He has been seriously injured. There is . . . . . . . hope for his survival.
(A) a little
(B) a few
(C) little
(D) few
Solution:
Few is a quantifier used with plural countable nouns. Little is used with singular uncountable nouns. Hope is singular uncountable nouns. Option C is correct.He has been seriously injured. There is little hope for his survival.
62.
Shraddha is a singer. She sings . . . . . .
(A) beautiful
(B) beautifully
(C) beauty
(D) beautifulness
Solution:
Shraddha is a singer. She sings beautifully.
63.
We . . . . . . . . be visiting him tomorrow.
(A) were not
(B) do not
(C) are not
(D) shall not
Solution:
'shall' is used with future tenses. 'tomorrow' means future tense and therefore 'shall not' is the correct usage.
64.
. . . . . clever you are, you canÃÂÃÂÃÂâÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂt solve this puzzle.
(A) Very
(B) However
(C) Even if
(D) Since
Solution:
However -- in whatever way; regardless of how.However clever you are, you can’t solve this puzzle.
65.
The Olympic Games . . . . . every four years.
(A) are holding
(B) are held
(C) are helded
(D) hold
Solution:
Sentence is in present tense. Rule : Subject + is/am/are + V3 + other agents.The Olympic Games are held every four years.
66.
He usually listens to the radio but at the present moment he . . . . . . . . television.
(A) has watching
(B) shall be watching
(C) is watching
(D) watches
Solution:
In the sentence, the words 'at present' clearly indicate that the tense of the sentence is present tense. Also, the sentence indicates that the subject's activity is currently ongoing. Thus, the answer must be in the present continuous tense. Option C is correct. 'is watching' is in the present continuous tense. It indicates that the subject usually listens to Radio, but he/she is currently watching TV. Thus, it is the correct answer.
67.
Rohan . . . . . . . . the movie before he read the review.
(A) watches
(B) have watched
(C) had watched
(D) was watching
Solution:
A perfect and meaningful sentence should start with a noun and have a suitable verb. Here the sentence is talking about past things. So, here 'had watched' is the perfect verb. Applying the correct verb the sentence can be written as follows- Rohan had watched the movie before he read the review.
68.
A: Do you want some tea?
B: No, I don't want . . . . . . . . Thank you!
(A) nothing
(B) none
(C) anything
(D) something
Solution:
Statement 'A' asks a question and statement 'B' answers it. The answer given by 'B' is negative and thus the sentence 'B' should stay negative. Thus, the answer must be positive since two negatives make a positive. Also, we can see that the answer is an indefinite pronoun that introduces an object in 'B'. Thus, the answer is a positive indefinite pronoun. Option A is incorrect. 'nothing' is a negative indefinite pronoun. Thus, it makes the sentence positive. Further, it also makes the sentence grammatically incorrect. Option B is incorrect. 'none' is not an indefinite pronoun. Further, 'want none' does not make any sense and so 'none' cannot be the answer. Option C is correct. 'anything' is a positive indefinite pronoun that keeps the statement 'B' negative. It introduces the object to the sentence and justifies the answer 'No' by indicating that the subject does not want anything. Option D is incorrect. 'something' is a positive indefinite pronoun but it cannot be used here as it does not justify the answer 'No'. It indicates that there is something that the subject might want. Thus, it contradicts the answer given by 'B'.
69.
That man . . . . . . . . left leg was amputated, suffers from diabetes.
(A) who
(B) which
(C) whose
(D) whom
Solution:
The word 'whose' is the possessive form of the pronoun 'who'. It is used in questions to ask who owns something, has something, etc. 'Who' becomes 'whose' just like he and she becomes his and her.
70.
The rains have set . . . . . . . .?
(A) in
(B) of
(C) on
(D) out
Solution:
'set in' (of rain, bad weather, infection, etc.) means to begin and seem likely to continue.