Chief Post
Opinion Must Be Heard

English Précis and Composition 2014

FEDERAL PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION

COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION – 2014 FOR RECRUITMENT TO POSTS IN BS-17 UNDER THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

ENGLISH (PRECIS & COMPOSITION)

TIME ALLOWED: THREE HOURS
PART-I(MCQS): MAXIMUM 30 MINUTES
PART-I (MCQS) MAXIMUM MARKS = 20
PART-II MAXIMUM MARKS = 80
NOTE:

  • (i) Part-II is to be attempted on the separate Answer Book.
  • (ii) Attempt ALL questions from PART-II.
  • (iii) All the parts (if any) of each Question must be attempted at one place instead of at different places.
  • (iv) Write Q. No. in the Answer Book in accordance with Q. No. in the Q.Paper.
  • (v) No Page/Space be left blank between the answers. All the blank pages of Answer Book must be crossed.
  • (vi) Extra attempt of any question or any part of the question will not be considered.

PART-II

Q.2. Make a précis of the following passage and suggest a suitable heading. (20+2=22)

Probably the only protection for contemporary man is to discover how to use his intelligence in theservice of love and kindness. The training of human intelligence must include the simultaneous development of the empathic capacity. Only in this way can intelligence be made an instrument of social morality and responsibility – and thereby increase the chances of survival.

The need to produce human beings with trained morally sensitive intelligence is essentially achallenge to educators and educational institutions. Traditionally, the realm of social morality was left to religion and the churches as guardians or custodians. But their failure to fulfil this responsibility andtheir yielding to the seductive lures of the men of wealth and pomp and power are documented byhistory of the last two thousand years and have now resulted in the irrelevant “God Is Dead”theological rhetoric. The more pragmatic men of power have had no time or inclination to deal withthe fundamental problems of social morality. For them simplistic Machiavellianism must remain theguiding principle of their decisions – power is morality, morality is power. This over-simplificationincreases the chances of nuclear devastation. We must therefore hope that educators and educational institutions have the capacity, the commitment and the time to in-still moral sensitivity as an integral part of the complex pattern of functional human intelligence. Some way must be found in the trainingof human beings to give them the assurance to love, the security to be kind, and the integrity requiredfor a functional empathy.

Q.3. Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow. Use your own language. (20)

In the height of the Enlightenment, men influenced by the new political theories of the era launchedtwo of the largest revolutions in history. These two conflicts, on two separate continents, were bothinitially successful in forming new forms of government. And yet, the two conflicts, though merely adecade apart, had radically different conclusions. How do two wars inspired by more or less the sameideals end up so completely different? Why was the American Revolution largely a success and theFrench Revolution largely a failure?

Historians have pointed to myriad reasons—far too various to be listed here. However, the most frequently cited are worth mentioning. For one, the American Revolution was far removed from theOld World; that is, since it was on a different continent, other European nations did not attempt tointerfere with it. However, in the French Revolution, there were immediate cries for war fromneighboring nations. Early on, for instance, the ousted king attempted to flee to neighboring Austriaand the army waiting there. The newly formed French Republic also warred with Belgium, and aconflict with Britain loomed. Thus, the French had the burden not only of winning a revolution but also defending it from outside. The Americans simply had to win a revolution.

ENGLISH (Précis & Composition):

Secondly, the American Revolution seemed to have a better chance for success from the get-go, due tothe fact that Americans already saw themselves as something other than British subjects. Thus, therewas already a uniquely American character, so, there was not as loud a cry to preserve the British wayof life. In France, several thousands of people still supported the king, largely because the king was
seen as an essential part of French life. And when the king was first ousted and then killed, somebelieved that character itself was corrupted. Remember, the Americans did not oust a king or kill him—they merely separated from him.
Finally, there is a general agreement that the French were not as unified as the Americans, who, for themost part, put aside their political differences until after they had already formed a new nation. TheFrench, despite their Tennis Court Oath, could not do so. Infighting led to inner turmoil, civil war, andeventually the Reign of Terror, in which political dissidents were executed in large numbers.
Additionally, the French people themselves were not unified. The nation had so much stratificationthat it was impossible to unite all of them—the workers, the peasants, the middle-class, the nobles, theclergy—into one cause. And the attempts to do so under a new religion, the Divine Cult of Reason,
certainly did not help. The Americans, remember, never attempted to change the society at large;

rather, they merely attempted to change the government.
(1) Why and how did the Reign of Terror happen?
(2) In what ways does the author suggest that the American Revolution was easier to
complete than the French Revolution?
(3) Of the challenges mentioned facing the French revolutionaries, which do you think hadthe greatest impact on their inability to complete a successful revolution? Why?
(4) Of the strengths mentioned aiding the American revolutionaries, which do you think hadthe greatest impact on their ability to complete a successful revolution? Why?

Q.4. Write a comprehensive note (250 – 300 words) on any ONE of the following: (20)

(i) Actions speak louder than words.
(ii) Girls are more intelligent than boys.
(iii) First deserve, then desire.
(iv) Nothing is certain unless it is achieved.

Q.5. Use ONLY FIVE of the following in sentences which illustrate their meanings: (Extra attempt shall not be considered). (10)

(i) To bring grist to the mill (ii) To keep one’s fingers crossed
(iii) With one’s tongue in one’s cheek (iv) A storm in the tea cup
(v) To talk through one’s hat (vi) Hum and Haw
(vii) To let the grass grow under one’s feet (viii) Penny wise and pound foolish.

Q.6. Correct ONLY FOUR of the following: Extra attempt shall not be considered. (08)

(i) Each furniture in this display is on sale for half price.
(ii) He is abusing the money of his father.
(iii) The duties of the new secretary are to answer the telephone, to type letters and bookkeeping.
(iv) The new models are not only less expensive but more efficient also.
(v) He complied with the requirement that all graduate students in education should write a thesis.
(vi) No sooner we left the shop it began to rain.
(vii) The population of Karachi is greater than any other city in Pakistan. *

 

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