Jamb English Language Past Questions For Year 1979
Question 71
Choose the option nearest in meaning to the underlined words :
Do you have the same aversion as i do for way film?
- A. bitterness
- B. dislike
- C. criticism
- D. indignation
- E. preference
Question 72
Choose the option nearest in meaning to the underlined words :
His summary of the meeting was brief and to the point
- A. careful
- B. precise
- C. accurate
- D. exact
- E. crucial
Question 73
Choose the option nearest in meaning to the underlined words :
As he was a gullible leader his followers took advantage of him
- A. He was weak and unable to enforce his authority
- B. He was partial and unfair in dispensing justice
- C. He was simple minded to a fault
- D. He was slow to act
- E. He was lacking in education and experience in everyday affair
Question 74
Choose the option nearest in meaning to the underline statement or word. My Headmaster is getting old. His mates have been retired. But because of his zeal for work, he has been retained.
- A. my headmaster is strong
- B. my headmaster is cheerful
- C. my headmaster is friendly
- D. my headmaster is enthusiastic about his job
- E. my headmaster's activity at work is unparalleled
Question 75
They hung around together, the boys from the school up on the hill, School was over. They were expecting the result. One or two got teaching job on St. Alban’s College. It is one of the post-war secondary schools that sprang up in the city because serious people felt the educational need of the country, and possessed a sharp nose for smelling quick money. Boys from up country who were eager to learn, whose parents had a little money, but who could not get into the big school like Achimota and Mfantsipim in Cape Coast, rushed to the new schools, secured lodgings with distance relatives , and bought for a relatively cheap amount some sort of education. His friend Sammy was the history master from Form one to Five and was also put in charge of sports in the distant hope that the school would one day get its own playing field near the mental hospital. There were six hundred students who were all day boys; classes were held in Dr. Dodu’s house. The house was originally built by a man of wealth and a large family. The bedrooms, of which they were eight, were turned into classrooms; toilets were knocked into pantries to provide additional classrooms for the ever growing population of the school. Mr. Anokye, a retired pharmacist, owned the school. He laid great emphasis on science, being a science man himself. He wrote a small-rimmed pair of glasses which made him looks like one of those little black cats on Christmas cards. He had a small voice which squeaked with akpeteshie and a breath a breath like the smell of gun powder. He had spent many years at Kole Bu Hospital where he drank the methylated spirit meant to be supplied to laboratory assistants. He was dedicated to learning, in scholar in many ways. He knew Archimedes’ principle. Whenever he shouted, during terminal examinations, his battle cry of Eureka! Eureka! Then he had caught someone cheating, someone looking over his mate’s answer sheet. Mr. Anokye came from a long line of scholars. He claimed his grandfather went to England with Reverend T.A Barnes, D. D., who was the Anglican Bishop of Cape Coast Diocese from 1896 to 1909. He was dedicated to his work. He interviewed Sammy himself, questioned him about his parentage and religious background, listened to him carefully, and decided to appoint him on a salary or six pounds per month pending the outcome of his Cambridge School Certificate examination. He questioned him closely on history, especially the Glorious Revolution, and Oliver Cromwell.
we know that St. Alban's College was in the pioneering state because
- A. only people of poor homes were admitted into it
- B. all the students were day boys
- C. the emphasis was on science
- D. Mr Anokye owned it
- E. it did not even have a playing field