All Categories MCQs
Topic Notes: All Categories
General Description
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
67371
This is the fifth time the baby ______ up tonight.
Answer:
has woken
**Rule**: The **Present Perfect Tense** is used with expressions of repetition like 'the first/second/fifth time' to count actions that have happened within an unfinished time period ('tonight'). **Correct Usage**: 'has woken' is the correct verb form to follow 'This is the fifth time' within a current time frame. **Incorrect Options**: (a) 'wakes' (Simple Present), (b) 'is waking' (Present Continuous), and (d) 'woke' (Simple Past) are grammatically incorrect in this specific structure.
67372
The local government ______ to improve public transportation for the last two years.
Answer:
has been promising
**Rule**: The **Present Perfect Continuous Tense** is used for a repeated action (promising) that has been happening over a period of time ('for the last two years') without a final result yet. **Correct Usage**: 'has been promising' suggests that the promises have been made repeatedly over the period and the issue is still ongoing. **Incorrect Options**: (a) 'promises' (Simple Present) is a habit. (b) 'is promising' (Present Continuous) is for now. (d) 'has promised' (Present Perfect) implies a single, completed promise.
67373
The author ______ a new book; it's due to be released next month.
Answer:
has written
**Rule**: The **Present Perfect Tense** is used to describe a recently completed action with a present or future relevance. **Correct Usage**: 'has written' indicates that the action of writing is finished, and the result is a new book that is ready for release. 'has been writing' would imply he is still in the process of writing it. **Incorrect Options**: (a) 'writes' (Simple Present) is a habit. (b) 'is writing' (Present Continuous) means he is writing it now. (d) 'has been writing' suggests the process is not yet complete.
67374
We ______ hard all week, so we are looking forward to the weekend.
Answer:
have been working
**Rule**: The **Present Perfect Continuous Tense** is used to describe a continuous action over a recent period ('all week') that leads to a present feeling or situation ('we are looking forward to the weekend'). **Correct Usage**: 'have been working' emphasizes the continuous effort that has just finished or is about to finish, causing the present feeling. **Incorrect Options**: (a) 'work' (Simple Present) is a habit. (b) 'are working' (Present Continuous) is for right now. (d) 'worked' (Simple Past) disconnects the action from the present feeling.
67375
This box ______ a lot; what's inside it?
Answer:
weighs
**Rule**: **Stative Verbs**. 'Weigh' is a stative verb when it refers to the state of having a certain weight. It is not used in continuous tenses. **Correct Usage**: 'weighs' correctly describes a factual characteristic of the box. The subject 'This box' is singular. **Incorrect Options**: (b) 'is weighing' would only be used for the action of measuring weight (e.g., 'He is weighing the ingredients'). (c) 'has weighed' is the wrong tense. (d) 'weigh' is a plural verb.
67376
My sister ______ for her final exams all month and is very stressed.
Answer:
has been studying
**Rule**: The **Present Perfect Continuous Tense** is used to emphasize the duration ('all month') of an activity that leads to a present state ('is very stressed'). **Correct Usage**: 'has been studying' correctly links the prolonged period of study to her current emotional state. **Incorrect Options**: (a) 'studies' (Simple Present) is a habit. (b) 'is studying' (Present Continuous) is for now. (d) 'has studied' (Present Perfect) focuses on completion.
67377
The two brothers ______ very different personalities.
Answer:
have
**Rule**: **Stative Verbs**. When 'have' means possession or to show a characteristic, it is a stative verb and is used in the **Simple Present Tense**. The subject 'The two brothers' is plural. **Correct Usage**: The plural verb 'have' agrees with the plural subject. **Incorrect Options**: (a) 'are having' and (d) 'is having' are incorrect because 'have' is stative. (b) 'has' is a singular verb.
67378
The kids ______ their grandparents next weekend.
Answer:
are visiting
**Rule**: The **Present Continuous Tense** is often used to talk about fixed personal arrangements in the near future. **Correct Usage**: 'are visiting' correctly describes a definite plan for the coming weekend. **Incorrect Options**: (a) 'visit' (Simple Present) is for habits. (c) 'have visited' (Present Perfect) refers to past visits. (d) 'visits' is for a singular subject.
67379
The price of petrol ______ again. It's more expensive than last week.
Answer:
has gone up
**Rule**: The **Present Perfect Tense** is used to announce a recent event or change that has a result in the present. **Correct Usage**: 'has gone up' indicates a recent change (the price increase) with a present consequence (it's now more expensive). **Incorrect Options**: (a) 'goes up' (Simple Present) is a habitual action. (b) 'is going up' (Present Continuous) describes a trend in progress. (d) 'go up' is a plural verb.
67380
How long ______ you ______ for the results to be announced?
Answer:
have, been waiting
**Rule**: Questions starting with 'How long' to ask about the duration of an unfinished action require the **Present Perfect Continuous Tense**. **Correct Usage**: The question asks about the duration of waiting that started in the past and is still ongoing. 'have you been waiting' is the correct question structure. **Incorrect Options**: (a) 'do, wait' is incorrect. (b) 'are, waiting' asks if they are waiting now, not for how long. (d) 'did, wait' is for a completed action in the past.