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GOOD BYE MR. CHIPS II Chapter no. 4, 5, 6 II Synonyms

                                     GOOD BYE MR. CHIPS

Chapter no. 4, 5, 6

Synonyms

1.      There came to him, stirred by the warmth of the fire and gentle aroma of tea. (SG 15-II) (MN 17-II)

a.       excited

b.      called

c.       dream

d.      desired

2.      There came to him, stirred by the warmth of the fire and gentle aroma of tea.

a.       cup

b.      color

c.       smell

d.      demand

3.      There came to him thousand tangled recollections of old times.

a.       mixed

b.      bitter

c.       pleasant

d.      clear

4.      An age at which a permanence of habits begins to be predictable.

a.       effect

b.      style

c.       value

d.      constancy

5.       An age at which a permanence of habits begins to be predictable.

a.       guessable

b.      acceptable

c.       opposed

d.      desirable

6.      He boarded in a small farmhouse.

a.       fought

b.      lodged

c.       locked

d.      found

7.      Thinking she was in difficulties, he hastened towards her.

a.       scrawled

b.      walked

c.       rushed

d.      looked

8.      But in doing so slopped himself, and wrenched his ankle. (DG 17-I,II)

a.       twisted

b.      rubbed

c.       slipped

d.      broke

9.      She was merely signaling to a friend farther down in the mountain.

a.       criticizing

b.      saying

c.       looking

d.      beckoning

10.  He found himself the rescued instead of the rescuer.

a.       injured

b.      culprit

c.       saved

d.      guilty

11.  He was quite, conventional person, and the world viewed from the haven of Brookfield.(SG 15-II) (RP 18-II)

a.       scholar

b.      traditional

c.       professional

d.      educated

12.  He was quite, conventional person, and the world viewed from the haven of Brookfield. (RP 15-I)

a.       building

b.      service

c.       safe place

d.      class room

13.  Bernard Shaw had the strangest and most reprehensible opinions. (RP 17-II) MN 18-II)

a.       odd

b.      strong

c.       objectionable

d.      positive

14.  He had vague notion, if he ever formulated it.

a.       created

b.      thought

c.       insisted

d.      enlisted

15.  The nice woman were weak, timid and delicate.

a.       loyal

b.      disloyal

c.       refined

d.      disobedient

16.  Nice men treated them with a polite but rather distant chivalry. (SG 17-I)

a.       love

b.      hatred

c.       co-operation

d.      bravery

17.  Mr. Chips had vague notion.

a.       radical

b.      vivid

c.       unclear

d.      polite

18.  She had blue, flashing eyes and freckle cheeks and smooth straw-colored hair.

a.       attractive

b.      colorful

c.       pretty

d.      heat spot

19.  In politics, she was a radical.(MN 15-II) (DG 19-II)

a.       neutral

b.      religious

c.       revolutionary

d.      extremist

20.  All her ideas and opinions she poured out the Chips.

a.       spilled

b.      imposed

c.       changed

d.      dictated

21.  Chips was not articulate about her ideas. (DG 16-II)

a.       radical

b.      dtrict

c.       expressive

d.      intelligent

22.  Chips sprain put him at Katherine’s mercy. (LR 15-II)

a.       discussion

b.      personality

c.       teaching

d.      injury

23.  He used to hobble with sticks along a footpath leading to the tiny church. (GW 15-I) (BP 18-II)

a.       stand

b.      run

c.       walk

d.      stagger

24.  It was comfortable to sit down, facing the sunlight and the Green-brown majesty of the Gable.

a.       Shape

b.      beauty

c.       splendor

d.      color

25.  It was comfortable to sit down, facing the sunlight and the Green-brown majesty of the Gable, and listening to the chatter of well yes.

a.       joke

b.      style

c.       talk

d.      opinion

26.  This “new woman” business, would repel him.

a.       dislike

b.      attract

c.       tease

d.      disturb

27.  She was making him positively look forward to the glimpse. If her safety bicycle careering along the lakeside road.

a.       sight

b.      style

c.       speed

d.      price

28.  She was making him positively look forward to the glimpse. If her safety bicycle careering along the lakeside road.

a.       standing

b.      moving fast

c.       dancing

d.      parking

29.  There come to him thousand tangled recollections of old times.

a.       reminiscences

b.      ideas

c.       picture

d.      horrifies

30.  He noticed a girl waving excitedly from a ledge.

a.       slowly

b.      actively

c.       enthusiastically

d.      horribly

31.  He called women monstrous creature.

a.       responsible

b.      ideal

c.       practical

d.      frightful

32.  Katherine thought that the people who disapprove of modernity were bores.

a.       Like

b.      appreciate

c.       term

d.      dislike

33.  Chips did not contradict with Katherine. (DG 15-I)

a.       stroll

b.      oppose

c.       correspond

d.      match

34.  Chips was rescued by the girl. (BP 17-I) LR 19-II)

a.       abrued

b.      cursed

c.       insulted

d.      saved

35.  Chips was not a very articulate. (SG 18-II)

a.       active

b.      stack

c.       slovenly

d.      eloquent

Answers:

1.

a

2.

c

3.

a

4.

c

5.

a

6.

b

7.

c

8.

a

9.

d

10.

c

11.

b

12.

c

13.

c

14.

a

15.

c

16.

d

17.

c

18.

d

19.

c

20.

a

21.

c

22.

d

23.

d

24.

c

25.

c

26.

a

27.

a

28.

b

29.

a

30.

c

31.

d

32.

d

33.

b

34.

d

35.

d

 



Chapter no. 5

Synonyms

1.      When Chips, dreaming through the hours at Mrs. Wickett’s recollected those days.

a.       forgot

b.      repented

c.       regretted

d.      remembered

2.      He used to look down at his feet and wonder which one it was that had performed so signal a service.

a.       excellent

b.      mild

c.       positive

d.      symbol

3.      The trivial cause of so many momentous happenings, was the one things of which details evaded him.

a.       huge

b.      ordinary

c.       technical

d.      important

4.      The trivial cause of so many momentous happenings, was the one things of which details evaded him.

a.       fatal

b.      dreadful

c.       significant

d.      pleasant

5.      The trivial cause of so many momentous happenings, was the one things of which details evaded him.

a.       Provided

b.      escaped

c.       refused

d.      available

6.      He re-saw the glorious hump of the Gable.

a.       huge

b.      majestic

c.       high

d.      useless

 

 

7.      He could re-smell the washed air after heavy rain, and re-follow the ribbon of the pass, across to sky head.

a.       strip

b.      involved

c.       rejected

d.      stayed

8.      So clearly it lingered that time of dizzy happiness, those evening strolls.

a.       indulged

b.      involved

c.       rejected

d.      stayed

9.      So clearly it lingered that time of dizzy happiness, those evening strolls.

a.       walks

b.      memories

c.       sports

d.      activities

10.  He had been rather serious about it, even a little awed.

a.       disturbed

b.      feared

c.       happy

d.      sad

11.  I was afraid you were a solicitor or a stockbroker.

a.       politician

b.      trader

c.       lawyer

d.      killer

12.  He had for some reason been afflicted with an acute desire to depreciate himself and all his attainments.

a.       possessed

b.      delighted

c.       troubled

d.      filled

13.  He had for some reason been afflictedwith an acute desire to depreciate himself and all his attainments.

a.       enjoyments

b.      duties

c.       relatives

d.      achievements

14.  He had told her of his only mediocre degree. (GW 17-II) (FB 18-II)

a.       precious

b.      notable

c.       average

d.      significant

15.  He would never get a promotion, and of his complete ineligibility to marry a young and ambitious girl.

a.       unsuitability

b.      desire

c.       resources

d.      unwillingness

16.  She said, with mock gravity.

a.       slight

b.      humorous

c.       seriousness

d.      feelings

17.  Green-pale gas-lamps flickering on a wet pavement.

a.       standing

b.      showing

c.       fixing

d.      shining

18.  He re-saw the glorious hump of the Gable.

a.       mound

b.      place

c.       ditch

d.      working

19.  So clearly it lingered that time of dizzy happiness, those evening strolls.

a.       delight

b.      bright

c.       faint

d.      exciting

20.  They had been so eager planning a future together.

a.       wondered

b.      worried

c.       puzzled

d.      keen

21.  She said, with mock gravity.

a.       fun

b.      happiness

c.       seriousness

d.      attainment

22.  Chips remembered the dizzy happiness. (FB 16-II)

a.       prominent

b.      certain

c.       puzzled

d.      extreme

Answers:

1.

D

2.

A

3.

b

4.

c

5.

b

6.

b

7.

a

8.

d

9.

D

10.

B

11.

c

12.

c

13.

d

14.

c

15.

a

16.

c

17.

A

18.

A

19.

c

20.

d

21.

c

22.

c

 

 

Chapter no. 6

a.        

b.      rigid

c.       traditional

d.      confined

2.      The one thing he had always had, a sense of humour, blossomed into a sudden richness.

a.       matured

b.      enjoyed

c.       formed

d.      transformed

3.      He began to make little jokes \, the sort those school-boys like mnemonics and puns.

a.       memorizing technique

b.      comment

c.       stories

d.      verses

 

4.      An outlook far beyond the roofs and turrets of Brookfield.

a.       towers

b.      windows

c.       rooms

d.      parks

5.      He remained, for instance a conservative in politics. (SG 17-I) (SW 18-I) (MN 18-II)

a.       neutral

b.      active

c.       honest

d.      orthodox

6.      To introduce a group of slum boys to the serene pleasances of better-class youngsters.

a.       holy

b.      peaceful

c.       beautiful

d.      pleasant

7.      At first a wanton stirring of all kinds of things that had better be left untouched.

a.       sudden

b.      slight

c.       careless

d.      strong

8.      Sometimes, she persuaded him completely.

a.       loved

b.      ignored

c.       convinced

d.      overcame

9.      Everyone was certain that the East End lads would be hooligans. (LR 15-I) (FB 19-II)

a.       rascals

b.      poor

c.       dull

d.      ugly

10.  You can’t satisfy your conscience by writing a cheque for a few guineas and keeping them at arm’s length.

a.       the poor

b.      school

c.       goods

d.      gold coins

11.  The volte-face was so complete that the authorities were taken unaware.

a.       opposition

b.      revolution

c.       dishonesty

d.      reversal

 

12.  Found themselves  consenting to the dangerous experiment.

a.       approving

b.      opposing

c.       suffering

d.      hating

13.  Everything has passes without the slighted hitch of any kind.

a.       opposition

b.      row

c.       problem

d.      gap

14.  She was immensely popular with boys and masters. (GW 19-II)

a.       enormously

b.      almost

c.       nearly

d.      only

15.  Mr. Chips was conscientious.(MN 18-I) (LR 18-II) (SW 19-I)

a.       hard working

b.      ill-tempered

c.       furious

d.      raged

16.  Chips was a fixture that gave service, satisfaction, confidence everything except inspiration.

a.       able

b.      constant

c.       stable

d.      staggering

17.   Katherine was a astonishing girl-wife. (SW 19-II)

a.       surprised

b.      wonderful

c.       contradictory

d.      lame

18.  Chips’ eyes gained sparkle.(RP 16-II)

a.       brilliance

b.      blindness

c.       slightness

d.      depression

19.  His mind began to move more adventurously.

a.       politely

b.      enterprisingly

c.       slowly

d.      lowly

 

 

20.  In a sense, he became less rigid.(GW 15-I) (MN 16-II) (LR 18-I) (SG 19-I) (RP 19-II)

a.       adamant

b.      orthodox

c.       mild

d.      conservative

21.  There was a law that permitted patricians to marry Plebeians.

a.       poor people/commoners

b.      royals

c.       aristocrats

d.      thieves

22.  He could not confute her ideas. (BP 18-II)

a.       confront

b.      continue

c.       refute/reject

d.      contribute

23.  Yet Katherine persisted. (FB 16-I)

a.       obliged

b.      requested

c.       told

d.      insisted

1.

a

2.

d

3.

d

4.

a

5.

c

6.

d

7.

c

8.

a

9.

a

10.

a

11.

d

12.

b

13.

c

14.

c

15.

d

16.

d

17.

d

18.

c

19.

a

20.

a

21.

b

22.

a

23.

a

24.

b

25.

a

26.

a

27.

c

28.

d

 

Answers:

 


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