SPELLING REBELS COMPETATIVE EXAMS TET,DSC,SSC - COMPETITIVE ENGLISH /* Optimize images */ .post-body img { max-width: 100%; height: auto; -webkit-transform: translateZ(0); /* GPU acceleration */ } /* Remove render-blocking elements */ .widget.HTML, widget.AdSense { async: true; }

English Vocabulary, TET,CTET,DSC AP AND TS,FOR ALL COMPETITIVE EXAMS, Grammar rules errors, usage new terminology, idioms and phrases antonyms and synonyms

Tuesday, 28 October 2025

SPELLING REBELS COMPETATIVE EXAMS TET,DSC,SSC

> English spelling doesn’t always follow logic—words like Colonel, Island, Debt, and Receipt prove it. This “Spelling Rebels” quiz is designed to test how well you understand irregular spellings and pronunciations through 10 unique question patterns—from easy MCQs to thought-provoking reasoning items. Ideal for TET, CTET, DSC, SSC, and banking aspirants who want conceptual mastery, not memorization.
Spelling Rebels – Competitive Exam Quiz

Spelling Rebels – Competitive Exam Quiz

Pattern-mix: MCQ • Error Detection • Matching • Odd One Out • Pronunciation • Rule Fill • Cloze • Critical & Descriptive

Tip (mobile): use your browser’s Find in page to revisit explanations quickly.
1) Multiple Choice — Silent Letter
Level: Easy

Which letter is silent in the word subtle?

2) Spelling–Pronunciation Pair (Error Detection)
Level: Moderate

Find the correctly matched pair:

3) Match the Pairs — Spelling ⇄ Sound
Level: Moderate
Colonel
Wednesday
Gauge
4) Odd One Out — Phonetic Regularity
Level: Thinking

Choose the word whose pronunciation matches its spelling:

5) Pronunciation Choice
Level: Application

Choose the correct pronunciation of Rendezvous:

6) Fill in the Rule
Level: Analytical

In the word receipt, the letter “p” is ______.

7) Critical Thinking — Explain the Irregularity
Level: High-order

Why do we pronounce colonel as KUR-nul although it contains no “r”? (3–4 lines)

8) Cloze — Context Use
Level: Applied

The captain steered the ______ through the storm.

9) Thought-Provoking — Meta Concept
Level: Conceptual

English spelling is called “rebellious” because —

10) Descriptive — Short Answer
Level: Evaluative

“English spelling is history written down.” — Explain using two examples from the Spelling Rebels list.

Show Answer Key + Explanations
  1. Q1: B — b is silent in subtle.
  2. Q2: A — Receipt → “re-seet”.
  3. Q3: Colonel → KUR-nul; Wednesday → WENZ-day; Gauge → GAYJ.
  4. Q4: Band is regular; the others have silent/irregular letters.
  5. Q5: “Rendezvous” → rahn-day-voo (French origin).
  6. Q6: “p” is silent in receipt.
  7. Q7 (model): English kept French pronunciation (coronel) but restored Italian spelling (colonnello) → KUR-nul.
  8. Q8: yacht.
  9. Q9: Because English often ignores phonetic logic and preserves history.
  10. Q10 (model): Use two examples (e.g., colonel, island, subtle) to show etymology over phonetics.
Scoring: MCQs/match/fill/cloze = exact. Essays award partial credit automatically if key ideas are present. Reviewers can override.
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Spelling Rebels Quiz • Designed for TET/CTET/DSC/SSC practice
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