Skip to main content
ENGLISH
(For both General and Technical/Professional Cadres)
Total Marks-200
Part-A
Marks-100
1. Reading Comprehension
An unseen passage dealing with a topic relevant to our times will be set. Candidates will be
required to answer (a) a number of thematic questions that will test their understanding of the passage
(30 marks), and (b) a number of questions related to grammar and usage. (30 marks)


2. Candidates will be required to write a summary of the given passage in their own words within 100
words. (20 marks)
3. Candidates will have to write a letter relating to the thematic issue of the given passage to the editor
of an English newspaper. (20 marks)
Part-B
Marks-100
1. Candidates will be required to compose an essay on a topic related to an issue of topical relevance.
The essay must conform to the word limit set and must convey a candidate’s ability to express his or
her ideas clearly and correctly in English as well as reflect and analyze a topic of contemporary
interest. (50 marks)
2. Translation from English into Bangla and Bangla into English
Candidates will be required to translate a short passage from Bangla into English and another from
English into Bangla. (25+25=50 marks)




Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A Critical Analysis of Poem "No Second Troy" by William Butler Yeats

  " No Second Troy " by William Butler Yeats, a great Irish poet, is poem about the love relationship between the poet and Maud Gonne , devastatingly beautiful Irish woman. It is one of the great literary love stories of the 20th century. The poem hints that how an alluring dazzling beauty can cause a devastating massive distraction with the reference to Helen of Troy, from the Iliad and the Aeneid . Now we will critically look into the poem. Before discussing the poem, let us have a look at the background of the poem. Yeats, in fact, published the poem in 1916 in the collection “ Responsibilities and Other Poems” , after he had already proposed to Gonne; and been rejected on numerous occasions. Yeats was obsessed with her and pursued her for over a decade and dedicated many of his poems to her. In this poem, however, Yeats's attitude is somewhat harsh, as he compares Gonne with the infamously beautiful and notoriously mi...

Bacon’s Prose Style as We Find in His Essays

Francis Bacon, (1561-1626) is the most influential and resourceful English writer of his time. He very expertly uses different types of literary devices like paradox, aphorism, climax in his essays. He usually uses the condensed sentences with deep hidden explanations. We also find a touch of reality and practicality in his writings. Now we are going to discuss his views. Bacon very skilfully exploits the literary device ‘paradox’ in the essay “ Of Truth” . Truth, according to Bacon, lacks the charm of variety which, falsehood has. Truth gives more pleasure only when a lie is added to it.  He believes that, falsehood is a source of temporary enjoyment as it gives the people a strange kind of pleasure. So the essayist paradoxically says: “ …a mixture of a lie doth ever add pleasure” We find another paradoxical maxim in the same essay .  To Bacon, a liar is brave towards god but cowardly towards men. A liar does not have courage to tell the truth to the people b...

The Difference between Tragedy and the Whole Truth

The Difference between Tragic Literature  and Non-tragic Literature Aldous Huxley (1894-1963), a great literary critic, highly individualistic writer and a major modern essayist, shows the difference between tragic literature, containing partial truth and the non-tragic literature, containing whole truth, in his master-piece essay “ Tragedy and the Whole Truth ”. Here he also shows the superiority of the whole truth over the tragedy.  Now we are going to discuss the difference between tragedy and the whole truth in detail. In order to know the difference between tragedy and the whole truth, we are, at first, to know what the truth is. We generally find two types of truth. First one is actual truth and another one is literary truth. To Huxley, two and two makes four, or Queen Victoria came to the throne in 1837 or light travels at the rate of 187000 miles a second is the example of actual truth.  But in literature we may not find such kind of t...