Tag: softskills

Questions Related to softskills

Multiple choice softskills creativity
  1. W.B.Yeats

  2. Ezra Pound

  3. T.S Eliot

  4. Rabindranath Tagore

Reveal answer Fill a bubble to check yourself
C Correct answer
Explanation

'The Waste Land' (often shortened to 'Wasteland') is indeed T.S. Eliot's masterpiece, one of the most important poems of the 20th century. W.B. Yeats, Ezra Pound, and Rabindranath Tagore were all great poets but did not write this work.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. STABILITY

  2. COUNT

  3. BUILT

  4. TAUNT

Reveal answer Fill a bubble to check yourself
A Correct answer
Explanation

This is a word puzzle. 'STABILITY' can be formed from letters in 'ACCOUNTABILITY'. Checking each letter: S(1), T(1), A(2), B(1), I(2), L(1), Y(1) - all are available in ACCOUNTABILITY. The other words cannot be formed.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. NICHE

  2. SEMI

  3. PALS

  4. METRO

Reveal answer Fill a bubble to check yourself
A Correct answer
Explanation

'NICHE' can be formed from 'PETROCHEMICALS'. Counting letters: N(1), I(1), C(1), H(1), E(1) - all are present in PETROCHEMICALS. SEMI, PALS, and METRO cannot be formed with available letters.

Multiple choice softskills creativity
  1. Leo Tolstoy

  2. Maxim Gorky

  3. John Reed

  4. Nikolai Gogol

Reveal answer Fill a bubble to check yourself
D Correct answer
Explanation

'The Overcoat' is indeed a famous short story by Russian writer Nikolai Gogol. Jhumpa Lahiri's novel 'The Namesake' was inspired by and named after this story. Tolstoy, Gorky, and John Reed are all writers but did not write this particular story.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. PERSON

  2. NAIL

  3. LEAST

  4. FEAST

Reveal answer Fill a bubble to check yourself
D Correct answer
Explanation

'FEAST' can be formed from 'PERSONALITY'. Counting: F(1), E(1), A(1), S(1), T(1). In PERSONALITY: P(1), E(1), R(1), S(1), O(1), N(1), A(1), L(1), I(1), T(1), Y(1) - all letters are present. PERSON, NAIL, and LEAST cannot all be formed.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. LUST

  2. TAROT

  3. STATUE

  4. STOUT

Reveal answer Fill a bubble to check yourself
C Correct answer
Explanation

'STATUE' can be formed from 'ILLUSTRATOR'. Counting: S(1), T(2), A(1), T(1), U(1), E(1). In ILLUSTRATOR: I(1), L(2), U(2), S(1), T(2), R(1), A(1), O(1) - all needed letters are available (T appears twice, which satisfies STATUE's requirement). LUST, TAROT, and STOUT cannot be formed.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. You have only one choice: Leave for London while you can.

  2. You have only one choice leave for London while you can.

  3. You have only one choice. Leave for London while you can.

  4. None of the above

Reveal answer Fill a bubble to check yourself
A Correct answer
Explanation

Option A is correct because it uses a colon to properly introduce the explanatory clause 'Leave for London while you can.' The colon connects the main clause to its explanation. Option B lacks the necessary colon, creating a run-on. Option C incorrectly uses a period, making 'Leave for London while you can.' a sentence fragment.

Multiple choice softskills business skills
  1. My favourite vegetables are: carrot, brinjal and potato.

  2. These are my favourite vegetables: carrot, brinjal and potato.

  3. My favourite vegetables: carrot, brinjal and potato

  4. None of the above

Reveal answer Fill a bubble to check yourself
B Correct answer
Explanation

Option B is correct because it uses a colon properly to introduce a list. The structure 'These are my favourite vegetables:' sets up the list that follows. Option A incorrectly places a colon after 'are' (the verb). Option C lacks a main verb after the colon, creating a fragment. The colon must come after a complete independent clause.

Multiple choice softskills business skills
  1. I really don't like pineapple, so I never eat it.

  2. I really don't like pineapple so, I never eat it.

  3. I really don't like pineapple so I never eat it.

  4. None of the above

Reveal answer Fill a bubble to check yourself
A Correct answer
Explanation

Option A is correct because it places a comma before the coordinating conjunction 'so' when it connects two independent clauses. The structure 'I really don't like pineapple, so I never eat it' follows the rule for compound sentences. Option B incorrectly places the comma after 'so'. Option C lacks the required comma before 'so' when connecting independent clauses.