg¨| sharp = AZ¨š— †ekx| sentence-wU‡Z
contrast-Gi wb‡`©k _vKvq k~b¨¯’vbwU‡Z revelry-Gi wecixZv_©K word em‡e| A_©vr MZiv‡Zi cÖPÛ ˆn ûj- vc~Y© Av‡gv`-cÖ‡gv‡`i wecix‡Z wedding
wQj GKwU dignified(wWM&wbdvB&W& - M¤¢xi, hv revelry-Gi wecixZ) affair.
44. (C) Sentence-Gi †k‡li As‡k Av‡Q limit the range of student abilities in the classroom gv‡b Qv·`i cÖwZfvi cv_©‡K¨i mxgv‡K Kwg‡q †`q|
wK‡mi Øviv GgbwU nq A_©vr Gap-Gi ci grouping kãwU _vKvq eySv hvq class-G GKB ai‡bi cÖwZfvi AwaKvix Qv·`i wb‡q †h KqwU `j n‡e Zv n‡e
homogenous Ges G‡Z ability-i range, student to student bv n‡q group to group n‡e e‡j instruction improve n‡e|
45. (D) Sentence-Gi cÖ_g Ask †_‡K eySv hvq k~b¨¯’v‡b rat ev Bu`y‡ii †Kvb behaviour ev quality eySvq Ggb †Kvb word em‡e| 2q As‡k ejv n‡q‡Q
Psychologist †`L‡Z †P‡qwQ‡jb †h cwiewZ©Z cvwicvwk¦©KZvq rat wKfv‡e Lvc LvB‡q ev adjust K‡i wb‡Z cv‡i| myZivs Answer choice †_‡K adjust-
Gi mgv_©K word adaptability em‡e hvi A_© Lvc LvB‡q †bqvi ¶gZv ev Awf‡hvRb ¶gZv|
Suggestion Level # 16
47
9. A. He went to the mountains on his vacation and we did too.
B. He went to the mountains on his vacation and so we did.
C. He went to the mountains on his vacation also we did.
D. He went to the mountains on his vacation and so did.
E. He went to the mountains on his vacation and also did we.
10. A. I didn’t see Maria in the party and so didn’t Jery.
B. I didn’t see Maria in the party and Jery didn’t too.
C. I didn’t see Maria in the party and also Jery didn’t.
D. I didn’t see Maria in the party and Jery didn’t either.
E. I didn’t see Maria in the party and Jery didn’t also.
11. A. Jabin didn’t plan to attend the conference and Hary didn’t.
B. Jabin didn’t plan to attend the conference and neither Harry didn’t.
C. Jabin didn’t plan to attend the conference and neither did Harry.
d. Jabin didn’t plan to attend the conference and Hary did either.
E. Jabin didn’t plan to attend the conference and either did Harry.
12. A. Porter doesn’t go that Church, and shorter doesn’t also
B. Porter doesn’t go that Church, and so doesn’t either.
C. Porter doesn’t go that Church, and shorter doesn’t either.
D. Porter doesn’t go that Church, and shorter doesn’t too.
E. None of the above.
From the questions 13-15, choose the correct option of the underlined portion:
13. Florida hasn’t yet ratified(Aby‡gv`b Kiv) the amendment(ms‡kvab), and several other states hasn’t either.
A. Several other states hasn’t either. B. and neither have several other state. C. and neither has several other states.
D. and neither has several other states. E. and several other state haven’t either.
14. California relies(wbf©i Kiv) heavily on income from fruit, crops, and Florida also.
A. from fruit, crops, and Florida also. B. from fruit, crops, and so does Florida. C. from fruit, crops, and Florida does so.
D. and so does Florida. E. from fruit, crops and Florida is as well.
15. Pioneer(AMÖ`~Z) men and women endured(mn¨ Kiv) terrible(fxlY) hardships(Kó), and so do their children.
A. and so do their children B. and neither did their children. C. and also the children.
D. and so did their children E. and but don’t do their children.
From the questions 16-20 select the incorrect word.
16. Although fraternal(fvB m¤^Üxq) twins (RgR) (A) are born at the same time, they do not tend (cÖeY nIqv) (B) resembling( wi‡Sg&e&j&
- †`L‡Z Abyiƒc nIqv) (C) each other may more (D) than (E) do other siblings (fvB ev †evb).
17. After (A) her famous (B) husband’s (C) death Eleanor Roosevelt continued (D) to work (E) for peace.
18. Every few (A) years, (B) changes in the legal profession (†ckv) force (cÖfve †djv) the American Bar Association (C) rewriting
(D) its (E) curriculum guidelines.
19. (A) After finished the marathon (`xN©‡`Šo cÖwZ‡hvMxZv)(B) in record time, Rocky (C) was awarded the (D)
outstanding(AmvaviY)performance medal (E) by the city.
20. Amateur (A‡ckv`vi) sportsmen (A) believe that there (B) are too (C) many (D) restrictions on (E) hunt (wkKvi Kiv) deer.
Choose the correct option of the underlined portion of the following questions :
21. The 13 original first states ratified (mg_©b Kiv) the US constitution (msweavb) during a 3-year period between 1787 and
1790.
A. The 13 original, first states ratified. B. The 13 original states ratified. C. 13 original, first states ratified.
D.the 13th original, first states ratified. E. The 13th original states ratified.
22. Two anthropologists(b„ZË¡we`) from the university of California they believe that they have found a missing link in
human evolution(gvbe weeZ©b)|
A. they believe that they have found a missing link. B. it believe that they have found a missing link
C. believe that they have found a missing link D. it believes that it has found a missing link
E. believes that they have found a missing link.
23. Tarkington’s writings were very extremely popular, but his conservative values (g~j¨‡eva/wek¦vm) soon dated(†m‡K‡j) his
works(mvwnZ¨ Kg©)|
A. writings were very extremely popular B. writings was very extremely popular C. writings were very popular
D. writings were extremely popular E. Both (C) and (D)
24. In prehistoric times, sharp arrowheads(Zx‡ii aviv‡jv gv_v) were often made and created by grinding(Nl©Y K‡i ¸uov Kiv)
rocks(cv_i) together.
A. were often made and crated by grinding rocks together
B. was often made and created by grinding rocks together
C. were often made by grinding rocks together
D. were often making and creating by grinding rocks together.
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E. were often making by grinding rocks together.
Choose the incorrect word:
25. Both natural and (A) synthetic man-made rubber (B) are of (C) little commercial valve in the (D) raw state (KvPv Ae¯’vq) and
(E) cannot be used until they are vulcanized (cPuv ivevi‡K k³ Kivi Rb¨ D”PZv‡c MÜK wgwkªZ Kiv|)
From the questions 26-30, find the most nearly opposite in meaning to the word in capital letters.
26. ACTOR
A. spectator B. singer C. player D. benefactor (`qvjy) E. thinker
27. SYCOPHANT
A. mastodon B. coward C. follower D. imitator E. leader.
28. HAPPY
A. argumentative B. appeasing (kvš—bv`vqK) C. affluent (A¨vd&j~‡qb&U& - abx)
D. vicarious (wfK¨vwiAvm& - Kv‡iv g‡bvcyZ wKQz Kiv n‡q‡Q e‡j †h myL ev mš‘wó) E. mangy (†gB&b&Rx- †bvsiv; Ae‡nwjZ)
30. NOCTURNAL
A. musical B. daily C. ignorance D. archaic (Avi‡KB&K& - cÖvPxb) E. consistent(mvgÄm¨c~Y©)
From the questions 31-35 find the nearest similar meaning of the capital letter.
31. INTEGRATE
A. unite B. tolerate C. assure D. separate E. none of this
32. SANCTION
A. verify B. prohibit C. plan D. authorization E. none of this.
33. EXPROPRIATE
A. assimilate B. integrate C. excommunicate D. separate E. deprive of ownership.
34. MISAPPROPRIATE
A. fervent B. indifferent C. passionate D. appropriate E. none of the above
35. ARTIFICIAL
A synthetic B. imitation C. man-made D. pretended (wcÖ‡Ub&W& - fvb Kiv) E. all of the above.
36. FOOD : MENU
A. accounting: inventory B. index : foreword C. silverware: spoon D. merchandise : catalogue E. films : credits
37. REFUGE : ASYLUM
A. astronaut : capsule B. perfectionist: frustration C. consumer : impulse (Bg&cvj&m& - †cÖiYv)
D. opportunity : advantage E. director : stage
38. YEARN (AvKzj AvKvsLv cÖKvk Kiv) : Longing
A. beware (mZK©v nIqv) : danger B. rush : patience C. enjoy: pleasure D. suppress: range E. sleep: insomnia(Awb`ªv)
39. SKETCH : ARTIST
A. secret : confident B. palette : painter C. cell : prisoner D. draft : writer E. chisel : sculptor
40. TOLERANCE : BIGOTRY
A. prodigality(cÖwWM¨vwjwU - AwgZe¨wqZv) : ribaldry(AkxjZv) B. magnanimity(g¨vMb¨vwbwgwU - gnvbyfeZv) : parsimony (cvi&wm‡gŠbx - K…cYZv)
C. exigency(†qM&wS‡Rb&mx) : urgency D. emulation (†qwgD&‡jBk&b& - mgK¶ nIqvi †Póv) : rivalry (cÖwZØwÜZv)
E. patience : conformity(Kb&diwgwU - wgj).
Answer Sheet
1. (D) KwVb!!! ‘would that’ w`‡q †Kvb sentence ïi“ n‡j subject-Gi ci could verb e‡m|
2. (C) Sentence-wU passive voice-G n‡e| Avi passive voice-G be verb Gici verb-Gi past participle nq|
3. (B) Complete verb-Gi ci wØZxq verb-Gi mv‡_ ing hy³ nq|
4. (A) ‡Kvb sentence-G it is high time _vK‡j c‡ii subject-Gi verb-wU past form-G nq|
5. (D) Main clause-wU past tense-G n‡j Ges subordinate clause-Gi †k‡l †Kvb mgq D‡j- L _vK‡j subordinate clause-G verb-Gi
Av‡M would/should e‡m|
6. (A) ‘lest’ _vK‡j c‡ii subject Gi ci should/might emv‡Z n‡e|
7. (E) ‘While’-Gi ci ïay verb em‡j verb-Gi mv‡_ ing hy³ nq| Avi clause em‡j clause-wU past continuous tense-G nq|
8. (b) Affirmative statement-G †h tense-Gi auxiliary verb _v‡K, so hy³ As‡kI wVK GKB tense-Gi auxiliary verb nq|
9. (A) Auxiliary verb e¨wZZ †Kvb verb affirmative statement-G _vK‡j so, too, also hy³ As‡k tense Abyhvqx do, does, did emv‡Z
nq| G‡¶‡Î so Gi structure n‡”Q-so+do, does, did+subject Ges too I also-Gi structure n‡”Q subject+ do, did, does + too/also.
10. (D) Negative agreement either I neither e‡m| also, too, so nq|
11. (C) Negative agreement-G either-Gi position n‡”Q verb-Gi ci Avi neither-Gi position n‡”Q verb Gi Av‡M|
12. (C) Negative agreement either I neither e‡m|
13. (D) and Gi ci wØZxqvs‡ki subject n‡jv several other states hv plural, Avi plural subject-Gi mv‡_ have e‡m, has bq|
14. (B) So Gi position n‡jv verb Gi Av‡M Ges also I too-Gi position n‡jv verb-Gi ci| cÖ_g D`vni‡Y wØZxqvs‡k verb bv _vKvq GwU
mwVK nqwb| Avevi j¶¨ Ki“b (D)-†Z so-Gi structure mwVK n‡jI from fruit, crops bv _vKvq (D)-I mwVK DËi nqwb|
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15. (D) Affirmative statement-wU past form-G _vKvq so Gici verb-wU I past tense-G n‡e| (A)-†Z so-Gi ci verb-wU present tense-
G _vKvq (A) mwVK DËi nqwb|
16. (B) GKwU sentence-G GKmv‡_ `ywU verb em‡j wØZxqwU nq Gerund bv nq infinitive n‡e| ‘Tend’ n‡”Q Ggb GKwU verb hvi ci Gerund
bv e‡m infinitive e‡m|
17. (D) ‘Continue’ verb-Gi ci wØZxq Av‡iKwU verb em‡j †mwU Gerund nq|
18. (C) ‘Force’ verb-Gi ci infinitive e‡m|
19. (A) ‘Finished’ bv †_‡K hw` finishing _vK‡Zv Z‡e (A) fyj n‡Zv bv| wKš‘ GLv‡b ‘Finished’ _vKvq †evSv-hv‡”Q †h GwUi perfect
participle A_©vr Having finished n‡e|
20. (E) Preposition-Gi ci †Kvb verb em‡j| †mwU Gerund n‡e|
21. (B) Original A_© g~j ev Avmj ev cÖv_wgK| Avevi first ejvi `iKvi †bB| ïay original states n‡e| Avi †h †Kvb number Gi mv‡_ ‘th’ †hvM
K‡i position †evSv‡bv nq| wKš‘ (D)- †Z 13th w`‡q position bv †evSvq (D) mwVK DËi nq wb|
22. (C) ‘believe’ verb Gi subject n‡jv two anthropologists. ZvB bZzb K‡i believe verb-Gi Av‡M subject emv‡j Redundancy n‡e|
23. (E) Very I Extremely n‡”Q mgv_©K kã `yÕwU GKmv‡_ emv‡j redundant n‡e| ZvB GKwU sentence-G nq very em‡e bv nq extremely
em‡e|
24. (C) made I created mgv_©K kã| ZvB ïay made n‡e|
25. (A) Synthetic (K…wÎg) Ges man-made n‡jv mgv_©K kã GKmv‡_ `ywU‡K emv‡j redundant n‡e| ZvB ïay synthetic ev man-made n‡e|
26. (A) Actor A_© Awf‡bZv| Gi wecixZ n‡jv Spectator (`k©K)|
27. (E) ‘Sycophant’ A_© †Zvlv‡gv`Kvix| Gi wecixZ leader (†bZv) _v‡K †Zvlv‡gv` Kiv nq|
28. (E) Happy Gi wecixZ Lamentable A_© †kvKvZ©|
29.(B) ‘Impassive’ A_© Ôwbwe©Kvi/AwePwjZÕ| Gi wecixZ agitated A_© Ôwe¶zäÕ|
30.(B) Nocturnal A_© ivwÎKvjxb| Gi wecixZ daily (w`evKvjxb)
31.(A) Integrate A_© GKwÎZ Kiv| Avi Gi Synonym n‡jv unite hvi A_©I GKwÎZ Kiv|
32.(D) Sanction A_© †Kvb wKQz Kivi Rb¨ cÖ`Ë AbygwZ, gÄyi, Zvi gv‡b authorization.
33.(E) Expropriate A_© Kvnv‡iv gvwjKvbvaxb m¤úwË/Rwg Ab¨ †KD (we‡klZ: miKvi) `Lj K‡i †bqv| Zvi gv‡b deprive of ownership A_© ¯^Ë¡ nB‡Z
ewÂZ Kiv|
34.(D) misappropriate A_© AvZ¥mvr Kiv| Appropriate A_© I AvZ¥mvr Kiv|
35.(E) Artificial A_© K…wÎg, cÖvK…wZK bq, gvbyl wbwg©Z/KcU/fvb Kiv|
36.(D) Menu n‡jv †i‡¯—vivq cÖ¯‘Z Food-Gi ZvwjKv| Avi catalogue n‡jv †`vKv‡b merchandise (cY¨`ªe¨)-Gi ZvwjKv|
37.(A) Asylum(Avkªq)-G _v‡K Refuge(kiYv_©x)| Capsule-G _v‡K Astronaut (b‡fvPvix)|
38.(C) Yearn n‡jv Longing A_© AvKzj AvKvsLv-Gi synonym. Avi enjoy n‡jv pleasure-Gi synonym.
39.(D) Artist- iv sketch ‰Zix K‡i| Avi writer- iv draft ‰Zix K‡i|
40.(D) Tolerance is a characteristics of Bigotry (†Muvovwg),
Emulation is a characteristics of rivalry.
Suggestion Level # 17
that has lasted (wU‡K _vKv) from the mid-sixteenth to the early eighteenth century.
(B) (C) (D) (E)
22. In many parts of the US, houses are more energy efficient (kw³ mvkªqx) than
(A) (B) (C)
23. I 1872, when congress (msm`) passes the yellow stone Act, the world’s first national park was created.
(A) (B) (c) (d) (e)
24. Space programs already will explored (Avwe¯‹v‡ii D‡Ï‡k¨ AbymÜvb Kiv)
(A) (B)
other planets how long will it be before they explore other stars ?
(C) (D) (E)
25. Before 1900, scientists will have known little, about the forces governing small group behavior.
(A) (B) (C) (D) (E)
For question 26-30, find the closest same meaning of the word.
26. INGREDIENT
A. component B. ingenious (D™¢vebKzkj) C. congenial (AbyK~j/mgg‡bvfvevcbœ/eÜzfvevcbœ) D. perfect E. none of these.
27. CONVICTION
A. convenience (myweav) B. cooperate C. belief D. caused E. none of these.
28. GRACIOUS (D`vi; m`q)
A. gorgeous (RgKv‡jv/PgrKvi) B. haughty (D×Z; AnsKvix) C. grand (gwngvwš^Z) D. courteous E. none of this
29. REALISTIC
A. repressible B. relevant (cÖvmw½K) C. pragmatic D. forlorn (AmnvqZ¡) E. fatal (gvivZ¥K)
30. ENTRANCE
A. constrict (msKzwPZ Kiv) B. relevant C. unearth (†Mvcb cÖKvk nIqv) D. access E. disgust (weiw³)
For questions 31-35, find the closest opposite meaning of the word.
31. FLEXIBLE
A. changing B. plastic C. rigid D. elastic (bgbxq) E. none of this.
32. CONTAMINATION
A. contain B. miserliness C. prejudice (†Kvb c‡¶i cÖwZ Uvb) D. forgetfulness E. purification
33. MONOPOLY
A. moderate B. competition C. noisy D. control E. none of these
34. REDEEM
A. reduce B. forfeit C. revenge (cÖwZ‡kva MÖnY Kiv) D. injure E. none of these.
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35. YIELD
A. Zenith (m‡e©v”P we›`y/P~ov) B. impede (evav †`qv) C. produce D. youthful E. none of this .
36. HEART : HUMAN
A. tail : dog B. hand : child C. kitchen : house D. brick : wall E. engine : car.
37. CONSTELLATION : STAR
A. sun : milky way B. telescope : astronomer C. solar system : planet D. quasar : comet E. doctor : symptom
38. SINGER : CHORUS
A. architect : blueprint B. author : publisher C. actor : cast D. teacher : student E. driver : teacher
39. HANDWRITING : SIGNATURE
A. biographer : confession B. painting : self-portrait C. eulogy : speech D. sculptor : model E. sonnet : verse (cswZ)
40. LIABILITY : IMMUNITY (`vwqZ¡ ev ¶wZ †_‡K gy³)
A. debit : credit B. pardon : amnesty C. real estate : property D. fidelity : honesty E. equinox : winter.
Answer sheet
1. (C) ‡Kvb sentence-G once or twice _vK‡j Ges AZxZ †Kvb marker bv _vK‡j Present indefinite tense nq| Avi adverb usually-Gi position
n‡”Q principal verb-Gi Av‡M|
2. (C) e³v ejv mgq †Kvb KvR Pj‡Q †evSv‡Z Present continuous tense e¨envi Ki‡Z nq|
3. (C) AZx‡Z A‡bK mgq a‡i †Kvb KvR n‡q‡Q Ges GL‡bvI mg‡qi mgvwß nqwb †evSv‡Z Present perfect continuous tense e¨envi Kiv nq|
Present perfect continuous tense-G beginning time-Gi mv‡_ since e‡m from bq|
4. B) ‡Kvb KvR c~‡e© ïi“ n‡q A‡bK mgq a‡i Pj‡Q †evSv‡Z Present perfect continuous tense e¨envi Kiv nq| Since morning A_©vr
mKvj n‡Z Kuv`‡Q ‡evSv‡Z Present perfect continuous tense-G sentence wU n‡e|
5. (B) K‡qKw`b a‡i R¡‡i fyM‡Q †evSv‡Z Present perfect continuous tense nq| Avi †iv‡M †fvMv †evSv‡Z suffer from nq| Suffer with ev
suffer of bq Avi For-Gi mv‡_ the last nq Avi since-Gi mv‡_ ïay last nq|
6. (C) AZxZ wb‡`©kK 1985 _vKvq simple past n‡e|
7. (D) Simple present tense-G n‡e| Sentence-wU‡Z Subject i‡q‡Q Gevi GKwU verb jvM‡e| Option-¸‡jvi g‡a¨ choice n‡”Q noun,
choosen n‡”Q adjective, chose n‡”Q verb-Gi past form Avi choose n‡”Q verb-Gi simple form. ZvB GKgvÎ
(D)-B mwVK DËi| g‡b ivL‡eb, Choose-chose-chosen
8. (A) Yesterday _vKvq sentence-wU simple past-G n‡e|
9. (B) AZx‡Z GKwU KvR PjvKvjxb mgq Av‡iKwU KvR m¤úvw`Z n‡j m¤úvw`Z KvRwU Past indefinite-G nq|
10. (B) similar to
11. (C) AZx‡Z `ywU Kv‡Ri g‡a¨ †h KvRwU Av‡M nq †m KvRwU past perfect tense-G nq| GLv‡b gymv realize Kiv Av‡M wUwKUwU evwo †i‡L G‡mwQ‡jv|
12. (E) bZzb Mvwo †Kbvi Av‡M cyivZb MvwowU †f‡½ wM‡qwQ‡jv| †f‡½ hvIqv KvRwU Av‡M m¤úbœ n‡qwQ‡jv e‡j G AskwU past perfect tense-G n‡e|
13. (C) P‡j hvIqv KvRwU Av‡M m¤úbœ n‡qwQ‡jv e‡j G AskwU past perfect tense- G n‡e|
14.(D) eÜziv Avgvi Av‡M iwng Zvi KvRwU †kl KiwQ‡jv| AZxZ Kv‡ji `y‡Uv Kv‡Ri g‡a¨ †h KvRwU Av‡M †kl nq †m KvRwU Past perfect tense-G nq|
(D)-B mwVK DËi|
15. (A) Avgiv j¶¨ Kivi Av‡M fv½v KvRwU n‡qwQ‡jv e‡j G AskwU Past Perfect Tense-G n‡e|
16. (A) AZx‡Z †Kvb GKwU KvR A‡bK mgq a‡i Pj‡ZwQ‡jv †evSv‡Z Past perfect continuous tense-G n‡q‡Q|
17. (E) Since hy³ AskwU Past indefinite-G n‡j AciwU AskwU Past perfect tense-G nq|
18. (D) By + future time _vK‡j future perfect tense nq|
19. (C) ‡Kvb sentence-G two times, three times _vK‡j sentence-wU Present perfect tense-G nq|
20. (B) Yesterday _vKvq simple past-G n‡e| Simple past-‡K negative Kivi Rb¨ didn’t e‡m Ges Gici verb-Gi present form nq|
21. (C) cy‡iv NUbvUvB †h‡nZz N‡U wM‡q‡Q| myZivs, has `iKvi †bB| ïay lasted (wU‡KwQ‡jv, we`¨gvb wQ‡jv) n‡e|
22. (D) `k ermi Av‡Mi NUbv †evSv‡Z are-Gi e`‡j were n‡e|
23. (B) 1972 mv‡ji NUbv nIqv‡Z passes bv n‡q passed n‡e|
24. (B) already _vKv‡Z †evSv hv‡”Q NUbvwU N‡U wM‡q‡Q| myZivs, will ev` w`‡q have n‡e|
25. (A) 1990 mv‡ji Av‡Mi K_v nIqv‡Z will have known-Gi e`‡j past tense knew n‡e|
26. (A) INGREDIENT A_© Dcv`vb DcKiY| Component A_©I Dcv`vb/Ask|
27. (C) CONVICTION (KbwfKkb) A_© `„p wek¦vm|
28. (D) GRACIOUS A_© †mŠRb¨gq; f`ª|
Courteous A_© webqx/f`ª|
29. (C) REALISTIC Ges Pragmatic A_© ev¯—em¤§Z|
30. (D) ENTRANCE A_© †XvKvi c_| access A_© cÖ‡ek|
31. (C) FLEXIBLE A_© bgbxq; rigid A_© Lye k³ ev Abgbxq|
32. (E) CONTAMINATION A_© `~wlZ KiY| Purification A_© weï×KiY|
33. (B) MONOPOLY A_© GK‡PwUqv e¨emv, †hLv‡b †Kvb e¨emvwqK cÖwZØ›Øx ev †Kvb cÖwZØ›ØxZv †bB| Gi wecixZ competition.
34. (B) REDEEM A_© (†Kvb wKQz„‡K) cybi“×vi Kiv ev cybivq n¯—MZ Kiv| forfeit A_© (†Kvb wKQz‡K) †Lvqv‡bv/ AwaKviPz¨Z nIqv|
35. (B) YIELD A_© Drcv`b Kiv, AvZ¥mgc©Y Kiv cÖf„wZ|
36. (E) HUMAN-Gi Rb¨ HEART †hgb ¸i“Z¡c~Y©, Car-Gi Rb¨ engine †Zgwb ¸i“Z¡c~Y©|
52
37. (C) CONSTELLATION (b¶ÎcyÄ)-G A‡bK star Av‡Q, solar system (†mŠiRMZ)-G A‡bK planet (MÖn) Av‡Q|
38. (C) A‡bK SINGER wg‡j CHORUS(Mvq‡Ki `j) nq| A‡bK actor wg‡j cast (Awf‡bZv/ Awf‡bÎxe„›`) nq|
39. (B) SIGNATURE n‡jv Ggb Hand writing hv e¨w³‡f‡` wfbœ nq| Self-portrait (AvZ¥-cÖwZK…wZ) n‡jv Ggb painting hv e¨w³‡f‡` wfbœ wfbœ nq|
40. (A) LIABILITY Ges IMMUNITY wecixZv_©K kã| Debit Ges Credit wecixZv_©K kã|
Suggestion Level # 18
1. He the students to him.
A. made, to listen B. made listening C. made, listen D. make listen E. None
02. which of the following sentence is correct?
A. His mother made him to take his medicine B. His mother made him taking his medicine
C. His mother made him take his medicin D. Both (A) and (C) E. None
03. Psychologists believe that incentives –––––– to increase our productivity.
A. make us want B. make us to want C. making us want D. makes us want E. None
04. Professor Mannan Cricate instead of playing Football
A. let us to play B. let us playing C. let us played D. Let us play E. None
05. Would you some money?
A. let us the borrow B. let us borrow C. let us to borrow D. let us borrowing E. None
06. The immigration and Naturalization service often their visas, if they fill out the appropriate papers.
A. let students extend B. let students for extending C. let ting students to extend D. let students extending
07. Which of the following sentence is correct?
A. I want to get the house to paint before winter B. I want to get the house Paint before winter.
C. I want to get this house painted before winter D. I want to get this house painting before winter. E. None.
08. We will have to get someone fixing the phone right away
A. to get someone fixing B. to get someone to fix C. to get someone fixed D. to get someone for fixing E. None
09. Lobbyists who represent special interest groups get that benefit their groups.
A. congress to pass the legislation B. congress passed the legislation
C. the legislation to pass by the congress D. the legislation that canings passing
10. Which of the following sentences is correct?
A. Apurbo had a tooth filled. B. Apurbo had a tooth to fill.
C. Apurbo had a tooth have filled D. Apurbo had a tooth have filled
11. We are going to before we go to new York
A. have our car to fix B. have our car fixed C. have our car fixing D. have our car fix
12. This book should help you the lecture
A. to understand B. understanding C. understand D. Both (A) and (C) E. None
13. My mother by a well-know photographer
A. had taken her photo B. had her photo looking C. her photo was taken D. took her photo
14. Complete the sentence : where ?
A. did you cut your hair B. have you cut your hair C. did you have cut your hair D. did you have your hair cut
15. Mr. Apu prefers that she with him personally
A. speaks B. speaking C. speak D. to speak E. None
16. He proposes that the vote ballot
A. is secret B. will be secret C. be secret D. will secret E. None
17. The law required that everyone al least once a year
A. has his car checked B. has his car be checked C. have his car checked D. have his car is checking
18. Which of the following sentences is correct?
A. She insisted that they would give her a receipt B. She insisted that they gave her a receipt
C. She insisted that they had given her a receipt D. She insisted that they give her a receipt.
19. Less moderate members of congress are insisting that changes in the social security system made.
A. will B. are C. being D. be E. None
20. The recommendation that we –––––– was approved
A. were evaluated B. are evaluated C. be evaluated D. evaluated
21. She ignored the suggesting that she ––––– more exercise
A. gets B. got C. get D. had gotten E. None
22. The committee refused the request that–––––––waived.(IG&Bf& - e¨envi bv Kiv/ cwiZ¨vM Kiv)
A. the prerequisite is B. the prerequisite was C. the prerequisite be D. the prerequisite shall be
23. It is recommendation of many psychologist ––––––– to associates words and remember names.
A. the learner used mental images B. a learner to use mental images
C. mental images are used D. that a learner use mental images
24. Choose the correct answer? It is important that verified
A. the data is B. the data are C. the data is D. the data be E. None
25. Choose the correct Sentence
A. It is imperative that you are on time B. It is imperative that you were in time
C. It is imperative that you be on time D. It is imperative that you will be on time
26. It is essential that all applications and transcripts ________ on later than July 1.
53
A. are filled B. are being filled C. be filled D. filled E. None
27. It is important that she with Mr. John immediately.
A. Speaks B. Speak C. will speak D. Both A & C E. None
28. It is imperative that your signature –––––––– on your identification card
A. appear B. be appear C. is appeared D. to appear
29. The yearly financial statements of a large corporation may seem at first, but a persistent reader will soon
decipher its content.
A. unassuming B. inviting C. surprising D. misused E. bewildering(weåvwš—Ki/nZeyw×Ki)
30. Because our supply of fossil fuel has been sadly ––––––––––we must find –––––––– sources of energy.
A. stored ............ hoarded B. compensated ....... affiliate C. exhausted ...... inefficient
D. increased ............ available E. depleted ......... alternative.
31. The civil rights movement did not emerge from obscurity into national prominence overnight, on the contrary, it
captured the publics immigration only .
A. fruitlessly B. unimpeachably C. momentarily D. expeditiously E. gradually.
32. She belt her late parents furniture, not for any value it had but for purely reason.
A. Potential ....... monetary B. ornamental ..... aesthetic C. financial.... pecuniary D. intrinsic..... sentimental
33. The word “Preserve’ is closest is meaning to
A. encourage B. maintain C. reflect D. attain E. B + C
34. The Synonym of ‘impromptu’ (c~e©cÖ¯‘wZ QvovB †Kvb wKQz Kiv) is
A. extempore B. prepared C. improper D. Direct
35. The antonym of ‘Plaintiff’ (ev`x) is
A. complainant B. defendant C. sorrowful D. Waitress
36. What is the antonym of PENURY (`vwi`ª)
A. Wealth B. Prudently C. Nimble D. Gullible
37. DEGREE : TEMPERATURE
A) Mass : Energy B) Fathom : Volume C) Ounce : Weight D) Time : length E) light : heat
38. AIRPLANE: HANGER
A) Ship : Channel B) Automobile : Garage C) Helicopter : Pad D) Motorcycle : Sidecar E) Jet : Runway
39. WEALTH : Luxuries
A) story: Moral B) Sandwich : Bread C) Enemies : friend D) Crying : Sympathy E) Ticket : Admission
40. PEAK: SUMMIT
A) Foreign : Native B) Gun : Soldier C) Mutation : change D) Switch : council E) Elementary : Advanced
7. To estimate how much it will cost to build a home, finding the total square
A B C
footage of the house and multiply by cost per square foot. No Error.
D E
8. Fast food restaurants have become popular because many working people want ________________.
A. to eat quickly and cheaply B. eating quickly and cheaply C. eat quickly and cheaply
D. that eat quickly and cheaply E. to quickly eat and cheap
9. Burrowing animals provide Paths for water in soil, and so do the roots of plants ________________.
A. decaying and they dying B. when they die and decay C. they die and decay
D. when they will die and decay E. if they die and decaying
10. The more the relative humidity reading rises, the worst the heat affects us. No Error
A B C D E
13. Some bat caves, like honeybee hives, have residents that take on different duties such as defending the entrance, acting
as sentinels (cÖnix) and to sound a warning at the approach of danger, and scouting outside the cave for new food and
roosting sites
A. acting as sentinels and to sound. B. acting as sentinels and sounding. C. to act as sentinels and sound.
D. to act as sentinels and to sound. E. to act as a sentinel sounding.
14. Writing a slam poem is as much an achievement as ___________ a major work of the canon.
A. to finish B. it is to finish C. finishing D. if you finished E. to have finished
15. Courteously and __________, but persistently, the members of the special investigatory commission asked question of
all the president’s aides.
A. intrusively(AbwaKvi cÖ‡ekg~jKfv‡e) B. belligerently(hy×iZfv‡e) C. urbanely
55
D. remorselessly(Aby‡kvPbvnxb fv‡e) E. intermittently
16. ________________ air traffic controllers guide planes through conditions of near zero visibility.
A. They talk with pilots and watch their approach on radar. B. Talking with pilots and watching their approach on radar.
C. Talk with pilots and watch their approach on radar. D. When they talked with pilots and watched their approach on radar.
E. He talks with pilots and watches his approach on radar.
17. Young and energetic, ________________
A. it was easy for him B. Sam did the job easily C. it was easy for him to do the job.
D. Sam did the job ease. E. Sam did the job with easy
18. Having done the work, ________________.
A. supper was taken by us. B. supper is taken by us. C. we took supper. D. we taking the supper. E. us take supper.
19. Having been asked to speak at the convention, ________________
A. Some notes were prepared for Dr. Yunus. B. Dr. Ynnus prepared some notes.
C. the convention members were pleased to hear Dr. Yunus D. some notes were prepared by Dr. Yunus.
E. some notes are prepared by Dr. Yunus.
20. Having finished lunch, ________________.
A. the detectives began to discuss the case. B. the case was discussed again by the detectives.
C. they discussed the case. D. a bunch of detectives discussed the case E. None of them
21. Having been served supper ________________.
A. the problem was discussed by the members of the committee. B. the committee members discussed the problem
C. it was discussed by the committee members the problem
D. a discussion of the problem was made by the members of the committee. E. None of them
22. ________________ he began to make friends more easily.
A. Having entered school in the new city, it was found that B. After entering the new school,
C. When he had been entering the new school, D. Upon entering into the new school, E. All of them
23. While attempting go reach his home before the storm, ______________.
A. the bicycle of Johny broke down. B. it happend that Johny’s bike broke down. C. the storm caught Johny
D. Johny had an accident on his bicycle E. B + C
24. ________________ did Akash realize that there was danger.
A. Upon entering the store B. When he entered the store C. After he had entered the store
D. Only after entering the store E. After he entered the store
25. After seeing a Movie based on a novel, ________________.
A. the book is read by many people. B. the book made many people want to read it.
C. many people want to read the book. D. the reading of the book interests many people. E. All of them
26. Upon hatchling ________________.
A. young ducks know how to swim. B. swimming is known by young ducks.
C. the knowledge of swimming is in young ducks. D. how to swim is known in young ducks
E. how to swim is known by young bucks.
27. Like many big cities, ________________.
A. traffic jam is a great problem for Dhaka B. Dhaka suffers traffic problem greatly.
C. traffic jam has been a problem for Dhaka. D. traffic jam is on problem for Dhaka.
E. Dhaka suffer traffic problem greatly.
* Fill in the blanks with the most appropriate word from the given five options:
28. The voters never thought that the candidate would resort to _____ to win; he seemed to be _____ man.
A. charm _____ an amazingly(Avðh©RbKfv‡e) B. bombast _____ a pompous(Avo¤^ic~Y©)
C. innuendo _____ a devious(cÖZviYvc~Y©) D. subterfuge _____ an honest E. argument _____ a controversial( weZwK©Z)
29. As I recall my plane trip around the world last July and August, I think my greatest difficulty was the adjustment to
the different _______ served with the food in various cities we visited.
A. ingredients B. condiments C. qualities D. grades E. varieties
30. Because he had assumed (g‡b K‡iwQj) that he child’s first, fierce (cÖPÛ) rush (cywÄf~Z) of grief (`ytL) would quickly
________________, Mamun was astonished to find him still ________________.
A. subside (K‡g hvIqv) ––––––– disconsolate (mvš—¡bvi AZxZ) B. fade (K‡g hvIqv) –––––––– irresolute (gbw¯’i Ki‡Z cv‡i bv Ggb)
C. elapse (AwZµvš— nIqv) –––––––– ingenious D. escalate (e„w× cvIqv) –––––––– forlorn (wbtmnvq)
E. dwindle (µgk K‡g hvIqv) –––––––– dormant
31. While imports are restrained (euvavcÖvß nIqv) by barriers, exports are, encouraged through ________________.
A. bargaining (`i KlvKwl Kiv) B. lowering Prices (Aeg~j¨vqb/ `vg Kgv‡bv) C. subsidies (fZ©ywK) D. advertising E. dealing
Each of the following items contains a pair of words in capital letters, choose the pair that best expresses a relationship
similar to the one expressed by the capitalized pair.
32. PLAY : ACTS : :
A. Opera : Arias B. Games : Athletes C. Poem : Rhymes D. Novel : Chapters E. Essay : topics
33. AFFLUENT : WEALTHY
A. Repugnance : Revulsion B. Quiet : Loud C. Adoration : Aversion
D. Qualification : Incompetence E. Permanent : Tenacious
34. HEART : HUMAN : :
56
A. Tail : Dog B. Hand : Child C. Kitchen : House D. Brick : Wall E. Engine : Car
35. AIRPLANE: HANGAR : :
A. Ship : Channel B. Automobile : Garage C. Helicopter : Pad D. Motorcycle : Sidecar E. Jet : Runway
Each of the following sentences has an underlined word. Choose the word that best replaces the underlined word without
changing the meanings of the original sentences.
36. The old utilities building was demolished and a new high risk took its place.
A. renovated. B. razed. C. remodeled D. reconciled E. completed
37. Like snakes, many insects grow by throwing away their skin several times.
A. digesting B. discarding C. stretching D. mending E. changing
38. In a search to further his knowledge of the unknown, man has explored the earth, the sea, and now, the outer space.
A. quest B. colloquy (K‡_vcK_b) C. fantasy D. documentary E. survey
39. Ethnocentrism prevents us from putting up with all of the customs we encounter in another culture.
A. experiencing B. comprehending C. adopting D. tolerating E. protruding
ANSWER SHEET
1. (C) GLv‡b me¸‡jv verb + ing form-G parallel Ki‡Z n‡e|
2. (B) Correlative conjunction both + adverb Ges and + adverb n‡e|
3. (D) Not only ______ but also.
4. (A) whether to increase ______ to sell ______
5. (D) GLv‡b Parallelism n‡q‡Q (verb + ing) Gerund Øviv
6. (D) both ______ and ______ as well as.
myZivs both-Gi ci and em‡e|
7. (C) finding, Parallel structure wn‡m‡e to build-Gi mv‡_ match K‡i bv|
8. (A) Want-Gi ci infinitive complement e¨eüZ nq|
9. (B) GLv‡b, when-Gi ci present tense verb e¨eüZ n‡q‡Q future †evSv‡bvi Rb¨|
10. (B) The more (Comparative) ______ the worse (Comparative).
11. (C) To answer ______ to finish.
12. (D) Joining the army.
13. (B) GLv‡b Underlined portion-Gi c~‡e© i‡q‡Q defending (verb + ing), Ges c‡i i‡q‡Q scouting (verb + ing) Gerund. myZivs option B-
†ZB i‡q‡Q (verb + ing) Gerund, ZvB GUvB mwVK|
14. (C) Writing (Gerund) _____________ finishing (Gerund)
15. (C) and _vKv‡Z Ggb GKUv kã em‡e †hUv courteously (f`ªfv‡e) Gi mgv_©K n‡e| GKgvÎ Urbanely (gvwR©Zfv‡e) kãwU GLv‡b Lv‡U|
16. (B) Participle modifier-G 1g As‡k directly †Kvb Subject-Gi D‡j- L _v‡Kbv| 1g As‡k ïay 2q As‡ki †`vl, ¸Y, Ae¯’v BZ¨vw` †evSv‡bv nq| 2q
As‡k subject-Gi D‡j- L _v‡KÕ
17. (B) Kgvi cÖ_g As‡k Sam-Gi ¸Y ejv n‡q‡Q 2q As‡k Sam w`‡q ïi“ n‡q‡Q|
18. (C) 1g As‡k hvi KvR wb‡q Av‡jvPbv Kiv n‡e, K_vi c‡i Aek¨B †mB Subject w`‡q Clause wU Avi¤¢ Ki‡Z n‡e|
19. (B) †h‡nZz DR. Yunus n‡”Q Subject ZvB K_vi c‡ii Ask Zv‡K w`‡qB ïi“ n‡e|
20. (A) Lunch finish Kivi ci Detectives-iv Case study Kij|
21. (B) Participle phrase-Gi Subject Aek¨B n‡e committee members.
22. (B) enter into e¨eüZ nq †Kvb agreement-Gi †¶‡Î ZvB Option D n‡e bv| Use: enter + noun
23. (D) Storm-Gi c~‡e© home-G ‡cuŠQvi †Póv KiwQj Johny ZvB c‡ii Ask Zv‡K w`‡qB ïi“ n‡e|
24. (D) Sentence-Gi cÖ_‡g adverbial em‡e| corr. form – adverbial + auxiliary + Sub + verb 2q As‡k auxiliary (did) + Subject
(Akash) myZivs 1g As‡k adverbial wn‡m‡e only after em‡e|
25. (C) Verbal Phrase-Gi c‡ii AskwU Noun w`‡q ïi“ n‡e Ges Zv logically modified n‡Z n‡e verbal phrase Øviv|
26. (A) hatch (wWg dz‡U ev”Pv †ei nIqv)
27. (B) K_vi Av‡Mi As‡k city wb‡q K_v n‡”Q ZvB Aci As‡k Aek¨B city-i bvg w`‡q Clause ïi“ Ki‡Z n‡e|
28. (D) resort to A_© †Kvb c×wZ Aej¤^b Kiv Ges Subterfuge A_© PvjvwK/†KŠkj/cÖZviYv
29. (B) Condiments A_© gkjv/AvPvi/PvUwb, Food-Gi mv‡_ Condiments (AvPvi) Serve Kiv nq|
30. (A) gvgyb g‡b K‡iwQj †h wkïwUi cywÄf~Z Kvbœv/†¶vf quickly K‡g hv‡e wKš‘ †m Avðvh©vwš^Z....
31. (C) Subsidies gv‡b A_©m¤ú`/fZz©wK| Export encourage Kiv nq subsidies Øviv
32. (D) PLAY-Gi A_© bvUK Ges ACTS A_© bvU‡Ki A¼|
* kã `y‡Uvi m¤úK© n‡jv :
A‡bK¸‡jv ACTS wg‡j GKwU PLAY nq|
A‡bK¸‡jv Chapters wg‡j GKwU novel nq|
33. (A) AFFLUENT gv‡b weËevb; m¤ú`kvjx mgv_©K WEALTHY/
Repugnance gv‡b cÖej Abxnv; AcQ›`| Zvi mgv_©K revulsion cÖPÛ weZ…lZv/AcQ›`|
34. (C) HUMAN-‡K mwµq iv‡L HEART Ges Car-†K mwµq iv‡L engine.
35. (B). AIRPLANE ivLv nq HANGER-GÕ Automobile ivLv nq Garage-G
36. (B) Demolish (‡W‡gvwjk-‡f‡½ †djv)| Now come to options.
A. Renovate (†givgZ K‡i bZz‡bi gZ Kiv) B. raze (aŸsm Kiv) C. remodel (c~b©MVb Kiv) D. reconcile (mgš^q Kiv) E. complete
57
37. (B) Throw away (†d‡j †`qv/eR©b Kiv)| See the options
A. Digest (nRg Kiv) B. discard (AcÖ‡qvRbxq e‡j †d‡j †`qv) C. Stretch (cÖmvwiZ Kiv) D. mend (†givgZ Kiv)
E. change (cwieZ©b Kiv)
38. (A) Search (Mfxifv‡e cix¶v ev mÜvb)| See the options
A. quest (AbymÜvb) B. colloquy (K‡_vcK_b) C. fantasy (Kíbv) D. documentary (cÖvgvb¨ wPÎ) E. survey (Rwic)
39. (D) Put up with (mn¨ Kiv)| See the options
A. experience (AwfÁZv) B. comprehend (Dcjwä Kiv) C. adopt (`ËK †bIqv) D. tolerate (mn¨ Kiv) E. protrude (cÖmvwiZ nIqv)
Suggestion Level # 20
1. ___________Statue of liberty was a sift of friendship from France to the to the United States.
A. a B. an C. the D. No article E. Both a & b
2. Lack Eric is one of ________________ five Great lakes in North America.
A. a B. an C. the D. No article E. Both a & b
3. Phil can’t go to the movies tonight because he has to write ______________ essay.
A. a B. an C. the D. No article E. Both a & b
4. No one is the Bangle class knew ___________ correct answer to Mrs. Bonna’s question.
A. a B. an C. the D. no article E. Both a & b
5. You are going to school tomorrow, ____________?
A. Are you B. Do you C. Does you D. Aren’t you E. Don’t you
6. She’s been studying English for two years, _______________?
A. Does she B. Doesn’t she C. hasn’t she D. has she E. isn’t she
7. You and I talked with the professor yesterday, ____________?
A. don’t we B. didn’t we C. didn’t you D. didn’t I E. didn’t you and I
8. You are taking the admission test, ___________?
A. won’t you B. will you C. aren’t you D. why aren’t you E. are you\
9. Which of the following sentence is correct?
A. The matter is been examined B. The matter having being examined C. The matter is being examined
D. The matter has been being examined E. None
10. Farid is better than Hamid, ____________?
A. Isn’t it B. Isn’t not C. Is it D. Isn’t he E. Is not he
11. Choose the correct passive voice form of the following sentence : All of his friends laughed at him.
A. He laughed at all of his friends. B. He was laughed at by all of his friends. C. All of his friends had laughed at him.
D. All of his friends were laughed at by him. E. None of the above.
12. His work was interrupted ______________ our sudden noise.
A. on B. by C. in D. at E. for
13. _______________ first world war was finished with a lots of damages and tests.
A. the B. a C. an D. no article E. both b & c
14. _______________ Chapter three is most important for your 2nd semester final exam.
A. the B. a C. an D. no article E. both b & c
15. _______________ Constitution should be changed for the benefit of people.
A. the B. a C. an D. no article E. both b & c
16. _______________ Mathematics is very important for you coming exam.
A. the B. a C. an D. no article E. both b & c
17. You cannot visit the plant _________ .
(A) except Saturdays (B) all days but Saturday (C) excepting on Saturday
(D) except on Saturday (E) with the exceptions of Saturday s
18. The Prime minister is said ______ Australia next year.
(A) that she will be visit (B) to be visiting (C) to visit (D) to have visited (E) to start visit
19. We are happy _________ of your application for membership.
(A) for reporting approval (B) in reporting to approval (C) to report for that approval
(D) to reporting the approval (E) to report approval
20. One of the world’s most celebrated (‡mwj‡eªB&†UW& - weL¨vZ) paintings, The Man with the Golden Helmet, _____ .
(A) must always be a Rembrandt after all (B) has been a Rembrandt at all (C) will not be a Rembrandt at all
(D) is not a Rembrandt after all. (E) is a copy of Rembrandt
21. We invite you to _________ .
(A) buy with the catalogue enclosed (B) buy out of the enclosed catalogue (C) look from the enclosed catalogue
(D) purchase from the enclosing catalogue (E) buy from the enclosed catalogue
22. I am 32 years of age married and ______ the possibility of employment with you.
(A) interested to exploring (B) have interest to exploring (C) interested in exploring
(D) am interested for exploring (E) will be interested to exploring
23. You certainly wouldn’t like_______ in such bad company.
(A) to be seen (B) to have seen (C) to be seeing (D) to see (E) to have been seen
24. What is your evaluation ________?
(A) of Shacin’s leadership (B) about the leadership ability of Shacin (C) as to Shacin’s leadership
58
(D) for Shacin in his leadership ability (E) as to the ability of leader Shacin
25. In 1998, a consumer agency concluded that Xylo brand bicycles _____ than Zenon brand bicycles.
(A) is safe to ride (B) are safe to ride (C) are more safe to ride (D) is safe to be riding (E) are safer to ride
26. Can you put me __________ for the weekend?
(A) in (B) up (C) away (D) down (E) only
27. The plot of the story is so _______ that I can predict the outcome.
(A) complicated(Kg&wc- ‡KB&†UW& - LyeB RwUj) (B) theoretical (C) significant (D) trite (E) fantastic
28. Only the fear of immediate _____ prevents that country from launching an attack.
(A) retaliation(wiU¨vwjGB&k&b& - mgywPZ cÖwZ‡kva/cvëv `ye©¨envi|) (B) surrender (C) truce (D) control (E) disapproval
29. Even if you do not _____ what I have to say, I would appreciate your listening to me with an open mind.
(A) anticipate (B) reject (C) clarify (D) deviate from (E) concur with
30. He was _____ success, writing not for the sake of fame, but for the sheer love of poetry.
(A) indifferent to (B) destined for (C) eager for (D) tired by (E) charmed by
31. Paradoxically, Sharmeen, who had been a strict mother to her children, proved _________ teacher to her students.
(A) a harsh (B) a lazy (C) a lenient (D) a cautious (E) an indecisive
32.The teacher suspected cheating as soon as she noticed the student’s _____ glances at his classmate’s script.
(A) rewarding (B) rare (C) furtive(dvi&wUf& - †Pviv) (D) cold (E) petty
33. In his speech, the headmaster urged the teachers to discover and _______ each student’s ________talents.
(A) suppress ….. unrecognized (B) develop... intrinsic (Bb&wUªb&wmK& - Aš—wb©wnZ) (C) redirect …possible
(D) belittle ….hidden (E) justify…unnecessary
34. His meek manner made it ____ he would be ____ to take charge of the commando unit.
(A) unlikely … selected (B) implausible …. hesitant (C) clear …designated
(D) puzzling ….unwilling (E) probable ….demoted
35. When our supply of natural gas is _________, we must find ________ sources of energy.
(A) stored …hoarded (B) compensated ….significant (C) exhausted…inefficient
(D) increased …available (E) depleted …alternate
36. The thief tried to _____ all traces of _____ which could link him to the crime.
(A) manufacture…goods (B) steal….paintings (C) escape…fingerprints
(D) remove…evidence (E) disguise….valuables
37. His_______ smile _______ all those who saw it.
(A) devastating(†Wfvm&‡UB&wUs - aŸsmvZ¥K)................ blinded (B) penultimate(†cbvj&wU‡gB&U&)................ inured
(C) radiant................obliged(Ae&jvB&R& - eva¨ Kiv/AbyMÖn Kiv) (D) sunny................tanned
(E) bright................dazzled(W¨vS&j& - †PvL avuauv‡bv/nZevK Kiv)
38. According to recent studies, prices in supermarkets are considerably higher in the inner city, thus ____ the poor who
receive assistance (G¨vwmm&U¨vb&m&) to buy the food.
(A) reprimanding(†iwcÖg¨vb&wWO& - K‡Vvi wZi¯‹vi/frm©bv) (B) intimidating(Bb&wUwg‡WB&U& - eva¨ Kiv) (C) alleviating(G¨v‡jwfGB&U& - Dckg Kiv)
(D) assuaging(G¨vwmD&G&B&R& - `ytL/hvZbv cÖkwgZ Kiv) (E) exploiting(†q·c- yB‡qwUO& - ‡Kvb cwiw¯’wZi my‡hvM †bqv)
39. Since there are so few conservative thinkers on the committee, their influence on its recommendations is ________.
(A) monumental (B) negligible(†bM&wjwRe&j& - Zz”Q/mvgvb¨/bMY¨) (C) discriminatory(wWQ&wµwg‡b‡Uvwi - c¶cvZg~jK/ˆelg¨g~jK)
(D) impractical(Bg&cÖ¨vK&wUK¨vj& - e¨enviAbyc‡hvMx) (E) cathartic(K¨v_vi&wUK& - †gv¶Y/Av‡eMgyw³)
40. It has been proven that cockroaches _______ for several weeks even after their heads have been cut off.
(A) are surviving (B) can survive(mvi&fvB&f& - †eu‡P _vKv) (C) surviving (D) that survive (E) survives
41. _________ , the young man chose to retain(wi‡UB&b& - i¶v Kiv) his seat on the crowded bus and let the old woman remain
standing.
(A) Gleefully(Mxdywj - Dj- wmZfv‡e) (B) Hopefully(†nŠc&dzwj - Avkvbyiƒcfv‡e) (C) Painfully (D) Foolishly (E) Selfishly
42. The pressure(†cÖmvi& - Pvc) of population on available resources is the key to understanding history; consequently, any
historical writing that takes no cognizance (KM&wbS¨vb&m& - ÁvZ ev AeMZ) of ______ facts is ______ flawed.
(A) demographic........intrinsically (Bb&wUªb&wmK¨vjx - Rb¥MZfv‡e; Aš—wb©wnZfv‡e) (B) ecological........marginally
(C) cultural...........substantively (mve&÷¨vb&wUf&wj - cÖPzi cwigv‡Y) (D) psychological..........philosophically
(E) political...........demonstratively (†W‡gvb&‡÷ªwUf&wj - ¯úófv‡e)
43. Because it is _____ to ______ all the business costs related to employee discontent, an accurate estimate of the
magnitude(g¨vM&wbwUD&W& - wekvjZv) of these costs is not easily calculated.
(A) impossible............justify (B) improper...........overlook (C) difficult............measure
(D) useless..............discover (E) necessary...........pinpoint (wcb&c‡qb&U& - mywbw`©ófv‡e wbY©q Kiv)
44. Scientists who are on the cutting edge of research must often violate common sense and make seemingly _____
assumptions because existing theories simply do not ____ newly observed phenomena.
(A) radical..............confirm (B) vague.................incorporate (Bb&Ki‡cv‡iB&U& - Aš—f©~³ Kiv)
(C) absurd (G¨ve&mvi&W& - Aevš—i)...........explain (D) mistaken...........reveal (wifxj& - cÖKvk Kiv)
(E) inexact (Bb&‡qM&S¨vK&U& - Ah_vh_)..........corroborate(K‡iv‡eЇiB&U& - mg_©b Kiv)
45. Because many of the minerals found on the ocean floor are still _______ on land, where mining is relatively
inexpensive, mining the ocean floor has yet to become a ______ enterprise.
(A) scarce............common (B) accessible........marginal (C) unidentified...........subsidized
59
(D) conserved.............public (E) plentiful(†c- b&wUdzj& - cÖPzi).........profitable
46. Opponents of the expansion (†q·c¨vb&kb& - cÖmviY) of the market economy, although in ________ , continued to constitute
________ political force throughout the country.
(A) error, an inconsequential (B) retreat(wiUªxU& - am&; cðv`miY).............a powerful
(C) disarray(wWQ&G¨v‡iB - wek„•Ljv)............a disciplined (D) jeopardy(SuywK ev wec`)....an ineffective(AKvh©Ki ev e¨_©)
(E) command, a viable(fvBGB&e&j& - wU‡K _vK‡Z m¶g)
47. Because the novel was so long, Jalil decided to read the version.
(A) lengthened (B) smaller (C) abridged(ms‡¶wcZ) (D) famous (E) humorous
48. a parliamentary system, the prime minister must be appointed on the basis of the distribution of power in the
parliament.
(A) The considered (B) To be considered (C) Considering (we‡ePbv K‡i) (D) Considers (E) Is considering
49. The psychologist set up the experiment to test the rat’s ; he wished to see how well the rat adjusted (Lvc LvIqvq) to the
changing conditions it had to face.
(A) reflexes (B) communicability (C) curtailed(Kvi&†UB&j& - KvUQuvU Kiv) (D) adaptability(Lvc LvIqv‡bvi ¶gZv) (E) pragmatism
50. In a time of fiscal crisis(ivR¯^ msKU), such lavish expenditure(AwZwi³ e¨q) must be ______ .
(A) quickened (B) corrected (C) curtailed (D) justified (E) adjusted
51. The officers of the corporation promised there would be no ; nothing would be held against the strikers.
(A) truce (B) retaliation(cvëv Reve) (C) favoritism
(D) reservations (E) scabs(†h mKj kªwgK ag©N‡U KvR K‡i Zv‡`i‡K ¯‹¨ve& e‡j Zz”Q Kiv nq)
52. Feeling restless and unhappy, he left the house to take a quiet stroll(kvš— nvIqv †L‡Z †ei nIqv), hoping the tone of the day
would not decline further into _________ and uncertainty.
(A) dissonance (B) ardor (C) perversity (D) pretense (E) reticence
Answer Keys
1. (C) ‡h †Kvb Mountains, Statue BZ¨vw` Av‡M the e‡m| ZvB Correct Answer n‡e C (the) .
2. (C) Singular Lake-Gi Av‡M the e‡m bv| but plural lake-Gi Avv‡M the e‡m| GLv‡b †h‡nZz Òfive great lakes” ejv Av‡Q| ZvB GLv‡b the em‡e|
3. (A) ‡h †Kvb vowel sound Gi Av‡M article wn‡m‡e Òan” e‡m| GLv‡b ZvB essay Gi Av‡M an em‡e|
4. (C) ‡Kvb wbw`©ó e¯Zzi Av‡M the e‡m| GLv‡b †h‡nZz GKwU wbw`©ó Correct Answer Gi K_v ejv n‡q‡Q, ZvB Av‡M the em‡e|
5. (D) Auxiliary verb are _vK‡Z Ges sentence wU positive _vKv‡Z tag n‡e Negative. So GLv‡b question tag wn‡m‡e `Aren’t you” n‡e|
6. (C) Sentence Structure ‡`‡L eySv hv‡”Q GwU present perfect continuous tense. So, GLv‡b She’s gv‡b `She has” So, Correct tag question
form n‡e Ò hasn’t She” .
7. (B) GLv‡b Subject `ywU _vKv‡Z tag question ‰Zixi mgq we e¨envi Ki‡Z n‡e| Avi Sentence-wU †h‡nZz past simple, ZvB question tag n‡e
Òdidn’t we” .
8. (C) Sentence positive nevi Kvi‡Y Ges auxiliary verb _vKv‡Z aren’t you n‡e|
9. (C) Continuous tense Gi passive voice Ki‡Z n‡j is-Gi ci being e‡m| ZvB correct answer-Gi †¶‡Î Òis being” em‡e|
10. (D) Auxiliary verb wn‡m‡e sentence G †h‡nZz is Av‡Q Ges sentence-wU positive, So tag question wn‡m‡e Òisn’t” em‡e| pronoun wn‡m‡e
GLv‡b he e‡m‡e|
11. (B) Sentence-wU GKwU past indefinite tense. So, passive voice wn‡m‡e Ò he was laughed --------------------Ó n‡e|
12. (B) Passive voice-Gi †¶‡Î Preposition wn‡m‡e †ekxifvM †¶‡ÎB by em‡e| ZvQvov GLv‡b Ab¨vb¨ preposition Gi †P‡q by wUB †ekx suit K‡i|
13. (A) ‡h †Kvb ordinal number-Gi Av‡M the e‡m|
14. (D) ‡Kvb Cardinal number Gi †¶‡Î Av‡M the emv‡Z nq bv| GLv‡b Òthree” GKwU Cardinal number.
15. (A) ‡h †Kvb historical document-Gi Av‡M the e‡m| ZvB GLv‡b Constitution-Gi Av‡M the em‡e|
16. (D) wKQz wKQz word subject wn‡m‡e em‡j Zvi Av‡M †Kvb article use Ki‡Z nq bv| mathematics-G iKg GKwU word.
17. (D)
18. (B) GLv‡b present progressive tense e¨eüZ n‡et ‡Kbbv GB sentence-wU‡Z fwel¨‡Zi wbw`©ó plan/ personal arrangement eySv‡bv n‡q‡Q,
we‡kl K‡i GLv‡b fwel¨‡Zi time selected Kiv Av‡Q| myZivs “...said to start visit...”/ “.......said to visit.......”/ “.......said to have
visited.....”/ “....said that she will visit.....” e¨eüZ bv n‡q present progressive “....said to be visiting ......” n‡e|
19. (E) ‡h me adjective personal feelings/expressions /reactions cÖfw„ Z cÖKvk K‡i, †m me adjectives-i ci cÖvqB Infinitive “to” use nq
A_©vr “..... happy in.....” (B), “.......happy for.....” (A), use bv n‡q “......happy to report....” (E) use n‡e| Avgiv Rvwb, Infinitive
“to” Gici g~j verb-Gi †Kvb cwieZ©b nq bv A_©vr “....to reporting.....” (D) n‡e bv| Avevi, choice (C)-G “for that” phrase-wU
unnecessary/irrelevant hv ev‡K¨i A‡_©i mv‡_ Lvc Lvq bv|
20. (D) Avgiv Rvwb, “After all” e¨eüZ nq mvaviYZ aviYvi wecixZ wKQz eSv‡bvi Rb¨ (“contrary to what was expected”/“in spite of what was
said before”). G‡¶‡Î GKgvÎ (D) DËiwUB Lvc Lvq| GLv‡b hv expected Zvi wecixZ aviYvi mv‡_ “after all” e¨eüZ n‡q‡Q| A_©vr QwewU
celebrated nIqv m‡Ë¡I Rembrandt-i bq| Choice (E) grammatically correct e‡jI sentence-Gi meaning-Gi mv‡_ Lvc Lvq bv| KviY
Rembrandt-Gi copy weL¨vZ wPÎKg© n‡Z cv‡i bv| DËi (C) Ges (A)-‡Z negative idea _vK‡jI, GwU Rembrandt wK-bv, Zv future-G wba©viY Kiv
m¤¢e bq e‡j (A), (C) correct bq|
21. (E) GLv‡b “...buy with...” (A), “......buy out.....” (B), bv n‡q “.......buy from......” (E) n‡e| †Kbbv, GwUB preposition-Gi mwVK e¨envi|
22. (C) “interested”-Gi ci preposition “in” hy³ n‡e|
23. (A) Sentence-wU passive/indirect e‡j “......to be seen.....” n‡q‡Q|
24. (A) “evaluation”-Gi ci preposition “of” hy³ n‡e|
60
25. (E) ‡h‡nZz GLv‡b `yÕ†Uv brand-Gi cycle-Gi g‡a¨ Zzjbv eySv‡”Q, †m‡nZz comparative “safer” (E) use Ki‡Z n‡e|
26. (B) “Put some body up” gv‡b _vKv-LvIqvi e‡›`ve¯— K‡i †`qv|
27. (D) outcome A_© cwiYwZ/djvdj| predict(‡cÖwWK&U&) A_© fwel¨ØvYx Kiv| trite (UªvB&U&) A_© MZvbyMwZK ev GKB ai‡Yi, Zvi gv‡b bZzbZ¡ †bB Ggb wKQy|
28. (A) (C) Truce(Uªym&) mvgwqK hy×weiwZ| cÖwZ‡ekx †`k‡K AvµgY Kiv †_‡K †`kUv weiZ i‡q‡Q ïay GKUv Zvr¶wYK wKQyi f‡q| ïay A-Gi retaliation
(cÖwZ‡kvag~jK AvNvZ) k~b¨¯’v‡b Lvc Lvq|
29. (E) Kb&Kvi& - m¤§Z nIqv; (B) wi‡RK&U& - cÖZ¨vL¨vb Kiv (C) K¬¨vwidvB& - e¨vL¨v Kiv| Even w`‡q contrast-Gi Bw½Z †`qv n‡jv| wØZxqvs‡k ejv n‡jv †h,
Zzwg †Lvjv g‡b Avgvi K_v ï‡bv| cÖ_gvs‡k even (hw`I) _vKv‡Z ‡evSv hv‡”Q k~b¨¯’v‡b Ggb GKUv kã em‡e, †hUv KviI K_v †kvbvi ci Avkv Kiv nq,
†hgbt K_v ï‡b †kªvZv nq‡Zv †mB g‡Zv KvR Ki‡e ev †mB K_vi mv‡_ GKgZ n‡e cÖf„wZ| concur with A_© GKgZ nIqv|
30. (A) wkqvi& - wb‡f©Rvj, †Kej; (A) Bb&wWdv‡ib&U& - D`vmxb|
‡m Qwe AuvKwQ‡jv L¨vwZ ev cqmvi Rb¨ bv, eis ïaygvÎ (sheer) wk‡íi cÖwZ fvjevmvi Rb¨| †evSv hv‡”Q, success cvIqvi Rb¨ Zvi †Kv‡bv gv_ve¨_v wQ‡jv
bv, ïaygvÎ indifferent to (D`vmxb) k~b¨¯’v‡b Lvc Lvq|
31. (C) Paradoxically(¯^we‡ivax/ci¯úi we‡ivax) kã w`‡q contrast-Gi Bw½Z †`qv Av‡Q| GRb¨ k~Y¨¯’v‡b strict (k³/Kov/K‡Vvi)-Gi wecixZ lenient
(†jwb‡qb&U& - m`q, cÖkªqc~Y©; †Kvgj) kãwU appropriate.
32. (C) GLv‡b she e‡j teacher-‡K refer Kiv n‡”Q ev †evSvb n‡”Q| wZwb student-Gi ______ glance j¶¨ Kivi mv‡_ mv‡_B (as soon as), wZwb
suspect (m‡›`n) Ki‡jb †h QvÎwU cheating Ki‡Q| Zvn‡j, glances (¶wYK, `ª“Z `„wó) kãwUi Av‡M GKwU negative word em‡e| (C)-Gi furtive
A_© †Pviv ev ¸ß `„wó|
33. (B) urge (Avi&R&) A_© †Rviv‡jv Aby‡iva Kiv| Headmaster-iv student-‡`i intrinsic talents-‡K `gb (suppress) K‡i bv ev belittle(Le© Kiv) K‡i
bv, eis develop K‡i|
34. (A) meek (gxB&K&) A_© jvRyK/bgª| Zvi meek manner-Gi Kvi‡Y commando unit (A_©vr †mbv Kg¨v‡Ûv `j)-Gi charge ev `vwqZ¡ †bqv wbðqB m¤¢e
n‡e bv| AZGe, cÖ_g k~b¨¯’v‡b (A)-Gi unlikely (Avb&jvB&K&wj - Am¤¢ve¨) Ges (B)-Gi implausible (Bg&cwSej& - Am¤¢ve¨) Lvc Lvq| GLb, wØZxq
blank-G ïaygvÎ (A)-Gi selected Lvc Lvq|
35. (E) deplete(wWcxU& - wbt‡kl n‡q hvIqv); alternate (Aj&Uvi&‡bB&U&) A_© weKí| natural gas-Gi supply †kl n‡q †M‡j(depleted/exhausted) kw³i inefficient
(AKvh©Ki) (C) bq, eis alternate Drm LyuR‡Z n‡e|
36. (D) trace (†UªB&m&) A_© wPý ev AvjvgZ| evidence (†qwf‡Wb&m&) A_© cÖgvY| †Pvi me©`vB †Póv K‡i †hb Zvi crime-Gi †Kvb evidence bv _v‡K|
37. (E) 38. (E) 39. (B) 40. (B) 41. (E)
42. (A) demographic (†WgMÖvwdK&) - RbmsL¨v-welqK| intrinsically (Bb&wUªb&wmK¨vwj) - Aš—wb©wnZfv‡e; cognizance (KM&wbR¨vb&m&) - AeMwZ|
ev‡K¨ ejv n‡q‡Q, “history-†K Dcjwä Ki‡Z cÖvß m¤ú‡`i Dci RbmsL¨vi Pvc nj GKwU g~L¨ Dcvq”, c‡ii As‡k ejv n‡q‡Q †h, †Kvb HwZnvwmK writing hv Avg‡j
†bq bv ev writing-G ¯’vb †`q bv “facts’’| wK ai‡Yi fact ev NUbv Zv choice (A)-†Z cvIqv hvq, †h‡nZz ev‡K¨i cÖ_g As‡k RbmsL¨vi welq m¤ú‡K© ejv n‡q‡Q, ZvB
c‡ii As‡kI RbmsL¨v m¤ú‡K©B n‡e|
43. (C) ev‡K¨i †klvs‡k ejv n‡q‡Q GB e¨q mg~‡ni [gv‡b cÖ_g As‡k †h e¨‡qi K_v ejv n‡q‡Q A_©vr employee discontent (Amš‘wó) msµvš— e¨emvwqK costs] wbfy©j
cwigvc (estimate) mn‡R “calculate” Kiv hvq bv gv‡b measure Kiv difficult|
44. (C) cutting edge gv‡b †Kv‡bv wKQzi Dbœq‡bi P~ovš— ch©vq| ev‡K¨ cÖ_g w`‡Ki g~j K_v nj Advanced ch©v‡qi M‡elKiv cÖvqB common sense-Gi mxgv jsNb K‡i
Avi GKvi‡Y A™¢~Z ev A‡hŠw³K wKQz K‡i| Zvn‡j Answer choice (C)-‡Z GiKg kã cvIqv hvq A_©vr D³iƒc scientists-iv seemingly (AvcvZ`„wó‡Z) absurd
(A¨ve&mvi&W&)-A‡hŠw³K assumption (†Kv‡bv wKQz mZ¨ e‡j a‡i †bqv) K‡i, KviY we`¨gvb w_Iixmg~n m`¨ ch©‡e¶YK…Z ev¯—e NUbvmg~n (phenomena) cy‡ivcywi e¨vL¨v
K‡i bv|
45. (E) Sentence-Gi ga¨eZ©x As‡k ejv n‡q‡Q, “‡hLv‡b Lwb Lbb (mining) Z~jbvg~jKfv‡e Kg e¨qeûjÓ GKUz wPš—v Ki‡j eySv hvq LwbR D‡Ëvj‡b †hLv‡b e¨q Kg †mLv‡b
(gv‡b Land) Aek¨B h‡_ó cwigv‡Y (plentiful) LwbR Av‡Q| ev‡K¨i †klvsk nj mgy‡`ªi Zj‡`‡k mining e¨qeûj nIqv‡Z GLbI m‡š—vlRbK ev jvfRbK
(profitable) e¨emvq cwiYZ nq bvB|
46. (B) retreat (wiUªxU&) - †Kv‡bv wKQz †_‡K wcQz nUv| opponent(A‡cЇbb&U&) - we‡ivax c¶|
sentence-G evRvi A_©bxwZi we‡ivax c‡¶i K_v ejv n‡”Q, although w`‡q Zv‡`i m¤ú‡K© negative aviYv w`‡q c‡ii As‡k Zv‡`i m¤ú‡K© fvj activities eySv‡bv
n‡q‡Q| A_©vr hw`I (although) Zv‡`i †Kvb wKQz‡Z NvUwZ, Zviv mviv‡`‡k GKai‡bi ivR‰bwZK kw³i MVb Ae¨vnZ †i‡L‡Q| †Kvb& w`‡K Zv‡`i NvUwZ Ges wK ai‡bi
ivR‰bwZK kw³ GiKg cÖkœ Ki‡j (B)-†K Answer choice wn‡m‡e wb‡Z n‡e| Zvn‡j ev‡K¨i A_© `uvovq, evRvi A_©bxwZ m¤cÖmvi‡Yi we‡ivaxiv hw`I wcQ‡b c‡o Av‡Q,
Z_vwc Zviv mviv‡`‡k GKwU kw³kvjx ivR‰bwZK kw³ MVb Ae¨vnZ †i‡L‡Q|
47. (C) 48. (B)
49. (D) cix¶vi mgq ‡hfv‡e AvMv‡Z n‡e, †mfv‡e bx‡Pi e¨vL¨vwU wjLv n‡q‡Q| cÖ_‡g cÖ`Ë evK¨wU cov hvKt
The psychologist set up the experiment to test the rat’s ______ ; gb¯—Ë¡we` Bu`y‡ii ______ cix¶v Kivi Rb¨ cix¶vwU set up ev ˆZix K‡ib)| ‡mwg-
‡Kvj‡bi gva¨‡g ev‡K¨i GB AskwU cy‡ivcywifv‡eB †kl K‡i †`qv n‡jv| k~b¨¯’v‡b wK em‡e, (A_©vr Bu`y‡ii †Kvb& ¸YwU), Zv †ei Kivi Rb¨ †mwg-‡Kvj‡bi c‡ii Ask †Lqvj
K‡i gb w`‡q co‡Z n‡e he wished to see how well the rat adjusted to the changing conditions it had to face.
Gevi GB ev‡K¨i A_© wPš—v Kiv hvKt wZwb Pvw”Q‡jb †`L‡Z ( _______ ) + how well (= KZ fv‡jvfv‡e) + Bu`yiwU + adjusted (Lvc LvB‡q wb‡qwQ‡jv) + to the
changing conditions
GLv‡b changing A_© Kx, GKUz wPš—v K‡i ejyb‡Zv! GQvovI, changing kãwU verb, bv noun, bv adjective, bv adverb cÖf„wZi †KvbwU, †mUvI GKUz †ei Kivi †Póv
Ki“b| ................. changing-Gi Av‡M Av‡Q the, Ges c‡i Av‡Q conditions(Kb&wWkb&m& A_© Ae¯’vmg~n)| the _vKv‡Z †evSv hv‡”Q, the-Gi ci GKwU noun n‡e,
Avi †mB noun-wU n‡jv conditions kãwU| Avi conditions †Kgb, Zv †evSvi Rb¨ ejv n‡jv changing (A_©vr, cwieZ©bkxj)| Zvi gv‡b, changing n‡jv
adjective|
ev‡K¨i †k‡l Av‡Q face| GB †dB&m& A_© wKš‘ †Pnviv bq, KviY, face-Gi Av‡M Av‡Q had to hvi A_© Ki‡ZB n‡e| it had to face A_© GwU †K‡bv wKQzi m¤§yLxb n‡eB|
Aek¨B, conditions Ges it kãwUi gv‡S which _vK‡j ev‡K¨i A_© †evSv Av‡iv mnR †nv‡Zv| he wished ..... the changing conditions, which it had to face
........ A_©vr, wZwb †`L‡Z †P‡qwQ‡jb Bu`yiwU K‡Zv fv‡jvfv‡e wewfbœ cwieZ©bkxj Ae¯’vi m¤§yLxb n‡q, †m¸‡jvi mv‡_ wb‡R‡K Lvc LvB‡q wb‡Z cv‡i| DËi n‡e (D)|
50. (C) 51. (B) 52. (A)
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