Have any questions?
[email protected]
English
Vietnamese
French
Spanish
Korean
Japanese
Thai
Chinese
Indonesian
Login
Signup
Contact
Login
Home
What type of plant is the mulberry?
Question 1:
What type of plant is the mulberry?
A.
Tree
B.
None of these
C.
Herb
D.
Shrub
These questions are from this test. Would you like to take a practice test?
Trivial Practice Quiz hobbies - Test 81 | Englishfreetest.com
30 minutes
15 questions
Do test
Some questions from the same exam
What type of plant is the mulberry?
In what country was the garden strawberry first bred in 1740?
What type of oil is used for the preparation of the bread variety called Tiger bread?
In what country did the Damper bread variety originate?
How is the traditional Jamaican bread called Bammy prepared?
What type of bread is the German bread variety called Dampfnudel?
On what major holiday is the sweet bread Tsoureki eaten in Greece?
In what Arab country did the Sangak bread variety originate?
What makes the Vienna bread so light and airy?
In what country did the bread called Pane carasau originate?
What type of flour is used for the preparation of the Thai bread Khanom bueang?
In what Asian country was the Melonpan bread variety invented?
What important health benefit does cooked sweet corn provide?
What essential vitamin is supplied through the consumption of carrots?
The regular consumption of cauliflower is proven to prevent this disease.
Some other questions you may be interested in
The following quote is from a novel which describes a society, characterized mainly by the lack of freedom: ‘Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.’ Name the novel.
The main character from this literary work by Philip Roth addresses the following words to his domineering and meticulous Jewish mother: ‘Because to be bad, Mother, that is the real struggle: to be bad and to enjoy it. That is what makes men of us boys.’
In this novel, with the following sentences, David Lodge sums up the fact that his Catholic characters ceased to believe in the existence of hell: ‘At some point in the nineteen-sixties, Hell disappeared. No one could say for certain when this happened. First it was there and then it wasn’t.
The following quote is from a literary work by Kurt Vonnegut in which the characters search for an important and dangerous substance called ‘ice-nine’: ‘Beware of the man who works hard to learn something, learns it, and finds himself no wiser than before. He is full of murderous resentment of people who are ignorant without having come by their ignorance the hard way.’ Name the literary work.
The following speculation is from a novel set in the gloomy Fen Country of East Anglia: ‘Realitys not strange, not unexpected. Reality doesnt reside in the sudden hallucination of events. Reality is uneventfulness, vacancy, flatness. Reality is that nothing happens. How many of the events of history have occurred, ask yourselves, for this and for that reason, but for no other reason, fundamentally, than the desire to make things happen?’ Can you name the novel?
This quote is from a novel by Somerset Maugham, which tells the story of a young man searching for the meaning of life: ‘It is an illusion that youth is happy, an illusion of those who have lost it; but the young know they are wretched, for they are full of the truthless ideals which have been instilled into them and each time they come in contact with the real they are bruised and wounded.