The Bet by Anton Chekhov MCQ for Semester 3 Class 12 English

The Bet by Anton Chekhov MCQ for Semester 3 Class 12 English

The Bet by Anton Chekhov MCQ for Semester 3 Class 12 English-দ্বাদশ শ্রেণীর (WBCHSE Class 12) ছাত্রছাত্রীদের জন্য আমাদের তরফ থেকে নিয়ে আসা হল ইংরাজি The Bet (Anton Chekhov) Prose -এর MCQ প্রশ্ন উত্তর। নতুন পাঠ্যক্রম অনুসারে এই প্রবন্ধটি তৃতীয় সেমিস্টার (3rd Semester)-এর অন্তর্গত । ছাত্রছাত্রীরা যদি এই প্রসঙ্গটি বই থেকে খুঁটিয়ে খুঁটিয়ে পড়ে নেয় তার পরে এই প্রশ্ন উত্তর গুলো প্র্যাকটিস করে , তাহলে তাদের প্রস্তুতি অনেক ভালো হবে ।

আমাদের এই প্রশ্ন উত্তর গুলো তোমাদের ভালো লাগলে শেয়ার করতে ভুলোনা । একটি প্রশ্নের মান 1 ধরে সবাই দেখে নাও মক টেস্টে (Mock Test) কে কত পেলে এবং কমেন্টের মাধ্যমে জানাও ।

The Bet by Anton Chekhov MCQ for Semester 3 Class 12 English

1. “To avoid unnecessary rumours he took the paper with the renunciation from the table and, on his return, locked it in his safe.”What does the word ‘renunciation’ refer to in the sentence?

a) A declaration of acceptance

b) An official statement of refusal or rejection

c) A letter expressing gratitude

d) A request for financial support

b) An official statement of refusal or rejection

2. What is the central conflict in ‘The Bet’?

a) A wager between a banker and a lawyer

b) A dispute between an employer and an employee

c) A trial between a judge and a prisoner

d) A debate between a professor and a student

a) A wager between a banker and a lawyer

3. While recalling the past, the banker, was walking

a) in his garden

b) on the streets

c) in his study

d) in a courtroom

c) in his study

4. What was the old banker doing on that dark autumn night?

a) Attending a party

b) Walking up and down his study

c) Talking to a lawyer

d) Reading a book

b) Walking up and down his study

5. The majority of the guests at the banker’s party were

a) farmers and merchants

b) politicians and soldiers

c) Journalists and intellectual men

d) scientists and artists

c) Journalists and intellectual men

6. Who was not present at the banker’s party?

a) The banker

b) The journalist

c) The lawyer

d) The doctor

d) The doctor

7. How did the guests at the banker’s party react to capital punishment?

a) Some fully supported it

b) Some were indifferent to it

c) The majority disapproved of it

d) few strongly recommended it

c) The majority disapproved of it

8. The majority of the guests disapproved of the death penalty, considering it

a) a fully justified punishment

b) irrelevant and unimportant

c) outdated, immoral and unsuitable for Christian States

d) the best form of punishment

c) outdated, immoral and unsuitable for Christian States

9. Who among the following supported the death penalty over life imprisonment?

a) The guests

b) The banker

c) The journalist

d) The lawyer 

b) The banker

10. What reason did the banker give for supporting capital punishment?

a) It is more painful

b) It punishes criminals severely

c) It is cheaper than imprisonment

d) It is more humane and moral as it kills instantly

d) It is more humane and moral as it kills instantly

11. How old was the young lawyer?

a) About twenty years old

b) About twenty-five years old

c) About thirty years old

d) About thirty-five years old

b) About twenty-five years old

12. What bet did the banker initially propose to the young lawyer?

a) One million rubles for five years of solitary confinement

b) One million rubles for ten years of solitary confinement

c) Two million rubles for five years of solitary confinement

d) Two million rubles for fifteen years of solitary confinement

c) Two million rubles for five years of solitary confinement

13. How did the young lawyer respond to the banker’s bet?

a) He rejected the bet as unreasonable

b) He accepted but insisted on ten years instead

c) He asked for a reduced duration

d) He accepted and voluntarily extended it to fifteen years

d) He accepted and voluntarily extended it to fifteen years

14. With reckless confidence, the banker staked

a) his reputation

b) two million rubles

c) his estate

d) one million rubles

b) two million rubles

15. How was the ‘bet’ described in the story?

a) A reckless and foolish venture

b) A fair and logical agreement

c) A wild and ridiculous bet

d) A necessary and justified challenge

c) A wild and ridiculous bet

16. Where was the young lawyer confined for the bet?

a) A distant prison

b) A wing of the banker’s garden

c) An underground chamber

d) A secluded monastery

b) A wing of the banker’s garden

17. How could the lawyer communicate with the outside world?

a) By talking to the guards

b) By sending letters through a secret messenger

c) Through a specially constructed little window

d) By using sign language

c) Through a specially constructed little window

18. What privileges were granted to the lawyer during his confinement?

a) Reading newspapers and receiving letters

b) Books, a musical instrument, writing letters, wine and smoking

c) Only writing letters and drinking wine

d) Nothing as he was completely isolated

b) Books, a musical instrument, writing letters, wine and smoking

19. What would happen if the lawyer left even two minutes before the agreed time?

a) He would receive a reduced amount of money

b) He would lose the two million rubles

c) He would be sent to prison

d) The banker would be entitled to increase the duration of the bet

b) He would lose the two million rubles

20. When did the lawyer’s confinement begin?

a)  At twelve o’clock on November 14th, 1860

b)  At twelve o’clock on November 14th, 1870

c) At twelve o’clock on January 1st, 1871

d) At twelve o’clock on December 31st, 1870

b)  At twelve o’clock on November 14th, 1870

21. During the first year of his confinement, the lawyer suffered from

a) satisfaction and peace

b) sorrow and regret

c) enjoyment and pleasure

d) loneliness and boredom

d) loneliness and boredom

22. How did the lawyer’s habits change in the second year?

a) He stopped playing the piano and read only classics

b) He played more music and read poetry

c) He requested newspapers and modern books

d) He gave up reading and focused on writing letters

a) He stopped playing the piano and read only classics

23. What change occurred in the lawyer’s habits in the fifth year?

a) He stopped reading and wrote letters

b) He abandoned music and read philosophy

c) He started playing music again and requested wine

d) He requested only science books

c) He started playing music again and requested wine

24. How many books did the banker procure for the lawyer over four years?

a) Around two hundred volumes

b) Around four hundred volumes

c) Around six hundred volumes

d) Around eight hundred volumes

c) Around six hundred volumes

25. In the letter, the lawyer requested the banker to

a) send his writings to his family members

b) fire a shot in the garden if there were no mistakes

c) release him from confinement

d) provide him with more books

b) fire a shot in the garden if there were no mistakes

26. To fulfill the lawyer’s desire, the banker ordered

a) his immediate release

b) more books to be provided

c) a celebration in his honour

d) two shots to be fired in the garden

d) two shots to be fired in the garden

27. What did the lawyer read after the tenth year of confinement?

a) The Old Testament

b) Political essays

c) The New Testament

d) Fiction and biographies

c) The New Testament

28. What surprised the banker about the lawyer’s reading in the tenth year?

a) The lawyer had stopped reading altogether

b) The lawyer spent a year reading too many books

c) The lawyer burnt all the books he finished reading

d) The lawyer spent nearly a year reading only one book

d) The lawyer spent nearly a year reading only one book

29. What type of books did the lawyer read after finishing the New Testament?

a) Detective novels

b) Histories of religion and theology

c) Travel diaries

d) Mythology and folklore

b) Histories of religion and theology

30. Why was the banker worried about the lawyer’s release?

a) The lawyer might refuse the money

b) Paying two million would ruin him

c) The lawyer might take revenge

d) He no longer wanted to honour the bet

b) Paying two million would ruin him

31. What did the banker do at three o’clock?

a) He went to sleep

b) He called his servants

c) He met the lawyer in the lodge

d) He opened the safe and took out the key

d) He opened the safe and took out the key

32. What was the banker’s intention when he went to the garden wing?

a) To release the lawyer before the bet ended

b) To offer the lawyer a settlement instead of payment

c) To kill the lawyer and avoid paying the money

d) To extend the lawyer’s confinement

c) To kill the lawyer and avoid paying the money

33. What did the banker think would happen if he carried out his intention?

a) He would be caught immediately

b) The lawyer would escape before he acted

c) No one would ever suspect anything

d) Suspicion would fall first on the watchman

d) Suspicion would fall first on the watchman

34. What was in front of the sleeping lawyer on the table?

a) A pile of books

b) A candle and a quill

c) A sheet of paper with something written in fine handwriting

d) A plate of untouched food

c) A sheet of paper with something written in fine handwriting

35. What did the lawyer declare in his letter?

a) He rejected the two millions rubles he once dreamed of

b) He demanded the banker fulfill the bet

c) He requested an early release

d) He expressed his resentment toward the banker

a) He rejected the two millions rubles he once dreamed of

36. Why did the banker weep after reading the lawyer’s letter?

a) He realised his own moral downfall

b) He was relieved to keep his fortune

c) He felt guilty for plotting murder

d) He was moved by the lawyer’s suffering

a) He realised his own moral downfall

37. How did the lawyer violate the agreement with the banker?

a) He wrote letters to outsiders

b) He demanded more money than agreed

c) He refused to speak to the banker

d) He escaped from the lodge before the bet ended

d) He escaped from the lodge before the bet ended

38. How did the lawyer leave the lodge?

a) He walked out through the main door

b) He climbed out of the window

c) He was escorted out by the banker

d) He escaped through a secret tunnel

b) He climbed out of the window

39. What did the banker do after confirming the lawyer’s escape?

a) He called the authorities to report it

b) He chased after the lawyer with his servants

c) He took the lawyer’s letter and locked it in his safe

d) He ordered the watchmen to seal the garden wing

c) He took the lawyer’s letter and locked it in his safe

40. “They found it obsolete as a means of punishment, unfitted to a Christian State and immoral.” -Here, the word obsolete means

a) harsh and unreasonable

b) appropriate and effective

c) accepted and widely practiced

d) outdated and no longer suitable for use

d) outdated and no longer suitable for use

41. “Execution kills instantly, life-imprisonment kills by degrees.”—In this sentence, the word ‘execution’ refers to

a) the act of planning and carrying out a task

b) the legal process of putting someone to death as a punishment

c) the gradual loss of life in confinement

d) the emotional toll of imprisonment

b) the legal process of putting someone to death as a punishment

42. “Capital punishment and life-imprisonment are equally immoral….”-What does ‘capital punishment’ refer to here?

a) A life sentence in prison

b) A system of reducing punishments for severe crimes

c) A method of reforming criminals through counselling

d) The legal process of putting a criminal to death as punishment

d) The legal process of putting a criminal to death as punishment

43. “In the second half of the sixth year, the prisoner began zealously to study languages, philosophy, and history.”- What does the word ‘zealously’ mean in this sentence?

a) With great enthusiasm and dedication

b) In a careless and indifferent manner

c) Slowly and without interest

d) Secretly and cautiously

a) With great enthusiasm and dedication

44. “The banker found it strange that a man who in four years had mastered six hundred erudite volumes….”—What does the word ‘erudite’ mean in this sentence?

a) Simple and ordinary

b) Having or containing a lot of knowledge

c) Outdated and irrelevant

d) Confusing and unclear

b) Having or containing a lot of knowledge

45. “And beautiful women, like clouds ethereal, created by the me by night and magic of your poets’ genius, visited whispered to me wonderful tales……..”—What does the phrase ‘like clouds ethereal’ suggest about the beautiful women in the sentence?

a) They appeared delicate and heavenly, as if not of this world

b) They seemed strong and commanding, like storm clouds

c) They were dark and mysterious, blending into the night

d) They moved swiftly and unpredictably, like rushing winds

a) They appeared delicate and heavenly, as if not of this world

46. “Everything is void, frail, visionary and delusive as mirage.”-What does the phrase ‘delusive as a mirage’ imply in the sentence?

a) Everything is calm and serene, like a distant horizon

b) Everything is bright and dazzling, impossible to ignore

c) Everything is unstable yet achievable, like shifting sands

d) Everything is deceptive and illusory, appearing real but ultimately false

d) Everything is deceptive and illusory, appearing real but ultimately false

47. The banker recalled the party from fifteen years ago, where the guests engaged in a discussion about ______________.

a) politics

b) literature

c) capital punishment

d) economics

c) capital punishment

48. The banker argues that capital punishment is more humane because it kills _________.

a) painfully

b) instantly

c) slowly

d) brutally

b) instantly

49. The lawyer believes that between imprisonment, capital punishment and life it is better to__________ somehow than not at all.

a) survive

b) suffer

c) protest

d) escape

a) survive

50. The banker warned the lawyer that the idea of having the right to leave at any moment would _________ his life. in the cell.

a) liberate

b) poison

c) strengthen

d) shorten

b) poison

51. The lawyer was allowed to communicate with the outside world, but only _________ through a special window.

a) by speaking

b) through letters

c) in silence

d) once a year

c) in silence

52. The lawyer was bound by the agreement to stay in solitary confinement _________.

a) from November 14, 1870, to November 14, 1885

b) from November 14, 1872, to November 14, 1884

c) from November 14, 1875, to November 14, 1885

d) from November 14, 1871, to November 14, 1883

a) from November 14, 1870, to November 14, 1885

53. During the fifth year of his imprisonment, the lawyer abandoned books and was often heard ________.

a) singing

b) weeping

c) laughing

d) whispering

b) weeping

54. To prove his mastery of languages, the lawyer asked for a _________ to be fired in the garden if experts found no mistakes in his writing.

a) flare

b) firework

c) cannon

d) gun

d) gun

55. The lawyer read as though he were ________.

a) a drowning man grasping at wreckage to survive

b) a sailor navigating a calm sea

c) a scholar methodically studying texts

d) a prisoner uninterested in learning

a) a drowning man grasping at wreckage to survive

56. If the banker pays the lawyer the agreed sum, he will be ___________.

a) relieved of his burden

b) financially ruined

c) celebrated for his generosity

d) free from all obligations

b) financially ruined

57. The banker’s reckless speculation and gambling on the ________ gradually led to his financial downfall.

a) real estate market

b) gold trade

c) banking sector

d) stock-exchange

d) stock-exchange

58. The banker thought that if he went through with his plan, suspicion would first fall on the _______.

a) lawyer

b) servant

c) watchman

d) gardener

c) watchman

59. The prisoner appeared almost unrecognisable, resembling a with ________ tight-drawn skin and long curly hair.

a) warrior

b) skeleton

c) scholar

d) statue

b) skeleton

60. Before carrying out his plan, the banker decided to first ___________.

a) hide the evidence

b) read the letter on the table

c) check if the prisoner was truly asleep

d) lock the door behind him

b) read the letter on the table

61. Before leaving his confinement and seeing the sun, the prisoner felt it necessary to __________.

a) declare his views in a letter

b) demand his prize money

c) escape unnoticed

d) destroy all his books

a) declare his views in a letter

62. After reading the lawyer’s letter, the banker felt an overwhelming sense of ____________for himself.

a) pride

b) relief

c) contempt

d) gratitude

c) contempt

63. To prevent unnecessary rumours, the banker took the lawyer’s letter and locked it in his _______.

a) desk drawer

b) safe

c) bookshelf

d) briefcase

b) safe

True-False Type

64. Which of the following statements is true?

a) The banker recalls a party where the guests discussed capital numbers.

b) The guests at the party strongly supported capital punishment.

c) The banker said that life imprisonment was more immoral than capital punishment.

d) All the scholars and journalists at the party argued in favor of execution.

c) The banker said that life imprisonment was more immoral than capital punishment.

65. Choose the correct option:

(i) The lawyer enjoys his solitary confinement and refuses to leave.

(ii) The banker plots to kill the lawyer to avoid paying the wager.

(iii) The lawyer spends his years in confinement without reading any books.

(iv) The banker willingly pays the lawyer two million rubles at the end of the bet.

a)  (i)—(T), (ii)—(F), (iii)—(T), (iv)—(T)

b) (i)-(F), (ii)—(T), (iii)—(T), (iv)—(F)

c) (i)-(T), (ii)—(F), (iii)—(F), (iv)—(T)

d) (i)—(F), (ii)—(T), (iii)—(F), (iv)—(F)

d) (i)—(F), (ii)—(T), (iii)—(F), (iv)—(F)

66.Choose the correct option:

(i) The lawyer spends complete fifteen years alone in confinement.

(ii) The banker’s guests debate capital punishment and life imprisonment at his party.

(iii) The lawyer rejects wealth and worldly pleasures.

(iv) The banker admires the lawyer and praises his wisdom.

a) (i), (ii) are true and (iii), (iv) are false

b) (ii), (iii) are true and (i), (iv) are false 

c) (ii), (iv) true and (i), (iii) are false

d) (i), (iv) are true and (ii), (iii) are false

b) (ii), (iii) are true and (i), (iv) are false 

67. Choose the correct option:

(i) The banker remained financially successful despite the bet.

(ii) The banker was reluctant to pay the lawyer his winnings.

(iii) The banker’s business declined due to reckless financial habits.

(iv) The banker admired the lawyer’s resilience and wanted to reward him.

a) (i)—(T), (ii)—(T), (iii)—(T), (iv)—(F)

b) (i)-(F), (ii)-(F), (iii)—(T), (iv)—(T)

c) (i)—T), (ii)—(T), (iii)—(F), (iv)—(T)

d) (i)—(F), (ii)—(T), (iii)—(T), (iv)—(F)

d) (i)—(F), (ii)—(T), (iii)—(T), (iv)—(F)

Rearrangement of Sentences Type

68.Choose the correct option on the basis of the sequence:

(i) A guest argued that both capital punishment and life imprisonment were equally immoral.

(ii) The banker expressed his belief that capital punishment was more humane than life imprisonment.

(iii) A young lawyer stated that although both were immoral, he would prefer life imprisonment.

(iv) A discussion about capital punishment took place at the party organised by the banker.

a) (i)-(ii)-(iv)-(iii)

b) (ii)-(iii)-(i)-(iv)

c) (iv)-(iii)-(ii)-(i)

d) (iv)-(ii)-(i)-(iii)

d) (iv)-(ii)-(i)-(iii)

69. Choose the correct option on the basis of the sequence:

(i) The banker hosted a party where the debate over capital punishment took place.

(ii) A young lawyer confidently took on the bet.

(iii) The banker bet two million rubles, believing the lawyer could not last even five years in isolation.

(iv) The lawyer agreed to voluntary imprisonment under strict conditions.

a) (i)-(ii)-(iii)-(iv)

b) (i)-(iii)-(ii)-(iv)

c) (ii)-(iii)-(i)-(iv)

d) (i)-(ii)-(iv)-(iii)

b) (i)-(iii)-(ii)-(iv)

70.Choose the correct option on the basis of the sequence:

(i) The lawyer spent almost an exact fifteen years in solitary confinement.

(ii) The banker initially thought the bet was foolish but late refereed losing his wealth.

(iii) Before the term ended, the banker planned to kill the lawyer to avoid paying the money.

(iv) The lawyer renounced the money and left five minutes before the bet was completed.

a) (ii)-(i)-(iii)-(iv)

b) (i)-(ii)-(iii)-(iv)

c) (ii)-(iii)-(i)-(iv)

d) (i)-(iii)-(iv)-(ii)

b) (i)-(ii)-(iii)-(iv)

71.Choose the correct option on the basis of the sequence:

(i) The banker took the key from his safe, put on his overcoat and stepped outside.

(ii) The clock struck three as the banker listened in silence.

(iii) The garden was dark, cold and filled with the sound of the wind and rain.

(iv) He approached the garden wing and called the watchman twice, but there was no response.

a) (ii)-(i)-(iii)-(iv)

b) (i)-(ii)-(iv)-(ii)

c) (ii)-(iii)-(i)-(iv)

d) (iii)-(ii)-(i)-(iv)

a) (ii)-(i)-(iii)-(iv)

́Column Matching Type

72. Match column A with column B selecting the correct answer option:

Column-AColumn-B
(a) Anton Chekhov  (i) The wealthy man who wagers millions on the bet
(b) The banker  (ii) The author of the story. ‘The Bet’
(c) The lawyer  (iii) The person who fails to notice the escape of the prisoner
(d) The watchman  (iv) The prisoner who endures fifteen years of confinement

a) (a)—(ii), (b)—(i), (c)—(iv), (d)—(iii)

b) (a)—(i), (b)—(iii), (c)—(ii), (d)—(iv)

c) (a)—(iv), (b)—(ii), (c)—(i), (d)—(iii)

d) (a)—(iii), (b)—(iv), (c)—(ii), (d)—(i)

a) (a)—(ii), (b)—(i), (c)—(iv), (d)—(iii)

73. Match column A with column B selecting the correct answer option:

Column-AColumn-B
(a) First year(i) Loneliness, boredom
(b) Second year(ii) Abandoned music
(c) Fifth year(iii) Emotional turmoil
(d) Sixth year onwards(iv) Intense study

a)  (a)-(ii), (b)-(iv), (c)—(i), (d)—(iii)

b) (a)-(i), (b)—(ii), (c)—(iii), (d)—(iv)

c) (a)-(iii), (b)-(i), (c)—(iv), (d)—(ii)

d) (a)-(iv), (b)—(iii), (c)—(i), (d)—(iii)

b) (a)-(i), (b)—(ii), (c)—(iii), (d)—(iv)

74. Match column A with column B selecting the correct answer option:

Column-AColumn-B
(a) Passion for languages  (i) Theological exploration  
(b) Obsession with a single book(ii) Chaotic reading  
(c) Deep dive into religion  (iii) Mastery of six languages  
(d) Final years of reading  (iv) Year-long focus on the New Testament  

a)  (a)-(ii), (b)—(iv), (c)—(i), (d)—(iii)

b) (a)—(iii), (b)—(iv), (c)—(i), (d)—(ii)

c)  (a)—(ii), (b)—(iii), (c)—(iv), (d)—(i)

d) (a)—(iv), (b)—(i), (c)—(ii), (d)—(iii)

b) (a)—(iii), (b)—(iv), (c)—(i), (d)—(ii)

75. Match column A with column B selecting the correct answer option:

Column-AColumn-B
(a) Dim candlelight and scattered books(i) Smothering the prisoner with a pillow
(b) Banker’s silent entry(ii) Aged beyond his years- skeletal, frail, sunken face
(c) The prisoner’s appearance(iii) Rusty lock creaks-no reaction from the prisoner
(d) Banker’s sinister thought(iv) The prisoner’s solitude and unchanged routine

a) (a)—(ii), (b)—(i), (c)—(iv), (d)—(iii)

b) (a)—(i), (b)—(ii), (c)—(iii), (d)—(iv)

c) (a)(iii), (b)—(iv), (c)—(i), (d)—(ii)

d) (a)—(iv), (b)—(iii), (c)—(ii), (d)—(i)

d) (a)—(iv), (b)—(iii), (c)—(ii), (d)—(i)

76. Match column A with column B selecting the correct answer option:

Column-AColumn-B
(a) Prisoner’s letter of renunciation(i) Hides the letter to avoid rumours
(b) Banker’s feelings after reading the letter(ii) Weeps-feels deep shame and self- contempt
(c) Prisoner’s unexpected action(iii) Leaves five minutes early-breaks the agreement
(d) Banker’s reaction tothe prisoner’s escape(iv) Denounces wealth and wisdom as hollow illusions

 a) (a)(ii), (b)—(i), (c)—(iv), (d)—(iii)

b) (a)-(iv), (b)—(ii), (c)—(iii), (d)—(i)

c) (a)-(iii), (b)—(iv), (c)—(i), (d)—(ii)

d) (a)-(iv), (b)-(iii), (c)—(ii), (d)—(i)

b) (a)-(iv), (b)—(ii), (c)—(iii), (d)—(i)

Assertion-Reasoning Type

77. Choose the most appropriate alternative as the reason of the assertion given in the questions:

Assertion (A): A party conversation turned into a heated debate on capital punishment among a banker, a lawyer and other guests.

Reason (R): The guests unanimously agreed that life imprisonment is a worse punishment than execution.

a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A

b) Both A and R are true but R is not the correct explanation of A

c) A is true but R is false

d) A is false but R is true

c) A is true but R is false

78.Choose the most appropriate alternative as the reason of the assertion given in the questions:

Assertion (A): The lawyer believed that life imprisonment was more humane than capital punishment.

Reason (R): He argued that he would choose life imprisonment as it allowed one to live.

a) A Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A

b) Both A and R are true but R is not the correct explanation of A

c) A is true but R is false

d) A is false but R is true

d) A is false but R is true

79.Choose the most appropriate alternative as the reason of the assertion given in the questions:

Assertion (A): The banker challenged the lawyer with a two- million-ruble bet that he wouldn’t survive five years in Isolation.

Reason (R): The lawyer, eager to prove himself, raised the challenge to fifteen years.

a) R Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A

b) Both A and R are true but R is not the correct explanation of A

c) A is true but R is false

d) A is false but R is true

b) Both A and R are true but R is not the correct explanation of A

80.Choose the most appropriate alternative as the reason of the assertion given in the questions:

Assertion (A): The banker feared bankruptcy if he paid the two million rubles to the lawyer.

Reason (R): His reckless financial choices had drained his wealth.

a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A

b) Both A and R are true but R is not the correct explanation of A

c) A is true but R is false

d) A is false but R is true

a) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A

Relationship between Statements Type

81.Select the option that shows the correct relationship between statements (A) and (B).

Statement (A): The banker believed capital punishment to be more humane than life  imprisonment.

Statement (B): The young lawyer argued that capital punishment is less humane than life imprisonment.

a) B contradicts A

b) B is the reason for A

c) A is true, but B is false

b) A and B are independent of each other

c) A is true, but B is false

82. Select the option that shows the correct relationship between statements (A) and (B).

Statement (A): The banker warned the lawyer that voluntary Imprisonment was harder than enforced Imprisonment. Statement (B): The lawyer argued that living in any form is better than dying.

a) B contradicts A

b) B is the reason for A

c) A is true, but B is false

d) A and B are independent of each other

d) A and B are independent of each other

83. Select the option that shows the correct relationship between statements (A) and (B).

Statement (A): The lawyer was allowed books, wine, and music during his confinement. of human

Statement (B): He was partially deprived of interaction.

a) B contradicts A

b) B is the reason for A

c) A is true, but B is false

d) A and B are independent of each other

c) A is true, but B is false

84. Select the option that shows the correct relationship between statements (A) and (B).

Statement (A): The banker cursed the bet and the lawyer, hoping the lawyer would die.

Statement (B): He decided to let the lawyer go free without any consequences.

a) B contradicts A

b) B is the reason for A

c) A is, true, but B is false

d) A and B are independent of each other

c) A is, true, but B is false

85.Select the option that shows the correct relationship between statements (A) and (B).

Statement (A): The lawyer claimed to have gained great wisdom during his years of isolation.

Statement (B): He declared that he still valued everything that the world considered great.

a) B contradicts A

b) B is the reason for A

c) A is true, but B is false

d) A and B are independent of each other

c) A is true, but B is false

Case-based Type

Choose the most appropriate alternative:

86. If capital punishment had been considered suitable for a Christian State, the guests

a) would have strongly opposed life imprisonment

b) would not have found it immoral

c) would have suggested a more severe punishment

d) would have insisted on public executions

b) would not have found it immoral

87. If the banker had not been reckless with his money, he would not have

a) remained wealthy and self-confident

b) become afraid of market fluctuations

c) needed to worry about debts

d) struggled with business decay

c) needed to worry about debts

88. Suppose the night had been bright and clear, the banker would have

a) seen the garden wing and trees more distinctly

b) stayed inside instead of going out

c) been able to wake the watchman easily

d) walked more cautiously

a) might have killed the prisoner

89. Suppose the banker had not decided to read the note first, he

a) might have killed the prisoner

b) would have still hesitated at the last moment

c) might have assumed the prisoner was already dead

d) would have checked if the prisoner was truly asleep

a) might have killed the prisoner

90. Suppose the prisoner had not read books during his confinement, he

a) might have lost his sanity

b) would not have experienced the wonders of the world

c) might have given up long before fifteen years

d) would have struggled to endure solitude

b) would not have experienced the wonders of the world

Important Links

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