Q.1.
In which of these sentences does an item of clothing double as the most aggressive verb?
Q.2.
In ONE of the following sentences, a noun that is the name of a tool is WRONGLY used as though it were also a verb: which one?
Q.3.
ONE of these sentences includes a word which can also mean 'to cause an injury by means of one's hand': which one?
Q.4.
In which of these sentences does the main verb come from a part of the body that is not 'on the outside'?
Q.5.
Which of these occupational nouns-as-verbs carries the LEAST suggestion of things being cut down, or back?
Q.6.
In which of the following sentences is the name of an animal used as a verb, which is not usually regarded as a farm animal?
Q.7.
Which of these culinary metaphors does NOT involve the addition of any solid ingredient?
Q.8.
In which ONE of these sentences / passages is the word doubling as a verb and a noun, also (and most usually / obviously) the name of a living creature?
Q.9.
Which of the words offered below is the only one that would make sense in EACH of the blanks in this passage? 'When the Council acquired the site to build the Hillside Park Library, their first plan was to have a gently ... ... building that flowed with the landscape, rather than one great big slabby traditional municipal block; it could still be designed to accommodate sufficient ... ... to house the present and future book stock. But there were so many arguments; costs rose, no plans were agreed or approved; and, very sadly, they ended up ... ... the entire project indefinitely.'
Q.10.
In which ONE of these sentences is the noun/verb 'drag' used in its original, literal sense?