Match the items in List – I with items in List – II according to the code given below:
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Readers of Tayeb Salih's Seasons of Migration to the North will undoubtedly notice its parallels with the story / stories of :
Match the following characters of the Canterbury Tales with their 'Tales'
Select the correct answer using the codes given below:
Eighteenth century writers used satire frequently for
Which of the following is not a statement given by Wordsworth for Milton ?
In King Lear who among the following speaks in the voice of Poor Tom?
Match the following elegies with the persons for whom they were written :
As Adam and Eve leave Paradise, “hand in hand with wand’ring steps and slow” (Book XII, Paradise Lost) what is their consolation?
The Bloomsbury Group included British intellectuals, critics, writers and artists. Who among the following belonged to the Bloomsbury Group?
Here is a list of early English plays imitating Greek and Latin plays. Pick the odd one out :
What is the significance of the d'Urberville family history, as mentioned in the excerpt?
What is the significance of the Battle Abbey Roll, mentioned in the excerpt?
What is the speaker's tone in the excerpt?
Match List - I with List - II according to the code given below :
In Paradise Lostwhich character narrates the story of the making of Eve from a rib in Adam’s side?
Heinrich Boll has something to say, and not of course merely something about theGermans. He says it several times. A common weakness of writers with something to say is their inability to understand that saying it four times is not necessarily four times as effective as saying it once. But to have something to say – how rare this is!
– D. J. Enright, “Three New Germans”.
From a reading of the above, the reader can deduce:
I. Enright mildly disapproves of Heinrich Boll’s saying not merely something about Germans.
II. Enright is disappointed that Heinrich Boll has practically nothing to say about people other than Germans.
III. Enright agrees that Heinrich Boll shares a weakness with writers who prefer saying something four times to saying it once
IV. Enright does not believe that saying something four times will necessarily make the same effective.
The right combination, according to the code, is
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