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degrees-of-comparison-en-l1 MCQ — 10 Practice Questions with Answers

Practice 10 degrees-of-comparison-en-l1 multiple-choice questions with detailed answers and explanations. Ideal for RAS/RPSC exam preparation.

10 Questions language-ii-english

Practice Questions

Q1. Assertion: "Beautifuler" is usually rejected in primary school grammar. Reason: Longer adjectives commonly use more and most.

A Assertion true, reason false.
B Both assertion and reason are true, and the reason explains the assertion. Correct
C Assertion false, reason true.
D Both assertion and reason are false.

Explanation

Beautiful is a longer adjective, so the safe school forms are more beautiful and most beautiful. This item is hard because some learners overgeneralise er and est from short adjectives. The reason explains the assertion and gives the correct rule for Karan to use.

Q2. Which set shows a longer adjective pattern?

A fast, faster, fastest
B late, later, latest
C careful, more careful, most careful Correct
D happy, happier, happiest

Explanation

Longer adjectives often use more and most instead of er and est. Careful is a useful classroom example because children may be tempted to say carefuler. The teacher should connect the form to sentences, such as Devika is more careful than Karan.

Q3. Match the signal with the likely degree: 1. than 2. of all 3. no comparison

A 1-comparative, 2-superlative, 3-positive Correct
B 1-positive, 2-comparative, 3-superlative
C 1-superlative, 2-positive, 3-comparative
D 1-comparative, 2-positive, 3-superlative

Explanation

Signal words are quick MCQ clues. Than normally points to comparative degree. Of all points to superlative degree because one item is being chosen from the group. When no comparison is made, the adjective stays in positive degree.

Q4. Which pair is correctly matched?

A good - gooder - goodest
B beautiful - beautifuler - beautifulest
C bad - worse - worst Correct
D small - more small - most small

Explanation

This item checks whether the candidate separates regular and irregular patterns. Devika should remember bad, worse, worst as a fixed irregular set. The other options either force regular endings onto irregular or longer adjectives, or use more and most where er and est are expected.

Q5. Asha says, "This pencil is tall." Which degree is tall?

A Positive degree Correct
B Comparative degree
C Superlative degree
D Irregular degree

Explanation

Positive describes a quality without comparing it. Asha is looking at one pencil only, so tall stays in the base form. The teacher should first ask whether another pencil or a group is present; if not, the positive degree is the safe answer.

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Q6. Assertion: "Karan is the tallest of the two boys" is incorrect. Reason: Superlative degree is normally used for a group of three or more.

A Both assertion and reason are false.
B Assertion is false but reason is true.
C Assertion is true but reason is false.
D Both assertion and reason are true, and the reason explains the assertion.
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Q7. Meena writes, "This is the most clean desk." What is the best correction?

A This is the cleaner desk of all.
B This is the cleanest desk.
C This is the more clean desk.
D This is the most cleanest desk.
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Q8. For an inclusive activity, a child using a wheelchair should not be asked to run to create comparison data. Which alternative keeps the grammar aim?

A Compare ramp lengths, desk heights, picture sizes, or story-card counts.
B Remove the child from the activity until the race is over.
C Give only written homework to that child.
D Ask another child to answer for the child.
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Q9. Imran compares two bags. Which sentence is correct?

A This bag is the heavy of that bag.
B This bag is heavier than that bag.
C This bag is most heavier than that bag.
D This bag is heaviest than that bag.
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Q10. Which two statements are correct? 1. "Than" often signals comparative degree. 2. "The" is never used before superlative degree. 3. "Good, better, best" is irregular.

A 1 and 2 only
B 2 and 3 only
C 1 only
D 1 and 3 only

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many degrees-of-comparison-en-l1 MCQ questions are available?
There are 10 degrees-of-comparison-en-l1 practice MCQs available on Aspirant Academy, with detailed answers and explanations for each question.
Are answers and explanations provided for degrees-of-comparison-en-l1 MCQs?
Yes, every degrees-of-comparison-en-l1 question comes with the correct answer and a detailed explanation to help you understand the underlying concept.
How is degrees-of-comparison-en-l1 relevant to the RAS/RPSC exam?
degrees-of-comparison-en-l1 falls under the language-ii-english section of the RAS/RPSC syllabus. It is a frequently tested area and regular practice with these MCQs will strengthen your preparation.
Can I practice degrees-of-comparison-en-l1 questions in Hindi?
Yes, Aspirant Academy offers bilingual support. You can practice degrees-of-comparison-en-l1 MCQs in both English and Hindi, including questions, options, and explanations.

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