KPPSC Junior Clerk (BS-11) English Tenses — Set 2

Tenses MCQs set 2 for KPPSC Junior Clerk (BS-11) English — 20 solved questions.

KPPSC Junior Clerk (BS-11) English Tenses — Set 2

  1. Question 1

    Q1. Choose the correct punctuation. History it has been said is the essence of innumerable biographies.

    • A) History, it has been said is the essence of innumerable biographies.
    • B) History, it has been said, is the essence of innumerable biographies.
    • C) History it has been said, is the essence of innumerable, biographies.
    • D) History it has been said is the essence of innumerable biographies.

    Answer: History, it has been said, is the essence of innumerable biographies.

    Explanation: The parenthetical phrase "it has been said" must be set off by commas on both sides to indicate it is a non-essential interruption within the sentence.

  2. Question 2

    Q2. Choose the voice of the following sentence: A present has been bought for our teacher.

    • A) We bought a present for our teacher.
    • B) They have bought our teacher a present.
    • C) They bought a present for our teacher.
    • D) We have bought a present for our teacher.

    Answer: We have bought a present for our teacher.

    Explanation: "A present has been bought" is present perfect passive; the active equivalent requires present perfect active: "We have bought a present for our teacher."

  3. Question 3

    Q3. Select the correct active form of the given sentence: "The strike has been called off by the workers."

    • A) The workers have called off the strike.
    • B) The workers are calling off the strike.
    • C) The strike has called off the workers.
    • D) The workers had called off the strike.

    Answer: The workers have called off the strike.

    Explanation: "Has been called off" is present perfect passive, so the active voice uses present perfect active: "have called off."

  4. Question 4

    Q4. Choose the sentence using the present perfect tense correctly.

    • A) He was working for three hours.
    • B) She has completed the project.
    • C) They are writing the letter.
    • D) I do work here.

    Answer: She has completed the project.

    Explanation: The present perfect tense is formed with "has/have + past participle"; "has completed" correctly follows this pattern.

  5. Question 5

    Q5. Which sentence uses the past continuous tense correctly?

    • A) She plays the piano when I arrived.
    • B) I was reading when he called me.
    • C) They have been studying all day.
    • D) He will be cooking tomorrow.

    Answer: I was reading when he called me.

    Explanation: Past continuous tense is formed with "was/were + verb-ing"; "I was reading when he called me" correctly shows an ongoing past action interrupted by another event.

  6. Question 6

    Q6. Identify the correct use of simple future tense.

    • A) I am going to the market.
    • B) She will go to the market.
    • C) They have gone to the market.
    • D) He goes to the market.

    Answer: She will go to the market.

    Explanation: Simple future tense is formed with "will + base verb"; "she will go" correctly demonstrates this structure.

  7. Question 7

    Q7. Choose the sentence with correct present perfect continuous tense.

    • A) He has been working here since 2020.
    • B) She is working here since 2020.
    • C) They work here since 2020.
    • D) I have worked here since 2020.

    Answer: He has been working here since 2020.

    Explanation: Present perfect continuous uses "have/has been + verb-ing" with "since" for a point in time; "has been working since 2020" is the correct form.

  8. Question 8

    Q8. Which tense is used in: "She had finished her homework before he arrived"?

    • A) Past perfect and past simple
    • B) Present perfect and past simple
    • C) Past continuous and future simple
    • D) Past perfect continuous and present simple

    Answer: Past perfect and past simple

    Explanation: "Had finished" is past perfect tense, used for an action completed before another past action; "arrived" is simple past - together they show sequence of past events.

  9. Question 9

    Q9. Fill in the blank: She _____ working here for five years.

    • A) is
    • B) has been
    • C) was
    • D) were

    Answer: has been

    Explanation: "Has been working" is present perfect continuous, used for an action that started in the past and continues to the present - here indicated by "for five years."

  10. Question 10

    Q10. Which sentence uses the present perfect tense correctly?

    • A) I have went to the market
    • B) I have gone to the market
    • C) I am went to the market
    • D) I gone to the market

    Answer: I have gone to the market

    Explanation: Present perfect tense is formed with "have/has + past participle"; the past participle of "go" is "gone," not "went," making "have gone" the correct form.

  11. Question 11

    Q11. Which tense is used in: "She has been reading for two hours"?

    • A) Present Perfect Simple
    • B) Past Perfect Progressive
    • C) Present Perfect Progressive
    • D) Present Progressive

    Answer: Present Perfect Progressive

    Explanation: "Has been reading" uses "has been + present participle," which is the structure of present perfect progressive (continuous), indicating an ongoing action.

  12. Question 12

    Q12. Which tense is used in: "They had finished the work before noon"?

    • A) Simple Past
    • B) Past Perfect
    • C) Present Perfect
    • D) Past Progressive

    Answer: Past Perfect

    Explanation: Past perfect tense ("had + past participle") is used for an action completed before another past event; "had finished" indicates completion before noon.

  13. Question 13

    Q13. He _____ for three hours without a break when he finally stopped.

    • A) was working
    • B) had been working
    • C) has been working
    • D) worked

    Answer: had been working

    Explanation: Past perfect continuous ("had been + verb-ing") is used for an action that was ongoing over a period in the past and then stopped; it emphasises duration before a past event.

  14. Question 14

    Q14. She told me that she _____ tired.

    • A) is
    • B) was
    • C) will be
    • D) has been

    Answer: was

    Explanation: In reported speech, the present tense "is" backshifts to the past tense "was" when the reporting verb is in the past tense.

  15. Question 15

    Q15. Neither the teacher nor the students _____ informed.

    • A) was
    • B) were
    • C) has been
    • D) is

    Answer: were

    Explanation: With "neither...nor," the verb agrees with the noun closest to it; since "students" is plural, the verb is "were."

  16. Question 16

    Q16. He has been _____ this project for six months.

    • A) work
    • B) worked
    • C) working
    • D) works

    Answer: working

    Explanation: Present perfect continuous uses "has/have been + present participle"; "has been working" correctly describes an ongoing activity from the past to now.

  17. Question 17

    Q17. The police _____ investigating the case thoroughly.

    • A) is
    • B) was
    • C) are
    • D) has been

    Answer: are

    Explanation: "Police" is treated as a plural noun in English, referring to the force collectively; it therefore takes the plural verb "are."

  18. Question 18

    Q18. Identify the tense error: "She has went to the market yesterday."

    • A) "has went" should be "went"
    • B) "to the" should be "at the"
    • C) "yesterday" should be "the day before"
    • D) No error in the sentence

    Answer: "has went" should be "went"

    Explanation: "Has went" is incorrect; with "has" (present perfect auxiliary), the past participle "gone" is needed - but with "yesterday" (simple past context), the correct form is simply "went."

  19. Question 19

    Q19. Which is the correct use of "loath"?

    • A) I loath dishonest people.
    • B) She was loath to admit her mistake.
    • C) He loaths vegetables intensely.
    • D) They loathed to leave early.

    Answer: She was loath to admit her mistake.

    Explanation: "Loath" is an adjective meaning reluctant or unwilling; "was loath to admit" correctly uses it as a predicate adjective following a linking verb.

  20. Question 20

    Q20. Identify the error in: "He has been working since three hours."

    • A) "since" should be "for"
    • B) "has been" should be "was"
    • C) "working" should be "work"
    • D) No error in the sentence

    Answer: "since" should be "for"

    Explanation: "Since" is used with a specific point in time (since 3 o'clock); "for" is used with a duration of time (for three hours) - the sentence gives a duration, so "for" is correct.

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Level 1

Choose the correct punctuation. History it has been said is the essence of innumerable biographies.