XH-C2: English (60 Marks) Q1. To Q 12. Are MCQ Where Only One Answer Is Correct. Each Question Carries One Mark
XH-C2: English (60 Marks) Q1. To Q 12. Are MCQ Where Only One Answer Is Correct. Each Question Carries One Mark
XH-C2: English (60 Marks) Q1. To Q 12. Are MCQ Where Only One Answer Is Correct. Each Question Carries One Mark
Q1. to Q 12. are MCQ where only one answer is correct. Each question carries one
mark.
Q1. Which of the following texts consists of a series of twelve eclogues, one for each
month of the year?
Q4. Who is the author of Beloved, Sula, Song of Solomon, The Bluest Eye?
Q6. What is common among to the following: When Memory Dies, , Funny
Boy, A Story of Brief Marriage, Gorilla, Atawaka Putthu (Half Moon Sons)?
(A) Kshemendra
(B) Utpaladeva
(C) Bhartrihari
(D) Abhinavagupta
Q8. Which of the following statements is NOT true about Don Quixote?
(A) The novel is about what happens when romantic idealism clashes with the real
world.
(B) Many of Don Quixote
(C) Social class in the novel is rarely an impediment to what a character truly
wants.
(D) Don Quixote is often taken to be the founding moment of the European novel.
Q9. Which of the following is NOT based upon the Mahabharata?
Q10. In which of the following pairs of poems does Milton celebrate the classical goddesses
Mirth and Melancholy each with their specific attributes in a poetic style reminiscent
of both Italian verse and Elizabethan and Jacobean poetry?
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
Q12. In an essay assessing the political career of a famous public figure, the following
words were written as a conclusion by a well-known essayist and novelist of the 20th
figures of our time, how clean a smell he has managed to leave beh
essayist and on whose political career was this essay written?
Q13.
really an alien language to us. It is the language of our intellectual make-up, like
Sanskrit or Persian was before, but not of our emotional make-up. We are all
instinctively bilingual, many of us writing in our own language and in English. We
(A)
(B) Kanthapura
(C)
(D) Swami and Friends
Q14. Identify the novel whose preface begins with the following words:
The world is so taken up of late with novels and romances, that it will
be hard for a private history to be taken for genuine, where the names and
other circumstances of the person are concealed, and on this account we must
be content to leave the reader to pass his own opinion upon the ensuing sheet,
and take it just as he pleases.
The author is here supposed to be writing her own history, and in the
very beginning of her account she gives the reasons why she thinks fit to
conceal her true name, after which there is no occasion to say any more about
that.
Q16. Literary canons in India's regional languages, primarily forged in the colonial period,
took as their point of departure the premodern corpus of bhakti. The word 'premodern'
in this context directs us to the .
Q17. Mimesis
underscores _.
(A) how the West invented the idea of realism and made it the dominant generic mode of
representation from the nineteenth century onwards
(B) how mankind has been harried by, and has therefore meditated on, reality since the
beginning of time
(C) how the reality of present experience (the experience of the present) as a figure of the
future has been an integral aspect of its literary tradition since ancient times
(D) how Western realism is different from non-Western realism
Q18.
magnitude, complete in itself; in language with pleasurable accessories, each kind
brought in separately in the parts of the work; in ; with
incidents arousing pity and fear, wherewith to accomplish its catharsis of such
Fill in the blanks in this definition of tragedy offered Aristotle, taken from the Ingram
Bywater translation of Poetics.
Q19.
suspicion) and about whom?
(A)
fascination for the ex-colonial
(B)
(C) suggest that Trinidad and England represent two different kinds of landscapes,
so incommensurable that they cannot be compared
(D)
Q21.
metaphors drawn from the annual hunt that is a high point of the Oraon calendar.
this story is to .
(A) narrate how the bloodthirstiness of the hunt can be used by this Oraon woman to defend
herself
(B) show how the idea of power can be handed down as a gift ancestrally in the annual
bility to turn the tables against the predator
(C) celebrate the traditions of the indigenous people of India
(D) None of the other options
Q22.
implication is that .
Q23. In an Antique
Land?
Q24.
Irish can do is offer up their children for the English to feed on. The rhetoric the essay
deploys or the area of writing in which Swift excelled is/are .
(A) satire
(B) innuendo
(C) irony
(D) double entendre
Q26. The following Arun Kolatkar, Adil Jussawala, Arvind Krishna Mehrotra, Namdeo
Dhasal, Dom Moraes, Eunice de Souza all _ .
(A)
(B) wrote poetry primarily in the English language
(C) were editors at The Bombay Literary Review in different points in history
(D) were founding members of the art and craft scene of Bombay in the 1960s
Q27. Which of the following is/are true of the Gutenberg Bible?
Q29. The Hunter Commission of 1882 was presided by Sir William Hunter and was
appointed by Lord Ripon, the then viceroy of India. With which among the following
was the commission tasked with?
(A) Marlowe was one of the most well-known of Elizabethan playwrights and is
known to have significantly influenced William Shakespeare
(B)
was dedicated to Elizabeth I.
(C) Marlowe is best known for his play The Spanish Tragedy.
(D) Marlowe was one of the earliest writers to make innovative use of the blank
verse.
Q35. Which of the following, according to Sharan Kumar Limbale, is/are congruent to Dalit
aesthetics?
king Cambyses, Cambyses was bent on humbling his prisoner. He gave orders to
place Psammenitus on the road along which the Persian triumphal procession was to
pass. And he further arranged that the prisoner should see his daughter pass by as a
maid going to the well with her pitcher. While all the Egyptians were lamenting and
bewailing this spectacle, Psammenitus stood alone, mute and motionless, his eyes
fixed on the ground; and when presently he saw his son, who was being taken along in
the procession to be executed, he likewise remained unmoved. But when afterwards
he recognized one of his servants, an old, impoverished man, in the ranks of the
prisoners, he beat his fists against his head and gave all the signs of deepest mourning.
From this story it may be seen what the nature of true storytelling is. [...] It resembles
the seeds of grain which have lain for centuries in the chambers of the pyramids shut
up air-
From this passage we may conclude that .
(D) stories harbour links to arcana and storytelling can help retrieve ancient
secrets retained in them
Q38. Read the poem and answer the question below. Note that two other questions in this
section are based on the same poem, but they may not appear in sequence.
keep,
and miles of ghosts before their sleep.
And miles of ghosts beneath our sleep.
Which of the following images is/are associated with the refugees in the
poem?