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Sentences Test 38

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Sentences Test 38
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  • Question 1
    1 / -0
    Choose the exact meaning of the idiom/phrase.

    To chew the cud 
    Solution
    The given phrase means 'to be in deep thought'.
    Option B is correct. 'To think deeply' has the same meaning as the required one. Thus, it is the correct answer.
    Options A, C and D are incorrect. They do not have the required meaning.
  • Question 2
    1 / -0
    Separate the following sentence into Subject and Predicate:
    Miss Kitty was rude at the table one day.
    Solution
    The subject is who or what the sentence is about, and the predicate tells something about the subject. Here the sentence is about Miss Kitty, and the sentence says that she was rude at the table one day. Therefore, Option B is correct. In rest of the options, a part of the information is included along with the object of focus in the subject, hence incorrect.
  • Question 3
    1 / -0
    Choose the exact meaning of the idiom/phrase:

    Might and main
    Solution
    The given phrase means 'with great physical strength'.
    Option C is correct. It has the required meaning and thus, it is the correct answer.
    Options A, B and D are incorrect. They do not have the required meaning.
    Option D, penetrating, means 'piercing'.
  • Question 4
    1 / -0
    Choose the exact meaning of the idiom/phrase:

    To get into hot water 
    Solution
    The given phrase means 'to get into trouble'.
    Option A is correct. As we can see, option A has the exact required meaning and thus, it is correct.
    Options B, C and D are incorrect. They do not have the required meaning.
  • Question 5
    1 / -0
    Choose the exact meaning of the idiom/phrase: 
    At sea. 
    Solution
    The given phrase means 'confused or unable to decide what to do'.
    Option C is correct. It has the exact meaning as the given phrase. Thus, it is the correct answer.
    Options A, B and D are incorrect. They do not have the required meaning.
  • Question 6
    1 / -0
    Identify the subject in the following sentence:

    Read the works of such thinkers as Bertrand Russell, Vivekananda and Aurobindo Ghosh for guidance.
    Solution
    Option D is the correct answer. The sentence begins with the verb read, indicating a command directed at someone, presumably the implied subject, the pronoun you. Option A is a verb and cannot be a subject. Option B includes the verb with the phrase the works which is the object of the preposition of. Option C contains part of the matter said to someone, here, the subject. Thus, it is part of the predicate. Therefore, Options A,B and C are all incorrect. 
  • Question 7
    1 / -0
    They left the restaurant where they had been eating in a fashionable car.

    Choose the option that best corrects the sentence.
    Solution
    Since "car" is qualified by "they...restaurant", these should be placed together, without changing the meaning. Hence, Option B is correct. The rest of the options do not adhere to the goal, or change the meaning, hence incorrect. 
  • Question 8
    1 / -0

    Directions For Questions

    [passage-header]Read the passage and answer the question that follows:
    [/passage-header]The great fundamental issue now before our people can be stated briefly. It is: are the American people fit to govern themselves, to rule themselves, to control themselves? I believe they are. My opponents do not.

    I believe in the right of the people to rule. I believe that the majority of the plain people of the United States will, day in and day out, make fewer mistakes in governing themselves than any smaller class or body of men, no matter what their training, will make in trying to govern them. 50265I believe, again, that the American people are capable of self-control and of learning by their mistakes90582. 78106Our opponents pay lip-loyalty to this doctrine, but they show their real89278 beliefs by the way in which they champion every device to make the nominal rule of the people a sham.

    68647I have scant patience with this talk of the tyranny of the majority15705. Wherever there is the tyranny of the majority, I shall protest against it with all my heart and soul. But we are today suffering from the tyranny of minorities. It is a small minority that is grabbing our coal deposits, our water powers, and our harbor fronts. A small minority is battening on the sale of adulterated foods and drugs. It is a small minority that lies behind monopolies and trusts. It is a small minority that stands behind the present law of master and servant, the sweatshops, and the whole calendar of social and industrial injustice. It is a small minority that is today using our convention system to defeat the will of a majority of the people in the choice of delegates to the Chicago Convention.

    This is the question that I propose to submit to the people. How can the prevailing morality or a preponderant opinion be better and more exactly ascertained than by a vote of the people? The people know what their own morality and their own opinion is.

    The only tyrannies from which men, women, and children are suffering in real life are the tyrannies of minorities. If the majority of the American people were, in fact, tyrannous over the minority, if democracy had no greater self-control than empire, then indeed no written words which our forefathers put into the Constitution could 18816stay that tyranny.

    95764No sane man who has been familiar with the government of this country for the last twenty years will complain that we have had too much of the rule of the majority81459. The trouble has been a far different one. 29609At many times and in many locations, there have been men who held public office in the States and in the nation who have, in fact, served not the whole people, but some special class or special interest40392. 11146I am not thinking only of those special interests which by grosser methods, by bribery and crime, have stolen from the people59145. I am thinking as much of their respective allies and figureheads, who have ruled and legislated and decided as if in some way the vested rights of privilege had a first mortgage on the whole United States, while the rights of all the people were merely an unsecured debt.

    39600Am I overstating the case64587? 79542Have our political leaders always, or generally, recognized their duty to the people as anything more than a duty to disperse the mob, see that the ashes are taken away, and distribute patronage54637? 37586Have our leaders always, or generally, worked for the benefit of human beings, to increase the prosperity of all the people, to give each some opportunity of living decently and bringing up his children well32048? The questions need no answer. 

    ...view full instructions

    In the context of the passage, Roosevelt's use of the phrase "pay lip-loyalty" in lines 78106 - 89278is meant to convey the idea that his opponents _______.
    Solution
    The phrase 'pay lip-loyalty' means 'to express loyalty or support for something insincerely'. Thus, Roosevelt is saying that 'while the opponents say that they agree with the idea of American people having self-control, their actions indicate otherwise'. Thus, the answer must have the above meaning.
    Option A is incorrect. It means the opponents truly believe that American people are capable of self-control. Thus, it does not have the required meaning.
    Option B is correct. It has the exact required meaning and thus, it is the correct answer.
    Option C is incorrect. It means that the opponents support people's right to rule, but not during war time. Thus, it has no connection to the required meaning.
    Option D is incorrect. It says that the opponents give many speeches saying that they agree about American people having self-control. Thus, it does not have the required meaning either.
  • Question 9
    1 / -0
    Identify the subject in the following sentence:

    On the topmost shelf of that cupboard are lying several books written by them.
  • Question 10
    1 / -0
    Fill in the blank with the appropriate option:

    The road was _____ for the car to turn around.
    Solution
    'Enough' is used to signify something that is just what you need and nothing more. Options A and C are incorrect answers. 'Too' is used to define also or in addition. 'As..as' is used to compare one thing with another. 'Wider' is used in the comparative form of degree. 
    The given sentence explains that the road was sufficiently wide for the car to turn around thus, option B is the correct answer. 
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