Directions How to Answer

Aptitude Test Topic: Cloze

A cloze test is a test consisting of a portion of text with certain words removed and the test taker is asked to replace the missing words. Cloze tests require the ability to understand context and vocabulary in order to identify the correct words or type of words that belong in the deleted passages of a text.

Directions

In the following passage there are blanks, each of which has been numbered. These numbers are printed below the passage and against each, five words suggested, one of which fits the blank appropriately. Find out the appropriate word in each case.

To give the answer click/tap the option alphabet for your answer choice. for correct answer green check and for wrong answer a red cross will appear along with a button to show explanation with or without video of the question answer.

Cloze: Advanced Practice MCQ

Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?

Although printed cheaply and for quick consumption, 1 today's experience of culture is largely shaped by dime novels. For much of the nineteenth century, Americans consumed fiction, poetry, and non-fiction by way of literary periodicals. Some of our best-known authors from this period, 2 though there were also some notable exceptions, published something close to their complete works between the pages of countless periodicals.

Things started to change around the Civil War. Harriet Beecher Stowe's great 3 novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin had been an enormously popular serial novel in the abolitionist periodical The National Era. By the time the novel's forty-week run had concluded, however, publishers were clamoring for an actual book. That book went on to become the first American bestseller.4 And it showed that Americans were willing to pay for books, which had, to that point, been too expensive to print and subsequently to buy. 5

In 1860, Irwin and Erastus Beadle published the first in a long series of what 6 would become known as Beadle's Dime Novels. The first was called Malaeska, The Indian Wife of the White Hunter. By the turn of the nineteenth century, dime novels were everywhere.

The 7 affects are difficult to chart, but we can actually see the influence of these dime novels everywhere. Much of the mythology of the Old West, for example, was concretized in these dime novels, and William Bonney and James Butler Hickok became the folk heroes Billy the Kid and Wild Bill Hickok as the dime novels charted their (largely imagined) adventures.8

The new media of the twentieth-century—film, radio, and comic books—may have replaced the dime novel, but they did so with much they had 9 been taught from the dime novel's popularity. All three media, for instance, borrowed characters that had become popular in dime novels—characters such as Frank Reade and Nick Carter, Master Detective. Then, in comic books and radio, a new generation of superheroes—The Shadow, Superman, and Popeye—was created in the mold of the old swashbuckling romanciers of the dime-novel era.

So today, as we enjoy superhero action films or boy-wizard series of novels, we should be aware that there is nothing new under the sun. Indeed, 10 for our hopelessly mass-media universe, this now forgotten form laid the foundation, pushing the same books onto countless readers. Such a feat may be commonplace as films gross many billions of dollars at the box office, but in the nineteenth century, the dime novel brought a new 11 frame of reference and a belief that the small world was getting larger bit by bit.

Question Statement:

The author is considering deleting the names "Billy the Kid and Wild Bill Hickok" from the preceding sentence. Should the names be kept or deleted?

Kept, because they are specific names in a sentence that speaks in generalities.
Kept, because they demonstrate the transformation described in the sentence.
Deleted, because they are nicknames of people whose true names are already listed in the sentence.
Deleted, because they encourage the frontier behavior that made the Wild West such a violent place.

Explanation:

Correct Answer: B

B The correct choice will feature words or phrases that make the passage as precise as possible. Without the actual names, the phrase William Bonney and James Butler Hickcock became the folk heroes doesn't make any sense. We need the names of transformed folk heroes in order to make sense of it. Eliminate (C) and (D). Choice (A) is incorrect because the rest of sentence does not speak in generalities; it provides two names already.

Question: 1   Test: 3 of 5 Next Test

Tests

You are taking Aptitude Test No. 3

Each aptitude test is comprised of 10 except the last test which might have fewer than 10 in some topics.

You are at question (MCQ) number 1 and Test Number 3 of Cloze: Advanced. To deal with Cloze questions, you must take lesson on the subject. In case of science and Art subjects revise your text books and in case of general aptitude topics take lessons from the topic page.

The question: The author is considering deleting the names "Billy the Kid and Wild Bill Hickok" from the preceding .... with options: Kept, because they are specific names in a sentence that speaks in generalities. , Kept, because they demonstrate the transformation described in the sentence. , Deleted, because they are nicknames of people whose true names are already listed in the sentence. , Deleted, because they encourage the frontier behavior that made the Wild West such a violent place. can be solved with the concepts and understanding of Cloze.