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BSF Constable Phrase Replacement

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This page covers BSF Constable Phrase Replacement with complete concept notes, 56 graded practice MCQs, key points and exam-specific tips. Free to study.

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Concept Notes

Phrase Replacement— Rules & Concept

Core ConceptRead this first — the foundation of the topic
Core Concept

A phrase is a group of words that work together but don't form a complete sentence. In phrase replacement questions, one phrase in the sentence is wrong. You must spot the error and choose the correct alternative

Subject-Verb Agreement

Singular subjects take singular verbs, plural subjects take plural verbs 2

Tense Consistency

All verbs in a sentence should follow logical time sequence 3

Preposition Usage

Each verb/noun has specific prepositions (interested 'in', good 'at') 4

Article Usage

'A/An' for singular countable nouns, 'The' for specific things 5

Pronoun Agreement

Pronouns must match their antecedents in number and gender 6

Comparative Forms

Use correct degrees of comparison (good-better-best)

Exam PatternsWhat examiners ask — read before attempting PYQs
1

2-3 questions appear regularly in SSC CGL Tier 1

2

Most errors involve subject-verb disagreement, wrong prepositions, or tense mismatches

3

Options include 'No improvement required' when the original phrase is correct

4

Phrases are usually 3-5 words long and underlined in the sentence

ShortcutsUse these to save 30–60 seconds per question

- The STAMP Method: S - Subject-verb check (do they agree?) T - Tense consistency (is timing logical?) A - Articles and prepositions (are they correct?) M - Meaning (does it make sense?) P - Parallel structure (are similar elements in same form?)

Worked ExampleSolve this step-by-step before moving on
1
Step 1

Identify the error type - This is a preposition error

2
Step 2

Apply STAMP method - 'Despite of' is incorrect because 'despite' never takes 'of'

3
Step 3

Check meaning - We need a word meaning 'even though'

4
Step 4

Evaluate options: - 'Despite' means 'in spite of' and doesn't need 'of' - 'In spite of' is correct but changes the structure - 'Though of' is grammatically wrong

5
Step 5

Answer is (B) Despite - it maintains meaning and fixes the error Another Quick Trick: Read the sentence aloud with each option. Your ear often catches what your eye misses.

Exam TrapsCommon mistakes students make — avoid these

Students often choose options that sound fancy but are grammatically wrong

Forgetting that 'No improvement' can be the answer

Not checking if the replacement fits the overall sentence structure

Ignoring the meaning while focusing only on grammar

Key Points to Remember

  • Phrase replacement tests grammar rules and contextual appropriateness in 3-5 word phrases
  • Use STAMP method: Subject-verb, Tense, Articles/prepositions, Meaning, Parallel structure
  • Subject-verb agreement is the most tested error type in SSC CGL phrase replacement
  • Despite, inspite of, although, though - learn the correct usage of these contrast words
  • 'No improvement required' option appears when the original phrase is already correct
  • Preposition errors are common - memorize verb-preposition and noun-preposition pairs
  • Read the complete sentence with your chosen option to ensure logical flow
  • Tense consistency errors often involve mixing past, present, and future incorrectly

Exam-Specific Tips

  • 2-3 phrase replacement questions appear in every SSC CGL Tier 1 English section
  • 'Despite' never takes 'of' while 'in spite of' always requires 'of'
  • Words ending in -one, -body, -thing are always singular (everyone is, somebody has)
  • 'Each', 'every', 'either', 'neither' always take singular verbs
  • Present perfect tense uses 'since' for point of time and 'for' for period of time
  • 'Good' is adjective, 'well' is adverb - He plays good (wrong), He plays well (correct)
  • 'Between' is used for two items, 'among' is used for three or more items
  • 'A lot of' is always written as three separate words, never 'alot'
Practice MCQs

Phrase Replacement — Practice Questions

56graded MCQs · easy to hard · full solution & trap analysis · showing 20 of 56

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Practice 1easy

Identify the sentence with correct phrase usage: Which option correctly uses the idiom 'beat around the bush'?

Practice 2easy

Choose the option that best replaces the underlined phrase: 'The government decided to crack down on corruption in the public sector.'

Practice 3easy

Choose the option that best replaces the underlined phrase: 'The manager decided to put off the meeting because he was not feeling well.' Which of the following is the most appropriate replacement for 'put off'?

Practice 4easy

Select the option that best replaces the underlined phrase. The manager decided to **put all his eggs in one basket** by investing the entire company fund in a single project. Which of the following is the closest meaning?

Practice 5easy

Choose the option that best replaces the underlined phrase. The company's new strategy proved to be a **double-edged sword** in the competitive market. What does this phrase mean in the given context?

Practice 6easy

Identify the error in the following sentence: 'The report which was submitted yesterday contains several errors that needs to be corrected immediately.'

Practice 7easy

Which option correctly completes the sentence: 'The team leader's decision to go the extra mile _____ the project's success.'

Practice 8easy

Choose the option that best replaces the underlined phrase: 'The employee's poor performance was a thorn in the side of the entire department.'

Practice 9easy

Which sentence correctly uses the idiom 'to beat around the bush'?

Practice 10easy

Select the option that best replaces the underlined phrase. The manager decided to **put all his eggs in one basket** by investing the entire company fund in a single project. Which of the following is the most appropriate replacement?

Practice 11easy

Choose the option that correctly replaces the underlined phrase: 'The employee was asked to come to terms with the new company policy.'

Practice 12easy

Select the option that best replaces the underlined phrase. The manager decided to **put all his eggs in one basket** by investing the entire company fund in a single project. A) distribute resources across multiple ventures B) risk everything on a single venture C) organise his financial portfolio carefully D) delegate responsibilities to team members

Practice 13easy

Choose the option that best replaces the underlined phrase: 'The CEO decided to call off the conference due to the pandemic.' What is the most appropriate formal replacement for 'call off'?

Practice 14easy

Choose the option that best replaces the underlined phrase: 'The manager decided to put off the meeting because of the unexpected crisis.'

Practice 15easy

Select the option that correctly replaces the underlined phrase. The witness decided to **spill the beans** about the incident after months of silence. Which option best expresses the same meaning?

Practice 16easy

Select the option that correctly replaces the underlined phrase. After years of hard work, she finally **came into her own** and achieved recognition in her field. Which option best conveys the same meaning?

Practice 17easy

Identify the sentence where the phrase 'beat around the bush' is used CORRECTLY. A) The politician continued to **beat around the bush** when asked directly about his involvement in the scandal. B) The teacher decided to **beat around the bush** by explaining the concept step-by-step to the students. C) The doctor will **beat around the bush** to diagnose the patient's illness accurately. D) She **beat around the bush** to complete the project on time.

Practice 18easy

Which sentence correctly uses the phrase 'in the long run'?

Practice 19easy

Choose the option that best replaces the underlined phrase: 'The politician's speech was full of empty promises, which proved to be much ado about nothing.'

Practice 20medium

Identify the sentence with the correct use of the phrase 'at loggerheads': A) The two nations have been at loggerheads over trade policies for months. B) The committee members are at loggerheads to reach a consensus. C) She remained at loggerheads despite the mediator's efforts. D) They went at loggerheads with the new proposal.

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60-Second Revision — Phrase Replacement

  • Remember: Apply STAMP method for systematic error detection in phrases
  • Formula: Singular subject + singular verb, Plural subject + plural verbs always
  • Trap: 'Despite of' is always wrong, use either 'despite' or 'in spite of'
  • Check: Read complete sentence with chosen option to verify logical meaning
  • Rule: Words like each, every, neither, either always take singular verbs
  • Trick: If original phrase sounds right and follows grammar rules, choose 'No improvement'
  • Alert: Don't choose fancy-sounding options that are grammatically incorrect
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