reading comprehension section 5 Detailed Explanation And More Example
MOST IMPORTANT general english mcq - 13 EXERCISES
-
Top 299+ Reading Comprehension MCQ Quiz for IBPS SBI RRB »
-
+249 Reading Comprehension Passages with Questions Answers »
-
199+ Advanced Reading Comprehension Questions Answers Quiz »
-
Latest 199+ Reading Comprehension Passages with MCQ Quiz »
-
199+ Top English Comprehension Passages with Mcqs Quiz »
-
Top 199+ Reading Comprehension Previous Year Mcq Quiz »
-
Latest 199+ Short reading comprehension passages Mcq Quiz »
-
Top +149 English Reading Comprehension MCQ Quiz Bank Exam »
-
Topmost English Reading Comprehension Mcq Quiz exercises »
-
Short 199+ Reading Comprehension Questions Answers Mcq »
-
Advanced 199+ Reading Comprehension Passages Mcq Quiz »
-
Top 199+ Reading Comprehension Multiple Choice Questions »
-
1500+ Reading Comprehension Passage MCQ PDF For SSC CHSL »
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
We have inherited the tradition of secrecy about the budget from Britain where also the system has been strongly attacked by eminent economists and political scientists including Peter Jay. Sir Richard Clarke, who was the originating genius of nearly every important development in the British budgeting techniques during the last two decades, has spoken out about the abuse of budget secrecy: "The problems of long-term tax policy should surely be debated openly with the facts on the table. In my opinion, all governments should have just the same duty to publish their expenditure policy. Indeed, this obligation to publish taxation policy is really essential for the control of public expenditure in order to get realistic taxation implications." Realising that democracy flourishes best on the principles of open government, more and more democracies are having an open public debate on budget proposals before introducing the appropriate Bill in the legislature. In the United States the budget is conveyed in a message by the President to the Congress, which comes well in advance of the date when the Bill is introduced in the Congress. In Finland the Parliament and the people are already discussing in June the tentative budget proposals which are to be introduced in the Finnish Parliament in September. Every budget contains a cartload of figures in black and white - but the dark figures represent the myriad lights and shades of India's life, the contrasting tones of poverty and wealth, and of bread so dear and flesh and blood so cheap, the deep tints of adventure and enterprise and man's ageless struggle for a brighter morning. The Union budget should not be an annual scourge but a part of presentation of annual accounts of a partnership between the Government and the people. That partnership would work much better when the nonsensical secrecy is replaced by openness and public consultations, resulting in fair laws and the people's acceptance of their moral duty to pay.
The following question based on reading comprehension topic of general english mcq
IMPORTANT
(a) significant
(b) unscheduled
(c) uncountable
(d) major
e) trivial
The correct answers to the above question in:
Answer: (e)
Discuss Form
Read more reading comprehension Based General English Questions and Answers
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 : 1
According to the passage, calculated affection
a) turns into permanent affection over a period of time
b) leads to self-pity
c) makes other person to love you
d) appears to be false and fabricated
e) gives a feeling of courage
Answer »Answer: (c)
Question : 2
Who according to the passage is the happy man?
a) Who is free from worldly passions
b) Who has externally centred passions
c) Who has free affection and wide interests
d) Who is encased in self
e) None of these
Answer »Answer: (c)
Question : 3
Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE in the context of the passage?
a) Unhappy man is encased in self.
b) A man who suffers from the sense of sin must tell himself that he has no reason to be sinful.
c) Courage has been recognised as an important virtue.
d) The happy man has wide interests.
e) Issue of intellectual courage has been extensively studied.
Answer »Answer: (e)
Question : 4
Choose the word which is most OPPOSITE in meaning to the word printed in bold as used in the passage.
DEBATED
a) accepted unconditionally
b) discussed frankly
c) opposed strongly
d) questioned severely
e) implemented forcibly
Answer »Answer: (a)
Question : 5
Choose the word which is most OPPOSITE in meaning to the word printed in bold as used in the passage.
FLOURISHES
a) vanishes
b) blooms
c) degenerates
d) disappears
e) opens
Answer »Answer: (c)
The meaning of the word flourish’ as mentioned in the passage is ‘to grow in a healthy way’. Out of the given words ‘degenerate’ means ‘to pass into a worse physical, mental or moral state than one which is considered normal or desirable’. Hence the words ‘flourish’ and ‘degenerate’ are antonymous.
Question : 6
Choose the word which is most nearly the SAME in meaning to the word printed in bold as used in the passage.
DUTY
a) tax-liability
b) function
c) imposition
d) obligation
e) job
Answer »Answer: (d)
GET reading comprehension PRACTICE TEST EXERCISES
reading comprehension section 1
reading comprehension section 2
reading comprehension section 3
reading comprehension section 4
reading comprehension section 5
reading comprehension section 6
reading comprehension section 7
reading comprehension section 8
reading comprehension section 9
reading comprehension section 10
reading comprehension section 11
reading comprehension section 12
reading comprehension section 13
reading comprehension Shortcuts and Techniques with Examples
Verbal Reasoning
Question & Answer Quiz
Non Verbal Reasoning
Question & Answer Quiz
Quantitative Aptitude
Question & Answer Quiz
Computer MCQ
Question & Answer Quiz
General English
Question & Answer Quiz
History GK
Question & Answer Quiz
Polity GK
Question & Answer Quiz
Geography GK
Question & Answer Quiz
Economy GK
Question & Answer Quiz
General Awareness GK
Question & Answer Quiz
Recently Added Subject & Categories For All Competitive Exams
Most Important Antonyms Vocabulary - IBPS Clerk Prelims 2024
Latest Antonyms multiple choice questions and answers with free PDFfor IBPS Clerk Prelims 2024. English Vocabulary practice exercise for all bank exam
Continue Reading »
Syllogism Practice Questions Answers PDF - IBPS Clerk 2024
Practice Verbal Reasoning Syllogism multiple choice questions and answers with Fully solved explanation, PDF for the IBPS Clerk Prelims 2024 Bank Exam
Continue Reading »
IBPS Clerk Prelims 2024 Synonyms Questions Solved Answers
Most important IBPS Clerk Prelims 2024 Synonyms and Antonyms multiple choice questions and answers with detailed solutions, English vocabulary PDF Download
Continue Reading »
New Cloze Test Questions and Answers PDF - IBPS Clerk 2024
The most important Cloze Test questions with detailed answers for upcoming IBPS Clerk prelims 2024. Latest English verbal ability practice MCQs, PDF
Continue Reading »