Questions Related to leadership

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. fervid

  2. felon

  3. feint

  4. fidelity

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

Fervid means showing earnest, intense, or passionate feeling - describing emotions that are deeply felt and strongly expressed. It conveys warmth and intensity of feeling or belief.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. we

  2. he

  3. me

  4. my

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

The sentence 'He came to see ___ last night' requires an object pronoun because 'see' is a verb needing an object. Option C 'me' is the correct object pronoun. Option A 'we' is a subject pronoun, B 'he' is a subject pronoun, and D 'my' is a possessive adjective - none fit grammatically.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. she

  2. his

  3. her

  4. our

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

'Listen to ___ carefully' requires an object pronoun after the preposition 'to'. Option C 'her' is the correct object pronoun. Option A 'she' is a subject pronoun, B 'his' is a possessive adjective, and D 'our' is a possessive adjective - none grammatically correct after 'to'.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. I would have stayed here.

  2. I stay here.

  3. I will stay home.

  4. I am going home.

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

This is a first conditional sentence expressing a real possibility. The structure is 'If + present simple, will + base verb'. Option C 'I will stay home' correctly follows this pattern. Option A uses conditional perfect (would have) for unreal past, B incorrectly uses present simple, and D uses present continuous form.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. I would have helped.

  2. I will help you.

  3. I wanted to help.

  4. I must help.

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

Another first conditional expressing a real possibility. Structure: 'If + present simple, will + base verb'. Option B 'I will help you' correctly completes the sentence. Option A uses conditional perfect (unreal past), C uses past simple, and D uses modal 'must' which doesn't fit the conditional context.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. I can do it.

  2. I cannot do it.

  3. I wouldn't do it.

  4. I do not do it.

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

This is a second conditional expressing a hypothetical/unreal situation. Structure: 'If + past (were), would + base verb'. Option C 'I wouldn't do it' correctly uses 'would' for the hypothetical result. Options A and B incorrectly use 'can' (present ability), and D uses present simple instead of conditional.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. we bought a big house.

  2. we would buy a bigger house.

  3. we would have bought a big house.

  4. we might have bought a big house.

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

Another second conditional for hypothetical situations. Structure: 'If + past simple (had), would + base verb'. Option B 'we would buy a bigger house' correctly uses 'would buy'. Option A incorrectly uses past simple, C uses conditional perfect (would have bought - for unreal past), and D uses modal 'might have' for past speculation.

Multiple choice softskills leadership
  1. For

  2. After

  3. Since

  4. None of these

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

The sentence describes temporal sequence - someone returned home after a show ended. Option B 'After' correctly establishes this time relationship. Option A 'For' indicates duration/purpose, C 'Since' indicates cause or starting point, and D is incorrect since B is the right answer.