mahendras

| Join Mahendras Telegram Channel | Like Mahendras Facebook Page | Online Admission | Download Mahendras App

Now Subscribe for Free videos

Subscribe Now

English Language Quiz For IBPS PO & Clerk Exam | 01-11-2020

Swati Mahendra's



 Dear Readers,

Mahendras has started special quizzes for IBPS PO & Clerk Exam so that you can practice more and more to crack the examination. This IBPS PO & Clerk Exam special quiz series will mold your preparations in the right direction and the regular practice of these quizzes will be really very helpful in scoring good marks in the Examination. Here we are providing you the important question of reasoning ability for the IBPS PO & Clerk Exam.


Q1-5 Read each sentence to find out if there is any error in it. The error, if any, will be in one part of the sentence. The number of that part is the answer. If there is no error, the answer is (5).

Q1 Everyone is aware (1)/ that laughter is the best medicine (2)/ but how any of us get (3)/ a good dose of laughter every day (4)/No error (5)

01. (1)

02. (2)

03. (3)

04. (4)

05. (5)

Q2 Nature has the ability (1)/to bring many people closer (2)/to their sense of the divine (3)/ sacredness and spiritual (4)/No error (5)

01. (1)

02. (2)

03. (3)

04. (4)

05. (5)

Q3 The police force (1)/is clearly lackadaisical (2)/and has no control over (3)/ the city law and order situation (4)/No error (5)

01. (1)

02. (2)

03. (3)

04. (4)

05. (5)

Q4 The owners were able to (1)/interact with one other (2)/and share their knowledge on dogs (3)/ at the dog show (4)/No error (5)

01. (1)

02. (2)

03. (3)

04. (4)

05. (5)

Q5 After having failed to get the work done (1)/ despite his best efforts (2)/he was left as no option (3)/but to commit suicide (4)/No error (5)

01. (1)

02. (2)

03. (3)

04. (4)

05. (5)

Q6-10 In the following passage there are blanks each of which has been numbered. These numbers are given below the passage and against each five words have been suggested, one of which fits the blanks appropriately. Find out the appropriate word in each case.

Expectedly, tobacco companies are resisting a new regulation that the mandatory pictorial warnings on cigarette packages be made larger. The legal challenge to the new rule is likely to be finally settled in the weeks ahead, but till then, as per the Supreme Court’s directives, the larger warnings must be printed. For now, cartons will have up to 85 per cent of the packet devoted to graphic messaging. Having lost the argument on the health effects of cigarette consumption, as well as passive smoking, cigarette-makers are pleading that tobacco-growers will be adversely affected. Experience in other countries suggests that they are fighting a losing battle. Australia has become something of a shining example for the rest of the world to follow in (A) down on suggestive branding. In 2012, it (B) a move to have cigarettes sold in logo-free plain cartons to deter smokers. This month, the European Court of Justice backed a measure to cover two-thirds of a cigarette packet with health cautions in the 28 member-states of the European Union. Earlier, the ECJ had (C) the use of descriptive terms such as “light” and “mild” to differentiate among cigarettes. This was in addition to the mandatory disclosure on cigarette packs of the ingredients. The smoking habit is often picked up by suggestive nudges — through advertising, peer pressure, and cultural signals that associate smoking with hipness, attitude, stress-busting, and so on. Indeed, Canberra’s post-implementation report shows that there has been a statistically significant drop in the (D) of smoking since packages have gone logo-less.

In tandem with the latest restrictions on how cigarettes are packaged, the EU and the U.S. have clamped down on the sale of electronic cigarettes. In the U.S., e-cigarettes cannot be sold to people under 18 years of age. This is the result of a growing (E) that far from being a harm-free alternative as claimed by industry lobbies, e-cigarettes could sooner or later lure consumers to take up the real thing. Curiously, it was when the new nicotine-based substitute began to make inroads that some tobacco giants were more willing to acknowledge the toxic chemicals and carcinogens released while smoking. However, they continue to pin their hopes on a challenge at the WTO, which they are fighting together with countries that have strong interests in the tobacco crop. That ruling may still be some time away. But the public health campaign must continue apace with the enforcement of extensive curbs on smoking in public spaces.

Q6 Choose the correct option for (A)

01. loosen

02. abstain

03. masticate

04. clamping

05. devour

Q7 Choose the correct option for (B)

01. circumvent

02. bamboozle

03. enlighten

04. pioneered

05. colonized

Q8 Choose the correct option for (C)

01. prohibited

02. expedit

03. precipitate

04. impede

05. sustain

Q9 Choose the correct option for (D)

01. vogue

02. infatuation

03. prevalance

04. idolatory

05. topnotch

Q10 Choose the correction option for (E)

01. denial

02. consensus

03. chime

04. appertain

05. orientate

Answers:-

Q.1 (3)

Q.2 (4)

Q.3 (4)

Q.4 (5)

Q.5 (3)

Q.6 (4)

Q.7 (4)

Q.8 (1)

Q.9 (3)

Q.10 (2)




0 comments:

Post a Comment

MAHENDRA GURU

Copyright © 2023 www.mahendraguru.com All Right Reserved by Mahendra Educational Pvt . Ltd.