Solved MCQs
Solved MCQs
_________45%
When material culture advances faster than the non material culture,it is called?____Cultural lag
The development of new norms to cope with a new situation is?____emergent norms
Social movements that seek to change people totally are______Redemptive social movements
Max Weber identified as the core reason for the development of capitalism_____Religion
Social change is a process of struggle between social classes over control of the forces of
production.This view is found in____Marx
GK MCQs
1. The river Danube rises in which country?
Germany.
2. Which US state has the sugar maple as its state tree and is the leading US producer of
maple sugar?
Vermont.
3. Which country is nicknamed ‘The Cockpit of Europe’ because of the number of battles
throughout history fought on its soil?
Belgium.
4. What is the capital of Libya?
Tripoli.
5. Apart from French, German and Romansch, what is the fourth official language of the
Switzerland?
Italian.
7. In which city was the world’s first underground train was service opened in 1863?
London.
14. Which city was the first capital of the Kingdom of Italy until 1865?
Turin.
17. Which three countries, apart from the former Yugoslavia, share borders with Greece?
Albania, Bulgaria, Turkey.
20. In the Greek alphabet, what is the name for the letter O?
Omicron.
21. What, in the 16th and 17th century, was a pavana?
A dance.
22. A nephron is the functional unit of which organ in the human body?
Kidney.
30. The river Douro forms part of the border between which two countries?
Spain and Portugal.
34. What name is given to a mixture of bicarbonate of soda and tartaric acid used in
cooking?
Baking powder.
35. AOL are an internet service provider. What does AOL stand for?
America Online.
40. Apart from America, which is the only country in the world to which alligators are
native?
China.
41. Which are the highest types of clouds: stratocumulus or cirrus?
Cirrus.
42. Which ancient measure of length was based on the length of the arm from fingertip to
elbow?
Cubit.
44. Which sea in Northern Europe is bounded by several countries including Sweden,
Finland, Poland and Germany?
The Baltic.
45. A road tunnel runs from Pelerins in France to Entreves in Italy under which mountain?
Mont Blanc.
47. Which two countries are either side of the mouth of the River Plate?
Argentina and Uruguay.
48. Quicklime is an alkaline powder obtained by strongly heating which other material?
Chalk.
50. The Great Barrier Reef is off coast of which Australian state?
Queensland.
51. What is the name of the milky fluid obtained from trees which is used to produce
rubber?
Latex.
54. How many innings are there for each team in a game of baseball?
Nine.
55. Which is the only mammal with the power of active flight?
Bat.
56. Which lower level of clouds are commonly called ‘rain clouds’?
Nimbus.
58. Which metallic element has the property of catching fire if dropped in hot water?
Sodium.
59. Which month of the year obtains its name from the Latin verb for ‘to open’?
April.
67. Which unit of measurement is derived from the Arabic quirrat, meaning seed?
Carat.
77. Which nun won the Nobel prize for peace in 1979?
Mother Teresa.
79. Which scientist was named 'Person of the Century' by Time Magazine?
Albert Einstein.
83. What name is given to the stiffening of the body after death?
Rigor mortis.
86. The name of which North African city literally means ‘white house’?
Casablanca.
87. Of what sort of fish is the dogfish a small variety?
Shark.
88. Which Asian country was divided at the 38th parallel after World War II?
Korea.
89. What is the name of the Winter Olympics event that combines cross-country skiing and
shooting?
Biathlon.
94. Aerophobia is a fear of flying, agoraphobia is a fear of open spaces, what is acrophobia a
fear of?
Heights.
98. What C is a device used to determine small lengths, of which a vernier is one type?
Caliper.
100. What calibrated tool was the standard tool for engineers and scientists prior to the
invention of the hand-held calculator?
Slide rule.
104. Ball-pein, club, claw and bush are types of which tool?
Hammer.
114. Which Indian religion celebrated the 300th anniversary of its founding in 1999?
Sikhism.
116. By what name is the fruit of the plant Ananas comosus known?
Pineapple.
125. In the book Treasure Island what is the name of the ship?
Hispaniola.
131. The name of which Roman god means 'shining father' in Latin?
Jupiter.
133. Which French city is a meeting place for the European Parliament?
Strasbourg.
134. What part of the body consists of the duodenum, the jejunum and the ileum?
Small intestine.
136. What kind of foodstuff is Monterey Jack? (It was also a cartoon's name
'What's for breakfast?'
187. What is the name of a person, plant or animal which shuns the light?
Lucifugous.
194. Which strait separates the North and South islands of New Zealand?
Cook Strait.
198. Ice-cream was first produced in which country in the 17th century?
Italy.
200. Which popular name for Netherlands is actually a low-lying region of the country?
Holland.
203. The Kyukyu Island chain lies between which two countries?
Japan & Taiwan.
204. Which fibrous protein is the major constituent of hair, nails, feathers, beaks and claws?
Keratin.
209. Which war lasted 16 years longer than its name implies?
The Hundred Year's War.
212. What name is given to minute or microscopic animals and plants that live in the upper
layers of fresh and salt water?
Plankton.
217. Which Shakespeare character's last words are: 'The rest is silence'?
Hamlet.
218. In economics, whose law states that: 'bad money drives out good money'?
Gresham's
219. Who made the first navigation of the globe in the vessel Victoria?
Magellan.
220. Which mountaineer on being asked why he wanted to climb Everest said: 'Because it's
there'?
George Mallory.
221. What was the former name for Sri Lanka?
Ceylon.
227. What is the quality rating for diesel fuel, similar to the octane number for petrol?
Catane number.
228. Which German city and port is at the confluence of the rivers Neckar and Rhine?
Mannheim.
234. How many balls are on the table at the start of a game of pool?
Sixteen.
236. What name is given to inflammation of one or more joints, causing pain, swelling and
restriction of movement?
Arthritis.
240. What 'ology' is concerned with the study of unidentified flying objects?
Ufology.
241. Coal and longtailed are types of which bird family?
Tit.
242. In the game of darts, what is the value of the outer bull?
25.
244. What is the modern name of the rocky fortress which the Moors named Gabel-al-Tarik
(the Rock of Tarik)?
Gibraltar.
245. What was the name of German terrorist Andreas Baader's female partner?
Ulrike Meinhof.
246. And what was the name of the urban guerrilla organisation they headed?
The Red Army Faction.
247. Which German bacteriologist discovered Salvarsan, a compound used in the treatment
of syphilis, before the introduction of antibiotics?
Paul Ehrlich.
251. What is the art of preparing, stuffing and mounting the skins of animals to make lifelike
models called?
Taxidermy.
253. What is the technical name for abnormally high blood presure?
Hypertension.
258. San Juan is the capital of which island in the West Indies?
Puerto Rico.
259. Which profession gets its name from the Latin word for lead?
Plumbing.
265. Which German city is asscociated with the legend of the Pied Piper?
Hameln, or Hamelin.
266. What name is given to the wind pattern that brings heavy rain to South Asia from April
to September?
Monsoon.
268. What name is given to the time taken for half the atoms in a sample of a radioactive
isotope to decay?
Half-life.
270. Which German author wrote the anti-war novel All Quiet on the Western Front?
Erich Maria Remarque.
271. Which country had a police force called the Tonton Macoutes?
Haiti.
273. Who was the first British sovereign to make regular use of Buckingham Palace when in
residence in London?
Queen Victoria.
279. Who became first black world heavyweight boxing champion in 1918?
Jack Johnson.
280. The name of which city in South America means Vale of Paradise?
Valparaiso.
_____281. Which gas used in advertising signs has the symbol Ne?
Neon.
284. What name is given to the use of live animals in the experiments?
Vivisection.
286. The Golden Arrow was a famous train that ran from Paris to which destination?
Monte Carlo.
287. Which country fought on both sides during World War II?
Italy.
300. Which term meaning 'lightning war' was used to describe military tactics used by
Germany in World War II?
Blitzkrieg.