POST-UTME: UNIBEN – MEDICAL & LIFE SCIENCES
Quizzes
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2005/2006 UNIBEN English Post-UTME
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2005/2006 UNIBEN General Paper Post-UTME
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2006/2007 UNIBEN English Post-UTME
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2006/2007 UNIBEN General Paper Post-UTME
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2007/2008 UNIBEN English Post-UTME
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2007/2008 UNIBEN General Paper Post-UTME
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2008/2009 UNIBEN English Post-UTME
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2008/2009 UNIBEN General Paper Post-UTME
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2009/2010 UNIBEN English Post-UTME
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2009/2010 UNIBEN General Paper Post-UTME
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2010/2011 UNIBEN English Post-UTME
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2010/2011 UNIBEN General Paper Post-UTME
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2011/2012 UNIBEN English Post-UTME
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2011/2012 UNIBEN General Paper Post-UTME
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2012/2013 UNIBEN English Post-UTME
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2012/2013 UNIBEN General Paper Post-UTME
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Question 1 of 40
1. Question
Read passage 1 and answer the question that follows:
When we survey all known human societies, we find everywhere a form of the family, some set of permanent arrangement by which males assist females in caring for children while they are young. The distinctively human aspect of the enterprise lies not in the protection the male affords the females and the young- this we share with the primates. Nor does it lies in the lordly possessiveness of the male over the females for whose favour he contends with other males this too we share with the primates. Its distinctiveness lies instead in the nurturing behaviour of the male who among human beings everywhere help provide food for women and children.
Among our structurally closest analogues – the primates- the male does not feed the female. He may fight to protect her or to possess her, but he does not nurture her. She has to fend for herself. Somewhere at the dawn of human history some social invention was made under which males started nurturing and their young’. In every known human society, everywhere in the world, the young male learns that he is grown up, one of the things which he must do in order to be a full member of society is to provide food for some females and her young. Even in very simple societies a large number of men may escape burden of feeding females and the young by entering monasteries- and feeding each other – or by entering some profession that their society will classify as giving them a right to be fed, like the Army and the Navy, or the Buddhist order of Burma. But in spite of such exceptions, every known human society rests firmly on the learned nurturing behaviour of men.
Man differs from other animals because _______
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Question 2 of 40
2. Question
Read passage 1 and answer the question that follows:
When we survey all known human societies, we find everywhere a form of the family, some set of permanent arrangement by which males assist females in caring for children while they are young. The distinctively human aspect of the enterprise lies not in the protection the male affords the females and the young- this we share with the primates. Nor does it lies in the lordly possessiveness of the male over the females for whose favour he contends with other males this too we share with the primates. Its distinctiveness lies instead in the nurturing behaviour of the male who among human beings everywhere help provide food for women and children.
Among our structurally closest analogues – the primates- the male does not feed the female. He may fight to protect her or to possess her, but he does not nurture her. She has to fend for herself. Somewhere at the dawn of human history some social invention was made under which males started nurturing and their young’. In every known human society, everywhere in the world, the young male learns that he is grown up, one of the things which he must do in order to be a full member of society is to provide food for some females and her young. Even in very simple societies a large number of men may escape burden of feeding females and the young by entering monasteries- and feeding each other – or by entering some profession that their society will classify as giving them a right to be fed, like the Army and the Navy, or the Buddhist order of Burma. But in spite of such exceptions, every known human society rests firmly on the learned nurturing behaviour of men.
The lordly possessiveness of the male over the female means that the male
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Question 3 of 40
3. Question
Read passage 1 and answer the question that follows:
When we survey all known human societies, we find everywhere a form of the family, some set of permanent arrangement by which males assist females in caring for children while they are young. The distinctively human aspect of the enterprise lies not in the protection the male affords the females and the young- this we share with the primates. Nor does it lies in the lordly possessiveness of the male over the females for whose favour he contends with other males this too we share with the primates. Its distinctiveness lies instead in the nurturing behaviour of the male who among human beings everywhere help provide food for women and children.
Among our structurally closest analogues – the primates- the male does not feed the female. He may fight to protect her or to possess her, but he does not nurture her. She has to fend for herself. Somewhere at the dawn of human history some social invention was made under which males started nurturing and their young’. In every known human society, everywhere in the world, the young male learns that he is grown up, one of the things which he must do in order to be a full member of society is to provide food for some females and her young. Even in very simple societies a large number of men may escape burden of feeding females and the young by entering monasteries- and feeding each other – or by entering some profession that their society will classify as giving them a right to be fed, like the Army and the Navy, or the Buddhist order of Burma. But in spite of such exceptions, every known human society rests firmly on the learned nurturing behaviour of men.
“Somewhere at the drawn of history” refers to
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Question 4 of 40
4. Question
Read passage 1 and answer the question that follows:
When we survey all known human societies, we find everywhere a form of the family, some set of permanent arrangement by which males assist females in caring for children while they are young. The distinctively human aspect of the enterprise lies not in the protection the male affords the females and the young- this we share with the primates. Nor does it lies in the lordly possessiveness of the male over the females for whose favour he contends with other males this too we share with the primates. Its distinctiveness lies instead in the nurturing behaviour of the male who among human beings everywhere help provide food for women and children.
Among our structurally closest analogues – the primates- the male does not feed the female. He may fight to protect her or to possess her, but he does not nurture her. She has to fend for herself. Somewhere at the dawn of human history some social invention was made under which males started nurturing and their young’. In every known human society, everywhere in the world, the young male learns that he is grown up, one of the things which he must do in order to be a full member of society is to provide food for some females and her young. Even in very simple societies a large number of men may escape burden of feeding females and the young by entering monasteries- and feeding each other – or by entering some profession that their society will classify as giving them a right to be fed, like the Army and the Navy, or the Buddhist order of Burma. But in spite of such exceptions, every known human society rests firmly on the learned nurturing behaviour of men.
Man makes it upon himself to feed the females except when ___
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Question 5 of 40
5. Question
Read passage 1 and answer the question that follows:
When we survey all known human societies, we find everywhere a form of the family, some set of permanent arrangement by which males assist females in caring for children while they are young. The distinctively human aspect of the enterprise lies not in the protection the male affords the females and the young- this we share with the primates. Nor does it lies in the lordly possessiveness of the male over the females for whose favour he contends with other males this too we share with the primates. Its distinctiveness lies instead in the nurturing behaviour of the male who among human beings everywhere help provide food for women and children.
Among our structurally closest analogues – the primates- the male does not feed the female. He may fight to protect her or to possess her, but he does not nurture her. She has to fend for herself. Somewhere at the dawn of human history some social invention was made under which males started nurturing and their young’. In every known human society, everywhere in the world, the young male learns that he is grown up, one of the things which he must do in order to be a full member of society is to provide food for some females and her young. Even in very simple societies a large number of men may escape burden of feeding females and the young by entering monasteries- and feeding each other – or by entering some profession that their society will classify as giving them a right to be fed, like the Army and the Navy, or the Buddhist order of Burma. But in spite of such exceptions, every known human society rests firmly on the learned nurturing behaviour of men.
According to the passage a common featuring of all human communities is ______.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 6 of 40
6. Question
Read passage 2 carefully and answer the question that follows:
From ancient times, people commonly believed that life arose repeatedly by spontaneous generation from non-living materials in addition to parental reproduction. For example frogs appeared to arise from damp earth, mice from putrefied matter, insects from dew and maggots from decaying meat. Warmth, moisture, sunlight and even starlight often were mentioned as factors that encourage spontaneous generation of living organism.
Among the account of early efforts to synthesize organisms in the laboratory is a recipe for making mice given by the Belgian plant nutritionist Jean Baptist van Helmont (1648). “If you press a piece underwear soiled with sweat together with some wheat in an open jar, after about twenty one days the odour changes and it ferment… changes the wheat into mice. But what is more remarkable is that the mice which came out of the wheat and underwear were not small mice, not even miniature adults or aborted mice but adult mice emerged”.
IN 1861, the great French scientist Louis Pasteur convinced science that living organisms cannot arise spontaneously from non-living matter. In his famous experiments, Pasteur introduced fermentable materials into a flask with a long S-shaped neck that was open to air. The flask and its contents were then boiled for long time to kill any micro-organisms that might be present. Afterward the flask was cooled and left undisturbed. No fermentation occurred because all organisms that entered the open end were deposited in the open neck and did not reach the fermentation material. When the neck of the flask was removed, micro organisms in the air promptly entered the fermentable material and proliferated. Pasteur concluded that life could not originate in the absence of previously existing organisms and their reproductive elements such as eggs and spores.
Announcing his results to the French Academy, Pasteur proclaimed, “Never will the doctrine of spontaneous generation arise from this moral blow.
All living organisms share a common ancestor, most likely a population of colonial micro-organisms that lived almost four billion years ago. This common ancestry was a product of a long period of pre-biotic assembly by non-living matter, including organic molecules and water, to form self-replicating units. all living organisms retain a fundamental chemical composition inherited from their ancient common ancestor.
Throughout the passage the words spontaneously can best be taken to mean _____.
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Question 7 of 40
7. Question
Read passage 2 carefully and answer the question that follows:
From ancient times, people commonly believed that life arose repeatedly by spontaneous generation from non-living materials in addition to parental reproduction. For example frogs appeared to arise from damp earth, mice from putrefied matter, insects from dew and maggots from decaying meat. Warmth, moisture, sunlight and even starlight often were mentioned as factors that encourage spontaneous generation of living organism.
Among the account of early efforts to synthesize organisms in the laboratory is a recipe for making mice given by the Belgian plant nutritionist Jean Baptist van Helmont (1648). “If you press a piece underwear soiled with sweat together with some wheat in an open jar, after about twenty one days the odour changes and it ferment… changes the wheat into mice. But what is more remarkable is that the mice which came out of the wheat and underwear were not small mice, not even miniature adults or aborted mice but adult mice emerged”.
IN 1861, the great French scientist Louis Pasteur convinced science that living organisms cannot arise spontaneously from non-living matter. In his famous experiments, Pasteur introduced fermentable materials into a flask with a long S-shaped neck that was open to air. The flask and its contents were then boiled for long time to kill any micro-organisms that might be present. Afterward the flask was cooled and left undisturbed. No fermentation occurred because all organisms that entered the open end were deposited in the open neck and did not reach the fermentation material. When the neck of the flask was removed, micro organisms in the air promptly entered the fermentable material and proliferated. Pasteur concluded that life could not originate in the absence of previously existing organisms and their reproductive elements such as eggs and spores.
Announcing his results to the French Academy, Pasteur proclaimed, “Never will the doctrine of spontaneous generation arise from this moral blow.
All living organisms share a common ancestor, most likely a population of colonial micro-organisms that lived almost four billion years ago. This common ancestry was a product of a long period of pre-biotic assembly by non-living matter, including organic molecules and water, to form self-replicating units. all living organisms retain a fundamental chemical composition inherited from their ancient common ancestor.
In Pasteur’s experiment, why was the neck of the flask removed?
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 8 of 40
8. Question
Read passage 2 carefully and answer the question that follows:
From ancient times, people commonly believed that life arose repeatedly by spontaneous generation from non-living materials in addition to parental reproduction. For example frogs appeared to arise from damp earth, mice from putrefied matter, insects from dew and maggots from decaying meat. Warmth, moisture, sunlight and even starlight often were mentioned as factors that encourage spontaneous generation of living organism.
Among the account of early efforts to synthesize organisms in the laboratory is a recipe for making mice given by the Belgian plant nutritionist Jean Baptist van Helmont (1648). “If you press a piece underwear soiled with sweat together with some wheat in an open jar, after about twenty one days the odour changes and it ferment… changes the wheat into mice. But what is more remarkable is that the mice which came out of the wheat and underwear were not small mice, not even miniature adults or aborted mice but adult mice emerged”.
IN 1861, the great French scientist Louis Pasteur convinced science that living organisms cannot arise spontaneously from non-living matter. In his famous experiments, Pasteur introduced fermentable materials into a flask with a long S-shaped neck that was open to air. The flask and its contents were then boiled for long time to kill any micro-organisms that might be present. Afterward the flask was cooled and left undisturbed. No fermentation occurred because all organisms that entered the open end were deposited in the open neck and did not reach the fermentation material. When the neck of the flask was removed, micro organisms in the air promptly entered the fermentable material and proliferated. Pasteur concluded that life could not originate in the absence of previously existing organisms and their reproductive elements such as eggs and spores.
Announcing his results to the French Academy, Pasteur proclaimed, “Never will the doctrine of spontaneous generation arise from this moral blow.
All living organisms share a common ancestor, most likely a population of colonial micro-organisms that lived almost four billion years ago. This common ancestry was a product of a long period of pre-biotic assembly by non-living matter, including organic molecules and water, to form self-replicating units. all living organisms retain a fundamental chemical composition inherited from their ancient common ancestor.
In the third paragraph, the word “moral” most nearly means____.
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Question 9 of 40
9. Question
Read passage 2 carefully and answer the question that follows:
From ancient times, people commonly believed that life arose repeatedly by spontaneous generation from non-living materials in addition to parental reproduction. For example frogs appeared to arise from damp earth, mice from putrefied matter, insects from dew and maggots from decaying meat. Warmth, moisture, sunlight and even starlight often were mentioned as factors that encourage spontaneous generation of living organism.
Among the account of early efforts to synthesize organisms in the laboratory is a recipe for making mice given by the Belgian plant nutritionist Jean Baptist van Helmont (1648). “If you press a piece underwear soiled with sweat together with some wheat in an open jar, after about twenty one days the odour changes and it ferment… changes the wheat into mice. But what is more remarkable is that the mice which came out of the wheat and underwear were not small mice, not even miniature adults or aborted mice but adult mice emerged”.
IN 1861, the great French scientist Louis Pasteur convinced science that living organisms cannot arise spontaneously from non-living matter. In his famous experiments, Pasteur introduced fermentable materials into a flask with a long S-shaped neck that was open to air. The flask and its contents were then boiled for long time to kill any micro-organisms that might be present. Afterward the flask was cooled and left undisturbed. No fermentation occurred because all organisms that entered the open end were deposited in the open neck and did not reach the fermentation material. When the neck of the flask was removed, micro organisms in the air promptly entered the fermentable material and proliferated. Pasteur concluded that life could not originate in the absence of previously existing organisms and their reproductive elements such as eggs and spores.
Announcing his results to the French Academy, Pasteur proclaimed, “Never will the doctrine of spontaneous generation arise from this moral blow.
All living organisms share a common ancestor, most likely a population of colonial micro-organisms that lived almost four billion years ago. This common ancestry was a product of a long period of pre-biotic assembly by non-living matter, including organic molecules and water, to form self-replicating units. all living organisms retain a fundamental chemical composition inherited from their ancient common ancestor.
The expression “when the neck of the flask was removed” found in the third paragraph can be described as _______.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 10 of 40
10. Question
Read passage 2 carefully and answer the question that follows:
From ancient times, people commonly believed that life arose repeatedly by spontaneous generation from non-living materials in addition to parental reproduction. For example frogs appeared to arise from damp earth, mice from putrefied matter, insects from dew and maggots from decaying meat. Warmth, moisture, sunlight and even starlight often were mentioned as factors that encourage spontaneous generation of living organism.
Among the account of early efforts to synthesize organisms in the laboratory is a recipe for making mice given by the Belgian plant nutritionist Jean Baptist van Helmont (1648). “If you press a piece underwear soiled with sweat together with some wheat in an open jar, after about twenty one days the odour changes and it ferment… changes the wheat into mice. But what is more remarkable is that the mice which came out of the wheat and underwear were not small mice, not even miniature adults or aborted mice but adult mice emerged”.
IN 1861, the great French scientist Louis Pasteur convinced science that living organisms cannot arise spontaneously from non-living matter. In his famous experiments, Pasteur introduced fermentable materials into a flask with a long S-shaped neck that was open to air. The flask and its contents were then boiled for long time to kill any micro-organisms that might be present. Afterward the flask was cooled and left undisturbed. No fermentation occurred because all organisms that entered the open end were deposited in the open neck and did not reach the fermentation material. When the neck of the flask was removed, micro organisms in the air promptly entered the fermentable material and proliferated. Pasteur concluded that life could not originate in the absence of previously existing organisms and their reproductive elements such as eggs and spores.
Announcing his results to the French Academy, Pasteur proclaimed, “Never will the doctrine of spontaneous generation arise from this moral blow.
All living organisms share a common ancestor, most likely a population of colonial micro-organisms that lived almost four billion years ago. This common ancestry was a product of a long period of pre-biotic assembly by non-living matter, including organic molecules and water, to form self-replicating units. all living organisms retain a fundamental chemical composition inherited from their ancient common ancestor.
In what sense is the use of the word “water” in the last paragraph ironic?
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 11 of 40
11. Question
Read the following passage and select the best option that fills the corresponding gap in the text.
By the 28th week, that is the end of the 7th ____11___ the foetus moves around vigorously within the ___12___ and its heartbeat can be heard by the __13__. Its length is 38cm (15inches) and its weight 100grams. Its body is thin, its skin reddish and covered with __14__ coating of a creamy, waxy substance, which is manufactured by small in the skin. It can open up its eyes and the __15__ covering the pupils of the __16__ has gone. If it is __17__ at this stage, it can __18__ but with difficulty. It can also cry __19__ but __20__ its legs energetically.
In number 11 above, choose the best option that best completes the gap
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 12 of 40
12. Question
Read the following passage and select the best option that fills the corresponding gap in the text.
By the 28th week, that is the end of the 7th ____11___ the foetus moves around vigorously within the ___12___ and its heartbeat can be heard by the __13__. Its length is 38cm (15inches) and its weight 100grams. Its body is thin, its skin reddish and covered with __14__ coating of a creamy, waxy substance, which is manufactured by small in the skin. It can open up its eyes and the __15__ covering the pupils of the __16__ has gone. If it is __17__ at this stage, it can __18__ but with difficulty. It can also cry __19__ but __20__ its legs energetically.
In number 12 above, choose the best option that best completes the gap
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 13 of 40
13. Question
Read the following passage and select the best option that fills the corresponding gap in the text.
By the 28th week, that is the end of the 7th ____11___ the foetus moves around vigorously within the ___12___ and its heartbeat can be heard by the __13__. Its length is 38cm (15inches) and its weight 100grams. Its body is thin, its skin reddish and covered with __14__ coating of a creamy, waxy substance, which is manufactured by small in the skin. It can open up its eyes and the __15__ covering the pupils of the __16__ has gone. If it is __17__ at this stage, it can __18__ but with difficulty. It can also cry __19__ but __20__ its legs energetically.
In number 13 above, choose the best option that best completes the gap
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Question 14 of 40
14. Question
Read the following passage and select the best option that fills the corresponding gap in the text.
By the 28th week, that is the end of the 7th ____11___ the foetus moves around vigorously within the ___12___ and its heartbeat can be heard by the __13__. Its length is 38cm (15inches) and its weight 100grams. Its body is thin, its skin reddish and covered with __14__ coating of a creamy, waxy substance, which is manufactured by small in the skin. It can open up its eyes and the __15__ covering the pupils of the __16__ has gone. If it is __17__ at this stage, it can __18__ but with difficulty. It can also cry __19__ but __20__ its legs energetically.
In number 14 above, choose the best option that best completes the gap
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Question 15 of 40
15. Question
Read the following passage and select the best option that fills the corresponding gap in the text.
By the 28th week, that is the end of the 7th ____11___ the foetus moves around vigorously within the ___12___ and its heartbeat can be heard by the __13__. Its length is 38cm (15inches) and its weight 100grams. Its body is thin, its skin reddish and covered with __14__ coating of a creamy, waxy substance, which is manufactured by small in the skin. It can open up its eyes and the __15__ covering the pupils of the __16__ has gone. If it is __17__ at this stage, it can __18__ but with difficulty. It can also cry __19__ but __20__ its legs energetically.
In number 15 above, choose the best option that best completes the gap
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 16 of 40
16. Question
Read the following passage and select the best option that fills the corresponding gap in the text.
By the 28th week, that is the end of the 7th ____11___ the foetus moves around vigorously within the ___12___ and its heartbeat can be heard by the __13__. Its length is 38cm (15inches) and its weight 100grams. Its body is thin, its skin reddish and covered with __14__ coating of a creamy, waxy substance, which is manufactured by small in the skin. It can open up its eyes and the __15__ covering the pupils of the __16__ has gone. If it is __17__ at this stage, it can __18__ but with difficulty. It can also cry __19__ but __20__ its legs energetically.
In number 16 above, choose the best option that best completes the gap
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 17 of 40
17. Question
Read the following passage and select the best option that fills the corresponding gap in the text.
By the 28th week, that is the end of the 7th ____11___ the foetus moves around vigorously within the ___12___ and its heartbeat can be heard by the __13__. Its length is 38cm (15inches) and its weight 100grams. Its body is thin, its skin reddish and covered with __14__ coating of a creamy, waxy substance, which is manufactured by small in the skin. It can open up its eyes and the __15__ covering the pupils of the __16__ has gone. If it is __17__ at this stage, it can __18__ but with difficulty. It can also cry __19__ but __20__ its legs energetically.
In number 17 above, choose the best option that best completes the gap
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 18 of 40
18. Question
Read the following passage and select the best option that fills the corresponding gap in the text.
By the 28th week, that is the end of the 7th ____11___ the foetus moves around vigorously within the ___12___ and its heartbeat can be heard by the __13__. Its length is 38cm (15inches) and its weight 100grams. Its body is thin, its skin reddish and covered with __14__ coating of a creamy, waxy substance, which is manufactured by small in the skin. It can open up its eyes and the __15__ covering the pupils of the __16__ has gone. If it is __17__ at this stage, it can __18__ but with difficulty. It can also cry __19__ but __20__ its legs energetically.
In number 18 above, choose the best option that best completes the gap
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 19 of 40
19. Question
Read the following passage and select the best option that fills the corresponding gap in the text.
By the 28th week, that is the end of the 7th ____11___ the foetus moves around vigorously within the ___12___ and its heartbeat can be heard by the __13__. Its length is 38cm (15inches) and its weight 100grams. Its body is thin, its skin reddish and covered with __14__ coating of a creamy, waxy substance, which is manufactured by small in the skin. It can open up its eyes and the __15__ covering the pupils of the __16__ has gone. If it is __17__ at this stage, it can __18__ but with difficulty. It can also cry __19__ but __20__ its legs energetically.
In number 19 above, choose the best option that best completes the gap
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 20 of 40
20. Question
Read the following passage and select the best option that fills the corresponding gap in the text.
By the 28th week, that is the end of the 7th ____11___ the foetus moves around vigorously within the ___12___ and its heartbeat can be heard by the __13__. Its length is 38cm (15inches) and its weight 100grams. Its body is thin, its skin reddish and covered with __14__ coating of a creamy, waxy substance, which is manufactured by small in the skin. It can open up its eyes and the __15__ covering the pupils of the __16__ has gone. If it is __17__ at this stage, it can __18__ but with difficulty. It can also cry __19__ but __20__ its legs energetically.
In number 20 above, choose the best option that best completes the gap
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 21 of 40
21. Question
In the question below, choose the option that has the opposite meaning to the word or group of words underlined in the sentence to fill the missing word(s).
One would have expected the students to take to consultation with the school authorities instead of resorting to ____.
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Question 22 of 40
22. Question
In the question below, choose the option that has the opposite meaning to the word or group of words underlined in the sentence to fill the missing word(s).
It is surprising that one of the identical twins is an alcoholic but the other is ____.
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Question 23 of 40
23. Question
In the question below, choose the option that has the opposite meaning to the word or group of words underlined in the sentence to fill the missing word(s).
While the man is parsimonic his wife is obviously ____.
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Question 24 of 40
24. Question
In the question below, choose the option that has the opposite meaning to the word or group of words underlined in the sentence to fill the missing word(s).
The lackadaisical student failed the test but the _____ one passed it well.
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Question 25 of 40
25. Question
In the question below, choose the option that has the opposite meaning to the word or group of words underlined in the sentence to fill the missing word(s).
While a sinner will incur the wrath of God, a saint will enjoy the ______ of God.
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Question 26 of 40
26. Question
Choose the option that best completes the sentence
The rich man _____ money to his wives and children every Monday.
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Question 27 of 40
27. Question
Choose the option that best completes the sentence
If i had known that the man was not a genuine pastor, I would not have ______ too much confidence in him.
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Question 28 of 40
28. Question
Choose the option that best completes the sentence
The poor woman has ____ herself to fate
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Question 29 of 40
29. Question
Choose the option that best completes the sentence
The clergy ____ everyday for the success of the present government
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Question 30 of 40
30. Question
Choose the option that best completes the sentence
The young girl ____ mind her language.
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Question 31 of 40
31. Question
Choose the option that best completes the sentence
Many a secondary school student _____afraid of English Language examination nowadays.
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Question 32 of 40
32. Question
Choose the option that best completes the sentence
The man with three wives and seventeen children _____ just travelled abroad.
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Question 33 of 40
33. Question
Choose the option that best completes the sentence
The lecturer does not _____ his real age
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Question 34 of 40
34. Question
Choose the option that best completes the sentence
During the recent communal crisis, the palace of the monarch was _____ amulets.
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Question 35 of 40
35. Question
Choose the option that best completes the sentence
I ____ your father to stop going out with politicians, then I changed my mind.
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Question 36 of 40
36. Question
In the question below, choose the option nearest in meaning to the word or phrase underlined in the sentence.
Are they expecting celestial blessing?
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Question 37 of 40
37. Question
In the question below, choose the option nearest in meaning to the word or phrase underlined in the sentence.
The indigent boy is my younger brother’s friend.
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Question 38 of 40
38. Question
In the question below, choose the option nearest in meaning to the word or phrase underlined in the sentence.
Adults seldom visit the new amusement centre
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Question 39 of 40
39. Question
In the question below, choose the option nearest in meaning to the word or phrase underlined in the sentence.
Really, life is ephemeral.
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Question 40 of 40
40. Question
In the question below, choose the option nearest in meaning to the word or phrase underlined in the sentence.
I want to tell you that Felix has an eclectic mind.
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Responses