Identify the kind of pronoun of the word underlined in the following sentence: |
Anyone can play this game. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks with appropriate articles: |
It is____ honour to be here. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks with appropriate articles: |
Which is ___ longest river in ___ world? |
Direction: are based on noun. Do as directed: |
Fill in the blank with correct collective noun. |
A __ of wolves attacked the travellers. |
Direction: are based on noun. Do as directed: | ||||||
Match the following: | ||||||
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Direction: Fill in the blanks with appropriate verbs: |
He ____ invited some of his friends to tea two months before. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks with appropriate verbs: |
One of the books ____ missing. |
Direction: Find the synonym of the words given in capital letters: |
VILIFY |
Direction: Find the synonym of the words given in capital letters: |
ADAMANT |
Direction: Find the antonym of the words given in capital letters: |
THREATEN |
Direction: Find the antonym of the words given in capital letters: |
IMPULSIVE |
Direction: Arrange P, Q, R and S to make a meaningful sentence: |
P: of science have made |
Q: human life |
R: some achievements |
S: happier and more comfortable |
Direction: Arrange P, Q, R and S to make a meaningful sentence: |
P: habit which must be cultivated |
Q: reading book is a |
R: knowledge but also enlarges mind |
S: by everybody because it not only increases |
Direction: Fill in the blanks with appropriate prepositions: |
My friend has not replied ___ my letter yet. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks with appropriate prepositions: |
Beware ___ pickpockets at the station. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks with appropriate prepositions: |
____ you or your brother is to blame. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks with appropriate conjunctions: |
Steve wants to fly ___ being afraid. |
Arrange the jumbled letters given below to make a meaningful word: |
SICDREVO |
Change the direct sentence into indirect one. |
He said to me, "Please give me a glass of water." |
Change the voice. |
By whom will the project have been completed? |
Direction: Find the usage of the words underlined in the following sentences: |
We don't need careless worker. |
Direction: Find the usage of the words underlined in the following sentences: |
The match will begin soon. |
Direction: Find the usage of the words underlined in the following sentences: |
She needs to go and see the doctor. |
Direction: Find the usage of the words underlined in the following sentences: |
Swimming is a good exercise. |
Fill in the blank with proper question tag |
They are coming to attend the farewell party, ______? |
Find the analogy. |
Infection: Illness ::? |
Identify the type of sentence on the basis of its structure. |
Steve was invited to a party but it was cancelled. |
Find the kind of tense for the following sentence: |
Beachside memorials and religious services were held across Asia on Friday to mark the 10th anniversary of the Indian Ocean tsunami. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks as per subject-verb agreement: |
Either he or I ____mistaken. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks as per subject-verb agreement: |
My friend and benefactor ____ come to meet me. |
Direction: Find one word substitution for the following sentences: |
A person who is always dissatisfied |
Direction: Find one word substitution for the following sentences: |
One who is very hard to please |
Fill in the blank with appropriate modal. |
Dr. Steve is very kind to me. I___ write him a letter of thanks. |
Direction: Read the passage carefully and answer the questions based on it. Two conceptions of science embody two different valuations of scientific life and of the purpose of scientific enquiry. According to the first conception, science is above all else an imaginative and exploratory activity and the scientist is a person taking part in a great intellectual adventure. The alternative conception suggests that science is above all else a critical and analytical activity and the scientist is pre-eminently a person who requires evidence before he or she delivers an opinion, and when it comes to evidence is hard to please. In the first conception, truth takes shape in the mind of the observer: it is his imaginative grasp of what might be true that provides the incentive for finding out, so far as he can, what is true. This viewpoint is supported by other scholars of science. For instance, Greenwald, argued that: |
"One's preliminary hypotheses have decided advantage in the judgment process." According to the second conception, truth resides in nature and is to be got at only through the evidence of the senses: apprehension leads by a direct pathway to comprehension, and the scientist's task is essentially one of discernment. |
What do you mean by intellectual adventure? |
Direction: Read the passage carefully and answer the questions based on it. Two conceptions of science embody two different valuations of scientific life and of the purpose of scientific enquiry. According to the first conception, science is above all else an imaginative and exploratory activity and the scientist is a person taking part in a great intellectual adventure. The alternative conception suggests that science is above all else a critical and analytical activity and the scientist is pre-eminently a person who requires evidence before he or she delivers an opinion, and when it comes to evidence is hard to please. In the first conception, truth takes shape in the mind of the observer: it is his imaginative grasp of what might be true that provides the incentive for finding out, so far as he can, what is true. This viewpoint is supported by other scholars of science. For instance, Greenwald, argued that: |
"One's preliminary hypotheses have decided advantage in the judgment process." According to the second conception, truth resides in nature and is to be got at only through the evidence of the senses: apprehension leads by a direct pathway to comprehension, and the scientist's task is essentially one of discernment. |
What does the second conception of science suggest? |
Direction: Read the passage carefully and answer the questions based on it. Two conceptions of science embody two different valuations of scientific life and of the purpose of scientific enquiry. According to the first conception, science is above all else an imaginative and exploratory activity and the scientist is a person taking part in a great intellectual adventure. The alternative conception suggests that science is above all else a critical and analytical activity and the scientist is pre-eminently a person who requires evidence before he or she delivers an opinion, and when it comes to evidence is hard to please. In the first conception, truth takes shape in the mind of the observer: it is his imaginative grasp of what might be true that provides the incentive for finding out, so far as he can, what is true. This viewpoint is supported by other scholars of science. For instance, Greenwald, argued that: |
"One's preliminary hypotheses have decided advantage in the judgment process." According to the second conception, truth resides in nature and is to be got at only through the evidence of the senses: apprehension leads by a direct pathway to comprehension, and the scientist's task is essentially one of discernment. |
What is hypothesis? |
Direction: Read the passage carefully and answer the questions based on it. Two conceptions of science embody two different valuations of scientific life and of the purpose of scientific enquiry. According to the first conception, science is above all else an imaginative and exploratory activity and the scientist is a person taking part in a great intellectual adventure. The alternative conception suggests that science is above all else a critical and analytical activity and the scientist is pre-eminently a person who requires evidence before he or she delivers an opinion, and when it comes to evidence is hard to please. In the first conception, truth takes shape in the mind of the observer: it is his imaginative grasp of what might be true that provides the incentive for finding out, so far as he can, what is true. This viewpoint is supported by other scholars of science. For instance, Greenwald, argued that: |
"One's preliminary hypotheses have decided advantage in the judgment process." According to the second conception, truth resides in nature and is to be got at only through the evidence of the senses: apprehension leads by a direct pathway to comprehension, and the scientist's task is essentially one of discernment. |
Who is a scientist as per first conception? |
Fill in the blank with appropriate determiner. |
There is ____ hope of his promotion. |
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