GOOD BYE MR. CHIPS
Chapter no. 9Synonyms
1.
Chips
changed hid more commodiousapartment in school house for his old original
bachelor quarters. (MN 17-II)
a.
spacious
b.
decorated
c.
beautiful
d.
ugly
2.
Just
as marriage had added something, so did bereavement after the first
stupor of grief. (LR,
MN 17-I) (SW 17-II) (FB 18-I)
a.
teaching
b.
old age
c.
row
d.
deprivation
3.
Just
as marriage had added something, so did bereavement after the first stupor
of grief.
a.
attack
b.
trance
c.
feelings
d.
phase
4.
Chips
used to recount that incident with many chuckles.
a.
sorrows
b.
tears
c.
laughs
d.
feelings
5.
There
settled upon Chips a mellowness that gathered all his developing
mannerisms.
a.
happiness
b.
sadness
c.
maturity
d.
responsibility
6.
Chips
had won, by seniority and ripeness, an uncharted no-man’s –land of
privilege.
a.
unchallenged
b.
undesired
c.
unwanted
d.
unexplored
7.
He
had acquired the right to those gentle eccentricities that so often
attack schoolmasters and parsons.
a.
oddities
b.
manners
c.
feelings
d.
dreams
8.
It
was with an air to mystic abandonment to ritual.
a.
attitude
b.
style
c.
worship
d.
yielding
9.
That
verifying glance was an easy and favorite subject of mimicry throughout.
a.
laughing
b.
copying
c.
joking
d.
criticism
10. A gaze half rapt half quizzical.
a.
diseased
b.
wept
c.
correct
d.
covered
11. A gaze half rapt half quizzical.
a.
questioning
b.
humorous
c.
open
d.
close
12. And on windy days with green and white hair and school-list fluttering
in uproarious confusion.
a.
flying
b.
printing
c.
writing
d.
tearing
13. And on windy days with green and white hair and school-list
fluttering in uproarious confusion.
a.
severe
b.
obvious
c.
noisy
d.
fatal
14. He wore his gown till it was almost to tattered to hold
together.
a.
dirty
b.
torn
c.
colorless
d.
old
15. The whole thing became a comic turn sandwiched between
afternoon games and the return to classes.
a.
squeezed
b.
pause
c.
enjoyment
d.
sadness
16. Some of those names, in little snatches of a chorus, recurred
to him ever afterwards.
a.
sent
b.
blamed
c.
occurred again
d.
encouraged
17. How far had they scattered, some break others to weave into
unknown pattern.
a.
move
b.
travel
c.
lost
d.
interlock
18. The strange randomness of the world beguiled him. (RP 16-I)
a.
philosophy
b.
attitude
c.
aimlessness
d.
expression
19. The strange randomness of the world beguiled him. (RP 16-I)
a.
blamed
b.
cheated
c.
expose
d.
agree
20. She had not between able to bequeath him all her mind,
still.
a.
Pass on
b.
compose
c.
expose
d.
resist
21. He had not share the general jingo bitterness against the
Boers.
a.
attitude
b.
patriotic
c.
war-like
d.
opinion
22. However heretical he might be about the Boers, he was
orthodox about Mr. Lioyd George.
a.
emotional
b.
prejudiced
c.
having different views
d.
sensitive
23. However heretical he might be about the Boers, he was orthodox
about Mr. Lioyd George.
a.
confused
b.
upset
c.
conventional
d.
stern
24. Behind Brookfield, one may glimpse a mountain behind another
mountain.
a.
visit
b.
climb
c.
clean
d.
see
25. The head standing with them was aghast. (BP 17-II)
a.
pleased
b.
horrified
c.
grieved
d.
pinched
26. He wore a tattered gown. (DG 17-II)
a.
dirty
b.
torn
c.
colorless
d.
old
27. Mr. Chips did not feel different about his work.
a.
bold
b.
brave
c.
shy
d.
coward
28. Katherine had not been able to bequeath all her mind to him.
(DG
17-I)
a.
conceal
b.
read
c.
grant
d.
afford
Answers:
1. |
a |
2. |
d |
3. |
b |
4. |
c |
5. |
c |
6. |
d |
7. |
a |
8. |
d |
9. |
b |
10. |
d |
11. |
a |
12. |
a |
13. |
c |
14. |
b |
15. |
a |
16. |
c |
17. |
d |
18. |
c |
19. |
b |
20. |
a |
21. |
c |
22. |
c |
23. |
c |
24. |
d |
25. |
b |
26. |
b |
27. |
c |
28. |
c |
|
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