Sentence MCQ Quiz in मल्याळम - Objective Question with Answer for Sentence - സൗജന്യ PDF ഡൗൺലോഡ് ചെയ്യുക
Last updated on Mar 13, 2025
Latest Sentence MCQ Objective Questions
Top Sentence MCQ Objective Questions
Sentence Question 1:
Select the most appropriate option to improve the underlined segment in the given sentence. If there is no need to improve it, select 'no improvement required'.
None of the girl deserve to be selected for this award.
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Sentence Question 1 Detailed Solution
The correct answer is option 4) i.e. 'None of the girls deserves.'
Key Points
- The error lies in Part (None of the girl deserve) of the sentence.
- The structure of the given sentence is incorrect.
- In the underlined part 'None' is an indefinite pronoun and used to indicate not a single person or object among more than two persons or objects.
- So we have to change the word 'girl' from singular to plural 'girls.'
- As the pronoun 'None' is a third-person singular number we have to add 's' after the verb i.e., 'deserves.'
- Therefore, the use of 'None of the girl deserve' in the sentence should be replaced with 'None of the girls deserves' to make it grammatically correct.
- Therefore, the correct answer is Option 4.
Correct sentence: None of the girls deserves to be selected for this award.
Sentence Question 2:
In the question below, a part of the sentence is underlined. Below are given alternatives to the underlined part which may improve the sentence. Choose the correct alternative. In case no improvement is needed, choose 'No improvement'.
Each of our students pay their tuition fee at the beginning of the month.
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Sentence Question 2 Detailed Solution
The correct solution is option 3.
Explanation
- 'students pay their' is grammatically incorrect.
- Here, 'each' is singular so 'their' is wrong because it refers to a plural subject.
- Among the options, only option 3 has 'his' which is singular.
- 'Students' is plural. According to the subject-verb agreement, 'pays' must be correct.
- Subject-verb agreement means that the subject and the verb must agree in numbers. This means both need to be in singular or plural forms. Let us understand it with examples.
- The dog barks at the stranger
- The dog bark at the stranger
So the correct sentence is, Each of our students pays his tuition fee at the beginning of the month.
Sentence Question 3:
Direction: In the following question, out of the four alternatives, select the alternative which will improve the underlined part of the sentence. In case no improvement is needed, select "No improvement".
Sita asked her husband to return back from the office before 7 p.m.
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Sentence Question 3 Detailed Solution
The correct answer is option 3) i.e. 'to return from the office'.
Key Points
- The error lies in Part (to return back from the office) of the sentence.
- The structure of the given sentence is incorrect.
- Here the use of 'return back' is incorrect because the use of 'back' with 'return' is superfluous.
- So we need to remove 'back' from the sentence.
- Example:
- Sneha will return from the tour after two weeks.
- Therefore, the use of 'to return back from the office' in the sentence should be replaced with 'to return from the office' to make it grammatically correct.
- Therefore, the correct answer is Option 3.
Correct sentence: Sita asked her husband to return from the office before 7 p.m.
Sentence Question 4:
The underlined phrase in the given sentence has been used incorrectly. Select the option that can correctly replace the underlined segment.
I am down with her complaints.
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Sentence Question 4 Detailed Solution
The correct answer is ‘2’ i.e. fed up with.
Key Points
- The phrase 'down with' is incorrect in the given context.
- The correct phrase should be 'fed up with.'
- This is because 'fed up with' accurately conveys the feeling of being tired or annoyed with something.
- The other options do not fit the context:
- Option 1: 'passed out with' indicates fainting or losing consciousness, which does not make sense in the context of complaints.
- Option 3: 'held down with' implies being physically restrained or burdened, which is not appropriate here.
- Option 4: 'looked down with' implies viewing with disapproval or disdain but is not idiomatically correct.
Hence, the correct answer is option 2.
Correct sentence: I am fed up with her complaints.
Additional Information
- Idioms like 'fed up with' are used to express specific feelings or situations in a figurative manner.
- Example: She is fed up with the constant noise.
Sentence Question 5:
Select the most appropriate option to substitute the underlined segment in the given sentence.
Suhani should not mind her come late.
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Sentence Question 5 Detailed Solution
The correct answer is 'Coming'.
Key Points
- We use 'coming' instead of 'come'.
- In this sentence, 'coming' works as a gerund. Because possessive pronouns like my, our, your, their, its, her, etc, will be followed by nouns.
- In the given sentence, come + ing works as a noun. Here, the sentence means that person has already come late, and that's okay.
Thus, the correct answer is Option 3.
Therefore, the correct sentence is: Suhani should not mind her coming late.
Sentence Question 6:
Select the most appropriate option that can substitute the underlined segment in the given sentence. If there is no need to substitute it, select 'No substitution required'.
Since the storm knocked in the power, we've been using candles to light our home.
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Sentence Question 6 Detailed Solution
The correct answer is: the storm knocked out the power
Key Points
- The original sentence contains a phrasing error.
- The correct phrasing when referring to a disruption in the power supply due to a storm is "knocked out the power."
- "Knocked out" is a common collocation used to describe the interruption or failure of electrical systems. (रुकावट या विफलता)
- Example: The lightning strike knocked out the transformer, plunging the neighbourhood into darkness.
- Revised sentence: Since the storm knocked out the power, we've been using candles to light our home.
Therefore, the correct answer is option 2.
Sentence Question 7:
A sentence is given with a phrase highlighted in bold. Which of the phrases given below the sentence should replace it improve the sentence? If the sentence is correct as it is given and no correction is required, select 'No correction required' as your answer.
Seeing his desperate struggle, the manager gave him an advice.
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Sentence Question 7 Detailed Solution
The correct answer is gave him a bit of advice.
Key Points
- "An advice" is incorrect because "advice," when used as a single word, is uncountable. It's correct to say "some advice" or "a piece of advice" or "a bit of advice" or "a lot of advice" or "not much advice" etc.
- Example:
- As a bit of advice, it may be worth pondering.
Sentence Question 8:
Select the most appropriate option to improve the underlined segment in the given sentence. If there is no need to improve it, select 'No improvement required'.
The football team has won the championship at the second time.
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Sentence Question 8 Detailed Solution
The correct answer is: for the
Key Points
- Replace 'at' with 'for' to make the sentence correct.
- “At” is used when you are at the top, bottom or end of something; at a specific address; at a general location; and at a point.
- Example - I will meet you at the school.
- 'In' is used in when something is located inside of a defined space.
- Example - My brother was born in 1999.
- We use 'for' to talk about a purpose or a reason for something
- Example - She leaves on Friday for a 15-day cruise around the Mediterranean.
- The implied meaning of the given sentence is: "The football squad has claimed the title once again."
- Therefore, 'for' should be used, because it is referring to a purpose.
Hence, the correct answer is option 4.
Corrected sentence: The football team has won the championship for the second time.
Sentence Question 9:
Select the option that will improve the underlined part of the given sentence.
Adyasha would have been looked gorgeous in ethnic apparel.
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Sentence Question 9 Detailed Solution
The correct answer is: would have looked
Key Points
- In the given sentence, "would have looked" is the appropriate construction.
- It is the past perfect form used to express a hypothetical situation or a condition that did not occur.
- It is commonly used to talk about unrealized possibilities or missed opportunities in the past.
- Structure: Subject + Modal + Main Verb + Object.
- "Would have" is a modal auxiliary verb used to express the hypothetical or unrealized nature of the action.
- "Looked" is the main verb, indicating the action of appearing or being visually attractive.
- The compliment "gorgeous in ethnic apparel" provides additional information about how Adyasha would have looked.
- Corrected Sentence: Adyasha would have looked gorgeous in ethnic apparel.
- The correction involves removing the unnecessary "been" and retaining the past participle "looked" after the modal "would have" to form a grammatically correct and meaningful sentence.
Thus, option 2 is the correct answer.
Sentence Question 10:
Select the option that will improve the underlined part of the sentence. In case no improvement is needed, select 'No Improvement'.
I reached at London only this morning.
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Sentence Question 10 Detailed Solution
The correct answer is option 2) i.e. 'reached.'
Key Points
- The error lies in Part (reached at) of the sentence.
- The structure of the given sentence is incorrect.
- There are some verbs that are exceptional to the rules of the preposition when they are used in the active voice. After such verbs preposition is not used.
- 'Reach' is such a verb.
- The given sentence is also in active voice and in past indefinite tense.
- Therefore, the use of 'reached at' in the sentence should be replaced with 'reached' to make it grammatically correct.
- Therefore, the correct answer is Option 2.
Correct sentence: I reached London only this morning.
Additional Information
- More examples of verbs after which prepositions are not used in active voice:
- stress, emphasise, investigate, comprise, accompany, consider, violate, pervade, precede, succeed, invade, resist, enter, eschew, direct, join, sign, affect, ensure, board, discuss, describe, reach, order, tell, demand, attack, control, resemble, ridicule.