Bihar Police Constable (30 June 2024)

Question 1:

Which of the following sentences has a transitive verb ?

  • He is running very fast.

  • She walks in the morning daily.

  • She writes well.

  • I killed a snake last night.

Question 2:

In the sentence 'He was going along the road', point out the tense.

  • Present perfect

  • Past continuous

  • Future indefinite

  • Past perfect

Question 3:

Which kind of noun is 'adversity'?

  • Collective noun

  • Common noun

  • Abstract noun

  • Proper noun

Question 4:

How many parts of speech are there in number?

  • 7

  • 8

  • 10

  • 6

Question 5:

Direction :- Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow by selecting the most appropriate option.

Among these adventures, in the year 1887, was a youth called Jacob who was then twenty-one years old. Although so young he had already lived a risky and dangerous life. He had been a seaman and crossed the Pacific, and been a pirate and a river patrol-man, a coal shoveller at a power plant, a landless man and a ‘hobo’. He had tramped the United States and Canada, switch rides on freight trains, and dodging and fighting railway men and police and knew all about cold and hunger, and poverty and danger, and he had served a prison-sentence of thirty days.

Though he did little else, he had a great love for books and words, and though he had found no gold in the Klondike, these things were soon to earn him a fortune. He came back from Alaksa after a year suffering from scurvy and without a penny in his pocket. He had, however, a great wealth of experience and he began to write stories about places he had seen and the people he had met. After months of hard work and hunger, he found success, Magazines began to accept his Alaskan stories.

Soon, he was famous. In the next sixteen years, he published fifty books, and made and spent a million dollars. He died in 1916.

In the given passage, what do you understand by the word 'Hobo'?

  • A hero

  • Someone who does not have a job or a house and moves from one place to other

  • Someone who fights with everyone and does not sit quietly ever

  • Someone who is brave

Question 6:

Direction :- Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow by selecting the most appropriate option. 
Among these adventures, in the year 1887, was a youth called Jacob who was then twenty-one years old. Although so young he had already lived a risky and dangerous life. He had been a seaman and crossed the Pacific, and been a pirate and a river patrol-man, a coal shoveller at a power plant, a landless man and a ‘hobo’. He had tramped the United States and Canada, switch rides on freight trains, and dodging and fighting railway men and police and knew all about cold and hunger, and poverty and danger, and he had served a prison-sentence of thirty days. 
Though he did little else, he had a great love for books and words, and though he had found no gold in the Klondike, these things were soon to earn him a fortune. He came back from Alaksa after a year suffering from scurvy and without a penny in his pocket. He had, however, a great wealth of experience and he began to write stories about places he had seen and the people he had met. After months of hard work and hunger, he found success, Magazines began to accept his Alaskan stories. 
Soon, he was famous. In the next sixteen years, he published fifty books, and made and spent a million dollars. He died in 1916.

'Scurvy' means

  • a feeling of nausea

  • an injury caused to the body from freezing cold

  • a sea-sickness

  • a disease resulting from a lack of vitamin C

Question 7:

Direction :- Select the most appropriate SYNONYM of the given word.

Affluent

  • Impoverished

  • Wealthy

  • Destitute

  • Proficient

Question 8:

Direction :- Select the most appropriate ANTONYM of the given word.

DISASTER

  • Success

  • Collapse

  • Safety

  • Downfall

Question 9:

Choose the correctly spelt word.

  • Closhare

  • Klousur

  • Kloshur

  • Closure

Question 10:

Direction :- Select the most appropriate meaning of the idiom given in Bold/Underline in the following Questions

To walk on air

  • To be completely free

  • To be very happy

  • To be very rich

  • To feel very depressed

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