1 . In questions given below out of four alternatives choose the one which can be substituted for the given word/sentence
One who does not believe in existence of god
2 . In questions given below out of four alternatives choose the one which can be substituted for the given word/sentence
A disease of mind causing an uncontrollable desire to steal
5 .In the following questions four alternatives are given for the idiom/phrase italicised and underlined in the sentence choose the alternative which best expresses the meaning of idiom phiase.
Don't thrust your nose into my affairs
6 .In the following questions four alternatives are given for the idiom/phrase italicised and underlined in the sentence choose the alternative which best expresses the meaning of idiom phiase.
He visits the doctor off and on
7 .In the following questions four alternatives are given for the idiom/phrase italicised and underlined in the sentence choose the alternative which best expresses the meaning of idiom phiase.
I cannot get along with a man who plays fast and loose
8 .In the following questions four alternatives are given for the idiom/phrase italicised and underlined in the sentence choose the alternative which best expresses the meaning of idiom phiase.
There is no love lost between two neighbours
9 .In the following questions four alternatives are given for the idiom/phrase italicised and underlined in the sentence choose the alternative which best expresses the meaning of idiom phiase.
Why do you wish to tread on the toes?
10 .In this section you have five short passages. Each is followed by questions based on the passage. First, read the passage and answer the questions based on the passage. You are required to select your answers from the given options.
The heat-wave deepened during the following few days while Jack and I lazed about in the house and yards, wearing ragged shirts and discarded garments, because the more presentable ones were being packed by Mother. She was obviously not strong enough to cycle downto Hemisphere, where Father and Jack had been one week-end, to see and rent a cottage in Ropley, near Alresford. From this prospective journey Jack had returned with half a dozen photographs taken with a plate-camera which he had made for himself, the aperture being a pinhole. This was only one of his many ingenious artefacts. I had studied the pictures, which included a church that leaned backwards, in the hope of finding the perpetually teasing certainty which we look for when about to take some adventurous step into the unknown. But Ropley remained unreal
During the hot summer days the author and Jack