Wiktionary
a. Having more than one, enumerated, possible answers. A type of test question where the correct answer is selected from a group of proffered choices.
WordNet
adj. offering several alternative answers from which the correct one is to be chosen; or consisting of such questions; "multiple-choice questions"; "a multiple-choice test" [ant: true-false]
Usage examples of "multiple-choice".
They had been past seven or eight multiple-choice branchings of the corridors, each sign becoming more specific and detailed: 1C Comms, 2IC Ed, Comp Cont, R&R, Tran Pool, Accts, Armory, which interested J.
Now, in order to be promoted, every student in third, sixth, and eighth grade had to manage a minimum score on the standardized, multiple-choice exam known as the Iowa Test of Basic Skills.
I got an A-minus on my in-class English theme and a D in European History, but flunked the Sociology multiple-choicer and the Geology multiple-choicer — soash by a little and geo by a lot.
She had guessed on a number of multiple-choice questions and considered her performance a fluke.
Toerag, would file the whole school into the auditorium and make us spend a tedious day answering multiple-choice questions on a variety of subjects for some national examination.
You'll have to write your own essays, on Part Two of the exam, but here are all one hundred and fifty answers to the multiple-choice questions in Part One.