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Zeal study SCERT Special TNTET Paper 2 English - Quiz (Part 2) Grammar Focus: Verbs, Plurals, Homophones, Compounds & Questions (Questions 26-50)

TNTET Paper 2 English Prep Quiz - Part 2

Zeal study SCERT Special TNTET Paper 1 English - Quiz (Part 2)

Grammar Focus: Verbs, Plurals, Homophones, Compounds & Questions (Questions 26-50)

26. We _______ a friendly cricket match *yesterday*.
  • play
  • played
  • have played
  • had played
Explanation: Complete past time markers (such as 'yesterday', 'last month', or 'ago') indicate that a simple past tense construction ('played') should be used.
27. The morning bus always _______ at 8:30 AM sharply.
  • is arriving
  • arrived
  • arrives
  • had arrived
Explanation: Regular operational schedules, fixed timetables, or habitual daily routines are expressed using simple present tense forms.
28. English verbs can generally be modified into how many basic functional form shapes?
  • Three
  • Four
  • Five
  • Six
Explanation: Standard main verbs carry 5 distinct forms: Base (write), Past (wrote), Past Participle (written), Present Participle (writing), and Third-Person Present -s (writes).
29. Present tense sentences containing plural subjects like 'They' or 'We' maintain verbs in their _______.
  • basic uninflected root form
  • s-suffixed form
  • past participle state
  • progressive -ing state
Explanation: Plural pronoun or noun actors do not take an added '-s' or '-es' structural ending when mapped in simple present timelines.
30. Fill with the correct choice: "Listen! The headmaster _______ the announcement now."
  • made
  • is making
  • makes
  • make
Explanation: Live real-time action markers (such as 'Listen!' or 'now') show an ongoing process, which requires present continuous tense ('is making').
31. Pick the sentence where the homophones 'heard' and 'herd' are situated correctly:
  • I herd the loud noise of the migrating heard.
  • I herd the sound echoing near the valley.
  • I heard the noise of the fast approaching herd.
  • I heard the shepherd guarding his open heard.
Explanation: 'Heard' means perceiving sound with your ears, whereas 'herd' refers to a collective group of animals.
32. The container is _______ heavy for _______ boys to carry alone.
  • to, too
  • too, two
  • two, to
  • too, to
Explanation: 'Too' functions as a degree intensifier adverb meaning 'excessively', while 'two' represents the absolute numerical count token value.
33. If you want to expand the project budget, you must first _______ sufficient capital.
  • rise
  • raise
  • rice
  • rays
Explanation: 'Raise' is a transitive action verb requiring an external object being increased or lifted, unlike 'rise', which occurs independently.
34. The car remained _______ at the traffic signal until it turned green.
  • stationary
  • stationery
  • stationairy
  • stationerry
Explanation: 'Stationary' (ending in -ary) defines a fixed, motionless state. 'Stationery' (ending in -ery) applies to writing supplies.
35. Doctors applied advanced organic ointment to _______ the patient's severe burn.
  • heel
  • heal
  • hail
  • hill
Explanation: 'Heal' is the verb meaning to cure or restore health. 'Heel' is the back part of a foot.
36. Plural formations created by shifting internal vowel sounds rather than appending an s-ending are termed _______.
  • homophonic plurals
  • apophonic plurals
  • acronym alignments
  • compound extensions
Explanation: Apophonic plurals (also called mutation plurals) alter internal vowels to show number change (e.g., tooth to teeth, mouse to mice).
37. Convert the following compound noun into its accurate plural layout: "Brother-in-law"
  • Brother-in-laws
  • Brothers-in-law
  • Brothers-ins-law
  • Brother-ins-laws
Explanation: Pluralizing hyphenated compound nouns requires appending the plural inflection directly to the primary root noun ('Brothers').
38. Identify the plural form for the classical singular Latin term "Formula":
  • Formulas only
  • Formuli
  • Formulae (or Formulas)
  • Formulam
Explanation: Latin roots ending in '-a' typically transform their plural configurations into '-ae' endings (e.g., formula to formulae, vertebra to vertebrae).
39. Pick out the specific structural noun whose singular and plural spelling profiles are entirely identical:
  • Child
  • Person
  • Fish
  • Tooth
Explanation: The noun 'fish' preserves its structural spelling shape without updates in plural counts, similar to 'deer' and 'sheep'.
40. Substitute the missing structural option: "Alumna represents a feminine singular form, whereas its matching plural expression is _______."
  • Alumnas
  • Alumnae
  • Alumni
  • Alumnus
Explanation: Classical feminine Latin roots ending in '-a' shift to '-ae' in their plural form. 'Alumni' serves as the masculine/mixed group plural.
41. Identify the structural combination layout for the compound entry: "Washing machine"
  • Noun + Noun
  • Gerund + Noun
  • Verb + Noun
  • Adjective + Verb
Explanation: 'Washing' acts as a gerund baseline specifying function, which combines with the core noun element 'machine'.
42. Which of the following displays a valid structural combination matching a Verb + Noun layout?
  • Sunlight
  • Scarecrow
  • Greenhouse
  • Homework
Explanation: 'Scare' is an active operational verb, combined directly with the subsequent object noun element 'crow'.
43. Compound expressions separated completely by blank spaces, like 'Dining room', are classified as _______.
  • closed compounds
  • open compounds
  • hyphenated patterns
  • synthetic blends
Explanation: Open compound configurations maintain written spacing between internal words while functioning as a single term.
44. Terms fused together cleanly with no separations or markers, like 'Bedroom', are categorized as _______.
  • closed compound words
  • open variables
  • hyphenated phrases
  • derived nominals
Explanation: Closed compound configurations bind the structural components seamlessly into a single unbroken word.
45. Words joined explicitly by internal punctuation dashes, like 'Self-control', are called _______.
  • open structures
  • hyphenated compound words
  • closed units
  • acronym clusters
Explanation: Words structurally connected via internal formatting lines or dashes belong to the hyphenated category.
46. Select the question pattern showing valid uninflected main verb usage:
  • Why did she called you last night?
  • Why did she call you last night?
  • Why does she called you yesterday?
  • Why has she calling you?
Explanation: Past context auxiliaries like 'did' manage past inflections, requiring the principal main verb to exist in its base form ('call').
47. Design an interrogative sentence to target the underlined element: "*The author* is checking the proof sheets."
  • Who is checking the proof sheets?
  • What is the author checking?
  • Where is the author checking things?
  • Which proof sheets are checked?
Explanation: To query about a person or subject actor, we use the interrogative word 'Who'.
48. The library purchased *fifty* new reference manuals. Choose the correct question:
  • How much reference manuals did the library purchase?
  • How many reference manuals did the library purchase?
  • How long did the library purchase manuals?
  • Where did the library buy reference books?
Explanation: Countable objects (manuals) require 'How many'. 'How much' is used exclusively for uncountable mass values.
49. Structure a proper query option for: "She reviews the data files *every Sunday*."
  • When did she review the data files?
  • How often does she review the data files?
  • Where does she review the data files?
  • What does she review every week?
Explanation: Recurring routine frequencies ('every Sunday') require 'How often'. 'Does' matches the simple present tense of the statement.
50. To query about time variables or structural date landmarks, clauses must launch using _______.
  • When
  • Where
  • Which
  • Whose
Explanation: 'When' targets chronological variables or time coordinates. 'Where' tracks physical locations.

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