General English MCQs
Topic Notes: General English
MCQs and preparation resources for competitive exams, covering important concepts, past papers, and detailed explanations.
Plato
- Biography: Ancient Greek philosopher (427–347 BCE), student of Socrates and teacher of Aristotle, founder of the Academy in Athens.
- Important Ideas:
- Theory of Forms
- Philosopher-King
- Ideal State
1341
The child said, "Good night, everyone." **Options:**
Answer:
The child wished everyone good night.
Salutation Good night → reporting verb wished**. Others are awkward/ungrammatical.
1342
He said, "What a fine shot it is!" **Options:**
Answer:
He exclaimed with joy that it was a very fine shot.
What a …! → exclamatory admiration. is → was, add very**. (b) wrong emotion, (c)/(d) flatten exclamation or wrong tense.
1343
She said, "How sweet this mango is!" **Options:**
Answer:
She exclaimed with joy that the mango was very sweet.
How + adj …! = exclamation of admiration. is → was. Add very** to retain emphasis. (b) wrong emotion; (c)/(d) omit emphasis.
1344
He said, "If only I could win this prize!" **Options:**
Answer:
He wished that he could win that prize.
If only …! expresses desire/wish. this → that. Reporting verb → wished**. (a)/(d) incorrect emotions; (c) neutralizes exclamatory sense.
1345
She said, "Would that I were a queen!" **Options:**
Answer:
She wished that she were a queen.
Would that …! expresses a wish → reporting verb = wished. No tense change for subjunctive were**. Other options distort meaning.
1346
The boy said, "Hurrah! We have won the match." **Options:**
Answer:
The boy exclaimed with joy that they had won the match.
Hurrah! = joy. We → they, have won → had won**. (a) wrong emotion, (c) loses exclamatory force, (d) tense error.
1347
He said, "Bravo! You have done well." **Options:**
Answer:
He exclaimed with joy that I had done well.
Bravo! conveys praise/joy. Reporting verb becomes exclaimed with joy. have done → had done**. (a) wrong emotion, (b) awkward phrase, (d) loses exclamation nuance.
1348
She said, "Alas! I have lost my purse." **Options:**
Answer:
She exclaimed with sorrow that she had lost her purse.
Interjection Alas! indicates grief → reporting verb becomes exclaimed with sorrow. have lost → had lost** (backshift). (b)/(c) change emotion wrongly. (d) loses emotional force and backshift.
1349
Rania said, "We are organizing a cleaning programme in the colony tomorrow."
Answer:
Rania said that they were organizing a cleaning programme in the colony the next day.
Present continuous → past continuous; we → they; tomorrow → the next day**. (c)(d) keep direct deixis/tense.
1350
The imam prayed that Allah might pour all His blessings on the newly married couple.
Answer:
The imam said to the newly married couple, "May Allah pour all His blessings on you."
Reported prayer/wish (“prayed that … might”) → Direct optative: “May …”. Maintain reverential capitalization and second-person you**.