- Rewrite the following sentences according to the instructions given. (Solved)
Rewrite the following sentences according to the instructions given.
a) If he comes he will not be punished.
Begin: Unless…………………………
b) The snail reached the ark only by perseverance
Begin: Only……………
c) They had just walked out of the building when the bomb went off.
(Begin: No sooner …………………
d) John told the principal that he needed to go and see the nurse because he was feeling unwell.
(Rewrite as direct speech)………………
e) These books belong to the daughters of our teacher.
(Begin: These are ………………..
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the passage below and answer the questions that follow.(Solved)
Read the passage below and answer the questions that follow.
Substance Abuse has emerged in recent decades as a major concern both on and off the job. Although reasons vary, substance abuse can be a way that some people try to manage or reduce distress.
But it is important to be clear on what is generally meant by a drinking problem. In all cases related to alcohol abuse, a common factor is the unfavorable effect alcohol has on the health or well-being of the drinker and his or her associates. Common signs and symptoms that frequently indicate a drinking problem include being constantly absent from work, causing on-the-job accidents and expressing grievances most of the time.
Alcoholic employees can sometimes go undetected for years. Coworkers cover up for those unable to perform their jobs because of drunkenness. Even managers may be adept at concealing their alcohol abuse problems. Their secretaries or loyal associates may cover up for them. Alcoholics can be clever at inventing “credible” excuses when detected: “I must have a drink or two when I’m entertaining customers, of course.”
Drug abuse, or drug addiction, exists when the taking of drugs, whether prescribed or non-prescribed, legal or illegal, causes difficulties in any area of an individual’s life. Years ago, the stereotype of the drug user was either of a glazed-eyed musician frantically beating his sticks on a tight skin or a person who dwelt in a slum. Mass publicity on drug abuse has long since caused that stereotype to fade from view.
Complicating the ongoing war on drugs are changes in public attitudes and drug-use patterns. It sometimes seems that no sooner is progress made in combating one illegal drug than a different kind of substance abuse comes into vogue. Ethyl alcohol was the social drug during prohibition (1920 – 1933), marijuana became the social drug of the 1960s and 1970s, and some observers believe that crack cocaine and possibly ectasy – another so-called upper – became the social drugs of the 1980s and 1990s. the drugs of choice and people’s attitude toward them may change, but the problem of drug abuse appears to be continuing unabated.
Pinpointing the specific symptoms of alcohol and drug abuse problems is not a simple task. A supervisor’s main responsibility, therefore should not necessarily be uncovering evidence of dependency on alcohol and drugs but instead being observant for declining job performance. Yet there are certain behavioural patterns that some excessive users of alcohol and drugs display. These patterns can sometimes be spotted through simple observation. Increasingly though, employers are taking more aggressive steps to ferret out substance abuse among their workforces. A growing number of companies, especially large ones with many employees and those in business with potential to effect public health or safety, are adopting drug-testing programmes.
The signs of alcohol dependency, unfortunately, do not always become manifest until the middle of the late stages of the problem. No wonder some managers have mistaken an employee’s euphoric appearance for the “look of love”. The earlier treatment begins, naturally, the earlier treatment begins, naturally, the easier it will be. A person could experience some isolated incidents of such drinking problems without necessarily being a alcoholic. However, alcohol abuse usually results in declining job performance.
Because there are many symptoms of drug abuse, no one person would exhibit all of them and a supervisor should guard against assuming that the presence of one or more symptoms is conclusive of alcohol or drug abuse.
Questions
1. What is the main reason given for substance abuse?
2. From paragraph two, state three ways in which alcohol abuse can unfavourably affect the workmates of a drunker?
3. According to the passage, what is drug abuse?
4. What was the common misconception about who a drug user was?
5. Rewrite the following sentences using “as soon as”
It sometimes seems that no sooner is progress made in combating one illegal drug than a different kind of substance abuse comes into vogue.
6. What can we infer about “prohibition”?
7. In not more than 55 words, summarize the reasons that make it difficult to effectively deal with substance abuse.
8. Why do you think the author of the passage cautions supervisors against hastily concluding that one is a drug abuser?
9. Explain the meaning of the following words as used in the passage.
i) Credible
ii) Stereotype –
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Fill in the gaps using the present perfect form of the verbs in brackets.(Solved)
Fill in the gaps using the present perfect form of the verbs in brackets.
i) I ………………………………………………………… (visit) many places.
ii) My wife ……………………………………………………… (join) me in most of these trips.
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Add an appropriate question tag to each of the following statements.(Solved)
Add an appropriate question tag to each of the following statements.
i) They aren’t serious.
ii) He bought a new house last month.
iii) Let us go
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Combine each of the following pairs of sentences by making one of them a relative clause.
(Solved)
Combine each of the following pairs of sentences by making one of them a relative clause.
i) Kasoha joined our school this term. She is very good at grammar.
ii) The generator had been on the whole night. It broke down in the morning.
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Rewrite the following sentences avoiding repetition. (Solved)
Rewrite the following sentences avoiding repetition.
i) Always be frank and open with your friends. When you are frank and open to your friends, you willwin your friends trust and confidence.
ii)Help yourself to some oranges. These oranges are sweet but those oranges are sweeter.
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Rewrite the sentences below according to the instructions given after each.(Solved)
Rewrite the sentences below according to the instructions given after each.
i) My father would not allow us to attend night parties under any circumstances.
(Begin: Under no circumstances ……………………………….)
.
ii) Strangers should not be allowed into the compound without the security officer’s permission. (Begin: On no account……..……………………..)
iii) The plane had just taken off when one of the passengers began to scream.
(Begin: Scarcely ……………..….)
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Complete the following sentences by choosing the appropriate expressions to fill the gaps. (Solved)
Complete the following sentences by choosing the appropriate expressions to fill the gaps.
i) Although Nduati is a great friend of mine, I ………………………………………..him on a few important issues. (differ to, differ with)
ii) As good citizens, we must all pay our taxes ………………………………………..the policy. (in accordance to, in accordance with)
iii) She chose her career ………………………………………………..(independent of, independent to )her father’s influence.
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the extract below and answer the questions that follow. (Solved)
Read the extract below and answer the questions that follow.
Nora: It’s a shame to say that. I do really save all I can.
Helmer:(laughing)That’s very true, - all you can. But you can’t save anything!
Nora: (smiling quietly and happily)You haven’t any idea how many expenses we skylarks and squirrels have, Torvald.
Helmer: You are an odd little soul. Very like your father. You always find some new way of wheedling money out of me, and as soon as you have got it, it seems to melt in your hands. You never know where it has gone. Still, one must take you as you are. It is in the blood: for indeed it is true that you can inherit these things, Nora.
Nora: Ah, I wish I had inherited many of papa’s qualities.
Helmer:And I would not wish you to be anything but just what you are, my little skylark. But do you know, it strikes me that you are looking-rather—what shall I say- rather uneasy today?
Nora: Do I?
Helmer: You do, really. Look straight at me.
Nora : ( looks at him) well?
Helmer: (wagging his finger at her) Hasn’t Miss Sweet Tooth been breaking rules in town today?
Nora: No; what makes you think that?
Helmer: Hasn’t she paid a visit to the confectioner’s?
Nora: No, I assure you, Torvald-
Helmer: Not been nibbling sweets?
Nora: No, certainly not.
Helmer: Not even take a bite at a macaroon or two?
Nora: (going to the table on the right) I shouldn’t think of going against your wishes.
Helmer: No, I am sure of that: besides, you gave me your word- (Going up to her) Keep your little Christmas secrets to yourself, my darling. They will be revealed tonight when the Christmas tree is lit, no doubt.
Nora: Did you remember to invite Doctor Rank?
Helmer: No. But there is no need; as a matter of course, he will come to dinner with us. However, I will ask him when he comes this morning. I have ordered some good wine. Nora, you can’t think how I am looking forward to this evening.
Nora: So am I! And how the children will enjoy themselves, Torvald!
Helmer: It is splendid to feel that one has a perfectly safe appointment, and a big enough income. It is delightful to think of, isn’t it?
Nora: It’s wonderful!
a) Place this extract in its immediate context.
b) Explain the dramatic irony in this extract.
c) Helmer says here, “it is splendid to feel that one has a perfectly safe appointment”. What is he referring to?
d) What issues on money and gender emerge in this extract?
e) Identify and illustrate any two ways the playwright has used language to achieve foregrounding in this extract.
f) What do we learn about the character of Nora in this extract?
g) Imagine you are directing this play. Which quality would you look for in an actor to play the role of Torvald?
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the following passage and then answer the questions that follow. (Solved)
Read the following passage and then answer the questions that follow.
The question is at least as old as Socrates: If we know what the right thing to do is, why do we not do it? It is an especially acute question when applied to global warming. The science showing that carbon dioxide emissions are already changing the planet’s climate, and are likely to have severe effects (melting ice caps, sea-level rise, and species extinction), is compelling and now barely disputed. Almost 90% of Europeans say they recognize climate change as a major issue, and 75% identify fossil fuel emissions as a major cause.
And yet, as was widely discussed at a conference of environmentalists, geologists and writers in May 2006 in Ankelohe, Germany, public understanding has not translated into even the simplest of public actions. Less than 1% of Britons, for example, have switched their home electricity to renewable sources, even though it requires little more than a phone call to one’s existing provider. Proportions on the continent are slightly higher, but there is clearly no rush to go green or — shudder — stop driving cars.
Why such a disconnect between information and action? Part of the problem is that environmental advocates emit mixed messages. In mid-May 2006, Britain’s Guardian published a front-page story showing that five companies in Britain produce more CO2 pollution in a year than all the country’s motorists combined. That is a strong argument for targeting industries, but the average reader could hardly be blamed for thinking, “Why should I bother to cut down my driving?”
Similarly, not enough thought has been devoted to the best role for government. Climate change is too vast a problem for individuals to solve alone, and some big businesses have an incentive not to solve it. That leaves government to take the lead, which is tricky, because over-reliance on government can allow individuals to fob off their own responsibilities. What is worse, government power seems to tickle autocratic fantasies. In my experience, environmentalists spend far too much energy advocating hard-line government ‘solutions’ that do not stand a chance of being enacted. Sure, it might be good for the planet if governments banned the use of sports-utility vehicles or, for that matter, of all fossil fuels. Yet not only is it hard to sell outright prohibitions to voters, but the sad truth is that governments have a woeful record in even the mildest interventions. One of the most significant innovations in the last decade has been Europe’s carbon-emission trading scheme: some 12 000 companies, responsible for more than half of the EU’s emissions, have been assigned quotas. Companies with unused allowances can sell them; the higher the price, the greater the incentive for firms to cut their use of fossil fuels. The system seemed to work for about a year — but now it turns out that Europe’s governments allocated far too many credits, which will likely hinder the program’s effectiveness for years.
Perhaps the real reason that well-intentioned consumers do not change is that they do not see any benefit. Climate change may be a frightening, irreversible calamity, but its worst effects will not be felt next week or next year. The planet looks the same regardless of whether we use environmentally friendly technology or we do not care how much CO2 we emit. But sure as the sun rises and sets every day, if we do not cut down on carbon emissions, then we may not have a planet to hand over to the next generation.
(Adapted from Times, June 5, 2006)
a) According to the passage, what are the effects of global warming?
b) What, according to the passage, is the main cause of global warming?
c) How does Britain encourage people to use renewable electricity?
d) Paraphrase the following sentence: That is a strong argument for targeting industries, but the average reader could hardly be blamed for thinking, ‘Why should I bother to cut down my driving?’
e) What message does the writer communicate in this passage?
f) Explain the meaning of the following words and expression as used in the passage.
i) fob off
ii) incentive
iii) calamity
iv) vast
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Fill the blank spaces with the correct article
(Solved)
Fill the blank spaces with the correct article
i) The students said they wanted…………union.
ii) What is ……. Ewe?
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Fill in the blanks with the appropriate prepositions.(Solved)
Fill in the blanks with the appropriate prepositions.
(i) He was charged ……………….forging property inheritance document.
(ii) Kamau deals…………….groceries
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
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Complete the following passage with the most appropriate forms of the words in brackets.(Solved)
Complete the following passage with the most appropriate forms of the words in brackets.
The Tsunami …………………………(cruel) destroyed lots of lives and property. For days, the survivors …………………….. (agony) searched for their missing relatives. The whole experience was …………………………….(horrible) traumatizing.
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Replace the phrasal verbs in the sentences below with one word that means the same. (Solved)
Replace the phrasal verbs in the sentences below with one word that means the same.
)It is wrong to look down on students from other schools.
………………………………………………………………………………………………
(ii)Teachers should not give into their students’ unreasonable demands.
…………………………………………………………………………………………………
(iii)The delegates came up with ten rules to guide our response to globalization.
…………………………………………………………………………………………………
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow.(Solved)
Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow.
When in early 1970s ultrasound confronted me with the sight of the embryo in a womb, I simply lost my faith in abortion on demand. I did not hold onto my old convictions. The change was in its way a clean and surgical conversion. I am by nature one that works out the conflicting data, weighs the opposing argument with great care, decides and then acts upon it with no lingering backward glances.
By 1984 however, I had begun to ask myself more questions about abortion: What actually goes on in an abortion? I had done many but abortion is a blind procedure. The doctor does not see what he is doing. He puts an instrument into a uterus and he turns on a mortar and a suction machine goes on and something is vacuumed out; it ends up as little pile of meat in a gauze bag. I wanted to know what happened, so in 1984 I said to a friend of mine who was doing fifteen or maybe twenty abortions a day:‘ Look ,do me a favour,Jay .Next Saturday when you are doing all these abortions put an ultra sound on the mother and tape it on me.”
He did, and when he looked at the tapes with me in the editing studio, he was so affected that he never did another abortion. Although I had not performed an abortion in five years, I was shaken to the very roots of my soul by what I saw. The tapes were shockingly amazing. Some of the tapes weren’t of very good quality but I selected one that was of better quality than the others and began to show it at pro- life gatherings around the country.(I had my first contact with pro-life movement in 1981 when the then president of the National Right to Life Committee, Carolyn Gerster, had gotten in touch with me).
At the time, I was speaking at a pro-life meetings around the country in weekends, and the response to the tape was so intense and dramatic that finally I was approached by a man named Don Smith, who wanted to make my tape into a film. I agreed that it would be good idea. That is how The Silent Scream, which was to generate so many furore, came to be made. We showed it for the first time in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on January3, 1985. The reaction was instantaneous. Everybody was up in arms because The Silent Scream represented an enormous threat to the abortion forces, and because it escalated the war (it is not really a debate- we don’t debate with each, we scream at one another). For the first time, we had the technology, and they had nothing.
The Silent Scream depicted a twelve- week- foetus being torn to pieces in the uterus by the combination of suction and crushing instrumentation by the abortionist. It was so powerful that pro choicers trotted out their heaviest hitters to denounce the tape. They very cleverly deflected the impact of the film into an academic cul- de- suc: a dispute regarding whether the foetus feels pain during an abortion. The impetus for the debate came from an on – the- record musing by the then President, Ronald Reagan, as to how much pain the foetus feels during an abortion.
( Source: The hand of God: A journey from death to life by the Abortion doctor who changed his mind- Bernard N. Nathanson, MD)
a) Based on your understanding of the entire passage, comment on the nature of the writer’s ‘old convictions’.
b) Explain why it was easy for doctors such as the writer to carry out abortions prior to introduction of ultrasound technology?
c) What are the names that are commonly used to refer to the two opposing groups mentioned in the passage
d) Briefly describe, in your own words, how those who supported abortion tried to undermine the impact of ‘ The Silent Scream’.
e) “ I was shaken to the very roots of my soul by what I saw’’. Rewrite this sentence beginning: (What…)
f) Make notes on the way abortion is carried out according to this passage
g) Identify and illustrate the use of parenthesis in the passage, give two examples.
h) Provide one example from the passage to illustrate the need for leaders to weigh their words carefully.
i) Explain the meaning of the following words as used in the passage.
i)convictions
ii)escalate
iii)impetus
Date posted: August 14, 2019. Answers (1)
- Rewrite the following sentence to remove gender bias.
The steward is in the restaurant
(Solved)
Rewrite the following sentence to remove gender bias.
The steward is in the restaurant
Date posted: August 13, 2019. Answers (1)
- Rewrite the underlined phrasal verbs with appropriate verbs in each sentence.(Solved)
Rewrite the underlined phrasal verbs with appropriate verbs in each sentence.
i) Juma’s performance did not measure upto the expected standards.
.....................................................................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................................
ii) Mary walked out on her family
Date posted: August 13, 2019. Answers (1)
- Choose the correct alternative from the words given in brackets after each sentence.(Solved)
Choose the correct alternative from the words given in brackets after each sentence.
i) The boys left ........................................................ (their, there) books in the field.
ii) All matatus have hiked the ............................................... (fair, fare)
Date posted: August 13, 2019. Answers (1)
- Use the correct form of the word in brackets to fill in the blank space in each of the sentences below.(Solved)
Use the correct form of the word in brackets to fill in the blank space in each of the sentences below.
i)Peter sang yesterday ...........................................................................(melody)
ii) The state will undertake the ................................................ (maintain) of the road.
iii) Her argument was obviously …………………………………………. (error)
Date posted: August 13, 2019. Answers (1)
- Complete each of the sentences with an appropriate question tag.(Solved)
Complete each of the sentences with an appropriate question tag.
i) It’s very cold, ………………………………………………………………………
ii) You are free, ……………………………………………………………………………
iii) They haven’t come yet, ………………………………………………………………..
Date posted: August 13, 2019. Answers (1)