Practice Test


Q1) The central theme of the poem is Show Answer


Q2) The line 'Was it the time I realized that Hell and Heaven' is an perfect example of Show Answer


Q3) The poet .... when he lost his childhood. Show Answer


Q4) The poet realized that he could form his own ..... as he grew up. Show Answer


Q5) What is name of the poem Show Answer


Q6) What made the poet question his faith more rationally? Show Answer


Q7) The message of the poem is that the life of a brook is


Show Answer


Q8) The poet draws a parallelism between the journey of the brook with Show Answer


Q9) The poem is narrated in the first person by the brook. This figure of speech is Show Answer


Q10) In the poem, below mentioned lines
"And here and there a lusty trout,
And here and there a graying"
suggest that........ Show Answer


Q11) How many hills and bridges does the brook pass during its journey? Show Answer


Q12) "I wind about, and in and out". What kind of picture does this line create in your mind? Show Answer


Q13) These beautiful stanzas are from Show Answer


Q14) The poets lament in the poem ' The Solitary Reaper' is that Show Answer


Q15) "The Solitary Reaper' is a narrative poem set to music. This form of verse is called a Show Answer


Q16) In the poem 'The Solitary Reaper' to whom does the poet say 'Stop here or gently pass'? Show Answer


Q17) The central idea of the poem 'The Solitary Reaper' is Show Answer


Q18) The setting of the poem is in Show Answer


Q19) The poet writes, 'Two roads diverged' in a yellow wood. The wood diverged means Show Answer


Q20) In the poem, a traveller comes to a fork in the road and needs to decide which way to go, to continue his journey. Figuratively the choice of the road denotes Show Answer


Q21) The tone of the speaker in the first stanza is that of Show Answer


Q22) Rhyme scheme of the poem is Show Answer


Q23) The poet chooses Show Answer


Q24) An example of 'Alliteration' is Show Answer


Q25) Laburnum is a kind of Show Answer


Q26) The poet 'Ted Hughes' got the inspiration by ....... to compose the poem. Show Answer


Q27) What do you notice about the beginning of the poem? Show Answer


Q28) The line 'A suddeness, a startlement at a branch end' contains Show Answer


Q29) The port evoked the image of the engine for Show Answer


Q30) What does the phrase 'her barred face identity mask' mean Show Answer


Q31) What is the name of the poem from which these lines have been extracted? Show Answer


Q32) This poem seems to be Show Answer


Q33) The poem deals with Show Answer


Q34) The father's helplessness is brought out very Show Answer


Q35) The rhyme scheme is Show Answer


Q36) Identify the phrase or line that indicates distance between father and son. Show Answer


Q37) These beautiful stanzas have been taken from Show Answer


Q38) The poem is the classic example of Show Answer


Q39) There are two voices in the poem are of Show Answer


Q40) The similarity between rain and music is indicated by the words Show Answer


Q41) The pairs opposite found in the poem is Show Answer


Q42) The phrase 'strange to tell' mean Show Answer


Q43) This poem has taken from Show Answer


Q44) The poetess says that after a gap of almost , ...... she sees her mother snapshot Show Answer


Q45) What has the camera captured? Show Answer


Q46) What does, 'this circumstance' refer to Show Answer


Q47) What does the word 'cardboard' denote in the poem? Show Answer


Q48) What has not changed over the years? According to the poem. Show Answer


Q49) Lord Ullin's daughter and her lover are trying to Show Answer


Q50) The boatman agrees to ferry them across because Show Answer


Q51) The mood changes in the poem. It transforms from Show Answer


Q52) The shore of Lochgyle has been referred to as 'fatal shore'! The poetic device used here is Show Answer


Q53) The name of the poem is Show Answer


Q54) Who is the 'highland bound'? Show Answer


Q55) All the world's a stage is an extended Metaphor for Show Answer


Q56) All 'have their exits and their entrances'. Exits and entrances refer to Show Answer


Q57) The seven roles that a man plays correspond to his Show Answer


Q58) These lines have been taken from Show Answer


Q59) The line 'Creeping like a snail unwilling to go to school' contains the poetic device of Show Answer


Q60) In the first stage 'Infancy' . What are the characteristic feature? Show Answer


Q61) What is title of the poem? Show Answer


Q62) The title 'Oh, I wish I'd Looked After Me Teeth', expresses Show Answer


Q63) The conscience of the speaker pricks her as she has Show Answer


Q64) The speaker says that she has paved the way for cavities and decay by Show Answer


Q65) The tone of the narrator is one of Show Answer


Q66) The poet went to the .... for treatment. Show Answer


Q67) What is 'I' in the poem?
Show Answer


Q68) The rain calls itself the 'dotted silver threads' as Show Answer


Q69) The tone and mood of the rain in the poem reflect its Show Answer


Q70) 'When I cry, the hills laugh' here cry refers to Show Answer


Q71) The poet wants to convey the idea that Show Answer


Q72) The poetic device used in the 'Rain embraces the trees' is a Show Answer


Q73) According to the poet what is a punishment for us? Show Answer


Q74) The poet is not being able to distinguish between Show Answer


Q75) What does the line; "Where we have to come again and again to suffer" signify? Show Answer


Q76) Allurement here refers to Show Answer


Q77) What according to the poet is our wishful thinking? Show Answer


Q78) Our life has been condemned to like Show Answer


Q79) The line 'She dines on the smell' means Show Answer


Q80) Who is 'She' in the poem Show Answer


Q81) The attitude of the speaker is Show Answer


Q82) The purpose of the poem is to tell us that Show Answer


Q83) The woman described in the poem is Show Answer


Q84) It is always suggested to beware of Show Answer


Q85) Here the poet proposes that habit should be in ratio Show Answer


Q86) What is seen through precepts in memory? Show Answer


Q87) It is always said to speak less Show Answer


Q88) What is the side effect of taking a loan? Show Answer


Q89) What is the opposite of rich here in line 14? Show Answer


Q90) What is rhyming scheme of the poem? Show Answer


Q91) Whom did he thought to make his crop? Show Answer


Q92) Who taught the nightingale to sing and worm to shine? Show Answer


Q93) Explain, 'The keen demands of appetite.' Show Answer


Q94) What did the nightingale finally decide? Show Answer


Q95) Suggest a suitable topic for the poem. Show Answer


Q96) What is the significant aspect of this stage? Show Answer


Q97) Who is snug in mother's bosom? Show Answer


Q98) What is the person attracted to most in adulthood? Show Answer


Q99) We receive untold pleasures Show Answer


Q100) Which line indicates the closeness of the baby to mother? Show Answer


Q101) When does tempestuous mean? Show Answer


Q102) Man is just running to get the most worldly pleasures. Amidst these he forgets Show Answer


Q103) What does the line, 'March towards Infinity' mean?
Show Answer


Q104) The poet wants the man to listen what kind of songs? Show Answer


Q105) Life is like a fight, full of struggle; find the related line in the poem. Show Answer


Q106) What is the Great White Throne ? Show Answer


Q107) Instead of facing eternal race of rivalry a man should Show Answer


Q108) The woman cooks a small dinner because Show Answer


Q109) 'Do you know how much you mean to me? is a ..... question. Show Answer


Q110) An antonym for the word 'harsh' is Show Answer


Q111) In the expression 'It sends me a whirl' 'it' refers to Show Answer


Q112) To 'stand up tall' is Show Answer


Q113) The phrase 'the world by its tail' means to Show Answer


Q114) The poem addresses a Show Answer


Q115) Another word in the poem that suggests 'forbidden' is Show Answer


Q116) "It becomes the predator" means Show Answer


Q117) An example of personification in the poem is Show Answer


Q118) "Eating at us like a carnivore" refers to Show Answer


Q119) "We, still craving illicit nectar" can be explained by focusing on the word Show Answer


Q120) A synonym for the word 'savoring' is Show Answer


Q121) 'Who has seen the wind?' Transform this sentence into an assertive. Show Answer


Q122) The wind can be felt by Show Answer


Q123) In the poem 'trembling' means Show Answer


Q124) 'Neither you nor I '. Here 'you' refers to Show Answer


Q125) In the second last line of the poem 'their' refers to Show Answer


Q126) "The wind is passing by". Here 'passing by' is Show Answer


Q127) The writer's message in his/her essay is about Show Answer


Q128) The essay is ... in form Show Answer


Q129) A man noticed that the Show Answer


Q130) The man's first instinct was Show Answer


Q131) The natural process would have the wings of the butterfly Show Answer


Q132) A word that means 'to make or become withered' is Show Answer


Q133) The woman cooks a small dinner because Show Answer