SSC CPO Paper-2 27th-Sep-2019 Shift-3

Instructions

For the following questions answer them individually

Question 101

Identify the segment in the sentence, which contains the grammatical error.
The actor smiled to me when I entered the room as if she knew me.

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Question 102

Select the word which means the same as the group of words given.
A large number of fish swimming together

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Question 103

Identify the segment in the sentence, which contains the grammatical error.
The list of candidates to be called for the interview were put up on the board.

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Question 104

Select the most appropriate antonym of the given word.
EMACIATED

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Question 105

Select the most appropriate option to fill in the blank.
Generally people use ______ oils for their cooking.

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Question 106

Choose the option that is the direct form of the sentence.
Vikas said to Navin that he hadn’t met him since February the previous year.

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Question 107

Choose the option that is the passive form of the sentence.
They found her guilty of theft.

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Question 108

Select the word which means the same as the group of words given.
A room or building with equipment for doing physical exercise

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Question 109

Choose the option that is the direct form of the sentence.
The counter clerk asked me what my mobile number was.

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Instructions

Read the passage and answer the questions given below it
Comprehension:

No one can look back on his schooldays and say with truth that they were altogether unhappy. I have good memories of St Cyprian's, among a horde of bad ones. Sometimes on summer afternoons there were wonderful expeditions across the Downs to a village called Birling Gap, or to Beachy Head, where one bathed dangerously among the boulders and came home covered with cuts. And there were still more wonderful mid-summer evenings when, as a special treat, we were not driven off to bed as usual but allowed to wander about the grounds in the long twilight, ending up with a plunge into the swimming bathe at about nine o'clock. There was the joy of waking early on summer mornings and getting in an hour's undisturbed
reading (Ian Hay, Thackeray, Kipling and H. G. Wells were the favourite authors of my boyhood) in the sunlit, sleeping dormitory. There was also cricket, which I was no good at but with which I conducted a sort of hopeless love affair up to the age of about eighteen. And there was the pleasure of keeping caterpillars — the silky green and purple puss-moth, the ghostly green poplar-hawk, the privet-hawk, large as one's third finger, specimens of which could be illicitly purchased for sixpence at a shop in the town — and, when one could escape long enough from the master who was ‘taking the walk’, there was the excitement of dredging the dew-ponds on the Downs for enormous newts with orange-coloured bellies. This business of being out for a walk, coming across something of fascinating interest and then being dragged away from it by a yell from the master, like a dog jerked onwards by the leash, is an important feature of school life, and helps to build up the conviction, so strong in many children, that the things you most want to do are always unattainable.

Question 110

We can infer that the writer was a

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