SCERT Special TNTET Paper 1 English - Quiz (Part 2)
Grammar Focus: Verbs, Plurals, Homophones, Compounds & Framing Questions (Questions 26-50)
26. We _______ volleyball *yesterday*.
Explanation: Time markers referencing completed segments like 'yesterday' dictate the usage of a simple past tense format.
27. Our school _______ at 9:00 in the morning as a permanent routine.
Explanation: Fixed operational timetables or recurring daily habits are consistently written using simple present structures.
28. Plural pronouns like 'They' or 'We' paired in the present tense keep the verb in its _______.
Explanation: Plural subject agreements do not accept an additional '-s' or '-es' suffix on action verbs.
29. Singular third person references (He, She, It) operating in standard present conditions require verbs with an _______.
Explanation: Singular subject structures demand matching verbs using singular inflections, usually concluding with '-s'.
30. Fill with appropriate alignment: "The train _______ the station right now."
Explanation: The present progressive variant ('is leaving') represents ongoing live behavior perfectly.
31. Identify the structural arrangement using proper homophone context:
Explanation: 'Heard' represents auditory tracking, while 'herd' captures an aggregate livestock group.
32. The workspace is _______ congested _______ allow multi-tasking.
Explanation: Adverbial scale intensifiers utilize 'too', while action linkage dependencies adapt 'to'.
33. Market indicators indicate fuel prices will _______ next season.
Explanation: 'Rise' represents independent vertical scale changes, distinct from agricultural 'rice' or physical 'raise' actions.
34. Stationary and Stationery have matching sounds, but 'Stationery' containing an 'e' outlines _______.
Explanation: Link the letter 'e' directly with words like pen or envelope. 'Stationary' values imply motionlessness.
35. Extracts from herbal leaves are formulated to _______ small wounds.
Explanation: 'Heal' is synonymous with curing recovery states, while 'heel' captures structural feet parts.
36. Plural transformations modifying internal vowel components instead of adding s-suffixes are called _______.
Explanation: Vowel shifts inside words (e.g., foot to feet, goose to geese) represent apophonic plural properties.
37. Convert the following noun phrase into its right plural setup: "Sister-in-law"
Explanation: Suffix pluralizations belong to the primary structural component (Sisters) in compound groups.
38. Identify the irregular plural transformation for the scientific term "Alga":
Explanation: Latin structural components concluding with an '-a' modify their plural form to '-ae'.
39. Select the item that maintains an identical spelling state across both singular and plural metrics:
Explanation: 'Sheep', 'deer', and 'fish' do not acquire structural spelling updates in their standard plural context.
40. Substitute the missing option: "Alumni represents a plural collection, whereas its masculine singular form is _______."
Explanation: Classical masculine endings adapt '-us' in the singular state and change to '-i' to indicate a plural collection.
41. Identify the structural classification category for: "Rainbow"
Explanation: 'Rain' is a noun and 'Bow' is a noun, combining into a standard Noun + Noun compound word.
42. In compound strings like 'Swimming pool' or 'Washing machine', the initial parts are classified as _______.
Explanation: The initial terms operate as gerund markers stating structural purpose, not active operations.
43. Select the component showing a clear Noun + Verb structure:
Explanation: 'Home' serves as a noun component, combined with the active verb 'work'.
44. Words written with distinct structural spacing like 'Bus stop' are classified as _______.
Explanation: Open structures retain isolated word separations but operate contextually as an integrated title.
45. Terms fused together without spaces or symbols are called _______.
Explanation: Closed compounds fuse elements together without spacing (e.g., toothpaste, notebook).
46. Select the question pattern with valid auxiliary verb alignment:
Explanation: Auxiliary verbs like 'did' manage past tense requirements, so the main verb must remain in its base form ('wake').
47. Frame the right interrogative version targeting the marked item: "Hari is writing *a letter*."
Explanation: To ask about an object, statement, or inanimate element, we open the clause using 'What'.
48. There are *15* players active on the field. Select the correct question formula:
Explanation: Countable units like players are questioned using 'How many', while 'how much' applies to uncountable mass quantities.
49. Frame a question for this statement: "He drinks tea *twice every day*."
Explanation: Iteration scales and frequency habits (twice a day) are asked using 'How often'.
50. To query about specific timelines or temporal milestones, we open clauses with the interrogative word _______.
Explanation: 'When' targets chronological values, temporal settings, or dynamic moment coordinates.
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