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
69641
Ali bought . . . . . . . . European jacket during his trip.
Answer:
a
Although 'European' begins with the vowel letter 'E', its pronunciation is 'yoo', which is a consonant sound. Therefore, 'a' is the correct article. 'An European' would be grammatically wrong. The jacket is mentioned for the first time, making the indefinite article suitable. Hence, 'a European jacket' is correct.
69642
The sun rose over . . . . . . . . horizon.
Answer:
Unique natural features like the horizon always take the definite article 'the'. This is because they represent one specific thing in a universal context. 'A horizon' would imply one of many, which is incorrect here. 'No article' would also be incomplete. Thus, 'the horizon' is correct.
69643
Nadia read . . . . . . . . interesting article in the magazine.
Answer:
The adjective 'interesting' begins with a vowel sound, requiring the article 'an'. This makes the sentence smooth and grammatically correct. 'A interesting' would be wrong because of the mismatch in sound. Since it is the first mention, the indefinite article is appropriate. Therefore, 'an interesting article' is the right phrase.
69644
Hassan placed . . . . . . . . apple on the counter.
Answer:
The word 'apple' begins with a vowel sound, so the article 'an' is correct. Indefinite articles are used when something is introduced for the first time. 'A apple' would be wrong because it does not match the vowel sound. 'The apple' would only be used if the apple was already identified earlier. Thus, 'an apple' is the correct usage here.
69645
She teaches . . . . . . . . English at a local community college.
Answer:
Academic subjects, languages, and fields of study generally take no article when used generically. 'English' here denotes the subject, not a specific course title. 'The English' would refer to a specific group of people or a particular course. Thus, no article is used.
69646
He checked . . . . . . . . oil before starting the long drive.
Answer:
In the context of a particular car, 'the oil' refers to the specific vehicle’s engine oil, which is identifiable in the situation. The definite article is thus appropriate. No article would be too generic. Indefinite articles are not used with uncountable nouns in this definite, situational sense.
69647
They restored . . . . . . . . old manuscript found in the attic.
Answer:
The participial phrase 'found in the attic' identifies a specific manuscript, making the noun definite. 'The' signals this specificity. An indefinite article would fail to reflect the unique reference established by the modifier. Hence, 'the old manuscript' is correct.
69648
He saved . . . . . . . . little money each month for emergencies.
Answer:
a
With quantifying adjectives like 'little' before a singular countable noun like 'money' (treated here as a fixed expression meaning a small amount), 'a' is used in the idiom 'a little money'. This construction denotes a small but sufficient quantity. 'Little money' without 'a' would emphasize insufficiency. 'An' is phonetically incompatible.
69649
. . . . . . . . dogs are loyal companions when treated well.
Answer:
Plural countable nouns used to make generalizations typically take no article. Here, 'dogs' refers to the class as a whole. 'The dogs' would imply a specific set of dogs previously known. Indefinite articles cannot modify plurals.
69650
She visited . . . . . . . . United Kingdom last summer for research.
Answer:
Country names with 'Kingdom', 'States', or plural forms typically take 'the'. Thus, 'the United Kingdom' is correct. Omitting the article would be ungrammatical. Indefinite articles are not used with country names in this pattern.