Have any questions?
[email protected]
English
Vietnamese
French
Spanish
Korean
Japanese
Thai
Chinese
Indonesian
Login
Signup
Contact
Login
Home
The state of his affairs …………….. a cause for concern.
Question 1:
The state of his affairs …………….. a cause for concern.
A.
is
B.
are
These questions are from this test. Would you like to take a practice test?
Subject-verb agreement - Test 9 | Exercise follow Topic
20 minutes
10 questions
Do test
Some questions from the same exam
Plutarch’s Lives ……………. an interesting book.
The United States ………………… one of the most influential countries in the world.
Thousand dollars …………… a huge sum.
Either you or I ………………. mistaken.
The leader, as well has his followers, …………… arrested.
Wool, as well as cotton, ………………… exported from India.
No news ……………… good news.
The king, with his ministers, …………….. coming.
Time and tide ………………. for none.
The state of his affairs …………….. a cause for concern.
Some other questions you may be interested in
In this novel, the following words are said by the protagonist, Isadora Wing, who is in pursuit of liberation: ‘I was nobody’s baby now. Liberated. Utterly free. It was the most terrifying sensation I’d ever known in my life. Like teetering on the edge of the Grand Canyon and hoping you’d learn to fly before you hit the bottom.
This is a quote from a novel in which the action takes place in a mental institution: ‘You have to laugh at the things that hurt you just to keep yourself in balance, just to keep the world from running you plumb crazy.’ Name the novel.
After Dr. Seuss used 236 different words to write The Cat in the Hat, his publisher, Bennett Cerf, bet $50 that Seuss could not write a book of only fifty words. Seuss won the bet with this book in 1960.
Published in January 1990, this is the last book written and illustrated by Dr. Seuss. In the US, its a popular graduation gift.
The plot of this 1984 Seuss satire has been likened to the war between Blefuscu and Lilliput in Jonathan Swifts Gullivers Travel and their war over which end of an egg is supposed to be cracked.
Youre a Mean One, Mr. Grinch, one of the most famous songs from the 1966 animated TV special How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, was sung by the narrator Boris Karloff.