Questions Related to leadership

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. at

  2. in

  3. on

  4. none of these

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

Use 'on' for specific days and dates. 'At' is for exact times or locations, not days. 'In' is for months, years, seasons, or parts of day. 'On what day' is the standard way to ask about a specific day of birth.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. at

  2. in

  3. on

  4. none of these

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

Use 'on' for surfaces and campuses (on the table, on the floor, on campus). 'In' would mean physically inside something (in the building, in the room). The pool is located on the surface of the TCS campus, not inside it. 'On campus' is standard English.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. at

  2. in

  3. on

  4. none of these

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

Use 'in' when entering a body of water or putting something inside a container. The toe goes inside the water, so 'in' is correct. 'On' would mean placing it on the surface (on the edge), not entering the water. 'At' would indicate a location but not entry.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. at

  2. in

  3. on

  4. none of these

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

Use 'on' when placing food on top of a surface. Sprinkling parsley means placing it on the surface of the tomatoes. 'In' would mean mixing it inside the tomatoes (like chopped parsley mixed in). 'On' correctly indicates the garnish sits on top.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. at

  2. in

  3. on

  4. none of these

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

To solve this question, the user needs to understand the correct preposition to use when indicating the destination of dropping someone off at their house.

Explanation of each option:

A. "at" - This is the correct preposition to use in this context. When dropping someone off at their house, we use the preposition "at." For example, "drop me off at my house."

B. "in" - This preposition is not suitable in this context. We use "in" to indicate being inside a location, such as "in the house." However, when referring to the act of dropping someone off at their house, we use "at."

C. "on" - This preposition is also not appropriate in this context. We use "on" to indicate being on top of a surface, such as "on the table." It is not suitable for indicating the destination of dropping someone off at their house.

D. "none of these" - This option is incorrect because option A, "at," is the correct preposition to use in this context.

Therefore, the correct answer is:

A. at

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. at

  2. in

  3. on

  4. none of these

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

To solve this question, the user needs to understand the correct preposition to use when talking about applying makeup.

Explanation of each option:

A. "at" - This preposition is not commonly used when talking about applying makeup.

B. "in" - This preposition is not commonly used when talking about applying makeup.

C. "on" - This preposition is commonly used when talking about applying makeup. When you apply makeup, you put it on your face or specific areas of your face value of 2.

D. "none of these" - This option is incorrect because one of the options is the correct answer.

The correct answer is option C. "on". When talking about applying makeup, we use the preposition "on". Therefore, the correct sentence is "I like to put make-up on when I dress up."

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. injure without breaking the skin

  2. curved

  3. lacking intelligence or wit

  4. having a common center

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

'Witless' means lacking intelligence, wisdom, or cleverness. It comes from 'wit' (mental sharpness) plus '-less' (without). Option C is the correct definition. Other options define different words (bruise, curved, concentric).

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. sorcery

  2. mutually agreed on

  3. blunt

  4. person with power to decide a matter in dispute

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

'Wizardry' refers to magic, sorcery, or exceptional skill in a particular area. A wizard is a magician, so 'wizardry' means sorcery or magical practices. Option A is correct. Other options define 'consensual', 'blunt', and 'arbitrator'.