MCQs
Total Questions : 175
| Page 17 of 18 pages
Answer: Option A. -> 2 3 4 1
Answer: (a)
Answer: (a)
Answer: Option B. -> Pamir Knot
Answer: (b)
The Pamir Mountains are a mountain range in Central Asia formed by the junction or knot of the Himalayas, Tian Shan, Karakoram, Kunlun, and the Hindu Kush ranges.
They are among the world’s highest mountains and since Victorian times they have been known as the “Roof of the World” a probable translation from Persian.
Answer: (b)
The Pamir Mountains are a mountain range in Central Asia formed by the junction or knot of the Himalayas, Tian Shan, Karakoram, Kunlun, and the Hindu Kush ranges.
They are among the world’s highest mountains and since Victorian times they have been known as the “Roof of the World” a probable translation from Persian.
Answer: Option C. -> Denmark
Answer: (c)
Answer: (c)
Answer: Option B. -> Peshawar - Islamabad - Gujranwala - Multan
Answer: (b)
Answer: (b)
Answer: Option D. -> Sydney
Answer: (d)
Answer: (d)
Answer: Option D. -> Rome
Answer: (d)
Some of the nicknames of Rome are:
The Eternal City, Caput Mundi, the City of seven hills, etc.
Rome was known as the Eternal City even among the ancient Romans themselves. It was so-called because the Roman people thought that no matter what happened to the world, no matter how many other empires might rise and fall, Rome would go on forever.
Tibullus (54-18 B.C.), Roman elegiac poet, and Ovid (43 B.C), one of the greatest of the Latin poets, as well as other Roman writers, refer to the city as eternal, and the thought is expressed in many official documents of the Empire in later days.
In Vergil’s Aeneid Jupiter tells Venus that he will give the Romans imperium sine fine, “an empire without end.” The phrase was popularized by The Eternal City (1901), a novel by Hall Caine that deals with a Utopian state in Rome.
Answer: (d)
Some of the nicknames of Rome are:
The Eternal City, Caput Mundi, the City of seven hills, etc.
Rome was known as the Eternal City even among the ancient Romans themselves. It was so-called because the Roman people thought that no matter what happened to the world, no matter how many other empires might rise and fall, Rome would go on forever.
Tibullus (54-18 B.C.), Roman elegiac poet, and Ovid (43 B.C), one of the greatest of the Latin poets, as well as other Roman writers, refer to the city as eternal, and the thought is expressed in many official documents of the Empire in later days.
In Vergil’s Aeneid Jupiter tells Venus that he will give the Romans imperium sine fine, “an empire without end.” The phrase was popularized by The Eternal City (1901), a novel by Hall Caine that deals with a Utopian state in Rome.
Answer: Option C. -> 4 1 2 3
Answer: (c)
Answer: (c)
Answer: Option D. -> Sieraleone
Answer: (d)
Answer: (d)
Answer: Option B. -> Africa and South America
Answer: (b)Africa and South America form a mirror image of each other.
Answer: (b)Africa and South America form a mirror image of each other.