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Reading Test - 1

Description: Reading Test - 1 (Moderate)
Number of Questions: 15
Created by:
Tags: Reading Test - 1 (Moderate) Specific Detail Language I (English) Word Meanings Inference
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Developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

The evidence given so far demonstrates that a nuclear exchange in the Northern Hemisphere would have an unavoidable global aftermath making the continued existence of mankind impossible anywhere. It is also very improbable that a nuclear exchange would be confined exclusively to the vicinity of the industrialized states. Current developments indicate that a nuclear disaster would be carried into the territories of the developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. These developments include the preparations being made by aggressive forces for the armed seizure of the Middle East oilfields, the nuclear missile deployment in the south of Western Europe, the establishment of military bases for the Rapid Deployment Forces in North Africa and the Indian Ocean, and the tensions in the South Atlantic and the Caribbean.

  1. would be free from the impact of a future nuclear disaster

  2. would be carrying out future nuclear explosions

  3. are preparing for seizure of the Middle East oilfields

  4. could suffer the impact of future nuclear disasters


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

Read sentence three of the passage.

In all probability, the impact of a nuclear exchange

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

The evidence given so far demonstrates that a nuclear exchange in the Northern Hemisphere would have an unavoidable global aftermath making the continued existence of mankind impossible anywhere. It is also very improbable that a nuclear exchange would be confined exclusively to the vicinity of the industrialized states. Current developments indicate that a nuclear disaster would be carried into the territories of the developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. These developments include the preparations being made by aggressive forces for the armed seizure of the Middle East oilfields, the nuclear missile deployment in the south of Western Europe, the establishment of military bases for the Rapid Deployment Forces in North Africa and the Indian Ocean, and the tensions in the South Atlantic and the Caribbean.

  1. would be far reaching

  2. would pose a great threat to the industrialized nations

  3. would be strictly confined to the vicinity where it occurs

  4. would result in the total wipe-out of nuclear powers


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

  The passage mentions that a nuclear exchange in Northern Hemisphere would have global aftermath.

Aggressive forces have intentions to

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

The evidence given so far demonstrates that a nuclear exchange in the Northern Hemisphere would have an unavoidable global aftermath making the continued existence of mankind impossible anywhere. It is also very improbable that a nuclear exchange would be confined exclusively to the vicinity of the industrialized states. Current developments indicate that a nuclear disaster would be carried into the territories of the developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. These developments include the preparations being made by aggressive forces for the armed seizure of the Middle East oilfields, the nuclear missile deployment in the south of Western Europe, the establishment of military bases for the Rapid Deployment Forces in North Africa and the Indian Ocean, and the tensions in the South Atlantic and the Caribbean.

  1. seize the Middle East oilfields

  2. deploy nuclear missiles across the world

  3. carry on with their nuclear programmes

  4. free the Indian ocean from the impact of nuclear warfare


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

 See sentence four. 

As per the author, a mathematician

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

Mathematics is the language in which the Book of Nature is written: Mathematics is the queen of sciences. It is universally agreed that Mathematics is the backbone of science and technology. For without Mathematics the engineer is but an artist or a sculptor. He can build the bridge, attest to its form and beauty, but without Mathematics he cannot guarantee its reliability to serve the purpose for which it is built. Mathematics is indeed the science of sciences. It is also the art of all arts. It is right, legitimate and defensible to consider Mathematics as an art. The poet, the musician, the artist and the mathematician have a lot in common. Fundamental to all their studies and works is their common interest in the logical study related to concepts and objects to form patterns which will produce beauty, harmony and order. Thus, the poet arranges words to produce a pattern called poetry; the musician arranges sounds to produce a pattern called music; the artist arranges colours to produce a pattern called painting and the mathematician arranges abstract ideas into a pattern, using symbols, to produce equations. Each of these patterns-the poem, the music, the painting and the equation must stand up to the test of the same order, harmony and beauty. So if mathematics is not an art, what is art?

  1. arranges colours to form a pattern

  2. arranges abstract thoughts

  3. produces equations using symbols and abstract thoughts

  4. has nothing in common with an artist or a musician


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

 See sentence ten.

A nuclear exchange in the Northern Hemisphere

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

The evidence given so far demonstrates that a nuclear exchange in the Northern Hemisphere would have an unavoidable global aftermath making the continued existence of mankind impossible anywhere. It is also very improbable that a nuclear exchange would be confined exclusively to the vicinity of the industrialized states. Current developments indicate that a nuclear disaster would be carried into the territories of the developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. These developments include the preparations being made by aggressive forces for the armed seizure of the Middle East oilfields, the nuclear missile deployment in the south of Western Europe, the establishment of military bases for the Rapid Deployment Forces in North Africa and the Indian Ocean, and the tensions in the South Atlantic and the Caribbean.

  1. would have a few unavoidable consequences

  2. would pose a great threat to the very existence of mankind

  3. would make human existence impossible in that region

  4. would result in widespread demonstrations


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

The passage mentions that a nuclear exchange will make the esistence of human race impossible.

As per the author, music is

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

Mathematics is the language in which the Book of Nature is written: Mathematics is the queen of sciences. It is universally agreed that Mathematics is the backbone of science and technology. For without Mathematics the engineer is but an artist or a sculptor. He can build the bridge, attest to its form and beauty, but without Mathematics he cannot guarantee its reliability to serve the purpose for which it is built. Mathematics is indeed the science of sciences. It is also the art of all arts. It is right, legitimate and defensible to consider Mathematics as an art. The poet, the musician, the artist and the mathematician have a lot in common. Fundamental to all their studies and works is their common interest in the logical study related to concepts and objects to form patterns which will produce beauty, harmony and order. Thus, the poet arranges words to produce a pattern called poetry; the musician arranges sounds to produce a pattern called music; the artist arranges colours to produce a pattern called painting and the mathematician arranges abstract ideas into a pattern, using symbols, to produce equations. Each of these patterns-the poem, the music, the painting and the equation must stand up to the test of the same order, harmony and beauty. So if mathematics is not an art, what is art?

  1. the art of all arts

  2. an arrangement of words that can produce something beautiful

  3. a pattern of sounds

  4. a pattern of colours


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

 See sentence ten.

Which of the following statements is not true about an engineer?

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

Mathematics is the language in which the Book of Nature is written: Mathematics is the queen of sciences. It is universally agreed that Mathematics is the backbone of science and technology. For without Mathematics the engineer is but an artist or a sculptor. He can build the bridge, attest to its form and beauty, but without Mathematics he cannot guarantee its reliability to serve the purpose for which it is built. Mathematics is indeed the science of sciences. It is also the art of all arts. It is right, legitimate and defensible to consider Mathematics as an art. The poet, the musician, the artist and the mathematician have a lot in common. Fundamental to all their studies and works is their common interest in the logical study related to concepts and objects to form patterns which will produce beauty, harmony and order. Thus, the poet arranges words to produce a pattern called poetry; the musician arranges sounds to produce a pattern called music; the artist arranges colours to produce a pattern called painting and the mathematician arranges abstract ideas into a pattern, using symbols, to produce equations. Each of these patterns-the poem, the music, the painting and the equation must stand up to the test of the same order, harmony and beauty. So if mathematics is not an art, what is art?

  1. He cannot be a true engineer without Mathematics.

  2. He is just an artist or a sculptor without Mathematics.

  3. He cannot certify the reliability of a bridge without Mathematics.

  4. He cannot vouch for the beauty of a bridge without Mathematics.


Correct Option: A

According to the author, Mathematics is

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

Mathematics is the language in which the Book of Nature is written: Mathematics is the queen of sciences. It is universally agreed that Mathematics is the backbone of science and technology. For without Mathematics the engineer is but an artist or a sculptor. He can build the bridge, attest to its form and beauty, but without Mathematics he cannot guarantee its reliability to serve the purpose for which it is built. Mathematics is indeed the science of sciences. It is also the art of all arts. It is right, legitimate and defensible to consider Mathematics as an art. The poet, the musician, the artist and the mathematician have a lot in common. Fundamental to all their studies and works is their common interest in the logical study related to concepts and objects to form patterns which will produce beauty, harmony and order. Thus, the poet arranges words to produce a pattern called poetry; the musician arranges sounds to produce a pattern called music; the artist arranges colours to produce a pattern called painting and the mathematician arranges abstract ideas into a pattern, using symbols, to produce equations. Each of these patterns-the poem, the music, the painting and the equation must stand up to the test of the same order, harmony and beauty. So if mathematics is not an art, what is art?

  1. the language of nature

  2. the queen of sciences

  3. the art of the all arts

  4. all the above


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

 The author mentions all of the above as being related to mathematics.

The term 'aftermath' as used in the passage means

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

The evidence given so far demonstrates that a nuclear exchange in the Northern Hemisphere would have an unavoidable global aftermath making the continued existence of mankind impossible anywhere. It is also very improbable that a nuclear exchange would be confined exclusively to the vicinity of the industrialized states. Current developments indicate that a nuclear disaster would be carried into the territories of the developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. These developments include the preparations being made by aggressive forces for the armed seizure of the Middle East oilfields, the nuclear missile deployment in the south of Western Europe, the establishment of military bases for the Rapid Deployment Forces in North Africa and the Indian Ocean, and the tensions in the South Atlantic and the Caribbean.

  1. consequences

  2. inconvenience

  3. disaster

  4. deployment


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

 Aftermath is used to denote what happens after something is done/ has happened.

Which word in the passage can replace the word 'orderliness'?

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

Mathematics is the language in which the Book of Nature is written: Mathematics is the queen of sciences. It is universally agreed that Mathematics is the backbone of science and technology. For without Mathematics the engineer is but an artist or a sculptor. He can build the bridge, attest to its form and beauty, but without Mathematics he cannot guarantee its reliability to serve the purpose for which it is built. Mathematics is indeed the science of sciences. It is also the art of all arts. It is right, legitimate and defensible to consider Mathematics as an art. The poet, the musician, the artist and the mathematician have a lot in common. Fundamental to all their studies and works is their common interest in the logical study related to concepts and objects to form patterns which will produce beauty, harmony and order. Thus, the poet arranges words to produce a pattern called poetry; the musician arranges sounds to produce a pattern called music; the artist arranges colours to produce a pattern called painting and the mathematician arranges abstract ideas into a pattern, using symbols, to produce equations. Each of these patterns-the poem, the music, the painting and the equation must stand up to the test of the same order, harmony and beauty. So if mathematics is not an art, what is art?

  1. Pattern

  2. Harmony

  3. Logic

  4. Reliability


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

 Something in order would be pleasing to the eye. Similarly, something pleasing to the eye would be in harmony.

What did Christie do with her travel experiences?

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

Agatha Christie was probably the most successful writer in history. She wrote seventy-eight crime novels, six other novels, one hundred and fifty short stories, four non-fiction books and nineteen plays. That represents two billion books sold: more than William Shakespeare’s.

Christie became a writer by accident. She was bored when her husband was away in the First World War. Agatha was working in a hospital dispensary (which is where she learned all the information about poisons that she used in her books). She decided to write a novel to pass the time. She chose a detective novel because she loved reading them. Her first novel, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, was an instant success. Each book had a new ingenious plot. Readers loved the books, particularly because Christie always gave the readers all the information they needed to find the solution.

Christie loved travelling. When she became rich she could go all over the world. She used the travels in her writing. Agatha Christie died in 1976, but her stories are still immensely popular. Many have been adapted into films or for television.

  1. She included them in her novels.

  2. She included them in her real life.

  3. She named her novels after such travel destinations.

  4. She used them to create World War I stories.


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

 She used the travels in her writing.

Readers liked her novels because

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

Agatha Christie was probably the most successful writer in history. She wrote seventy-eight crime novels, six other novels, one hundred and fifty short stories, four non-fiction books and nineteen plays. That represents two billion books sold: more than William Shakespeare’s.

Christie became a writer by accident. She was bored when her husband was away in the First World War. Agatha was working in a hospital dispensary (which is where she learned all the information about poisons that she used in her books). She decided to write a novel to pass the time. She chose a detective novel because she loved reading them. Her first novel, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, was an instant success. Each book had a new ingenious plot. Readers loved the books, particularly because Christie always gave the readers all the information they needed to find the solution.

Christie loved travelling. When she became rich she could go all over the world. She used the travels in her writing. Agatha Christie died in 1976, but her stories are still immensely popular. Many have been adapted into films or for television.

  1. there was a lot of suspense and thrill in them

  2. they were given a lot of clues to find out the solution

  3. her novels contained great love stories

  4. her novels were easy to understand


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

 Readers loved the books, particularly because Christie always gave the readers all the information they needed to find the solution.

Why did she start by writing detective stories?

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

Agatha Christie was probably the most successful writer in history. She wrote seventy-eight crime novels, six other novels, one hundred and fifty short stories, four non-fiction books and nineteen plays. That represents two billion books sold: more than William Shakespeare’s.

Christie became a writer by accident. She was bored when her husband was away in the First World War. Agatha was working in a hospital dispensary (which is where she learned all the information about poisons that she used in her books). She decided to write a novel to pass the time. She chose a detective novel because she loved reading them. Her first novel, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, was an instant success. Each book had a new ingenious plot. Readers loved the books, particularly because Christie always gave the readers all the information they needed to find the solution.

Christie loved travelling. When she became rich she could go all over the world. She used the travels in her writing. Agatha Christie died in 1976, but her stories are still immensely popular. Many have been adapted into films or for television.

  1. She heard many such stories in the dispensary in which she worked.

  2. Her husband related his World War I experiences to her.

  3. She loved reading detective stories during her free time.

  4. She thought they would sell more.


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

She decided to write a novel to pass the time. She chose a detective novel because she loved reading them.

Why is Christie considered the most commercially successful writer in history?

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

Agatha Christie was probably the most successful writer in history. She wrote seventy-eight crime novels, six other novels, one hundred and fifty short stories, four non-fiction books and nineteen plays. That represents two billion books sold: more than William Shakespeare’s.

Christie became a writer by accident. She was bored when her husband was away in the First World War. Agatha was working in a hospital dispensary (which is where she learned all the information about poisons that she used in her books). She decided to write a novel to pass the time. She chose a detective novel because she loved reading them. Her first novel, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, was an instant success. Each book had a new ingenious plot. Readers loved the books, particularly because Christie always gave the readers all the information they needed to find the solution.

Christie loved travelling. When she became rich she could go all over the world. She used the travels in her writing. Agatha Christie died in 1976, but her stories are still immensely popular. Many have been adapted into films or for television.

  1. She gained great fame as a fiction writer during her lifetime.

  2. She was a great novelist as well as story writer.

  3. As a writer she was much better than Shakespeare.

  4. Her books sold more than Shakespeare's.


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

Only option 4 shows her success translated into sales.

Which word in the passage can replace 'vastly'?

Directions: Read the following passage to answer the given question.

Agatha Christie was probably the most successful writer in history. She wrote seventy-eight crime novels, six other novels, one hundred and fifty short stories, four non-fiction books and nineteen plays. That represents two billion books sold: more than William Shakespeare’s.

Christie became a writer by accident. She was bored when her husband was away in the First World War. Agatha was working in a hospital dispensary (which is where she learned all the information about poisons that she used in her books). She decided to write a novel to pass the time. She chose a detective novel because she loved reading them. Her first novel, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, was an instant success. Each book had a new ingenious plot. Readers loved the books, particularly because Christie always gave the readers all the information they needed to find the solution.

Christie loved travelling. When she became rich she could go all over the world. She used the travels in her writing. Agatha Christie died in 1976, but her stories are still immensely popular. Many have been adapted into films or for television.

  1. Accidentally

  2. Mysteriously

  3. Instantly

  4. Immensely


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

 Vast means big. Hence, vastly would mean hugely or immensely.

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