reading comprehension Practice Questions Answers Test with Solutions & More Shortcuts

DIRECTIONS:

Read the fol lowing passages carefully and answer the questions given below them. Certain words are given in bold to help you to locate them while answering some of the questions.

PASSAGE

The happy man is the man who lives objectively, who has free affections and wide interests, who secures his happiness through these interests and affections and through the fact that they in turn make him an object of interest and affection to many others. To be the recipient of affection is a potent cause of happiness, but the man who demands affection is not the man upon whom it is bestowed. The man who receives affection is, speaking broadly, the man who gives it. But it is useless to attempt to give it as a calculation, in the way in which one might lend money at interest, for a calculated affection is not genuine and is not felt to be so by the recipient. What then can a man do who is unhappy because he is encased in self? So long as he continues to think about the causes of his unhappiness, he continues to be self-centered and therefore does not get outside it. It must be by genuine interest, not by simulated interests adopted merely as a medicine. Although this difficulty is real, there is nevertheless much that he can do if he has rightly diagnosed his trouble. If for example, his trouble is due to a sense of sin, conscious or unconscious, he can first persuade his conscious mind that he has no reason to feel sinful, and then proceed, to plant this rational conviction in his unconscious mind, concerning himself meanwhile with some more or less neutral activity. If he succeeds in dispelling the sense of sin, it is possible that genuine objective interests will arise spontaneously. If his trouble is self-pity, he can deal with it in the same manner after first persuading himself that there is nothing extraordinarily unfortunate in his circumstances. If fear is his trouble, let him practise exercises designed to give courage. Courage has been recognized from time immemorial as an important virtue, and a great part of the training of boys and young men has been devoted to producing a type of character capable of fearlessness in battle. But moral courage and intellectual courage have been much less studied. They also, however , have their technique. Admit to yourself every day at least one painful truth, you will find it quite useful. Teach yourself to feel that life would still be worth living even if you were not, as of course you are, immeasurably superior to all your friends in virtue and in intelligence. Exercises of this sort prolonged through several years will at last enable you to admit facts without flinching and will, in so doing, free you from the empire of fear over a very large field.

Question : 11

Which of the following statements is SIMILAR in meaning to the word ‘flinching’ as used in the passage?

a) explaining

b) providing

c) convincing

d) wincing

e) debating

Answer: (d)

The meaning of the word ‘flinch’ as mentioned in the passage is ‘to make a sudden automatic movement because of pain, fear or shock’.

Out of the given words, the meaning of the word ‘wince’ is ‘to show pain, distress or embarrassment by a slight movement of the muscles in the face’. Hence the word ‘flinching’ and ‘wincing’ are synonymous.

Question : 12

How can one get out of the vicious circle mentioned in the passage?

a) Being true to others and one’s internal circumstances

b) Admitting to oneself that others could be right

c) By inculcating the habit of self-absorption

d) By practising skills of concentration

e) None of these

Answer: (a)

Question : 13

Which of the following words is OPPOSITE in the meaning of the word ‘dispelling’ as used in the passage?

a) projecting

b) scattering

c) accumulating

d) giving

e) receiving

Answer: (c)

The meaning of the word ‘dispel’ as mentioned in the passage is ‘to make something go away’.

Hence the word ‘dispelling’ and ‘accumulating’ are antonymous.

Question : 14

What according to the passage is the real cause of happiness?

a) Affection received from others

b) Calculated risk taken

c) Critical analysis of the happy state of mind

d) Material rewards and incentives received

e) None of these

Answer: (a)

Question : 15

What happens when you think about the cause of your unhappiness?

a) You try to practice exercise designed to give coverage.

b) You remain a self-centered person.

c) You realize that life can be lived in different ways.

d) You try to introspect and look critically at yourself.

e) None of these

Answer: (b)

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