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Bihar Secondary Teacher (English) : 24.04.2024

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Question 1

Direction: Point out the sentence which is in past perfect tense.

Question 2

Which of the following has a modal verb?

Question 3

Fill in the blank with correct alternative for the given sentence:

He ate ____ whole pudding.

Question 4

Use the correct determiner to complete the sentence.
“____ one of these bikes has the capability to reach a speed of 120 km in seconds.”

Question 5

Read the sentence and choose the correct alternative.

‘The secretary and treasurer is absent’-

Question 6

Which of the following sentence has a ‘modal’ verb?

Question 7

Which question form is correct in its structure?

Question 8

Which of the following sentences is exclamatory?

Question 9

To separate an adverbial clause from its principle clause which punctuation mark would you use-

Question 10

Direction: Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow by selecting the correct/most appropriate options.
Alienation refers to the estrangement that occurs in the relation between an individual and that to which he or she is relating. This break in the relation occurs in a variety of forms, such as the estrangements between an individual and his or her social community, natural environment, own self, or even God. As a psychological and theological notion, alienation has its origins in both classical philosophy and Christian theology. As a more specifically philosophical term, the idea became prominent in the nineteenth century beginning with G. W. F. Hegel and developed further, though in different directions, by Søren Kierkegaard and Karl Marx. In the twentieth century, the notion was further explored, particularly in the schools of phenomenology and existentialism, which included thinkers such as Martin Heidegger and Jean-Paul Sartre.
Christian theologians have suggested that the three levels of alienation (individual alienation from one's own self, social alienation from one another, and environmental alienation from all things) can be addressed by restoring the "image of God" (Genesis 1:27-28), lost due to the human fall, at three different levels of relationship: as an individual being who is true to the God within the self, as a social being in relationship to others, and as a natural being who lives in harmony with all creation.
Although the philosophical notion of alienation was not fully developed until the modern period, it has its roots in classical thought. In the Republic, for example, Plato considers the psyche of the human soul as being a tripartite relation between reason, emotion, and the senses. A human being, then, only achieves psychological harmony or happiness through a rightly ordered soul that balances these parts in the appropriate manner. Plato develops this ideal order not only psychologically, but socially and politically as well. For in the ideal Polis there should be a similar harmony or order where each part is in concord with the whole and so members of each class maintain their proper station. The Neoplatonists, such as Plotinus, push this Platonic notion further in an ontological and quasi-mystical direction, where the rightly ordered soul is properly attuned to the Good or One. For this reason, whenever the soul directs its reason, desire, or attention to lower things it results in a form of alienation.
“...refers to the estrangement that occurs...”
The word “estrangement” means same as
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Apr 24PRT, TGT & PGT Exams