FPSC English Grammar MCQs
FPSC English Grammar MCQs – Past Papers (2023) & Competitive Exams Practice
Get here FPSC all past papers 2023 English MCQs. These MCQs are collected from
official and repeated FPSC past papers of English 2023, carefully organized for students and job seekers.
Here, you will find high-quality English Grammar MCQs that are highly important for all
competitive exams of Pakistan, including CSS, PMS, FPSC, PPSC, KPPSC and other recruitment tests.
These MCQs cover essential grammar topics such as tenses, vocabulary, sentence correction, prepositions,
articles, synonyms, antonyms, and sentence structure. Each question is designed to improve your exam performance
and boost your accuracy in objective tests.
Our collection is especially helpful for candidates preparing for government jobs and
entry tests where English grammar plays a key role in selection.
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She is afraid ___ spiders.
- From: This is a highly frequent grammatical error. While speakers of other languages often translate ‘from’ literally to mean protection away from a source, in English ‘from’ indicates physical origins, starting points, or separation (e.g., ‘escaped from the zoo’). It cannot be paired with ‘afraid’ to map an active phobia.
- In: This is incorrect. The preposition ‘in’ implies physical containment, inside boundaries, or deep involvement within an enclosed environment (e.g., ‘trapped in a room’). It breaks structural idioms when placed directly after ‘afraid’.
- None of these: This is incorrect because the preposition ‘of’ perfectly satisfies all modern syntactic and idiomatic standards.
“]’. The word ‘of’ acts as the specific structural link that introduces the precise source, entity, or abstract phobia that is triggering the emotional response.
- From: This is a highly frequent grammatical error. While speakers of other languages often translate ‘from’ literally to mean protection away from a source, in English ‘from’ indicates physical origins, starting points, or separation (e.g., ‘escaped from the zoo’). It cannot be paired with ‘afraid’ to map an active phobia.
- In: This is incorrect. The preposition ‘in’ implies physical containment, inside boundaries, or deep involvement within an enclosed environment (e.g., ‘trapped in a room’). It breaks structural idioms when placed directly after ‘afraid’.
- None of these: This is incorrect because the preposition ‘of’ perfectly satisfies all modern syntactic and idiomatic standards.
“]’. The word ‘of’ acts as the specific structural link that introduces the precise source, entity, or abstract phobia that is triggering the emotional response.
- From: This is a highly frequent grammatical error. While speakers of other languages often translate ‘from’ literally to mean protection away from a source, in English ‘from’ indicates physical origins, starting points, or separation (e.g., ‘escaped from the zoo’). It cannot be paired with ‘afraid’ to map an active phobia.
- In: This is incorrect. The preposition ‘in’ implies physical containment, inside boundaries, or deep involvement within an enclosed environment (e.g., ‘trapped in a room’). It breaks structural idioms when placed directly after ‘afraid’.
- None of these: This is incorrect because the preposition ‘of’ perfectly satisfies all modern syntactic and idiomatic standards.
“]’ is an established grammatical collocated pairing used to introduce the specific source of a phrenic fear or phobia.
- From / In: These are incorrect. Substituting ‘afraid from’ or ‘afraid in’ introduces a structural error that breaks standard English prepositional rules.
“]
He accepted the car in lieu — his claim –Rs. 4,55,000.
- (A) of, of
- (B) with, for
- (C) of, for
- (D) with, of