Questions Related to leadership
B
Correct answer
Explanation
In this conditional sentence, the first part refers to a general present belief ("If you think"), so the simple present "is" is grammatically correct to describe the boss's current state.
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Affluience
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Affluence
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Affluense
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Affluiense
B
Correct answer
Explanation
"Affluence" is the correct spelling, meaning wealth. It uses the "-ence" suffix. Distractors add unnecessary 'i's or use the incorrect "-ense" or "-uense" endings.
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Controversy
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Contraversy
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Contrevarsy
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Controvarsy
A
Correct answer
Explanation
'Controversy' is the correct spelling. The root is 'controversy' from Latin 'controversia.' Common misspellings include 'contraversy' (swapping v for first s), 'contrevarsy' (re + misspelling), and 'controvarsy' (double misspelling). The correct form keeps the 's' after 't' and 'v' in the middle.
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Competancy
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Competency
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Compatency
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Compatancy
B
Correct answer
Explanation
'Competency' is correct. It follows the standard pattern: 'competent' → 'competency.' The suffix '-ency' is used with this root. Common errors include swapping 'e' and 'a' (competancy, compatancy) or inserting extra letters (compatency). The word relates to 'competence' and 'competent.'
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Rotine
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Routeen
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Routine
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Routien
C
Correct answer
Explanation
"Routine" is the correct spelling. It follows the standard French-derived spelling used in English. Distractors use phonetic spellings like "Routeen" or incorrect vowel placements like "Routien."
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Insinia
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Insignea
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Insignia
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Insinea
C
Correct answer
Explanation
"Insignia" is the correct spelling, derived from Latin. It requires the 'gn' combination to produce the 'ny' sound and ends in 'ia.' Distractors omit the 'g' or add an unnecessary 'e'.
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Discontinuanse
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Discontinuence
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Discontinuance
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Discontinuense
C
Correct answer
Explanation
"Discontinuance" is the correct spelling, ending in the suffix "-ance." Distractors incorrectly use "-anse," "-ence," or "-ense," which are common spelling mistakes for nouns derived from verbs ending in 'ue'.
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Philatelist
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Philatalist
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Filatelist
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Filatalist
A
Correct answer
Explanation
"Philatelist" (a stamp collector) is correctly spelled with 'ph', an 'a' in the second syllable, and 'e' in the third. Distractors use 'f' or incorrect vowels like 'a' in the third syllable.
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Sophistication
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Sopistication
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Sophisticasion
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Sopisticasion
A
Correct answer
Explanation
"Sophistication" is the correct spelling. It uses 'ph' for the 'f' sound and 'tion' for the suffix. Distractors use 'p' instead of 'ph' or 'sion' instead of 'tion,' which are common orthographic errors.
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Philadelphia
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Philadelfhia
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Philadelfia
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Filadelphia
A
Correct answer
Explanation
'Philadelphia' is the correct spelling - a proper noun, the city in Pennsylvania. Common errors include 'el' vs 'le' (Philadelfhia), missing 'l' (Philadelfia), or changing 'Ph' to 'F' (Filadelphia). The name comes from Greek and uses 'Ph' for the 'f' sound, with 'adelphia' meaning 'brotherly love.'