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English - 9 (AMCAT)

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Directions: Choose the word that is opposite in meaning to the given word.

Religious

  1. Agnostic

  2. Sinful

  3. Immoral

  4. Theistic


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Agnostic means a person who holds that the existence of the ultimate cause and the essential nature of things are unknown and unknowable or that human knowledge is limited to experience. It is the best option here. So, it is the correct answer.

Directions: Choose the word that is opposite in meaning to the given word.

Cheap

  1. Insufficient

  2. Inexpensive

  3. Less

  4. Costly


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

All the other options except costly are similar in meaning to cheap.

Directions: Choose the word that is similar in meaning to the bold word.

He indulged in his favourite hobby of painting.

  1. Delighted

  2. Aggravated

  3. Frustrated

  4. Cherished


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Here, indulged means took delight in.

Directions: Fill in the blank.

There is not ___________ tea in the pot.

  1. much

  2. some

  3. many

  4. little


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

‘Some’ is used in positive sense, ‘many’ is a number and ‘not little’ will be double negative.

Directions: Fill in the blank.

The petals of the flowers are wet with the _____________.

  1. due

  2. dew

  3. do

  4. dow


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

The correct option is (2).

Directions: Choose the word/phrase that is opposite in meaning to the word given in capital letters.

COVETOUS

  1. Miserly

  2. Eagerly desirous

  3. Unconcerned

  4. Unified


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

The correct option is (3).

Directions: In the sentence given below, a group of words is italicised. There may be an error in it. The sentence can be made meaningful and correct by replacing the italicised part with one of the given options. The number of that option is the answer. If no correction is required, mark (4) as the answer.

He is in the good books of his boss.

  1. the good book

  2. the better book

  3. the best book

  4. No improvement

  5. None of these


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

It is correct and doesn't need any improvement.

Directions: The following sentence has been broken into three parts - (1), (2) and (3). If there is any grammatical error in any of these parts, that is the answer. If there is no error, the answer is (4).

(1) The actor was happy that he got (2) the part in a movie (3) although the part was a small one. (4) No error

  1. (1)

  2. (2)

  3. (3)

  4. (4)

  5. -


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

 (b) is incorrect as there is incorrect article usage in this segment. The article ‘the’ is used to indicate a particular or specific noun. In this context, the ‘part’ in a movie has not been mentioned before. Thus, the correct article will be ‘a’.

Directions: Choose the most logical order of sentences to construct a coherent paragraph.

(A) Maybe it won’t. (B) Why should it work any better now? (C) The Arabs have been trying to do this for many years and it has never worked. (D) The launching of an Arab Free Trade Area was greeted with more of a yawn than a cheer.

  1. ABCD

  2. DBAC

  3. BDCA

  4. DCBA


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

D introduces 'Arab Free Trade Area' and is the opening sentence. "It" in C refers to 'Arab Free Trade Area' in D. "It has never worked" in C is followed by "why should it work" in B. A follows it.

Directions: Select the word that is similar in meaning to the word in capital letters.

FRAIL

  1. Unhealthy

  2. Weak

  3. Ugly

  4. Tender


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

Unhealthy means damaging, ugly means unattractive and tender means affectionate.

Which of the following statements is true?

Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question that follows.

For most people, one of the biggest worries about getting older is losing memories. Indeed, memory loss has become so associated with ‘old age’ that having a ‘senior moment’ is the stuff of TV sitcoms. But memory has no limits, whatever the age. Many older people may take a little more time to remember things, yet once the memory is there, it seems as good as at any age.
Rather than expecting to have more and more episodes of forgetfulness as one grows older, one should remember just what can be achieved. There are plenty of examples of great mental longevity. Michelangelo’s greatest works date from his sixties and he was still creating masterly work when he died at the age of 89. Goethe completed his famous Faust at the age of 82, just nine months before his death. In more modern times, Vera Stravinsky was a professional painter whose personal philosophy was, ‘You work in this life.’ She painted every day until the day she died at 97 and remained as sharp as a tack to the end. The maxim is: ‘You’re not getting older, you’re getting better!’
Memory is many different things. It’s that recollection of a day spent on the beach in the rain as a child. It’s the ability to write a letter without thinking how to hold the pen and shape the letters. It’s what enables one to hold in mind, the beginning of this sentence even before reading the end. Infact, memory is involved in everything we ever learn or experience. Memories are being made, stored and reminisced every single moment of our life.
While reminiscing something, the brain does it by creating a new series of pathways of nerve connections, called a ‘memory trace’. It is forgotten – whenever it so happens, because the connections break down through lack of use. Memory is a complex, multi-layered task that draws in every part of brain. Some memories are restricted to particular parts of the brain, most draw in scores of interacting networks or even the whole brain at once. Even those that end up in a particular location, often link up to many different areas.
Originally, psychologists thought they would find that each memory had its own location in the brain. If they had the right tools, they thought that they could one day identify the group of neurons or even the single neuron where a memory was stored. Although, there are parts of the brain associated with particular skills, we now know that the site association of even these skills is far from rigid. Indeed, it seems likely that most memories stimulate the entire brain.
What’s more, most memories are very far from being unchanging records. Each time a memory is used, it changes slightly. When going out for a meal, for example, the front cortex, the logical part of brain, organises the physical details of the event into one kind of memory. Amygdala, the emotional centre, adds an emotional meaning to these memories. In reminiscing happy effects of that night of dinner, the memories get attached to a good feeling. Subsequently, it is found that the dinner partner has gone off with another person. On recalling the dinner one previously had, it has a very different emotional context. The memory gets a different tag and it is reminisced in a different way. The interconnections involved in the memory trace have shifted.

  1. ‘Old age’ is made much fun of by some programmers.

  2. ‘Senior moment’ is a serious social issue of concern.

  3. Getting older means getting senile and ill-tempered.

  4. Older people cannot recall things correctly and quickly.

  5. Older people perform situational tasks with dexterity.


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

The TV sitcoms that the writer refers to are actually programmes making fun of old people by presenting them in a humourous way. This answers the question.

What purpose does the passage serve?

Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question that follows.

For most people, one of the biggest worries about getting older is losing memories. Indeed, memory loss has become so associated with ‘old age’ that having a ‘senior moment’ is the stuff of TV sitcoms. But memory has no limits, whatever the age. Many older people may take a little more time to remember things, yet once the memory is there, it seems as good as at any age.
Rather than expecting to have more and more episodes of forgetfulness as one grows older, one should remember just what can be achieved. There are plenty of examples of great mental longevity. Michelangelo’s greatest works date from his sixties and he was still creating masterly work when he died at the age of 89. Goethe completed his famous Faust at the age of 82, just nine months before his death. In more modern times, Vera Stravinsky was a professional painter whose personal philosophy was, ‘You work in this life.’ She painted every day until the day she died at 97 and remained as sharp as a tack to the end. The maxim is: ‘You’re not getting older, you’re getting better!’
Memory is many different things. It’s that recollection of a day spent on the beach in the rain as a child. It’s the ability to write a letter without thinking how to hold the pen and shape the letters. It’s what enables one to hold in mind, the beginning of this sentence even before reading the end. Infact, memory is involved in everything we ever learn or experience. Memories are being made, stored and reminisced every single moment of our life.
While reminiscing something, the brain does it by creating a new series of pathways of nerve connections, called a ‘memory trace’. It is forgotten – whenever it so happens, because the connections break down through lack of use. Memory is a complex, multi-layered task that draws in every part of brain. Some memories are restricted to particular parts of the brain, most draw in scores of interacting networks or even the whole brain at once. Even those that end up in a particular location, often link up to many different areas.
Originally, psychologists thought they would find that each memory had its own location in the brain. If they had the right tools, they thought that they could one day identify the group of neurons or even the single neuron where a memory was stored. Although, there are parts of the brain associated with particular skills, we now know that the site association of even these skills is far from rigid. Indeed, it seems likely that most memories stimulate the entire brain.
What’s more, most memories are very far from being unchanging records. Each time a memory is used, it changes slightly. When going out for a meal, for example, the front cortex, the logical part of brain, organises the physical details of the event into one kind of memory. Amygdala, the emotional centre, adds an emotional meaning to these memories. In reminiscing happy effects of that night of dinner, the memories get attached to a good feeling. Subsequently, it is found that the dinner partner has gone off with another person. On recalling the dinner one previously had, it has a very different emotional context. The memory gets a different tag and it is reminisced in a different way. The interconnections involved in the memory trace have shifted.

  1. It tries to resolve a long standing dispute between age and memory.

  2. It tries to dispel the misgiving that loss of memory is caused by age.

  3. It attempts to clear the psychological barriers that an elderly person faces.

  4. It successfully allays the fears of many that have grown forgetful.

  5. It serves the immediate purpose of putting a check on TV sitcoms.


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

Correct answer

What is the idea contained in the maxim: “You’re not getting older, you’re getting better”?

Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question that follows.

For most people, one of the biggest worries about getting older is losing memories. Indeed, memory loss has become so associated with ‘old age’ that having a ‘senior moment’ is the stuff of TV sitcoms. But memory has no limits, whatever the age. Many older people may take a little more time to remember things, yet once the memory is there, it seems as good as at any age.
Rather than expecting to have more and more episodes of forgetfulness as one grows older, one should remember just what can be achieved. There are plenty of examples of great mental longevity. Michelangelo’s greatest works date from his sixties and he was still creating masterly work when he died at the age of 89. Goethe completed his famous Faust at the age of 82, just nine months before his death. In more modern times, Vera Stravinsky was a professional painter whose personal philosophy was, ‘You work in this life.’ She painted every day until the day she died at 97 and remained as sharp as a tack to the end. The maxim is: ‘You’re not getting older, you’re getting better!’
Memory is many different things. It’s that recollection of a day spent on the beach in the rain as a child. It’s the ability to write a letter without thinking how to hold the pen and shape the letters. It’s what enables one to hold in mind, the beginning of this sentence even before reading the end. Infact, memory is involved in everything we ever learn or experience. Memories are being made, stored and reminisced every single moment of our life.
While reminiscing something, the brain does it by creating a new series of pathways of nerve connections, called a ‘memory trace’. It is forgotten – whenever it so happens, because the connections break down through lack of use. Memory is a complex, multi-layered task that draws in every part of brain. Some memories are restricted to particular parts of the brain, most draw in scores of interacting networks or even the whole brain at once. Even those that end up in a particular location, often link up to many different areas.
Originally, psychologists thought they would find that each memory had its own location in the brain. If they had the right tools, they thought that they could one day identify the group of neurons or even the single neuron where a memory was stored. Although, there are parts of the brain associated with particular skills, we now know that the site association of even these skills is far from rigid. Indeed, it seems likely that most memories stimulate the entire brain.
What’s more, most memories are very far from being unchanging records. Each time a memory is used, it changes slightly. When going out for a meal, for example, the front cortex, the logical part of brain, organises the physical details of the event into one kind of memory. Amygdala, the emotional centre, adds an emotional meaning to these memories. In reminiscing happy effects of that night of dinner, the memories get attached to a good feeling. Subsequently, it is found that the dinner partner has gone off with another person. On recalling the dinner one previously had, it has a very different emotional context. The memory gets a different tag and it is reminisced in a different way. The interconnections involved in the memory trace have shifted.

  1. Age makes an individual a better person, not just an older person.

  2. With growing age, an individual gains experiences that enrich him.

  3. Age brings experience that could provide valuable guidance to the young.

  4. Instances of mental longevity show how an individual grows better with age.

  5. Goethe completed his famous Faust at the age of 82, just nine months before his death.


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

It is the main idea contained in the maxim.

What is the central idea of this passage?

Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question that follows.

For most people, one of the biggest worries about getting older is losing memories. Indeed, memory loss has become so associated with ‘old age’ that having a ‘senior moment’ is the stuff of TV sitcoms. But memory has no limits, whatever the age. Many older people may take a little more time to remember things, yet once the memory is there, it seems as good as at any age.
Rather than expecting to have more and more episodes of forgetfulness as one grows older, one should remember just what can be achieved. There are plenty of examples of great mental longevity. Michelangelo’s greatest works date from his sixties and he was still creating masterly work when he died at the age of 89. Goethe completed his famous Faust at the age of 82, just nine months before his death. In more modern times, Vera Stravinsky was a professional painter whose personal philosophy was, ‘You work in this life.’ She painted every day until the day she died at 97 and remained as sharp as a tack to the end. The maxim is: ‘You’re not getting older, you’re getting better!’
Memory is many different things. It’s that recollection of a day spent on the beach in the rain as a child. It’s the ability to write a letter without thinking how to hold the pen and shape the letters. It’s what enables one to hold in mind, the beginning of this sentence even before reading the end. Infact, memory is involved in everything we ever learn or experience. Memories are being made, stored and reminisced every single moment of our life.
While reminiscing something, the brain does it by creating a new series of pathways of nerve connections, called a ‘memory trace’. It is forgotten – whenever it so happens, because the connections break down through lack of use. Memory is a complex, multi-layered task that draws in every part of brain. Some memories are restricted to particular parts of the brain, most draw in scores of interacting networks or even the whole brain at once. Even those that end up in a particular location, often link up to many different areas.
Originally, psychologists thought they would find that each memory had its own location in the brain. If they had the right tools, they thought that they could one day identify the group of neurons or even the single neuron where a memory was stored. Although, there are parts of the brain associated with particular skills, we now know that the site association of even these skills is far from rigid. Indeed, it seems likely that most memories stimulate the entire brain.
What’s more, most memories are very far from being unchanging records. Each time a memory is used, it changes slightly. When going out for a meal, for example, the front cortex, the logical part of brain, organises the physical details of the event into one kind of memory. Amygdala, the emotional centre, adds an emotional meaning to these memories. In reminiscing happy effects of that night of dinner, the memories get attached to a good feeling. Subsequently, it is found that the dinner partner has gone off with another person. On recalling the dinner one previously had, it has a very different emotional context. The memory gets a different tag and it is reminisced in a different way. The interconnections involved in the memory trace have shifted.

  1. Memory fades with the passage of time.

  2. Memory is located in a particular segment of brain.

  3. Memory has no limits, no matter what the age.

  4. Getting older does not mean loss of memory as a matter of rule.

  5. Events can be reminisced differently based on emotional elements.


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

This is the central idea of the passage.

What is the author’s opinion?

Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question that follows.

For most people, one of the biggest worries about getting older is losing memories. Indeed, memory loss has become so associated with ‘old age’ that having a ‘senior moment’ is the stuff of TV sitcoms. But memory has no limits, whatever the age. Many older people may take a little more time to remember things, yet once the memory is there, it seems as good as at any age.
Rather than expecting to have more and more episodes of forgetfulness as one grows older, one should remember just what can be achieved. There are plenty of examples of great mental longevity. Michelangelo’s greatest works date from his sixties and he was still creating masterly work when he died at the age of 89. Goethe completed his famous Faust at the age of 82, just nine months before his death. In more modern times, Vera Stravinsky was a professional painter whose personal philosophy was, ‘You work in this life.’ She painted every day until the day she died at 97 and remained as sharp as a tack to the end. The maxim is: ‘You’re not getting older, you’re getting better!’
Memory is many different things. It’s that recollection of a day spent on the beach in the rain as a child. It’s the ability to write a letter without thinking how to hold the pen and shape the letters. It’s what enables one to hold in mind, the beginning of this sentence even before reading the end. Infact, memory is involved in everything we ever learn or experience. Memories are being made, stored and reminisced every single moment of our life.
While reminiscing something, the brain does it by creating a new series of pathways of nerve connections, called a ‘memory trace’. It is forgotten – whenever it so happens, because the connections break down through lack of use. Memory is a complex, multi-layered task that draws in every part of brain. Some memories are restricted to particular parts of the brain, most draw in scores of interacting networks or even the whole brain at once. Even those that end up in a particular location, often link up to many different areas.
Originally, psychologists thought they would find that each memory had its own location in the brain. If they had the right tools, they thought that they could one day identify the group of neurons or even the single neuron where a memory was stored. Although, there are parts of the brain associated with particular skills, we now know that the site association of even these skills is far from rigid. Indeed, it seems likely that most memories stimulate the entire brain.
What’s more, most memories are very far from being unchanging records. Each time a memory is used, it changes slightly. When going out for a meal, for example, the front cortex, the logical part of brain, organises the physical details of the event into one kind of memory. Amygdala, the emotional centre, adds an emotional meaning to these memories. In reminiscing happy effects of that night of dinner, the memories get attached to a good feeling. Subsequently, it is found that the dinner partner has gone off with another person. On recalling the dinner one previously had, it has a very different emotional context. The memory gets a different tag and it is reminisced in a different way. The interconnections involved in the memory trace have shifted.

  1. Getting older is to be seen as losing memories.

  2. Neuron, where memory is stored, can be found.

  3. Forgetfulness occurs more as one grows older.

  4. Memories are far from being unchanging records.

  5. Each memory has its own location in the brain.


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

This represents the opinion of the author. This is one of the observations of the psychologists.

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