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Reading Test - 3

Description: Reading Test - 3 (Moderate)
Number of Questions: 15
Created by:
Tags: Reading Test - 3 (Moderate) Inference Language I (English) Specific Detail Word Meanings
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What general feeling does the author discuss in the first paragraph?

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

It was a sunny day in the month of May. The sun took its rightful position very early; lending credence to the general feeling that Andrew's birthday ceremony was going to be greeted with the blessing of a pleasant climate. The sky looked so bright that Andrew insisted on having an open air party. The habitual doubting Thomases had no dis­senting opinions to express. Andrew had gone to a great length to ensure a hitch-free party; a party which would remain the talk of the town. Although it was not intended to be free for all, a lot had been done to stamp the occasion on the memories of many people long afterwards.
The bright sun continued to smile. Andrew's face beamed with pleasure with every passing moment. Very few of his contemporaries have so succeeded in reaching the top of the ladder. Andrew in particular had been an orphan of storm. His father's death during his third year in the secondary school and that of his mother two years later were the only two of this orphan's `storms'. He suffered a physical misfortune when a machine severed his left middle finger. But Andrew did not despair.

The courage to fail is very cheap. Every fool can afford to fail. But it raises one above the herd of cowards and never-do-wells to be up and struggling. The reward of forbearance in the end is resounding success. And so it was for Andrew. Ever since he finished his university education, it had been success galore. He had got a good job in one of the country's insurance companies. His pay was good, his promotion had been steady and his prospects seemed bright. At forty, he had a good car and had already bought a house of his own. The world was at his feet!

  1. Andrew's birthday always falls on a sunny day.

  2. Andrew's birthday function would have the blessings of a good weather.

  3. Andrew always prefers an open air party.

  4. The doubting Thomases raised objections to the idea of holding an open air party.


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

 The first three sentences of the first paragraph point towards the right answer.

What does the poet mean by “We must let out the hem”?

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

FRONTIER LIFE
My stockings have a hole in them,
I'm learning how to darn.
Which means that I am mending them
With needle and some yarn.

Ma says my dress is getting short,
We must let out the hem.
My only shoes have come apart,
And Pa is patching them.

The garden must be weeded,
If we want food to eat.
I pick those scratchy blackberries
So we'll have something sweet.

I help my Pa by milking Bess
And stake her out each day.
I help my Ma by hanging clothes
And watching Sissy play.

I go to bed so tired,
And get up before the sun.
There's always work that's waiting.
It never gets all done.
   
But Ma has made Pa promise
To have a family rule
If there's a teacher hired,
I get to go to school!

    Cindy Breedlove

  1. There is a need to buy a new dress.

  2. She has to discard the old dress.

  3. The seam has to be opened to make the dress a bit longer.

  4. The dress should be given away to somebody.


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

Hem refers to the lower border of a dress. Letting out the hem would mean lengthening the dress.

The word in the passage that can replace the expression 'chances of advancement' is

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

It was a sunny day in the month of May. The sun took its rightful position very early; lending credence to the general feeling that Andrew's birthday ceremony was going to be greeted with the blessing of a pleasant climate. The sky looked so bright that Andrew insisted on having an open air party. The habitual doubting Thomases had no dis­senting opinions to express. Andrew had gone to a great length to ensure a hitch-free party; a party which would remain the talk of the town. Although it was not intended to be free for all, a lot had been done to stamp the occasion on the memories of many people long afterwards.
The bright sun continued to smile. Andrew's face beamed with pleasure with every passing moment. Very few of his contemporaries have so succeeded in reaching the top of the ladder. Andrew in particular had been an orphan of storm. His father's death during his third year in the secondary school and that of his mother two years later were the only two of this orphan's `storms'. He suffered a physical misfortune when a machine severed his left middle finger. But Andrew did not despair.

The courage to fail is very cheap. Every fool can afford to fail. But it raises one above the herd of cowards and never-do-wells to be up and struggling. The reward of forbearance in the end is resounding success. And so it was for Andrew. Ever since he finished his university education, it had been success galore. He had got a good job in one of the country's insurance companies. His pay was good, his promotion had been steady and his prospects seemed bright. At forty, he had a good car and had already bought a house of his own. The world was at his feet!

  1. credence

  2. occasion

  3. forbearance

  4. prospects


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

 Prospects means chances or possibilities. 

What is the little girl doing with a needle and some yarn?

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

FRONTIER LIFE
My stockings have a hole in them,
I'm learning how to darn.
Which means that I am mending them
With needle and some yarn.

Ma says my dress is getting short,
We must let out the hem.
My only shoes have come apart,
And Pa is patching them.

The garden must be weeded,
If we want food to eat.
I pick those scratchy blackberries
So we'll have something sweet.

I help my Pa by milking Bess
And stake her out each day.
I help my Ma by hanging clothes
And watching Sissy play.

I go to bed so tired,
And get up before the sun.
There's always work that's waiting.
It never gets all done.
   
But Ma has made Pa promise
To have a family rule
If there's a teacher hired,
I get to go to school!

    Cindy Breedlove

  1. She is learning to stitch a new pair of stockings.

  2. She is learning to repair her torn pair of stockings.

  3. She is learning to stitch new clothes.

  4. She is stitching a pair of stockings for her mother.


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

 The first line of the stanza describes the problem with the little girl's stockings.

Andrew wanted to make his birthday function a memorable one because

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

It was a sunny day in the month of May. The sun took its rightful position very early; lending credence to the general feeling that Andrew's birthday ceremony was going to be greeted with the blessing of a pleasant climate. The sky looked so bright that Andrew insisted on having an open air party. The habitual doubting Thomases had no dis­senting opinions to express. Andrew had gone to a great length to ensure a hitch-free party; a party which would remain the talk of the town. Although it was not intended to be free for all, a lot had been done to stamp the occasion on the memories of many people long afterwards.
The bright sun continued to smile. Andrew's face beamed with pleasure with every passing moment. Very few of his contemporaries have so succeeded in reaching the top of the ladder. Andrew in particular had been an orphan of storm. His father's death during his third year in the secondary school and that of his mother two years later were the only two of this orphan's `storms'. He suffered a physical misfortune when a machine severed his left middle finger. But Andrew did not despair.

The courage to fail is very cheap. Every fool can afford to fail. But it raises one above the herd of cowards and never-do-wells to be up and struggling. The reward of forbearance in the end is resounding success. And so it was for Andrew. Ever since he finished his university education, it had been success galore. He had got a good job in one of the country's insurance companies. His pay was good, his promotion had been steady and his prospects seemed bright. At forty, he had a good car and had already bought a house of his own. The world was at his feet!

  1. the sky looked bright and the weather was pleasant

  2. even the doubting Thomases agreed to the idea this time

  3. he wanted the function to leave a long-lasting impression

  4. it was the first birthday that he was celebrating


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

 The last two sentences of the first paragraph point towards the right option.

The expression 'The world was at his feet' means

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

It was a sunny day in the month of May. The sun took its rightful position very early; lending credence to the general feeling that Andrew's birthday ceremony was going to be greeted with the blessing of a pleasant climate. The sky looked so bright that Andrew insisted on having an open air party. The habitual doubting Thomases had no dis­senting opinions to express. Andrew had gone to a great length to ensure a hitch-free party; a party which would remain the talk of the town. Although it was not intended to be free for all, a lot had been done to stamp the occasion on the memories of many people long afterwards.
The bright sun continued to smile. Andrew's face beamed with pleasure with every passing moment. Very few of his contemporaries have so succeeded in reaching the top of the ladder. Andrew in particular had been an orphan of storm. His father's death during his third year in the secondary school and that of his mother two years later were the only two of this orphan's `storms'. He suffered a physical misfortune when a machine severed his left middle finger. But Andrew did not despair.

The courage to fail is very cheap. Every fool can afford to fail. But it raises one above the herd of cowards and never-do-wells to be up and struggling. The reward of forbearance in the end is resounding success. And so it was for Andrew. Ever since he finished his university education, it had been success galore. He had got a good job in one of the country's insurance companies. His pay was good, his promotion had been steady and his prospects seemed bright. At forty, he had a good car and had already bought a house of his own. The world was at his feet!

  1. he had to struggle a lot to achieve success

  2. he had been travelling all over the world

  3. he had been highly successful

  4. success had not turned his head


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

 'World at his feet' is an idiom which means that the person being spoken of has been very successful in life.

Which of the following can be made out from the second paragraph of the passage about Andrew's early life?

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

It was a sunny day in the month of May. The sun took its rightful position very early; lending credence to the general feeling that Andrew's birthday ceremony was going to be greeted with the blessing of a pleasant climate. The sky looked so bright that Andrew insisted on having an open air party. The habitual doubting Thomases had no dis­senting opinions to express. Andrew had gone to a great length to ensure a hitch-free party; a party which would remain the talk of the town. Although it was not intended to be free for all, a lot had been done to stamp the occasion on the memories of many people long afterwards.
The bright sun continued to smile. Andrew's face beamed with pleasure with every passing moment. Very few of his contemporaries have so succeeded in reaching the top of the ladder. Andrew in particular had been an orphan of storm. His father's death during his third year in the secondary school and that of his mother two years later were the only two of this orphan's `storms'. He suffered a physical misfortune when a machine severed his left middle finger. But Andrew did not despair.

The courage to fail is very cheap. Every fool can afford to fail. But it raises one above the herd of cowards and never-do-wells to be up and struggling. The reward of forbearance in the end is resounding success. And so it was for Andrew. Ever since he finished his university education, it had been success galore. He had got a good job in one of the country's insurance companies. His pay was good, his promotion had been steady and his prospects seemed bright. At forty, he had a good car and had already bought a house of his own. The world was at his feet!

  1. The loss of his parents was the only setback he had to face in his life.

  2. The loss of his middle finger in an accident was the severest of all the storms he had to face in his life.

  3. Tired of his misfortunes, Andrew almost gave up hope.

  4. He had to face far too many misfortunes in his life including the loss of his parents.


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

 The last sentence of the second paragraph sums up the entire paragraph.

In the last lines, the child cherishes a desire to

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

FRONTIER LIFE
My stockings have a hole in them,
I'm learning how to darn.
Which means that I am mending them
With needle and some yarn.

Ma says my dress is getting short,
We must let out the hem.
My only shoes have come apart,
And Pa is patching them.

The garden must be weeded,
If we want food to eat.
I pick those scratchy blackberries
So we'll have something sweet.

I help my Pa by milking Bess
And stake her out each day.
I help my Ma by hanging clothes
And watching Sissy play.

I go to bed so tired,
And get up before the sun.
There's always work that's waiting.
It never gets all done.
   
But Ma has made Pa promise
To have a family rule
If there's a teacher hired,
I get to go to school!

    Cindy Breedlove

  1. fulfil the wishes of her parents

  2. go to school some day

  3. help the poor village girl

  4. tell us how members of the family are helping one another


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

In the last line, the girl expresses a wish to go to school. 

What does the poet mean by 'And watching Sissy play'?

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

FRONTIER LIFE
My stockings have a hole in them,
I'm learning how to darn.
Which means that I am mending them
With needle and some yarn.

Ma says my dress is getting short,
We must let out the hem.
My only shoes have come apart,
And Pa is patching them.

The garden must be weeded,
If we want food to eat.
I pick those scratchy blackberries
So we'll have something sweet.

I help my Pa by milking Bess
And stake her out each day.
I help my Ma by hanging clothes
And watching Sissy play.

I go to bed so tired,
And get up before the sun.
There's always work that's waiting.
It never gets all done.
   
But Ma has made Pa promise
To have a family rule
If there's a teacher hired,
I get to go to school!

    Cindy Breedlove

  1. She was not allowed to play like other children.

  2. She used to watch her sister playing.

  3. It was her duty to take care of her younger sister.

  4. Her sister used to play when she worked.


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

 The little girl has to look after her sister while she (her sister) plays.

What does the poet mean to say in the following lines?

The garden must be weeded If we want food to eat I pick those scratchy blackberries So we'll have something sweet

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

FRONTIER LIFE
My stockings have a hole in them,
I'm learning how to darn.
Which means that I am mending them
With needle and some yarn.

Ma says my dress is getting short,
We must let out the hem.
My only shoes have come apart,
And Pa is patching them.

The garden must be weeded,
If we want food to eat.
I pick those scratchy blackberries
So we'll have something sweet.

I help my Pa by milking Bess
And stake her out each day.
I help my Ma by hanging clothes
And watching Sissy play.

I go to bed so tired,
And get up before the sun.
There's always work that's waiting.
It never gets all done.
   
But Ma has made Pa promise
To have a family rule
If there's a teacher hired,
I get to go to school!

    Cindy Breedlove

  1. The youngest child of the family has to do all the work.

  2. The family's maid servant will do all the work.

  3. There are lots of weeds but only a few blackberries in their garden.

  4. The family is leading a very hard life.


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

 Because the little girl will have to brave thorns to have something sweet to eat, and the weeds in the garden must be removed to grow food.  It shows that the girl's family is very poor.

What does the poet mean by the expression 'sinless flower'?

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

THE POOR CHILDREN
Take heed of this small child of earth;
He is great; he hath in him God most high.
Children before their fleshly birth
Are lights alive in the blue sky.

In our light bitter world of wrong
They come; God gives us them awhile.
His speech is in their stammering tongue,
And his forgiveness in their smile.

Their sweet light rests upon our eyes.
Alas! Their right to joy is plain.
If they are hungry Paradise
Weeps, and, if cold, Heaven thrills with pain.

The want that saps their sinless flower
Speaks judgment on sin's ministers.
Man holds an angel in his power.
Ah! Deep in Heaven what thunder stirs,

When God seeks out these tender things
Whom in the shadow where we sleep
He sends us clothed about with wings,
And finds them ragged babes that weep!

                      Victor Hugo

  1. Almighty God

  2. The innocence of little children

  3. Little children

  4. Beautiful flowers in the nature


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

 In the sentence, 'their' refers to 'children' and 'sinless flower' to the innocence of children.

What does the poet mean by ' God gives us them awhile'?

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

THE POOR CHILDREN
Take heed of this small child of earth;
He is great; he hath in him God most high.
Children before their fleshly birth
Are lights alive in the blue sky.

In our light bitter world of wrong
They come; God gives us them awhile.
His speech is in their stammering tongue,
And his forgiveness in their smile.

Their sweet light rests upon our eyes.
Alas! Their right to joy is plain.
If they are hungry Paradise
Weeps, and, if cold, Heaven thrills with pain.

The want that saps their sinless flower
Speaks judgment on sin's ministers.
Man holds an angel in his power.
Ah! Deep in Heaven what thunder stirs,

When God seeks out these tender things
Whom in the shadow where we sleep
He sends us clothed about with wings,
And finds them ragged babes that weep!

                      Victor Hugo

  1. Our life is just for a short while.

  2. Our life is a small gift of Almighty God.

  3. Children do not remain children for ever.

  4. Everything is for a short while except God's blessings.


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

The poet means that children grow up. 

What does the term 'want' in the fourth stanza actually mean?

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

THE POOR CHILDREN
Take heed of this small child of earth;
He is great; he hath in him God most high.
Children before their fleshly birth
Are lights alive in the blue sky.

In our light bitter world of wrong
They come; God gives us them awhile.
His speech is in their stammering tongue,
And his forgiveness in their smile.

Their sweet light rests upon our eyes.
Alas! Their right to joy is plain.
If they are hungry Paradise
Weeps, and, if cold, Heaven thrills with pain.

The want that saps their sinless flower
Speaks judgment on sin's ministers.
Man holds an angel in his power.
Ah! Deep in Heaven what thunder stirs,

When God seeks out these tender things
Whom in the shadow where we sleep
He sends us clothed about with wings,
And finds them ragged babes that weep!

                      Victor Hugo

  1. comfort

  2. food

  3. warm clothing

  4. lack


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

 Because the poet refers to the 'want' that 'saps their sinless flower', want here conveys lack or need. 

Why does the poet think that thea little child is great?

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

THE POOR CHILDREN
Take heed of this small child of earth;
He is great; he hath in him God most high.
Children before their fleshly birth
Are lights alive in the blue sky.

In our light bitter world of wrong
They come; God gives us them awhile.
His speech is in their stammering tongue,
And his forgiveness in their smile.

Their sweet light rests upon our eyes.
Alas! Their right to joy is plain.
If they are hungry Paradise
Weeps, and, if cold, Heaven thrills with pain.

The want that saps their sinless flower
Speaks judgment on sin's ministers.
Man holds an angel in his power.
Ah! Deep in Heaven what thunder stirs,

When God seeks out these tender things
Whom in the shadow where we sleep
He sends us clothed about with wings,
And finds them ragged babes that weep!

                      Victor Hugo

  1. Because the child cannot differentiate between right and wrong.

  2. Because the child is very innocent.

  3. Because the child was an angel in its previous life.

  4. Because the child is full of goodness that only God has in His heart.


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

 See line two of paragraph one.

What does the poet want to convey through this poem?

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

THE POOR CHILDREN
Take heed of this small child of earth;
He is great; he hath in him God most high.
Children before their fleshly birth
Are lights alive in the blue sky.

In our light bitter world of wrong
They come; God gives us them awhile.
His speech is in their stammering tongue,
And his forgiveness in their smile.

Their sweet light rests upon our eyes.
Alas! Their right to joy is plain.
If they are hungry Paradise
Weeps, and, if cold, Heaven thrills with pain.

The want that saps their sinless flower
Speaks judgment on sin's ministers.
Man holds an angel in his power.
Ah! Deep in Heaven what thunder stirs,

When God seeks out these tender things
Whom in the shadow where we sleep
He sends us clothed about with wings,
And finds them ragged babes that weep!

                      Victor Hugo

  1. Little children deserve better treatment.

  2. God will not forgive us for what we do to the little children.

  3. We should respect the innocence of children.

  4. It is the influence of the adults that spoils the children.


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

 The poem states that when children are hungry, heavan weeps. It points towards the need to treat children better as even heaven is moved by the childrens' plight.

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