Question : The statement below has been given in bracketed text. Select the option with the correct idiom for the bracketed text. You all look great in your costumes! (Good luck!)
Option 1: Come again
Option 2: Don't swear it
Option 3: Break a leg
Option 4: Spit it out
Correct Answer: Break a leg
Solution : The third option is the correct choice.
The expression break a leg is a common idiom used to wish someone good luck, especially in the performing arts. It is a way of offering encouragement and success without directly saying good luck. The phrase is believed to have originated in the theatre as a superstition, where wishing someone good luck directly was considered bad luck.
Therefore, the correct answer is break a leg.
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Question : The statement below has been given with bracketed text. Select the option with correct idiom for the bracketed text.
That new budget bill was (totally useless) before it hit the Senate.
Option 1: a cry wolf
Option 2: a dead duck
Option 3: cold feet
Option 4: a fuel to the fire
Question : The following sentence has been divided into parts. One of them may contain an error. Select the part that contains the error from the given options. If you don't find any error, mark 'No error' as your answer.
In the delicacy and elaborateness / of its ornament, it is the / more splendid church in Italy.
Option 1: of its ornament it is the
Option 2: No error
Option 3: In the delicacy and elaborateness
Option 4: more splendid church in Italy
Question : Select the most appropriate option to substitute the bracketed segment in the given sentence. If there is no need to substitute it, select 'no substitution required'.
It is expected that this police power will only apply to air and (sea routes between the Great Britain and the Northern Ireland).
Option 1: sea routes across the Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Option 2: sea routes across the Great Britain and the Northern Ireland
Option 3: sea routes between Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Option 4: No substitution required
Question : Select the most appropriate option to substitute the bracketed segment in the given sentence. If there is no need to substitute it, select 'No substitution required.' This commodity in clay-coloured material (can't be used neither as a table mat nor as a table napkin).
Option 1: can't be used either as a table mat or as a table napkin
Option 2: No substitution required
Option 3: can't be used neither as a table mat but as a table napkin
Option 4: can't be used neither as a table mat or as a table napkin
Question : Select the most appropriate meaning of the bracketed idiom in the given sentence. Did you know David went to school with my brother? It's (a small world), isn't it?
Option 1: Overwhelmed by what is happening in the moment.
Option 2: Meeting someone not expected to be at a certain place.
Option 3: A two-person conflict where both people are at fault.
Option 4: An aggressive and bold confrontation.
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