Anil Awad's Quest For Literature

Thursday 26 May 2016

JAMMU-KASHMIR ENGLISH SET – 22 May 2016 – PAPER II – MODEL ANSWER KEY



JAMMU-KASHMIR ENGLISH SET – 22 May 2016 –
PAPER II – MODEL ANSWER KEY
By Anil S Awad
English Net/SET/SLET Consultant
Email – anilawad123@gmail.com
Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)
Hello Aspirants,
I am herewith posting/sharing the Answer Key for Jammu Kashmir English NET Paper II. This is model answer key and not authentic key. I have tried my best to provide ideal model answers to all the 50 Questions in Paper II. It is my great pleasure to inform you that almost 40 to 42 questions (out of 50) are directly from my Study Notes and Online Guidance Course. Before moving to the key, let me clear some points –

1) It is model answer key and prepared by me (Anil S Awad), not final answer key. Please tally the key with the Authentic Key published by the competent authority, when it will be issued.

2) Please don’t ask such irrelevant questions, like – what will be the merit/cut off/qualifying marks for Open/SC/ST/OBC etc. It is improbable to anyone to guess it now. 

3) Instead of waiting for the result, I humbly advise you to start preparing for July 2016 Net as well as the upcoming SET Exams.

4) It is my humble request not to modify the key – any answers (or even my name) for purpose of sharing/re-posting it.

5) Some fake professionals are misusing my name, and calling me either as their teacher or student to impress the NET/SET aspirants and repost the key with their names. I appeal you to keep alert from such misleading and fake professionals. Don’t believe them.

6) You can share this key on your timeline from my time or my Facebook Page – English Net Study Notes and Online Guidance 

https://www.facebook.com/pages/English-Net-Study-Notes-and-Online-Guidance/800638513316780

7) You can read this key anytime on my Blog Spot. If any rectifications in the key, it will be made available on the blog. – Anil Awad’s Judgement on Literature.

http://anilawad.blogspot.in/

Anil S Awad
English Net/SET Consultant
Email – anilawad123@gmail.com
Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)


1. Which of the following characters in The Canterbury Tales has gone three times on pilgrimage to Jerusalem?
(A) Parson
(B) Wife of Bath
(C) Nun
(D) Monk

Answer – (B) Wife of Bath
Reference – Prologue To the Canterbury Tales by Chaucer line Nos. 463-464
‘She'd journeyed to Jerusalem three times;
Strange rivers she had crossed in foreign climes;’

2. ‘Something is rotten in the state of Denmark’, ‘Heaven will direct it’ – The dialogues from the play Hamlet are exchanged between______
(A) Horatio and Polonius
(B) Marcellus and Horatio
(C) Hamlet and Horatio
(D) Claudius and Polonius

Answer – (B) Marcellus and Horatio
Reference –
ACT I SCENE IV
[Exeunt Ghost and HAMLET]
HORATIO: He waxes desperate with imagination.
MARCELLUS: Let's follow; 'tis not fit thus to obey him.
HORATIO: Have after. To what issue will this come?
MARCELLUS: Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.
HORATIO: Heaven will direct it.
MARCELLUS: Nay, let's follow him.

3. In the drama Twelfth Night, Viola tries to convince Orsino that women can feel love by:
(A) Telling him of her own experience
(B) Showing him that Olivia can feel love
(C) Telling him of her “sister’s” love
(D) Debating the point with him

Answer – (C) Telling him of her “Sister’s” love

Reference – Twelfth Night – Act – II, Scene – 4 – See the conversation below -
VIOLA: Too well what love women to men may owe.
In faith, they are as true of heart as we.
My father had a daughter loved a man
As it might be, perhaps, were I a woman,
I should your lordship.
ORSINO : And what’s her history?
VIOLA: A blank, my lord. She never told her love,
But let concealment, like a worm i' the bud,
Feed on her damask cheek. She pined in thought,
And with a green and yellow melancholy
She sat like patience on a monument,
Smiling at grief. Was not this love indeed?
We men may say more, swear more, but indeed
Our shows are more than will, for still we prove
Much in our vows, but little in our love.

4. Identify the play, from which this line is taken – “Sir, I am vexed. Bear with my weakness. My old brain is troubled. Be not disturbed with my infirmity”?
(A) Tempest Act IV Scene I
(B) Tempest Act III Scene II
(C) King Lear Act IV Scene II
(D) King Lear Act V Scene V

Answer – (A) Tempest Act IV, Scene I
Explanation
– The above statement/dialogue is delivered by Prospero, when he is in company of Ferdinand and Miranda.

5. Match list I with List II according to the code give below:
List I (Authors) List II (Works)
i) Arthur Symons 1. The Symbolism of Poetry (1900)
ii) W B Yeats 2. The Symbolist Movement in Literature (1899)
iii) Kenneth Cornell 3. Symbolism and Fiction (1956)
iv) Harry Levin 4. The Symbolist Movement (1951)
Find the correct combination according to the code group
i ii iii iv
A 2 1 4 3
B 2 4 1 3
C 3 1 4 2
D 4 3 2 1

Answer – A 

6. Who was Ben Jonson referring to when he said ‘He writ no language’?
(A) Geoffrey Chaucer
(B) Thomas More
(C) Christopher Marlow
(D) Edmund Spencer

Answer – (D) Edmund Spencer
Reference
– An extract from Ben Jonson’s Timber, or Discoveries
‘Spencer, in affecting the Ancients writ no language: Yet I would have him read for his matter; but as Virgil read Ennius. The reading of Homer and Virgil is counsell'd by Quintillian, as the best way of informing youth, and confirming man.’

7. Which one of the following is NOT a Graveyard Poet?
(A) Thomas Parnett ?? (It’s Thomas Pernell)
(B) Edward Young Long
(C) Robert Blair
(D) Thomas Love Peacock

Answer – (D) Thomas Love Peacock

8. The concluding line of ‘Tess of D’Urbervilles “the President of the Immortals, in Aeschylean phrase, had ended his sport with Tess.” Is a fine example of
(A) Socratic Irony
(B) Cosmic Irony
(C) Dramatic Irony
(D) Romantic Irony

Answer- (B) Cosmic Irony
Explanation
Socratic Irony - Socratic irony is when you pretend to be ignorant to expose the ignorance or inconsistency of someone else.
Cosmic Irony - the idea that fate, destiny, or a god controls and toys with human hopes and expectations; also, the belief that the universe is so large and man is so small that the universe is indifferent to the plight of man; also called irony of fate.
Dramatic or situational irony - irony that is inherent in speeches or a situation of a drama and is understood by the audience but not grasped by the characters in the play.
Romantic Irony – Romantic irony is a kind of irony in which the writer reverts himself from what he has written already in the piece of literature and fabricates the story/plot. It is re-narration of what is narrated already.

9. ‘The moan of doves in immemorial elms And murmuring of innumerable bees’ are perfect example of
(A) Onomatopoeia
(B) Paradox
(C) Alliteration
(D) Oxymoron

Answer – (A) Onomatopoeia
Explanation –
Onomatopoeia – sound itself suggest the meaning.
Paradox - two contradictory statements are put together to achieve certain effect.
Alliteration – repetition of the same sound
Oxymoron – two contradictory words/terms are put together

10. In which of the following works of Milton does the following line appear, ‘ Who overcomes by force, hath overcome but half his foe’?
(A) Paradise Lost Book 9
(B) Paradise Lost Book 1
(C) Paradise Regained
(D) Samson Agonistes

Answer – (B) Paradise Lost Book 1
Reference – Book First – Lines 646 to 649
To work in close design, by fraud or guile
What force effected not: that he no less
At length from us may find, who overcomes
By force, hath overcome but half his foe.

11. Authorized Version of ‘The Bible’ appeared in the year:
(A) 1605
(B) 1609
(C) 1610
(D) 1611

Answer – (D) 1611

Explanation – It is also called as King Jame’s Version, the translation of Christian Bible for English Church, whose task began on 1604 and completed at 1611.

12. Who was Dr. Samuel Johnson referring to when he says, ‘he found it brick, and left it marble’?
(A) John Dryden
(B) Alexander Pope
(C) William Congreve
(D) William Wycherley

Answer – (A) John Dryden
Reference – Dr. Johnson’s ‘Lives of the English Poets’ (1781), "The Life of Dryden"

13. The character ‘Friday’ appears in which of the following novels of Robinson Crusoe?
(A) The True Born English Man
(B) The Shortest Way with Dissenters
(C) Robinson Crusoe
(D) Moll Flanders

Answer – (C) Robinson Crusoe
(Bonus Mark Question…Answer itself is given in the question.)

Anil S Awad
English Net/SET Consultant
Email – anilawad123@gmail.com
Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)


14. In which of the following dramas, the dialogue – “Time will easily scatter the tempest" appears?
(A) The Tempest
(B) Duchess of Malfi
(C) The Spanish Tragedy
(D) King Lear

Answer – (B) Duchess of Malfi
Explanation – Duchess of Malfi by John Webster. Act – I , Scene – III. Speaker – Duch.

15. R W Emerson delivered his speech ‘American Scholar’ in one of the following American Societies:
(A) Phi Beta Kappa Society
(B) American College Literary Society
(C) Comell Literary Society
(D) The Euphadian Society

Answer – (A) Phi Beta Kappa Society
Explanation – ‘American Scholar’ is a speech delivered by Emerson on August 31, 1837. Phi Beta Kappa Society is honor society which is formed to promote liberal arts and sciences. Its headquarter is in Washington DC, USA.

16. The term ‘Yahoo’ appears in which of the following works of Jonathan Swift?
(A) A Tale of a Tub
(B) The Battle of the Books
(C) Roxana
(D) Gulliver’s Travels

Answer – (D) Gulliver’s Travels
Explanations – Yahoos are the dirty and filthy creatures who are haunted by materialistic pleasure

17. Match List I with List II accfording to the code given below:
LIST – I                     LIST – II

i Wilfred Owen           1. Aftermath
ii Charles Sorey           2. Songs of the Ungirt Runner
iii Siegfried Sassoon   3. The Cherry Trees
iv Edward Thomas      4. Anthem For Doomed Youth
Find the correct combination according to the code:
i ii iii iv
A 1 2 3 4
B 3 2 4 1
C 4 2 1 3
D 2 3 4 1

Answer – C 

18. The term Restoration Period takes its name from the restoration of the Stuart Line Charles II to the English Throne between the year:
(A) 1661-1710
(B) 1660-1700
(C) 1668-1705
(D) 1665-1700

Answer – (B) 1660-1700

19. A play called ‘Vanity Fair’ appears in which of the following works”
(A) Pilgrim’s Progress
(B) Absolem and Achitophel
(C) Vanity of Human Wishes
(D) Paradise Lost Book I

Answer – (A) Pilgrim’s Progress
Reference – John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress Chapter VI
Then I saw in my dream, that when they were got out of the wilderness, they presently saw a town before them, and the name of that town is "Vanity"; and at the town there is a fair kept, called "Vanity Fair"; it is kept all the year long. It bears the name of Vanity Fair, because the town where 'tis kept is lighter than vanity; and also because all that is there sold, or that comes thither is vanity. As is the saying of the wise, "All that comes is vanity."

20. Match the following works of T. S. Eliot with their years of publication
Works                                      Years of Publication
i Waste Land                                       1. 1935
ii Ash Wednesday                              2. 1943
iii Four Quartets                                  3. 1922
iv Murder in the Cathedral                 4. 1930
Find the correct combination according to the code:
i ii iii iv
(A) 1 2 3 4
(B) 3 4 2 1
(C) 4 2 1 3
(D) 2 3 4 1

Answer – B

21. Identify the figure of speech from the following lines:
I find no peace; and all my war is done;
I fear and hope; I burn and freeze in ice
(A) Onomatopoeia
(B) Oxymoron
(C) Metonymy
(D) Paradox

Answer – (B) Oxymoron (two contradictory words/terms are put together)

22. ______ is the term applied to rough, heavy-footed and jerky versification.
(A) Epiphany
(B) Epigram
(C) Doggerel
(D) Cacophony

Answer (C) Doggerel 

23. A novel that shows the development of a novelist or other artist into the stage of maturity is
(A) Bildungsroman
(B) Erziehungsroman
(C) The Sociological novel
(D) Kunstlerroman

Answer – (D) Kunstlerroman

 Exmplanation - 
Bildungsroman - Novel of development, novel of formation, novel of coming of ages
Erziehungsroman - Novel of development but general development - no self-introspection and self-cultivation.  

24. Who according to T. S. Eliot – ‘Possessed a mechanism of sensibility which could devour any kind of experience? The exhibited a direct sensuous apprehension of thought’:
(A) Meta Physical Poets
(B) Romantic Poets
(C) Victorian Poets
(D) Neo-Classical Poets

Answer – (A) Meta Physical Poets

25. Who said, ‘A quibble was to him the fatal Cleopatra for which he lost the world’?
(A) Dr. Samuel Johnson about John Dryden
(B) Dr. Samuel Johnson about Shakespeare
(C) T S Eliot about Shakespeare
(D) Mathew Arnold about Shakespeare

Answer – (B) Dr. Samuel Johnson about Shakespeare

Reference – Dr. Johnson’s famous essay ‘Preface to Shakespeare’ (1765)
26. Match List I with List II according to the code given below:
LIST – I (PERIODICAL ESSAYS)              LIST – II (YEARS OF PUBLICATION)
i) The Tastler (The Tatler)                               1. 1711
ii) The Spectator                                              2. 1750
iii) The Rambler                                              3. 1709
iv) The Gurdian                                               4. 1713
Find the correct combination according to the code:
i ii iii iv
A 1 2 3 4
B 3 1 2 4
C 4 2 1 3
D 2 3 4 1

Answer – B 

Anil S Awad
English Net/SET Consultant
Email – anilawad123@gmail.com
Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)


27. In which of the following poems does this line appear, ‘I fall upon the thorns of life, I bleed’?
(A) Ode on Melancholy
(B) Dejection an Ode
(C) Ode to the West Wind
(D) Ode to Psyche

Answer – (C) Ode to the West Wind (Canto IV – Line 54) 

28. Which poet said, ‘Wither is fled the visionary gleam? Where is it now the glory and the dream?’
(A) Coleridge in Kubla Khan
(B) Wordsworth in ‘Intimations of Immortality’
(C) Keats in Ode to Nightingale
(D) Shelley in Ode to Skylark

Answer – (B) Wordsworth in ‘Intimations of Immortality’

29. ‘Xanadu’ is an imaginary place that appears in one of the following works of ST Coleridge:
(A) Kubla Khan
(B) Rime of the Ancient Mariner
(C) Christabel
(D) Ode on the Departing Year

Answer – (A) Kubla Khan 

30. Who does Keats refer to as ‘Unravished Bride’?
(A) Nightingale
(B) Autumn
(C) Grecian Urn
(D) Psyche

Answer – (C) Grecian Urn – Opening lines

31. Which critic found Keats’ line, ‘Beauty is truth, truth beauty’ as a serious blemish on a beautiful poem?
(A) Mathew Arnold
(B) I A Richards
(C) T S Eliot
(D) A C Bradley

Answer - (C) T S Eliot

Explanation
- Poet and critic T. S. Eliot, in his 1929 "Dante" essay in response to Richards.

32. The relationship between signifier and signified is one of the theoretical proposal of:
(A) Michel Foucault
(B) Jacques Lacan
(C) Julia Kristeva
(D) Roland Barthes

Answer – (D) Roland Barthes 

33. Mother of 1084 was originally written in ____ language.
(A) Telugu
(B) Bangla
(C) Assames
(D) Guajarati

Answer – (B) Bangla
Explanation – The original title of the book is ‘Hazar Charusia Maa’ by Mahashweta Devi. It tells the struggle of a mother, Sujata, whose son was killed as a Naxalite. The number 1084 denote the corpse number of her son.

34. The collection of short stories ‘Good Bones’ is written by:
(A) Margaret Atwood
(B) Toni Morrison
(C) Uma Parmeswaran
(D) Judith Wright

Answer – (A) Margaret Atwood ( Published in 1992)

35. Which of the following is NOT a play by Tennessee Williams?
(A) Night of the Iguana
(B) A Streetcar Named Desire
(C) Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
(D) The Zoo Story

Answer – (D) The Zoo Story (It is by Edward Albee) 

36. The line “A man can be destroyed but not defeated” appears in:
(A) For whom the Bell Tolls
(B) The Old Man and the Sea
(C) The Snow of Kilimanjaro
(D) The Sun Also Rises

Answer – (B) The Old Man and the Sea

37. The children of Lamb in Dream Children: A Reverie are:
(A) Alice and Angel
(B) Mary and John
(C) Alice and John
(D) Allen and John.

Answer – (C) Alice and John

38. Which Critic opines that Jane Austen is both a moralist and a humorist?
(A) Regainald Farrer
(B) Henry James
(C) George Henry Lewis
(D) A C Bradley

Answer – (D) A C Bradley 

39. ‘Sita’ is a poem written by:
(A) Sarojini Naidu
(B) Thoru Dutt
(C) Kamala Das
(D) Parthasarathy

Answer – (B) Thoru Dutt.

Sîta.
A poem by Toru Dutt

Three happy children in a darkened room!
What do they gaze on with wide-open eyes?
A dense, dense forest, where no sunbeam pries,
And in its centre a cleared spot.--There bloom
Gigantic flowers on creepers that embrace
Tall trees; there, in a quiet lucid lake
The white swans glide; there, "whirring from the brake,"
The peacock springs; there, herds of wild deer race;
There, patches gleam with yellow waving grain;
There, blue smoke from strange altars rises light,
There, dwells in peace, the poet-anchorite.
But who is this fair lady? Not in vain
She weeps,--for lo! at every tear she sheds
Tears from three pairs of young eyes fall amain,
And bowed in sorrow are the three young heads.
It is an old, old story, and the lay
Which has evoked sad Sîta from the past
Is by a mother sung.... 'Tis hushed at last
And melts the picture from their sight away,
Yet shall they dream of it until the day!
When shall those children by their mother's side
Gather, ah me! as erst at eventide?

40. The term ‘gynocriticism’ was coined by:
(A) Simone de Beauvoir
(B) Elaine Showalter
(C) Gayathri Spivak
(D) Susan Sontag

Answer – (B) Elaine Showalter

Anil S Awad
English Net/SET Consultant
Email – anilawad123@gmail.com
Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)


41. Which of the following pairs is correctly matched?
(A) Richardson ----- Mysticism
(B) Derrida ----- Deconstruction
(C) I A Richards ----- Imagism
(D) Eagleton ----- Stream of Consciousness

Answer – (B) Derrida – Deconstruction 

42. Which of the following pair is NOT correctly matched?
(A) R K Narayan – The Painter of Signs
(B) Raja Rao – The Cat and the Shakespeare
(C) Anita Desai – Interpreter of Maladies
(D) Chitra Banerjee – Arranged Marriages

Answer – (C) Anita Desai – Interpreter of Maladies

Explanation – 'Interpreter of Maladies' is a Pulitzer Prize Winning novel by Jhumpa Lahiri published in 1999

43. Kingsley Amis belongs to which school of poetry?
(A) Lost Generation
(B) Martian Poets
(C) Beat Generation
(D) Movement

Answer – (D) Movement 

Explanation - The Movement was a term coined in 1954 by J. D. Scott, literary editor of The Spectator, to describe a group of writers including Philip Larkin, Kingsley Amis, Donald Davie, D. J. Enright, John Wain, Elizabeth Jennings, Thom Gunn, and Robert Conquest.

44. The title ‘The Sound And the Fury’ is taken from:
(A) Hamlet Act I Scene I
(B) Macbeth Act V Scene V
(C) The Tempest Act V Scene III
(D) King Lear Act IV Scene II

Answer – (B) Macbeth Act V, Scene V – See the full quote below.

MACBETH:
She should have died hereafter.
There would have been a time for such a word.
Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day
To the last syllable of recorded time,
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.

45. The fourth part of the poem ‘The Waste Land’ is:
(A) The Fire Sermon
(B) Burial of the Dead
(C) What the Thnder Said
(D) Death by Water

Answer – (D) Death by Water 

Explanation – 1. Burial of the Dead, 2. A Game of Chess, 3. The Fire Sermon 4. Death By Water 5. What the Thunder Said.

(How to remember – Dead Chess Fire By Water in Thunder.)

46. Which poem ends with the line, ‘The page is printed’?
(A) Hawk Rooster
(B) Toads
(C) Thought Fox
(D) The Jaguar

Answer – (C) Thought Fox – Enjoy the poem below:

THE THOUGHT-FOX
I imagine this midnight moment’s forest:
Something else is alive
Beside the clock’s loneliness
And this blank page where my fingers move.
Through the window I see no star:
Something more near
Though deeper within darkness
Is entering the loneliness:
Cold, delicately as the dark snow,
A fox’s nose touches twig, leaf;
Two eyes serve a movement, that now
And again now, and now, and now
Sets neat prints into the snow
Between trees, and warily a lame
Shadow lags by stump and in hollow
Of a body that is bold to come
Across clearings, an eye,
A widening deepening greenness,
Brilliantly, concentratedly,
Coming about its own business
Till, with a sudden sharp hot stink of fox
It enters the dark hole of the head.
The window is starless still; the clock ticks,
The page is printed.
47. Match List – I with List – II according to the code given below:
LIST – 1 (WORKS0 LIST – II (MAJOR SYMBOLS)
i) Scarlet Letter 1. Albatross
ii) As You Like It 2. Letter ‘A’
iii) Rime of the Ancient Mariner 3. Naked shingles
iv) Dover Beach 4. Stage
CODE:
i ii iii iv
A 2 3 1 4
B 4 2 3 1
C 2 3 4 1
D 2 4 1 3

Answer – D

48. In which of Virgina Woolf’s works does this line appear: ‘Call me Mary Beton, Mary Seton…or by any name you please’?
(A) Mrs. Dalloway
(B) Orlando
(C) Jacob’s Room
(D) A Room of One’s Own

Answer – (D) A Room of One’s Own 

49. While “hissing the class” for “missing the class” is an example of Spoonerism, someone saying “pine apple” for pinnacle’ is an example of _______
(A) Malapropism
(B) Pleonasm
(C) Neologism
(D) Archaism

Answer – (A) Malapropism 

Malapropism - A malapropism (also called a malaprop or Dogberryism) is the use of an incorrect word in place of a word with a similar sound (which is often a paronym), resulting in a nonsensical, often humorous utterance.
Pleonasm - the use of more words than are necessary to convey meaning (e.g. see with one's eyes ), either as a fault of style or for emphasis.
Neologism - a newly coined word or expression.
Archaism - a thing that is very old or old-fashioned, especially an archaic word or style of language or art.

50. Nobel Prize for Literature 2015 was awarded to:
(A) Patrick Modiano
(B) Mo Yan
(C) Svetlana Alexievich
(D) Alice Munroe

Answer – (C) Svetlana Alexievich 

Anil S Awad
English Net/SET Consultant
Email – anilawad123@gmail.com
Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)


MODEL ANSWER KEY IN SHORT – JAMMU KASHMIR – ENGLISH PAPER II 

1. (B) Wife of Bath
2. (B) Marcellus and Horatio
3. (C) Telling him of her “Sister’s” love
4. (A) Tempest Act IV, Scene I
5. (A) 2 – 1 – 4 – 3
6. (D) Edmund Spencer
7. (D) Thomas Love Peacock
8. (B) Cosmic Irony
9. (A) Onomatopoeia
10. (B) Paradise Lost Book 1
11. (D) 1611
12. (A) John Dryden
13. (C) Robinson Crusoe
14. (B) Duchess of Malfi
15. (A) Phi Beta Kappa Society
16. (D) Gulliver’s Travells
17. (C) 4 – 2 – 1 – 3
18. (B) 1660-1700
19. (A) Pilgrim’s Progress
20. (B) 3 – 4 – 2 – 1
21. (B) Oxymoron
22. (C) Doggerel
23. (D) Kunstlerroman
24. (A) Meta Physical Poets
25. (B) Dr. Samuel Johnson about Shakespeare
26. (B) 3 – 1 – 2 – 4
27. (C) Ode to the West Wind
28. (B) Wordsworth in ‘Intimations of Immortality’
29. (A) Kubla Khan
30. (C) Grecian Urn – Opening lines
31. (C) T S Eliot
32. (D) Roland Barthes
33. (B) Bangla
34. (A) Margaret Atwood
35. (D) The Zoo Story
36. (B) The Old Man and the Sea
37. (C) Alice and John
38. (D) A C Bradley
39. (B) Thoru Dutt
40. (B) Elaine Showalter
41. (B) Derrida – Deconstruction
42. (C) Anita Desai – Interpreter of Maladies
43. (D) Movement
44. (B) Macbeth Act V, Scene V – See the full quote below
45. (D) Death by Water
46. (C) Thought Fox
47. (D) 2- 4 – 1 – 3
48. (D) A Room of One’s Own
49. (A) Malaproprism
50. (C) Svetlana Alexievich


Answer Key
1 - B 11 – D 21 – B 31 – C 41 – B
2 – B 12 – A 22 – C 32 – D 42 – C
3 – C 13 – C 23 – A 33 – B 43 – D
4 – A 14 – B 24 – A 34 – A 44 – B
5 – A 15 – A 25 – B 35 – D 45 – B
6 – D 16 – D 26 - B 36 – B 46 – C
7 – D 17 – C 27 – C 37 – C 47 – D
8 – B 18 – B 28 – B 38 – D 48 – D
9 – A 19 – A 29 – A 39 – B 49 – A
10 - B 20 – B 30 – C 40 - B 50 – C


Wednesday 25 May 2016

JAMMU-KASHMIR ENGLISH SET – 22 May 2016 – PAPER III – MODEL ANSWER KEY



JAMMU-KASHMIR ENGLISH SET – 22 May 2016 –

PAPER III – MODEL ANSWER KEY

By Anil S Awad
English Net/SET/SLET Consultant
Email – anilawad123@gmail.com
Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)

Hello Aspirants,
I am herewith posting/sharing the Answer Key for Jammu Kashmir English NET Paper II. This is model answer key and not authentic key. I have tried my best to provide ideal model answers to all the 75 Questions in Paper II.  It is my great pleasure to inform you that almost 40 to 42 questions (out of 70, excluding poetry passage) are directly from my Study Notes and Online Guidance Course. Before moving to the key, let me clear some points –

1)   It is model answer key and prepared by me (Anil S Awad), not final answer key. Please tally the key with the Authentic Key published by the competent authority, when it will be issued.

2)   Please don’t ask such irrelevant questions, like – what will be the merit/cut off/qualifying marks for Open/SC/ST/OBC etc. It is improbable to anyone to guess it now. 

3)   Instead of waiting for the result, I humbly advise you to start preparing for July 2016 Net as well as the upcoming SET Exams.

4)   It is my humble request not to modify the key – any answers (or even my name) for purpose of sharing/re-posting it.

5)   Some fake professionals are misusing my name, and calling me either as their teacher or student to impress the NET/SET aspirants.  I appeal you to keep alert from such misleading and fake professionals. Don’t believe them.
6)   You can share this key on your timeline from my time or my Facebook Page – English Net Study Notes and Online Guidance 

7)   You can read this key anytime on my Blog Spot. If any rectifications in the key, it will be made available on the blog.  – Anil Awad’s Judgement on Literature.

Anil S Awad

English Net/SET Consultant

Email – anilawad123@gmail.com

Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)

1.       ‘The Time Machine’ by H G Wells is a notable work of _____fiction.
A)     Detective
B)      Romantic
C)      Historical
D)     Science
Answer - D) Science 

Explanation – The Time Machine is a novel by H G Wells Published in 1895.
2.        The author of Hundred Years of Solitude is _____
A)     Gabriel Garcia Marquez
B)      Gabriel Macht
C)      Gabriel Meredith
D)     Gabriel Monnet
Answer - A) Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Explanation - One Hundred Years of Solitude (Spanish: Cien años de soledad) is a 1967 novel by Colombian author Gabriel García Márquez that tells the multi-generational story of the Buendía family.
3.       R K Narayan employs an Indian myth in which of the following novels?
A)     The English Teacher
B)      Man Eater of Malgudi
C)      The Guide
D)     Waiting for Mahatma
Answer – (B) Man Eater of Malguid
 
4.       Identify the play from which the following line has been taken:
Well – I do – all right? – thank everybody! And forgive me for ever wanting to be anything at all! (Pursuing him on her knees across the floor) FORGIVE ME, FORGIVE ME, FORGIVE ME!
A)     Raisin in the Sun
B)      Death of a Sales Man
C)      Street Car Named Desire
D)     Doll’s House
Answer – (A) Raisin in the Sun (Play by Lorraine Hansberry)

5.       Match List I with List – II according to the code given below:

LIST – (WRITERS)
LIST – II (WORKS)
i)                    Jamaica Kinkaid
1.       Voss
ii)                   Caryll Phillip
2.       A small Place
iii)                 Ngugi wa Thiong’s
3.       Cambridge
iv)                 Pratick white
4.       Weep not Child
Code:

i
ii
iii
iv
A
3
2
1
4
B
2
1
3
4
C
2
3
4
1
D
3
1
4
2

Answer – (C)

6.       The first chapter of The Wretched of the Earth by Frantz Fanon is entitled:
A)     Concerning the Earth
B)      Concerning Violence
C)      Concerning Freedom
D)     Concerning Struggle
Answer – B) Concerning Violence 

7.       Thus language and literature were taking us further and further from overselves to other selves, from out world to other worlds.
The above line appears in which of Ngui wa Thiongo’s works:
A)     A grain of Wheat
B)      Devil on the Cross
C)      Decolonizing the Mind
D)     A River Between
Answer – (C) Decolonizing Mind 

8.       The Indian writer known for his novel on Partition, who passed away in March 2014, is:
A)     Khuswant Singh
B)      Sadat Hasan Manto
C)      Ruth Prawar Jhabwala
D)     Mulk Raj Anandi
Answer – (A) Khuswant Sing

9.       Match List – I with List II according to the code given below:
LIST – I NOVELS OF CHEBE
LIST – II – YEARS OF PUBLICATION
i)                    Things Fall Apart
1.       1966
ii)                   The Man of the People
2.       1960
iii)                 No Longer at Ease
3.       1964
iv)                 Arrow of God
4.       1958

CODE:

i
ii
iii
iv
A
3
2
1
4
B
4
1
2
3
C
2
3
4
1
D
3
1
4
2

Answer – (B)

10.   V S Naipul’s essay Indian Autobiographies is taken from the anthology entitled:
A)     India a Wounded Civilization
B)      An Area of Darkness
C)      Literary Occasions
D)     The Mimic Men
Answer - C) Literary Occasions

11.   Which of the following arrangements is in the correct chronological sequence?
A)     Voices in the City, Bye bye Blackbird, Cry the Peacock, Games at Weilight
B)      Bye bye Blackbird, Voices in the City, Games at Twilight, Cry the Peacock
C)      Cry the Peacock, Voices in the City, Bye bye Blackbird, Games at Twilight
D)     Games at Twilight, Voices in the City, Bye bye Blackbird, Cry the Peacock 

Answer – (C) Cry the Peacock, Voices in the City, Bye bye Blackbird, Games at Twilight
Explanation –
 Cry, the Peacock – 1963
Voices in the City - 1965
Bye bye Blackbird – 1971
Games at Twilight – 1978

12.   Annihilation of Castle by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar is originally a_____
A)     essay
B)      speech
C)      dissertation
D)     thesis
Answer – (B) speech

13.   Towards an Aesthetics of Dalit Literature is written by_____
A)     Sharan Kumar Limbale
B)      Om Prakash Valmiki
C)      Gurram Jashuva
D)     Arun Kamble
Answer – (A) Sharan Kumar Limbale 

14.   Select from among the following novels, the one that best suits the description below:
I.                    Harikantha was used to arouse social consciousness
II.                  Hyphenated words used to suit the local colour and flavor
III.                Written in the backdrop of south Indian Village
IV.                An old woman narrates the story
The novel is ________
A)     Serpent and the Rope
B)      Kanthapura
C)      Cat and Shakespeare
D)     The Great Indian Way
Answer – (B) Kantapura

15.   Albert Camus’s ‘The Outsider’ is based on one of the following myths:
A)     Myth of Titan
B)      Myth of Zeus
C)      Myth of Sisyphus
D)     Myth of Apollo
Answer – (C) Myth of Sisyphus


Anil S Awad

English Net/SET Consultant

Email – anilawad123@gmail.com

Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)

16.   In ‘Midnight’s Children’ the Reader Response theory becomes operative through one of the following characters:
A)     Padma
B)      Saleem Sinai
C)      Parvathi
D)     Mary Percy
Answer – (B) Salem Sinai
Explanation - Salem Sinai is narrator of the novel and from the beginning he starts to address to the readers. 

17.   The novel that won Booker Prize for the year 2008 is:
A)     The White Tiger
B)      Monk Who Sold his Ferrari
C)      Sea of Poppies
D)     Inheritance of Loss
Answer – (A) The White Tiger (By Arvind Adiga) 

18.   Which of the following statements is NOT true of Girish Karnad’s ‘Hayavadana’?
A)     Identify crisis as central theme
B)      Elaborate use of mythology
C)      Blend of old and modern traditions
D)     Five act play
Answer – (D) Five act play (It is two act play)

19.   Match List - I with List – II according to the code given below:

LIST – I (WRITERS)
LIST – II (WORKS)
i)                    Chitra Banerjee
1.       Interpreter of Maladies
ii)                   Kavery Nambisan
2.       Palace of Illusions
iii)                 Jumpa Lahiri
3.       Mango Coloured Fish
iv)                 Bharati Mukherjee
4.       Management of Grief
Code:

i
ii
iii
iv
A
3
2
1
4
B
4
1
2
3
C
2
3
1
4
D
3
1
4
2

Answer – (C)

20.   The Nobel Prize for literature for the year 2013 was awarded to:
A)     Alice Munro
B)      Toni Morrison
C)      Buchi Emeecheta
D)     Doris Lessing
Answer – (A) Alice Munro 

21.   ‘Orientalism’ by Edward Said is a fundamental text on:
A)     Post-colonial studies
B)      Post-structural studies
C)      Post-modern studies
D)     Post-impressionism studies
Answer – (A) Post-colonial studies 

22.   In 1967, Jacques Derrida heralded a new literary interpretation called:
A)     Structuralism
B)      Historicism
C)      Deconstruction
D)     New Criticism
Answer – (C) Deconstruction 

23.   The figure of speech employed in the phrase ‘America is a melting pot’ is:
A)     Simile
B)      Metaphor
C)      Metonymy
D)     Hyperbole
Answer – (B) Metaphor 

24.   The line, ‘Rare and radiant maiden’ is a good example of:
A)     Rhyme
B)      Onomatopoeia
C)      Alliteration
D)     Parallelism
Answer – (C) Alliteration 

In the following sentences numbering 25-26, choose the correct one word substitute that best defines the sentences.

25.   A prearranged place of meeting:
A)     Multifarious
B)      Rendezvous
C)      Necessitate
D)     Insurrection
Answer –(B) Rendezvous 

26.   A giving characterized by liberality or generosity:
A)     Munificence
B)      Nebulous
C)      Promoter
D)     Squander
Answer – (A) Munificence

In the following questions 27-20, four alternatives are given for the idioms/phrase marked in bold. Form among the options given below, choose the alternative which best express the meaning of the idiom.

27.   I don’t know what made him spill the beans about his plans to his friends.
A)     Waste time
B)      Complete the work
C)      Disclose secret
D)     Use time properly
Answer – (C) Disclose Secret 

28.   Her indifferent attitude towards her classmates added insult to injury.
A)     Deeply hurt
B)      Solved all the problems
C)      Satisfying
D)     Broke the silence
Answer – (A) Deeply hurt (making the bad things worse) 

29.   When does the convocation come off?
A)     Get cancelled
B)      Happen
C)      Amount to
D)     Carried off
Answer – (B) Happen 

30.   Identify the correctly-matched poets and their works from the following:
A)     Parthasarathy – Introduction;  Kamala Das – From Homecoming; Nissim Ezekiel – Obituary; A K Ramanujan – Enterprise
B)      Parthasarathy – Enterprise; Kamala Das – Introduction; Nissim Ezekiel – Obituary; A K Ramanujan – From Homecoming
C)      Parthasarathy – Obituary; Kamala Das – From Homecoming, Nissim Ezekiel – Enterprise, A K Ramanujan – Introduction
D)     Parthasarathy – From Homecoming, Kamala Das – Introduction, Nissim Ezekiel – Enterprise, A K Ramanujan – Obituary
Answer - D)        Parthasarathy – From Homecoming, Kamala Das – Introduction, Nissim Ezekiel – Enterprise, A K Ramanujan – Obituary

Anil S Awad

English Net/SET Consultant

Email – anilawad123@gmail.com

Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)

31.   Mark Twain is the pen name of:
A)     Samuel Richards
B)      Samuel Langhome Clemens
C)      Samuel Climber
D)     Samuel Cleveland
Answer – (B)  Samuel Langhome Clemens 

32.   The sub title of ‘Walden’ by Henry David Thoreau is:
A)     Life in Walden
B)      Life in the Wilderness
C)      Life in the Woods
D)     Life in War
Answer – (C) Life in the Woods 

33.   The original name of Maxim Gorky, the Russian writer of fiction and drama is:
A)     Goliardic Kreshkov
B)      Ronsardo Felixikov
C)      Malthias Serpieri
D)     Aleksei Peshkov
Answer – (D) Aleksei Peshkov 

34.   _________is the story of a nameless man who struggles to reconcile himself with the reality of post-independence Ghana written by Ayi Kwei Armah.
A)     Why are we so Best
B)      Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born
C)      Fragments
D)     The Healers
Answer - (B) Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born
35.   The play______by Wole Soyinka was presented at the Nigerian Independence celebrations in 1960.
A)     A Dance of the forests
B)      Mad Man and Specialists
C)      The Lion and the Jewel
D)     A Play of Giants
Answer - (A) A Dance of the Forests

36.   Ned Kelly by Douglas Stelwart is a play based on the life of a______
A)     Nigerian freedom fighter
B)      Australian Outlaw
C)      Ghana’s political leader
D)     New Zealand’s prominent poet
Answer –( B) Australian Outlaw 

Question Nos. 37 to 41 are based on a poem. Read the poem carefully and pick out the most appropriate answers
I know Why the Caged Bird Sing
A free bird leaps
on the back of the wind  
and floats downstream  
till the current ends
and dips his wing
in the orange sun rays
and dares to claim the sky.

But a bird that stalks
down his narrow cage
can seldom see through
his bars of rage
his wings are clipped and  
his feet are tied
so he opens his throat to sing.

37.   The above poem is written by________
A)     Phillis Wheately
B)      Maya Angelou
C)      Langston Hughes
D)     Rita Dove
Answer – (B) Maya Angelou

38.   The theme of the above poem is ______
A)     Racial discrimination
B)      Migration
C)      Refugee
D)     Rita Dove
Answer – (A) Racial Discrimination
39.   The Bird stands as a metaphor for:
A)     Flying
B)      Singing
C)      Floating
D)     Freedom
Answer – (D) Freedom

40.   The phrase ‘Wings are clipped’ indicates
A)     Restricted freedom
B)      Enrich Beauty
C)      Fly better
D)     Enable singing
Answer – (A) Restricted freedom 

41.   This poem represents two birds; one bird represent _____and the other represents______
A)     African and European
B)      African and American
C)      American and European
D)     Australian and European
Answer – (A) African and European 

42.   ________ is the poet known for using animal images in his poems.
A)     Philip Larkin
B)      Robert Graves
C)      Ted Hughes
D)     Thom Gunn
Answer – (C) Ted Hughes 

43.   Match List I with List II according to the code given below:

LIST – I (LAST LINE
LIST – II (POEM)
i)                    Where ignorant armies clash by night
1.       Telephone Coversation
ii)                   Madam, I pleaded, wouldn’t you rather see for yourself
2.       Dover Beach
iii)                 And each slow dusk a drawing down of blinds
3.       The Unknown Citizen
iv)                 Had anything been wrong, we should certainly have heard Youth
4.       Anthem for Doomed

Code:

i
ii
iii
iv
A
3
2
1
4
B
4
1
2
3
C
2
1
4
3
D
3
1
4
2

Answer – (C)

44.   Identify the novel from which this last line has been taken: He had already chosen the title of the book, after much thought: The Pacification of the Primitive Tribes of the Lower Niger.
A)     A Grain of Wheat
B)      Things Fall Apart
C)      Ant Hills of Savannah
D)     A Man of the People
Answer – (B) Things Fall Apart 

45.   Which of the following arrangements is in the correct chronological sequence of Buchi Emeecheta’s novels?
A)     Second-Class Citizen, The Bride Price, The Slave Girl, The Joys of Motherhood
B)      The Bride Price, Second Class Citizen, The Joy of Motherhood, The Slave Girl
C)      The Slave Girl, The Bride Price, Second-Class Citizen, The Joy of Motherhood
D)     The Bride Price, Second-class Citizen, The Joys of Motherhood, The Slave Girl

Answer – (A) Second-Class Citizen, The Bride Price, The Slave Girl, The Joys of Motherhood
Explanation – All these novels are by Buchi Emecheta .
Second Class Citizen – 1974
The Bride Price – 1976
The Slave girl – 1977
The Joys of Motherhood 1979

Anil S Awad

English Net/SET Consultant

Email – anilawad123@gmail.com

Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)

46.   Identify the play from where these lines have been taken:
Ism to ism for ism is ism
Of isms and isms on absolute ism
To demonstrate the tree of life
Is sprung from broken peat

A)     The Man Died
B)      The Interpreters
C)      Kongi’s Harvest
D)     King Baabu
Answer – (C) Kongi’s Harvent 

47.   Which Caribbean poet of 20th century makes folk music a major part of his poetry in which he presents drumming, work songs and blues?
A)     Linton Kwesi Johnson
B)      Kamau Brathwaite
C)      Derek Walcott
D)     Cynthia James
Answer –  (B) Kamau Brathwaite 

48.   Feminist Theory: From Margin to Centre is written by:
A)     Bell Hooks
B)      Terry Eagleton
C)      Elaine Showalter
D)     Kate Miller
Answer – (A) Bell Hooks

49.   In Franz Kafka’s Metamorphosis, Gregor Samsa wakes up to find himself transformed into a big:
A)     Elephant
B)      Snake
C)      Insect
D)     Tiger
Answer – (C) Insect

50.   Match List I with List II according to the code given below:

LIST – I – CHARACTERS
LIST – II - WORKS
I.                    Natraj
1.       Untouchable
II.                  Raju
2.       The Guide
III.                Ratna
3.       Man Eater of Malgudi
IV.                Bakha
4.       Kanthapura

Code:


I
II
III
IV
A
2
1
3
4
B
3
2
4
1
C
4
1
2
3
D
1
2
3
4

Answer – (B)

51.   Identify the poem from where these lines are taken:
Lo, soul! Seest thou not God’s purpose from the first?
The earth to be spanne’d, connected by net-work,
The people to become brothers and sisters,
The races, neighbors, to marry and be given in marriage,
The ocens to be cross’d, the distant brought near,
The lands to be welded together.

A)     Leaves of Grass
B)      A Passage to India
C)      Song of Myself
D)     Captain! My Captain
Answer – (B) A Passage to India 

52.   Of the following characters, which one does not belong to A House for Mr. Biswas?
A)     Shama
B)      Anand
C)      Raina
D)     Owad
Answer – (C) Raina 

53.   Identify the novel which has a wrong sub title:
A)     Vanity Fair: A Novel without a Hero
B)      Pamela: Purity rewarded
C)      Frakenstein: The modern Prometheus
D)     Tess: Pure Woman
Answer – (B) Pamela : Purity rewarded (Actually, Pamela: Virtue Rewarded) 

54.   What is register in terms of linguistics?
A)     The way in which a language registers in the minds of its users
B)      The way users of a language register the nuances of that language
C)      A variety of language used for particular purpose or in a particular social setting
D)     A variety of language used in non-professional or informal situations by professionals.

Answer – (C) A variety of language used for particular purpose or in a particular social setting.

55.   “Womanist is to feminist as purple is to lavender” This is an important statement defining the womanist perspective advanced by:
A)     Toni Morrison
B)      Alice Walker
C)      Zora Neale Hurston
D)     Bell Hooks
Answer – (B) Alice Walker 

56.   Match List I with List II according to the code given below:

LIST – I
LIST – II
I.                    Theatre of Cruelty
      1. Martin Esslin
II.                  Theatre of the Opressed
      2. Georg Kaiser
III.                Expressionist Theatre
      3. Augusto Boal
IV.                Absurd Theatre
       4. Antonin Artaud

Code:

I
II
III
IV
A
1
2
4
3
B
1
4
2
3
C
2
3
1
4
D
4
3
2
1

Answer – (D)

57.   ______ is usually shaped as a twin, shadow, or mirror image of a protagonist. It refers to a character who physically resembles the protagonist and may have the same name as well.
A)     Doppelganger
B)      Fore Shadowing
C)      Anti Hero
D)     Flat Character
Answer – (A) Doppelganger 

58.   _______ is subordination of one clause to another, or when the clasues are coordinated or subordinated to one another within sentences.
A)     Jaxtaposition
B)      Hypotaxis
C)      Inference
D)     Isocolon
Answer – (B) Hypotaxis 

59.   A poetic device that gives a feeling of natural or physical bodily movement or action like a heartbeat, a pulse and breathing is called:
A)     Kinesics
B)      Motif
C)      Kinesthesia
D)     Metalepsis
Answer – (C) Kinesthesia

60.   Identify the novel in which the protagonist is a World War II veteran called Tayo who suffers from Shell Shock:
A)     Beloved
B)      Ceremony
C)      Daisy Miller
D)     Enter, Conversing
Answer – (B) Ceremony

Anil S Awad

English Net/SET Consultant

Email – anilawad123@gmail.com

Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)

61.   House Made of Dawn is a novel written by which of the following writers:
A)     V S Naipaul
B)      James Welch
C)      Leslie Silko
D)     Scott Momaday
Answer – (D) Scott Momaday 

62.   Which of the following plays of Sean O’Casey is set in Dublin at the height of Civil War of 1922?
A)     Juno and the Paycock
B)      Shadow of a Gun Man
C)      The Plough and the Stars
D)     The Silver Tassie
Answer – (A) Juno and the Peycock 

63.   ______ is a poem or other form of writing in which the first letter, syllable or word of each line, paragraph or other recurring feature in the text spells out a word or a message.
A)     Acrostic
B)      Alexandrine
C)      Haiku
D)     Ars Poetica
Answer – (A) Acrostic

64.   The action in the Play Boy of the Western World written by J M Synge, takes place in the coast of:
A)     Miami
B)      Mayo
C)      Maine
D)     Monaco
Answer – (B) Mayo

65.   In which year did Saul Bellow’s novel Mr. Sammler’s Planet win the National Book Award for Fiction?
A)     1960
B)      1964
C)      1968
D)     1971
Answer – (D) 1971 

66.   In which of the following cities was the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn set?
A)     St. Petersburg
B)      Missouri
C)      New York
D)     Ohio
Answer – (B) Missouri 

67.   Which play of Eugene O’Neil depicts 1692 Salem trails in the era of McCarthycism in the USA?
A)     All My Sons
B)      Death of a Salesman
C)      The Crucible
D)     Hairy Ape
Answer – (C) The Crucible 

68.   Which of the following philosopher and critic of literature was the husband of George Eliot?
A)     George Henry Lewis
B)      Sir William Fredrick Pollack
C)      Richard Sampson
D)     Austen-Leigh
Answer – (A) George HenryLewis
69.   Which of the following novels of Charles Dickens was published as a serial in ‘Household Words’ from April to August 1854:
A)     The Old Curiosity Shop
B)      Dombey and Son
C)      David Copperfield
D)     Hard Times
Answer – (D) Hard Times 

70.   Which one of the following novelists said: I have no brains about my eyes: I describe what I see:
A)     William Thackeray
B)      Charles Dickens
C)      Thomas Hardy
D)     George Eliot
Answer – (A) William Thackeray 

71.   The narrator of the story The Great Gatsby is:
A)     Jordan Baker
B)      Jay Gatsby
C)      Nick Carraway
D)     Daisy Buchanan
Answer – (C) Nick Carraway 

72.   In the play Death of a Salesman, what sound is heard before the curtain rises:
A)     Bagpipes playing a highland lament
B)      Fiddle music reminiscent of the country side
C)      A melody played on flute
D)     A piano playing song
Answer – (C) A melody played on flute
73.   The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner is partly narrated by:
A)     Benjy
B)      Caddy
C)      Quentin
D)     Jason
Answer – (A) Benjy
74.   Which of the following novels of D H Lawrence is set in Mexico?
A)     Sons and Lovers
B)      Rainbow
C)      The Plumed Serpent
D)     The White Peacock
Answer – (C) The Plumed Serpent

75.   ______was the leader of Confessional School that emerged in America in 1950s.
A)     Robert Lowell
B)      Sylvia Plath
C)      John Berryman
D)     W D Snodgras
Answer – (A) Robert Lowell 

Anil S Awad

English Net/SET Consultant

Email – anilawad123@gmail.com

Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)

MODEL KEY IN SHORT  –JAMMU KASHIMR  SET -  III PAPER – ENGLISH 
1.       D) Science
2.       A) Gabriel Garcia Marquez
3.       (B) Man Eater of Malguid
4.       (A) Raisin in the Sun (Play by Lorraine Hansberry)
5.       (C)  2 – 3 – 4 – 1
6.       (B) Concerning Violence
7.       (C) Decolonizing Mind
8.       (A) Khuswant Sing
9.       (B)  4 – 1 – 2 – 3
10.   (C) Literary Occasions
11.   (C) Cry the Peacock, Voices in the City, Bye bye Blackbird, Games at Twilight
12.   (B) speech
13.   (A) Sharan Kumar Limbale
14.   (B) Kantapura
15.   (C) Myth of Sisyphus
16.   (B) Salem Sinai
17.   (A) The White Tiger (By Arvind Adiga)
18.   (D) Five act play (It is two act play)
19.   (C)  2 – 3 – 1 – 4
20.   (A) Alice Munro
21.   (A) Post-colonial studies
22.   (C) Deconstruction
23.   (B) Metaphor
24.   (C) Alliteration
25.   (B) Rendezvous
26.   (A) Munificence
27.   (C) Disclose Secret
28.   (A) Deeply hurt (making the bad things worse)
29.   (B) Happen
30.   D) Parthasarathy – From Homecoming, Kamala Das – Introduction, Nissim Ezekiel – Enterprise, A K Ramanujan – Obituary
31.   (B)  Samuel Langhome Clemens
32.   (C) Life in the Woods
33.   (D) Aleksei Peshkov
34.   (B) Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born
35.   (A) A Dance of the Forests
36.   ( B) Australian Outlaw
37.   (B) Maya Angelou
38.   (A) Racial Discrimination
39.   (D) Freedom
40.   (A) Restricted freedom
41.   (A) African and European
42.   (C) Ted Hughes
43.   (C) 2 – 1 – 4 – 3
44.   (B) Things Fall Apart
45.   (A) Second-Class Citizen, The Bride Price, The Slave Girl, The Joys of Motherhood
46.   (C) Kongi’s Harvent
47.   (B) Kamau Brathwaite
48.   (A) Bell Hooks
49.   (C) Insect
50.   (B) 3 – 2 – 4 -1
51.   (B) A Passage to India
52.   (C) Raina
53.   (B) Pamela : Purity rewarded (Actually, Pamela: Virtue Rewarded)
54.   (C) A variety of language used for particular purpose or in a particular social setting.
55.   (B) Alice Walker
56.   (D) 4 – 3 – 2 – 1
57.   (A) Doppelganger
58.   (B) Hypotaxis
59.   (C) Kinesthesia
60.   (B) Ceremony
61.   (D) Scott Momaday
62.   (A) Juno and the Peycock
63.   (A) Acrostic
64.   (B) Mayo
65.   (D) 1971
66.   (B) Missouri
67.   (C) The Crucible
68.   (A) George HenryLewis
69.   (D) Hard Times
70.   (A) William Thackeray
71.   (C) Nick Carraway
72.   (C) A melody played on flute
73.   (A) Benjy
74.   (C) The Plumed Serpent
75.   (A) Robert Lowell

Anil S Awad

English Net/SET Consultant

Email – anilawad123@gmail.com

Mobile No. 09922113364 (WhatsApp), 09423403368 (BSNL)