Reading Comprehension

Reading Comprehension questions are designed to test a wide range of abilities that are required in order to read and understand the kinds of prose commonly encountered in advanced studies.

Directions

Directions

This passage is accompanied by questions about its content. For each question, select the best answer among the five choices. Answer all questions on the basis of what the passage states or implies.

Sample Question Passage

Should we really care for the greatest actors of the past could we have them before us? Should we find them too different from our accent of thought, of feeling, of speech, in a thousand minute particulars which are of the essence of all three? Dr. Doran's long and interesting records of the triumphs of Garrick, and other less familiar, but in their day hardly less astonishing, players, do not relieve one of the doubt. Garrick himself, as sometimes happens with people who have been the subject of much anecdote and other conversation, here as elsewhere, bears no very distinct figure. One hardly sees the wood for the trees. On the other hand, the account of Betterton, "perhaps the greatest of English actors," is delightfully fresh. That intimate friend of Dryden, Tillatson, Pope, who executed a copy of the actor's portrait by Kneller which is still extant, was worthy of their friendship; his career brings out the best elements in stage life. The stage in these volumes presents itself indeed not merely as a mirror of life, but as an illustration of the utmost intensity of life, in the fortunes and characters of the players. Ups and downs, generosity, dark fates, the most delicate goodness, have nowhere been more prominent than in the private existence of those devoted to the public mimicry of men and women. Contact with the stage, almost throughout its history, presents itself as a kind of touchstone, to bring out the bizarrerie, the theatrical tricks and contrasts, of the actual world.

Adapted from an essay by W H Pater

Question

In the expression ne hardly sees the wood for the trees, the author apparently intends the word trees to be analogous to

  1. features of Doran's language style
  2. details learned from oral sources
  3. personality of a famous actor
  4. details of Garrick's life
  5. stage triumphs of an astonishing player

For updated information and Test Preparation

Admission Tests Employment Tests Scholarship Tests

For updated information and Test Preparation

Admission Tests Employment Tests Scholarship Tests

Click/tap the topic below to have lesson and practice questions.

Reading Comprehension

Reading Comprehension

Short Passage

Short Passage

Medium Passage

Medium Passage

Long Passage

Long Passage

Main Idea

Main Idea

Inference

Inference

Tone Style and Attitude

Tone Style and Attitude

For updated information and Test Preparation

Admission Tests Employment Tests Scholarship Tests