1000+ Reading Comprehension Exercises with Answers Pdf - 1

Question: 1

Primitive man was probably more concerned with fire as a source of warmth and as a means of cooking food than as a source of light. Before he discovered less laborious ways of making fire, he had to preserve it, and whenever he went on a journey he carried a firebrand with him. His discovery that the firebrand, from which the torch may very well have developed, could be used for illumination was probably incidental to the primary purpose of preserving a flame.
Lamps, too, probably developed by accident. Early, man may have had his first conception of a lamp while watching a twig or fibre burning in the molten fat dropped from a roasting carcass. All he had to do was to fashion a vessel to contain fat and float a lighted reed in it. Such lamps, which were made of hollowed stones or sea shells, have persisted in identical form up to quite recent times.
Primitive man’s most important use for fire was

(A) to provide warmth

(B) to cook food

(C) to provide light

(D) both a and b

Ans: D

both a and b

Question: 2

Early lamps were made by

(A) floating a reed in the sea-shell

(B) putting the fat in a shell and lighting it

(C) letting a reed soak the fat

(D) using a reed as a wick in the fat

Ans: D

using a reed as a wick in the fat

Question: 3

Lamps probably developed through mere

(A) hazard

(B) planning

(C) chance

(D) fate

Ans: C

chance

Question: 4

By 'primary' the author means

(A) essential

(B) elemental

(C) fundamental

(D) primitive

Ans: A

essential

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