logo

CuriousTab

CuriousTab

Discussion


Home General Knowledge English See What Others Are Saying!
  • Question
  • A passage is given with 5 questions following it. Read the passage carefully and choose the best answer to each question out of the four alternatives and click the button corresponding to it. Man's attitude to various animals changed many times in the course of centuries. From indifference or practicality, he went on to adoration and deification, and then to hatred. Ancient Egyptians, for example, highly appreciated the cat's ability to destroy rodents. The cat was much superior in this respect to the grasssnakes and weasels they had kept in their houses before. These proved unable to cope with hordes of rats which invaded Egypt from Asia. So the cat, a very useful animal, was ranked as a sacred animal and one of the most important animals, too. The goddess of the Moon, fertility and childbirth, Bast herself was portrayed by the Egyptians as a woman with a cat's head. Sumptuous temples were built to this goddess, where cats were kept in luxury and fed the choicest of foods. They had their own priests and votaries, more numerous as a matter of fact than any other sacred animal could boast. According to the Greek historian Herodotus, the festival in the city of Bubastis, which had a temple dedicated to cats, was attended by as many as 700 thousand, who brought their offerings to the goddess in the shape of figurines of her made of gold, silver and bronze and adorned with precious stones. The word 'deification' in the passage means _____ .


  • Options
  • A. highly valuable
  • B. take pride
  • C. act of treating as God
  • D. devotees

  • Correct Answer
  • act of treating as God 

  • Tags: Bank Exams

    More questions

    • 1. United Nations adapted a Charter of Economic Rights in the year

    • Options
    • A. 1969
    • B. 1974
    • C. 1956
    • D. 1964
    • Discuss
    • 2. The intersecting lines drawn on maps and globes are


    • Options
    • A. latitudes
    • B. longitudes
    • C. geographic grids
    • D. None of the above
    • Discuss
    • 3. The budget deficit means


    • Options
    • A. the excess of total expenditure, including loans, net of lending over revenue receipts
    • B. difference between revenue receipts and revenue expenditure
    • C. difference between all receipts and all the expenditure
    • D. fiscal deficit less interest payments
    • Discuss
    • 4. The infrared radiation by sun are strongly absorbed by


    • Options
    • A. carbon dioxide
    • B. water vapours
    • C. carbon dioxide and water vapours
    • D. ozone
    • Discuss
    • 5. The Board of Industrial and Financial Reconstruction (BIFR) came into existence in


    • Options
    • A. 1984
    • B. 1986
    • C. 1987
    • D. 1989
    • Discuss
    • 6. Eugenics is the study of

    • Options
    • A. altering human beings by changing their genetic components
    • B. people of European origin
    • C. different races of mankind
    • D. genetic of plants
    • Discuss
    • 7. The highest mountains in Africa, which is not part of any mountains chain, is


    • Options
    • A. Mt. Aconcagua
    • B. Mt. Kilimanjaro
    • C. Mt. Kosciuszko
    • D. Mont Blanc
    • Discuss
    • 8. How many former republics of USSR have become members of the Commonwealth of Independent States?

    • Options
    • A. 11
    • B. 10
    • C. 12
    • D. 9
    • Discuss
    • 9. The length of the tropical years (the time interval between successive occurrences of the spring equinox) is decreasing very slowly as a result of


    • Options
    • A. small, progressive changes in the earth's rotational speed
    • B. small, progressive change in earth's orbit around the sun
    • C. both (a) and (b)
    • D. None of the above
    • Discuss
    • 10. The term Khalisa in Mughal administration signified the


    • Options
    • A. entire Imperial establishment
    • B. land owned b the emperor himself
    • C. religious land grants
    • D. land from where revenue was collected for the Imperial Treasury
    • Discuss


    Comments

    There are no comments.

Enter a new Comment