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English Language JAMB Past Questions

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Developments in electronic science have transformed the art of record keeping to the modern age. Traditionally, records of events were kept only in people’s minds. It depends very much on the retentive power of the human memory. This was extremely dangerous as people either forgot events wholly or in part or deliberately falsified details to suit their various interests. Interminable arguments were thus order of the day. Even writing which replaced mental recording was not entirely free from these shortcomings as untruths could be written as true either willingly or inadvertently. With the advent of the electronic memory, however these dangers have been largely overcome. Recording on audio and video cassettes now show not what happened, but also who did or said what including how and when
2461
The author believes that electronic recording is
  • A. superior only to mental recording
  • B. inferior to both mental recording and writing
  • C. superior to both mental recording and writing
  • D. inferior to only writing
View Answer & Discuss (12) JAMB 1987
Every artist’s work unless he be a hermit, creating solely for his own satisfaction and with on need of sales, is to some extent ‘socially conditioned’, He depends upon the approval of his patrons. Social conditioning is of course part of the field of study of the social anthropologist, yet I am not aware that the social conditioning of artists has ever been seriously studied. That such study is needed for the proper appraisal of traditional African art is evident enough when we note the ingenuous assumption, current in many writing on the subject, that the carver’s hand is so closely controlled by the custom of centuries that the credit for any creative imagination which is apparent in his work is due not to him but to the long succession of his predecessors. Of course, there is an element of truth in this view of the tribal as copyist; but it is hardly more valid for the Africa than for the European artist. In both cases the work of art is the outcome of a dialectic between the informing tradition and the individual genius of the artist, and in both the relative strength of these two forces may vary almost infinitely. To assess the personal ingredient in an African carving is no easy matter, especially if one is confronted with a rare or unique piece in an unfamiliar style; but the considerations involved are much the same as those employed in European art criticism.
2462
Most artists are strongly influenced by the
  • A. desire for self - expression
  • B. need to sell their works
  • C. tastes and wishes of the society
  • D. creative imagination
  • E. opinions of critics
View Answer & Discuss JAMB 1984
2463
The writer believes that the art of record keeping has
  • A. improved over the years
  • B. endangered the art of writing
  • C. changed human memory
  • D. overcome all the problems facing it
View Answer & Discuss (5) JAMB 1987
Post-UTME Past Questions - Original materials are available here - Download PDF for your school of choice + 1 year SMS alerts
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2464

How many stages of development did the writer mention while discussing the art of record keeping?

  • A. two
  • B. three
  • C. four
  • D. five
View Answer & Discuss (29) JAMB 1987
2465
According to the author, human memory is unreliable because people
  • A. die and we forget what they said
  • B. forget events or tell lies
  • C. do not always know when events happen
  • D. do not always know who did what and when
View Answer & Discuss (2) JAMB 1987
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Post-UTME Past Questions - Original materials are available here - Download PDF for your school of choice + 1 year SMS alerts
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