Tag: communication

Questions Related to communication

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. It’s been 6 days since we have been working on this single document.

  2. There are twenty five pages in this document.

  3. 20 person hours were spent on the last phase of the project.

  4. We need at least five additional resources to complete this.

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

Option D follows convention: small whole numbers (under 10) should be written out as words ('five'). Option A is incorrect - '6' should be 'six'. Option B should be 'twenty-five' (hyphenated). Option C is incorrect - '20' should be 'twenty'. Convention: write out numbers 0-9; use numerals for 10 and above unless starting a sentence.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. Its possible that the client may not like our proposal.

  2. The team member that wrote the proposal deserves to be appreciated.

  3. Who are you referring to as the author of the proposal?

  4. Shall we send the proposal to the client?

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

Option D is correct - it's grammatically sound. Option A is wrong: 'Its' (possessive) should be 'It's' (contraction of 'it is'). Option B should use 'who' not 'that' for people. Option C is wrong: 'referring to' is phrasal verb ending; the correct form is 'Whom are you referring to?' or 'To whom are you referring?'

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. you

  2. yourself

  3. yourselves

  4. your

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

When a pronoun follows 'to' and refers back to the subject ('we'), use subject pronoun form. Here, 'you' is correct as it's the object of 'to'. 'Yourself' (reflexive) is used when the subject and object are the same person (e.g., 'You treat yourself well'). 'Yourselves' is plural reflexive. 'Your' is possessive, not a pronoun.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. are

  2. is

  3. have

  4. has

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

With 'either/or', the verb agrees with the nearest subject. 'Maria' is singular (third person), so use 'has'. 'Either Carrie or Maria has been writing' means one of them (individually) has been doing it. Option A ('are') is plural, B ('is') would need 'has', and C ('have') is plural.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. is

  2. are

  3. have

  4. has

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

With 'either/or', the verb agrees with the nearest subject. 'Her parents' is plural, so use 'are'. The sentence means either Diane (singular) or her parents (plural) will pay, and we match the verb to 'parents'. Option A ('is') would be correct if the order were reversed: 'Either her parents or Diane is going'.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. to

  2. for

  3. with

  4. about

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

We agree 'with' someone's arguments or opinions. The preposition 'with' is used after 'agree' when indicating the person or position you're in concurrence with. 'Agree to' is used for proposals or suggestions, while 'agree about' works for topics or subjects. 'Agree for' is not standard English usage.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. beside of

  2. besides

  3. beside

  4. beside from

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

The correct phrase is 'beside the Thames', meaning 'next to' or 'at the side of'. 'Beside' is a preposition indicating location. 'Besides' (with an 's') means 'in addition to' or 'other than'. The forms 'beside of' and 'beside from' are grammatically incorrect - 'beside' doesn't require these additional prepositions.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. by

  2. from

  3. since

  4. for

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

When describing how long an action has continued, use 'for' with a duration. 'I have been working here for 2 years' indicates the length of time the action has been happening. 'Since' would be used with a specific starting point (since 2020), 'from' indicates origin, and 'by' indicates deadline. The present perfect continuous tense requires 'for' with duration expressions.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. I'm fine thanks. And you?

  2. Oh, I'm doing great.

  3. How do you do

  4. No I am not well.

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

'How do you do' is a formal greeting, and the correct response is to repeat the same phrase back. Unlike 'How are you?' which asks about wellbeing, 'How do you do' is a traditional formal introduction that doesn't require a literal response about your state. Responding with 'I'm fine' or 'I'm doing great' would be incorrect in this formal context.

Multiple choice softskills communication
  1. lesser

  2. fewer

  3. few

  4. less

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

Use 'fewer' for countable nouns (days, people, items). 'Days' is countable, so 'fewer days' is correct. 'Few' can also work but is less precise here. 'Less' and 'lesser' are used for uncountable nouns (less water, less time) or for comparative degree (lesser importance). This distinction between countable and uncountable nouns is a key grammar rule.