๐ Questions & options are always in English.
๐ Explanation will appear in your selected language after submission.
๐ Marking: +2 correct · −0.5 wrong · Skipped = 0.
๐ Time limit: 4 minutes. Auto-submits on timeout.
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WBP & KP English Mock Test — Set 74 (18 July 2026 Edition)
This WBP & KP English Mock Test Set 74 is a free, timed practice quiz built specifically for aspirants preparing for the West Bengal Police Constable, Sub-Inspector, Lady Constable and Kolkata Police recruitment examinations. The English Language section of these exams carries significant weight, and a strong grip on vocabulary, idioms, spelling and sentence transformation often makes the difference between a borderline score and a clear qualifying score. Set 74 has been designed by our TopperIQ faculty team, led by Raghu Sir, to mirror the exact difficulty level, question pattern and time pressure of the actual WBP and KP written exams, so that every practice session here translates directly into exam-day confidence.
The test contains 10 carefully selected multiple-choice questions spread across the most frequently tested English topics in West Bengal Police and Kolkata Police previous year papers. Set 74 focuses heavily on advanced vocabulary — including the commonly confused word ABROGATE (meaning to formally cancel or abolish) and its related antonym pair ABRIDGE vs EXPAND, along with the vivid idiom "to stab someone in the back", a frequently misspelt word check on occurred, a one-word grammar definition question on iconoclast, and — uniquely for this set — narration change of an optative (wish-type) exclamatory sentence and passive voice of an exclamatory sentence, both topics that trip up many WBP and KP candidates because the transformation rules differ from ordinary statements. The set is rounded off with a collocation-based fill-in-the-blank, a sentence improvement question on modal verbs of unfulfilled obligation, and a spot-the-error question on the correct idiom for submitting a resignation.
Why practice with TopperIQ mock tests
Unlike a plain PDF of questions, this mock test runs on a live exam-simulation engine right inside your browser. You get a real 4-minute countdown timer that mimics exam-hall pressure, a question palette so you can jump between questions and mark items for review exactly like the real WBP/KP computer-based test interface, and official-style marking of +2 for every correct answer and −0.5 for every wrong answer, so your final score reflects the real negative-marking pattern used in the actual examination. Once you submit, you receive an instant scorecard along with a full explanation for every question, and — uniquely — that explanation is shown to you in the language you are most comfortable studying in.
Explanations in your own language
A major reason English grammar feels difficult to many WBP and KP aspirants from West Bengal, Nepal and Hindi-speaking regions is that grammar rules are usually explained only in English, which slows down real understanding. Set 74 solves this problem by offering every single explanation in four languages — English, Bengali (เฆฌাংเฆฒা), Hindi (เคนिंเคฆी) and Nepali (เคจेเคชाเคฒी) — so you can choose whichever language helps a rule click for you the fastest. Each explanation does not just give the correct option; it also explains the underlying grammar rule, why the other options are incorrect, and gives extra example sentences so the concept stays with you long after the test is over.
Downloadable PDF scorecard
After completing the quiz you can generate and download a personalised PDF scorecard with your name, your total score, a full question-by-question breakdown of your correct, wrong and skipped answers, and the time you took on each question. This is extremely useful for tracking your improvement across multiple mock test sets on TopperIQ and for identifying exactly which grammar topics need more revision before your WBP or KP exam date.
Attempt Set 74 now, review every explanation carefully in the language of your choice, note down the rules you got wrong — especially the optative-sentence narration rules and the correct idiom for submitting a resignation — and come back tomorrow for the next set. Consistent daily practice with topic-wise mock tests like this one is one of the most reliable ways to build lasting command over English grammar for West Bengal Police and Kolkata Police recruitment exams.