Tag: softskills

Questions Related to softskills

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. many

  2. few

  3. much

  4. some

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

Money is an uncountable noun, so we use "much" rather than "many". "Many" is used with countable nouns (many coins, many dollars), while "much" is for uncountable quantities (much money, much water, much time). "Few" and "some" don't fit grammatically with "how" in this question structure.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. at

  2. to

  3. in

  4. nothing required

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

When "home" is used as a destination (direction) with verbs of motion like "come" and "go", no preposition is needed - "home" functions as an adverb. We say "come home", "go home", "arrive home", "run home". Prepositions like "at", "to", or "in" are not used in this construction.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. him

  2. his

  3. it

  4. nothing required

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

The verb "like" requires an object pronoun. Since "ack" (likely "Jack") refers to a male person, the correct object pronoun is "him". "His" is a possessive adjective, "it" is for things/animals, and "nothing required" would leave the sentence grammatically incomplete.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. flying

  2. fly

  3. to fly

  4. flew

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

After "see something", we can use a present participle (-ing form) to describe an action in progress. "Flying" is the correct choice because it shows the continuous action. "Fly" would be the base form, "to fly" is an infinitive, and "flew" is past tense - none fit grammatically after "see something" in this context.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. Do you like

  2. Would you like

  3. Like you

  4. Shall you like

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

"Would you like" is the polite form used for invitations and offers. "Do you like" asks about general preferences (not invitations). "Like you" is grammatically incorrect, and "Shall you like" doesn't exist in English. "Would you like" is followed by the infinitive with "to" (e.g., "Would you like to come").

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. want

  2. will

  3. shall

  4. do

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

"Shall" is used with "I" and "we" to make suggestions or ask for decisions, especially in first person plural questions like "What shall we see?" "Want" would need "do" ("do we want"), "will" is for predictions, and "do" doesn't fit grammatically in this suggestion structure.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. in

  2. on

  3. at

  4. to

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

With specific times (clock times), we use the preposition "at". "At seven o'clock" is correct. "In" is for larger time periods (in the morning, in July, in 2024), "on" is for days and dates (on Monday, on July 4th), and "to" doesn't fit with clock times in this way.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. come

  2. coming

  3. to come

  4. comes

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

After "want", we use the infinitive with "to". "Want" is always followed by "to + verb" (want to come, want to go, want to eat). "Come" is the bare infinitive, "coming" is the -ing form, and "comes" is conjugated for third person - none of these work grammatically after "want".

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. you do

  2. do you do

  3. are you doing

  4. does you do

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

This is a present simple question asking about regular activities. The correct structure is "What do you do" using the auxiliary "do" + subject + base verb. "You do" is not a question structure, "are you doing" is present continuous (for right now), and "does you do" is grammatically incorrect ("does" requires third person singular).

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. any

  2. some

  3. a lot

  4. lot

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

In positive statements, "some" is used to indicate an unspecified amount. "Any" is typically used in negatives and questions. "A lot" needs "of" (a lot of), and "lot" is incorrect alone. Since this is a positive statement with an uncountable noun (stories can be counted as individual items, but here "stories" is treated as content), "some" is correct.