TGT English Online Mock Test
TGT English Mock Test, TGT English Online Mock Test, TGT English Online Practice Test, TGT English Online Mock Test[ FREE ], TGT English Online Model Paper. TGT Previous Year Paper TGT ENGLISH Question Answer 2022, TGT English model Paper, TGT English Mock TestTGT के जो भी उम्मीदवार ENGLISH में लेक्चरर बनना चाहते हैं सर्वप्रथम उनको ENGLISH विषय में अच्छी पकड़ होनी चाहिए और जो भी उम्मीदवार TGT की तैयारी कर रहें हैं उनके लिए हमने TGT ENGLISH की पूरी प्रैक्टिस सेट लेकर आये है , लेकिन आपको प्रैक्टिस सेट को रेगुलर पढ़ना और उसे कंठस्थ करना पड़ेगा।
हमने इस सीरीज में ENGLISH के बहुत ही महत्वपूर्ण प्रश्नो और उनके उत्तर दिए है जो पहले TGT ENGLISH के परीक्षा में पूछे जा चुके हैं। आपको एग्जाम की तैयारी के लिए इस प्रश्नो को ध्यानपूर्वक और अंत तक पढ़ना चाहिए जिससे आपको एग्जाम में अच्छे अंक हासिल हो।
इस सेट में हम आपको ENGLISH से जुड़े सारे सवालों के डॉउट क्लियर करेंगे। हम उम्मीद करते है की यह प्रश्नोत्तर आपको काफी मदद करेंगे।
The type of fiction whose setting is in the medieval period, often in a gloomy castle replete with dungeons subterranean passages and use of ghosts and mysteries are called- |
(1) Picaresque novel
(2) Gothic novel
(3) Epistotary novel
(4) Historic novel,
Ans: (2)
What is poetic licence ? |
(1) Poetry written to established rules and regulations of verification
(2) Royal permission to write poetry
(3) Liberties with language and facts in poetry
(4) Poetic norms of a particular period
Ans: (3)
Period between 1700-1745 in English literature is called. |
- The restoration period
- Caroline Age
- The Augustan Age
- The Age of Johnson.
Ans: (3)
The unbroken flow of thought and awareness in the waking mind is called- |
- Stream of consciousness
- Epiphany
- Negative capability
- Objective correlative
Ans: (1)
What is meant by Catharsis? |
- Tragic flaw in the antagonist
- Tragic flaw in the protagonist
- False step taken in dark
- Purgation of emotion of pity and fear
Ans: (4)
The term Dystopia implies - |
- Pleasant imaginary world
- Unpleasant real world
- Pleasant real world
- Unpleasant imaginary world
Ans: (4)
- T.S Eliot
- Mathew Arnold
- John Keats
- Wordsworth
Ans: (1)
What is the theme of the proletarian novel? |
- Aristocratic class
- Warriors
- Middle class
- Working-class
Ans: (4)
A character which remains almost unchanged throughout the story is called- |
- Round character
- Dynamic character
- Caricature
- Flat character
Ans: (4)
10. How can one amend and improve his judgment of things - |
- Its not possible
- By consulting imperfect people
- By avoiding it
- By forcing one's judgement
Ans: (2)
Who is the author of 'Robinson Crusoe.' |
- Daniel Defoe
- Samuel Richardson
- Henry Fielding
- John Glassworthy
And: (1)
The best works of Shakespeare was alone- |
- Before 1595
- Before 1601
- After 1612
- After 1603
Ans: (4)
Venus and Adonis by Shakespeare was written in stanzas of - |
- Four lines
- Six lines
- Seven lines
- Nine lines
Ans: (2)
Which drama of Shakespeare was not included in the first folio of 1623 by Hemiage and condell - |
- Pericles
- Titus Andronicus
- Cymbeline
- Winter's tale.
Ans: (1)
It is believed that Shakespeare was found guilty of deer poaching in the garden of - |
- William Herbert
- Robert Greene
- Thomas Lucy
- Thomas Thorpe
Ans: (3)
Who is the author of the line 'Tyger's heart wrapt in a player's hide' - about Shakespeare. |
- Ben Jonson
- Christopher Murlowe
- Mathew Arnold
- Robert Greene.
Ans.: (4)
Answer the question (17 to 21) based on the passage given below - It is difficult to believe that any man can be so spiritually dead as to have no love for his native country after travelling in foreign lands. But if such an unpatriotic person does exist, take careful note of his career, and you will find that he will never inspire poets to celebrate him in deathless songs. He may be a man of high rank, of noble family and of riches beyond the dream of avarice, but these great advantages will not save him from oblivion. In spite of them all, he will win no fame during his lifetime, and when he dies he will die in a double sense. His body will return to the dust whence it came, and his name will be forgotten. None will weep for him, non will honour him, and no poet will keep his name alive in immortal poetry. |
An unpatriotic man who loves not his country will thus treated by poets - |
- Hated
- Ridicule
- Not immortalize
- Not say anything
Ans.: (3)
Such a man described in the passage will not achieve fame if he is - |
- Not of a noble family
- Not a rich man
- Not a great poet
- In no condition
Ans.: (4)
The passage deals with the problem of - |
- Brain drain
- Corruption
- Treason
- None
Ans. : (4)
In the passage man is said to die in double sense. Which death is repeatable? |
- Physical
- Oblivion
- Can't be said
- None
Ans. : (2)
The people who don't love their country are - |
- In majority
- None
- Very few
- Not clear
Ans. : (3)
Which one is the right chronological order of Shakespeare's major tragedies - |
- Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth
- Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth, Othello
- Hamlet, Macbeth, Othello, King Lear
- Macbeth, King Lear, Hamlet, Othello
Ans. : (1)
Who called Shakespeare - ' Sweetest Shakespeare, Fancy's child ' |
- Milton
- Coleridge
- Ben Johnson
- Arnold
Ans. : (1)
From where these lines have been taken and who is the speaker We or such stuffs As dreams are made on, and our little life Is rounded with a sleep. |
- Macbeth, Macbeth
- Hamlet, Hamlet
- Twelfth Night, Malvolio
- Tempest, Prospero
Ans. : (4)
Shakespeare was not of an age, but for all time was uttered by - |
- John Milton
- Mathew Arnold
- Ben Jonson
- T.S. Eliot
Ans. : (3)
Where from these lines have been taken Good friend, for Jesus' sake forbear to dig the dust enclosed hearer Beste be the man that spares these stones and curst be that moves my bones. |
- Cymbeline
- As you like it
- Much Ado About Nothing
- Shakespeare's tomb
Ans. : (4)
Where from the line. - Fear no more the heat of the sun, Nor the furious winter's rages; Thou thy worldly task has done. Home art gone and taken thy wages: |
- Cymbeline
- Midsummer Night's Dream
- King Lear
- Hamlet
Ans. : (1)
Who expresses the common judgement of whom when he says, "I do not remember that any book or person or event in my life ever made such a great an impression upon me is the plays of Shakespeare". |
- Dante
- Goethe
- Keats
- Wordsworth
Ans. : (2)
Hermia is a character in Shakespeare's - |
- Midsummer Night's Dream
- Romeo and Juliet
- Two Gentlemen of Verona
- Merry Wives of Windsor
Ans. : (1)
The line 'This is the noblest Roman of them all' - is said by - |
- Cleopatra
- Brutus
- Antonio
- Ceaser
Ans. : (3)
Milton was born in Bread arrest London in the year |
- 1616
- 1620
- 1608
- 1643
Ans. : (3)
John Milton was blinded in the year 1652, What other event is peculiar in the year - |
- Published Comus
- Married
- His wife died
- Started paradise lost
Ans. : (3)
Lycidas was written in the memory of - |
- Sir Christopher Milton
- Edward King
- Arthur Hugh clough
- Arthur Hallan.
Ans. : (2)
Who wrote and about whom - 'Thy soul was like a star, and dwelt a part'. |
- Milton about Shakespeare
- Keats about Milton
- Wordsworth about Milton
- Milton about Spencer
Ans. : (3)
The age of Milton when he wrote -'On the morning of Christ's Nativity' was - |
- 20
- 23
- 43
- 47
Ans. : (1)
When was 'Paradise lost' Published - |
- 1657
- 1671
- 1637
- 1667
Ans. : (4)
Theme of Areopagitica is - |
- Liberty of women
- Freedom of press
- Sanction on press
- Sanction on polygamy
Ans. : (2)
Which one was Milton's favorite - |
- Paradise lost
- Sermson Agonists
- Paradise Regain
- None of these
Ans. : (3)
'Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail Or knock the breast, no weakness, no contempt Dispralse or blame, - nothing but we'll and fair And what may quiet us in death so noble' where from these lines taken - |
- Paradise Regain
- Paradise lost
- On His Blindness
- Samson Agonists
Ans. : (4)
The literary form of 'comus' is - |
- A masque
- A pastoral Elegy
- An epic
- A Sonnet
Ans. : (1)
Whom Milton consider his master in poetry - |
- Chaucer
- Shakespeare
- John Donne
- Spenser
Ans. : (4)
The 'Lyrical Ballads' were better appreciated in America than in England. The first edition published in America in Year - |
- 1798
- 1805
- 1801
- 1802
Ans. : (4)
When was Wordsworth Laureated - |
- 1798
- 1805
- 1843
- Posthumously
Ans. : (3)
Where from these lines have been taken _ Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting :The soul that rises with us, our life's Star, Hath had elsewhere it's setting. |
- Tintern Abbey
- Intimation of Immortality
- To a Skylark
- None of these
Ans. : (2)
……... Nature never did bethay The heart that loved her……….. , These lines existe in |
- Immortality Ode
- Michael
- Ode to Duty
- Tintern Abbey
Ans. : (4)
When was 'The Prelude' published - |
- 1805
- 1832
- 1853
- None of these
Ans. : (4)
Several of Galsworthy's early novels, were written under a pscudonym of - |
- Johnson
- Issac
- John Sinjohn
- Elia
Ans. : (3)
The first successful novel of John Galsworthy was - |
- The man of property
- Fraternity
- Silver Box
- Strife
Ans. : (1)
Which novel of Galsworthy is considered to be his masterpieces |
- The pigeon
- Flowering wilderness
- Island Pharisees
- Indian Summer of A Forsyte
Ans. : (4)
Which is Galsworthy's first play - |
- Loyalties
- Justice
- Silver Box
- Jocelun
Ans. : (4)
When was John Galsworthy a awarded Noble Prize for literature - |
- 1933
- 1932
- 1930
- 1929
Ans. : (2)
'The Dark Flower' by John Galsworthy is a - |
- A Love Drama
- A Tragic Play
- A Love Novel
- A Comic Play
Ans. : (3)
Which drama of Galsworthy deals with the conflict between capitalists and Labourers - |
- Strife
- Silver Box
- Loyalties
- The Skin Game
Ans. : (1)
Answer the questions (54-58) based on the passage given below. We are all short-sighted, and very often see but one side of matter; our views are not extended to all that has a connection with it. From this defect I think no man is free. We see but in part, and we know but in part, and therefore it is no wonder we conclude not right from our partial views. This might instruct the proudest esteemer of his own parts how useful it is to talk and consult with others, even such as come short of him in capacity, quickness, and penetration; for since on one sees all, and we generally have different prospects of the same thing, according to our different, as I may say, positions to it, it is not incongruous to think, nor beneath any man to try, whether another man may not have notions of things which have escaped him, and which his reason would make use of if they came into his mind. |
Since no one is perfect and whole-sighted so its of no use taking suggestions from other such people to reach a conclusion |
- Incorrect
- Correct
- Con not be said confirmly
- None of these
Ans. : (1)
As it is not in our capacity to see the things as whole so making a partial judgment is - |
- Justified
- Not Justified
- Partially Justified
- None
Ans. : (2)
What is closet drama? |
- Drama to be acted in open.
- Drama to be read.
- Drama to be acted indoor.
- Drama to be performed in streets.
Ans. : (2)
What is the meaning of 'Incongruous' - |
- Appropriate
- Dignified
- Absurd
- Useful
Ans. : (3)
Suggestion and consultation can be made only with our superior in ability- The statement is - |
- Incorrect
- Correct
- Not clear
- None
Ans. : (1)
The misspelt word is - |
- Comitte
- Nursery
- Miscellaneous
- Occurrence
Ans. : (1)
Find the correctly spelt word - |
- Gramar
- Havene
- Haven
- Macaber
Ans. : (3)
|
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 10
Ans. : (3)
|
- Adjective
- Adverb
- Noun
- Verb
Ans. : (3)
|
- Alm is given to the bigger
- Alms is given to the beggars
- Alms are given to the beggars
- None of these
Ans. : (3)
Find the correct sentence - |
- Tom, I and you ate sweets.
- I, you and Tom ate sweets.
- I, Tom and you ate sweets.
- You, Tom and I ate sweets.
Ans. : (4)
Which sentence has a transitive verb - |
- He was looking at me.
- Don't interfere in the quarrel.
- He has gone to Patna.
- He treated her badly.
Ans. : (4)
Correctly punctuated sentence is - |
- The any boy (Mukul (alias Munna)) was there.
- The other boy (Mukul [alias Munna]) was there.
- The other boy [Mukul (alias munna)] was there.
- Two brackets are not use in a single sentence.
Ans. : (2)
The meaning of Liaison is - |
- Hatred
- Love
- Rough
- Intimacy
Ans. : (4)
What is the meaning of Indigent - |
- Rich
- Brave
- Intellectual
- Poor
Ans. : (4)
Antonym of Zenith is - |
- Nadir
- Important
- Summit
- Heaven
Ans. : (1)
A cure for all diseases is - |
- Panacea
- Gratis
- Temporal
- None
Ans. : (1)
What is the meaning of pertinent |
- Narrow-minded
- Relevance
- Curious
- Upside down
Ans. : (2)
What is the meaning of imminent - |
- Famous
- Crafty
- Near at hand
- Rare
Ans. : (3)
Change the narration of the sentence - You say, 'I cut the finger'. |
- You say that you cut the finger.
- You say that you had cut the finger.
- You say that I cut the finger.
- You said that I had cut the finger.
Ans. : (1)
Which one is the correct sentence |
- He said that earth was round.
- He said that earth is round.
- said that earth has been round.
- None of the these
Ans. : (2)
Which sentence is correct |
- The news of the train accident are shocking.
- The news of the train accident is shocking.
- The new of the train accident is shocking.
- None of the these
Ans. : (2)
Find the correct sentence |
- He is one of those boys who are wicked.
- He is one of those boys who is wicked.
- He is one of the those boy who is wicked.
- He is one of those boy who are wicked.
Ans. : (1)
Choose the correct sentence - |
- Two hundred rupees are not a big sum.
- Two hundred rupee are not a big sum.
- Two hundred ruppee are not a big sum.
- Two hundred ruppes is not a big sum.
Ans. : (1)
The correct sentence is - |
- The bag togeter with the books are lost.
- The bags to gether with the book is lost.
- The bag to gether with the books is lost.
- The bags to gether with the books is lost.
Ans. : (3)
In which of the sentence 'above' is used as adverb - |
- The moral law is above the civil.
- Analyse the abone sentence
- Our blessing come from above
- The heavens are abone.
Ans. : (4)
In which sentence 'As' is used as conjunction - |
- We walked as fast as we could.
- She likes the same colour as I do.
- As he was poor I helpee him.
- None of these
Ans. : (3)
Pick out the most implying meaning - Ingenvity |
- Skillfulness
- Bullness
- Sentimental
- Certainly
Ans. : (1)
Change the voice - The news Pleased him - |
- He was pleased by the news.
- He was pleased with the news.
- He was pleased to the news.
- None of these
Ans. : (2)
Change the voice - We may finish the work soon - |
- The work may be finished soon
- The work might be finished soon
- The work might finish soon
- None of these
Ans. : (3)
Change the voice - Where did sita buy the hat? |
- Where sita bought the hat
- From where did sita bought the hat
- Where was the hat bought by sita?
- None of these
Ans. : (3)
|
- Antithesis
- Apostrophe
- Metaphor
- Simile
Ans. : (1)
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