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sanskrit-shabd-roop-dhatu-roop-sa-l2 MCQ — 10 Practice Questions with Answers

sanskrit-shabd-roop-dhatu-roop-sa-l2 is a language-sanskrit topic in the RAS/RPSC syllabus. This page gathers exam-style sanskrit-shabd-roop-dhatu-roop-sa-l2 multiple-choice questions with correct answers and explanations, so aspirants can test recall and revise frequently examined concepts.

Practice 10 sanskrit-shabd-roop-dhatu-roop-sa-l2 multiple-choice questions with detailed answers and explanations. Ideal for RAS/RPSC exam preparation.

10 Questions language-sanskrit

Reviewed by: Aspirant Academy Editorial Team

Practice Questions

Q1. Consider: (1) The tṛtīyā ekavacana of rāma is rāmeṇa. (2) The caturthī ekavacana of latā is latāyāḥ. Which statement(s) are correct?

A Only statement 1 Correct
B Only statement 2
C Both statements
D Neither statement

Explanation

Statement 1 is correct: the tṛtīyā ekavacana of the akārānta masculine rāma is rāmeṇa ('by Rama'). Statement 2 is wrong: the caturthī ekavacana of the ākārānta feminine latā is latāyai, while latāyāḥ is the pañcamī and ṣaṣṭhī ekavacana. So only statement 1 holds. The designed trap is the latā oblique cluster (latāyai vs latāyāḥ vs latāyām); mapping each ending to its case prevents accepting statement 2.

Q2. Assertion (A): The dvitīyā ekavacana of asmad is mām. Reason (R): asmad is a sarvanāma that declines suppletively, not on a single fixed stem. Choose the correct option.

A A is true, R is true, and R correctly explains A
B A is true, R is true, but R does not fully explain A Correct
C A is true, R is false
D A is false, R is true

Explanation

Both A and R are true: the dvitīyā ekavacana of asmad is mām (with the enclitic mā), and asmad is a sarvanāma that declines suppletively (ahaṃ, mām, mayā, mahyam, mat, mama, mayi). However, R explains only the general irregularity, not why the specific accusative singular is mām — that comes from the memorised pronoun paradigm, not from suppletion as a rule. Hence R is true but does not fully explain A.

Q3. The form gacchet of the root gam belongs to which lakāra, and what does it express?

A Vidhiliṅ — expresses 'should go' Correct
B Laṭ — expresses 'goes'
C Laṅ — expresses 'went'
D Loṭ — expresses 'let him go'

Explanation

gacchet is the vidhiliṅ prathama-puruṣa ekavacana of gam, the potential/optative lakāra expressing 'should go' (obligation, advice or possibility). The distractors are the same person-number cell in other lakāras: gacchati is laṭ (goes, present), agacchat is laṅ (went, imperfect past) and gacchatu is loṭ (let him go, imperative). The recurring REET trap is lakāra-time mismatch, so naming the time/mood explicitly separates the four cleanly.

Q4. In 'te vidyālayam ___' (they ___ to the school, past), with root bhū-class verb gam in laṅ for prathama-puruṣa bahuvacana, which form is correct?

A agacchat
B gacchanti
C agacchan Correct
D gacchantu

Explanation

The subject te is prathama-puruṣa bahuvacana and the sentence is past, so the verb must be laṅ plural. The laṅ prathama-puruṣa bahuvacana of gam is agacchan ('they went'), formed with the past augment a- and the plural ending. agacchat is laṅ but singular (he went), gacchanti is laṭ present (they go), and gacchantu is loṭ imperative (let them go). This item layers the two recurring traps together — lakāra-time mismatch and number disagreement — so both the augment and the plural ending must be checked.

Q5. For the akārānta napuṃsaka stem phala, which form is the prathamā bahuvacana (nominative plural)?

A phalāḥ
B phalam
C phalāni Correct
D phale

Explanation

The napuṃsaka stem phala differs from the masculine rāma only in prathamā and dvitīyā. Its prathamā bahuvacana is phalāni (also dvitīyā bahuvacana), the diagnostic neuter plural. phalāḥ wrongly transfers the rāma masculine plural; phalam is the singular; phale is the dual. This is the classic neuter-versus-masculine REET contrast: only the first two cases change, the rest follow rāma (phalena, phalāya, etc.).

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Frequently Asked Questions

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There are 10 sanskrit-shabd-roop-dhatu-roop-sa-l2 practice MCQs available on Aspirant Academy, with detailed answers and explanations for each question.
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How is sanskrit-shabd-roop-dhatu-roop-sa-l2 relevant to the RAS/RPSC exam?
sanskrit-shabd-roop-dhatu-roop-sa-l2 falls under the language-sanskrit section of the RAS/RPSC syllabus. It is a frequently tested area and regular practice with these MCQs will strengthen your preparation.
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