Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
1. Step VI
• Input: some 31 tower down 32 29 what 45 ice
2. Step III
52 ice 52 75 all
3. Step IV
• Step I: what 75 some 31 tower down 32 29 45
4. There is not such step
ice 52 all
5. None of these
• Step II: what 75 tower 52 some 31 down 32 29
45 ice all
4). If in the last step all the words get rearranged in
• Step III: what 75 tower 52 some 45 31 down alphabetical order, which of the following words
32 29 ice all will remain at its original position?
• Step IV: what 75 tower 52 some 45 down 32
31 29 ice all
1. inter
• Step V: what 75 tower 52 some 45 down 32 all 2. price
31 29 ice 3. out
• Step VI: what 75 tower 52 some 45 down 32 4. under
all 31 ice 29 5. None of these
And Step VI is the last step of the above input. As per the 5). How many words/numbers are there between
rules followed in the above steps, find out the ‘79’ and ‘inter’ in step II?
appropriate steps for the above input.
1. Four
• Input: equal 54 inter 83 out town 25 79 2. Three
under close 57 price 12 3. None
4. Two
1). How many steps will be required to complete the 5. None of these
rearrangement?
Direction (6-10) : Each of the questions below
1. six consists of a question and two statements
2. five numbered I and II given below it. You have to decide
3. four whether the data provided in the statements are
4. seven sufficient to answer the question. Read both the
5. None of these statements and
• Give answer (1): If the data in statement I Directions (11 - 15): Answer the questions on the
alone are sufficient to answer the question, basis of the information given below.
while the data in statement II alone are not
sufficient to answer the question. • There are 8 people – A, B, C, D, E, F, G and H who
• Give answer (2): If the data in statement II stay on 5 floors (numbered 1 to 5) of a building.
alone are sufficient to answer the question, There are two flats on each of the five floors out
while the data in statement I alone are not of which two flats are vacant.
sufficient to answer the question. • The flats are numbered 1 and 2 on each of the
• Give answer (3): If the data either in floors and are left to right on the floor
statement I alone or in statement II alone are respectively. Flat no. 1 of floor no. 2 is exactly
sufficient to answer the question. above the flat no. 1 of floor no. 1 and so on. So
• Give answer (4): If the data even in both when it is said that A lives above B means they
statements I and II together are not sufficient share same flat number. Flats which are empty
to answer the question. do not have same flat number.
• Give answer (5): If the data in both • H lives on flat number 1 of floor number 1. There
statements I and II together are necessary to is one floor between floors of H and C. C lives
answer the question. above H. B lives on floor which is immediately
above C’s.
6. Who is oldest among Peter, Kevin, Joseph and • E lives immediately above G. A and E share same
Jason ? floor. There are 2 floors between A and D and
they live in same flat number.
I. Jason is older than Peter and Joseph. • D lives on one of the flats which is immediately
II. Kevin is younger than Joseph. above an empty flat. Two of A, B and F share
same flat number.
7. How is ‘happy’ written in that code language ?
11. Who lives on flat number 2 of floor number 4?
I. ‘I happy today’ is written as ‘gke ne que’ and
‘today happy day’ is written as ‘ke poi ne’. 1. Empty
II. ‘I play’ is written as ‘clue pa’. 2. D
3. B
8. H is the mother of J. How is J related to V ? 4. Cannot be determined
5. E
I. V is the only daughter of H.
II. V is the sister of J. 12. H shares floor with which of the following?
Conclusion:
1. Only I and III follow
2. Only III follow
3. Only I and II follow I. Some tired are not quick.
4. All follow II. Some quick being tired is a possibility.
5. None of these III. Some quick are sick.
22. Statements:
1. Only I and III follow
2. Only III follow
o All Shahs are Kapoors. 3. Only I and II follow
o Some Kapoors are Khans. 4. All follow
o All Khans are Singhs. 5. None of these
o No Singh is a Shah.
25. Statements :
Conclusion:
o All trams are buses.
I. All Kapoors being Shah is a possibility. o Some buses are trains.
II. All Shah being Kapoors is a possibility. o No train is plane.
III. All Singhs being Khans is a possibility. o Some planes are trams.
23. Statements:
1. Only I and III follow
o All trees are bees. 2. Only III follow
o Some bees are treys. 3. Only I and II follow
o No trey is a plate. 4. All follow
o Some plates are trees. 5. None of these
31. Statement :
I % J, G $ H, H * I, H @ K
I. I*J
Assumptions :
II. G@K
31. Statements :
I. Adventure stories are the only reading material.
II. Nobody loves reading any other material.
W % A, U * V, V * W, A # B, B @ C
33. Statement :
Conclusion :
o All the teachers are hereby instructed to reach
I. W#C the institution by 9 a.m.
II. W%C
Assumptions :
32. Statements :
I. Some of the teachers do not arrive at the
K # L, J # K, I # K, L * M, M * N institution in time.
II. Teachers will follow the strict warning given in
Conclusion : the notice.
1. 490 1. Rs 8,800
2. 590 2. Rs 9,040
3. 440 3. Rs 8,040
4. 560 4. Rs 9,800
5. 520 5. None of these
1. Rs 100 lakhs
2. Rs 110 lakhs
3. Rs 150 lakhs
4. Rs 140 lakhs
5. None of these
1. Rs 220 lakhs
2. Rs 310 lakhs
3. Rs 255 lakhs
4. Rs 225 lakhs
5. None of these
73. Which of following will be the FIFTH sentence? 80. (a) ambition (b) jealousy (c) delay (d) dispute (e)
competition
1. C
2. D 81. (a) colleague (b) client (c) boss (d) subordinate (e)
3. B employee
4. F
5. A 82. (a) remembers (b) types (c) suggests (d) replies (e)
does
83. (a) more (b) all (c) less (d) some (e) few In the eighteenth century, Japan’s feudal overlords,
from the shogun to the humblest samurai, found
84. (a) unnatural (b) unfortunates (c) healthy (d) themselves under financial stress. In part, this stress
heartening (e) discouraging can be attributed to the overlords’ failure to adjust to a
85. (a) retardation (b) denial (c) evil (d) complexity (e) rapidly expanding economy, but the stress was also due
progress to factors beyond the overlords’ control. Concentration
of the samurai in castle-towns had acted as a stimulus
Questions (86 - 95) Read the sentence to find out to trade. Commercial efficiency, in turn, had put
whether there is any error in it. The error, if any, temptations in the way of buyers. Since most samurai
will be in one part of the sentence. The number of had been reduced to idleness by years of peace,
that part is the answer. If there is no error, the encouraged to engage in scholarship and martial
answer is (5). Ignore errors of punctuation, if any. exercises or to perform administrative tasks that took
little time, it is not surprising that their tastes and
86. The poetries of P.B. Shelley (A)/ who is regarded habits grew expensive. Overlords’ income, despite the
(B)/ as one of the greatest romantic poets in English increase in rice production among their tenant farmers,
literature (C)/ are really very charming (D). No failed to keep pace with their expenses. Although
error (E) shortfalls in overlords’ income resulted almost as much
87. The way (A)/ the people have suffered (B)/ from the from laxity among their tax collectors (the nearly
atrocities of the foreign invaders (C)/ can hardly be inevitable outcome of hereditary office-holding) as from
described (D). No error (E) their higher standards of living, a misfortune like a fire
or flood, bringing an increase in expenses or a drop in
88. The teacher said to the boys (A)/ that (B)/ one revenue, could put a domain in debt to the city rice-
ought to work hard (C)/ to earn his living (D). No brokers who handled its finances. Once in debt, neither
error (E) the individual samurai nor the shogun himself found it
easy to recover.
89. When (A)/ I offered him to help (B)/ which he
needed, he persisted (C)/ in refusing it, so I left him to It was difficult for individual samurai overlords to
his fate (D). No error (E) increase their income because the amount of rice that
farmers could be made to pay in taxes was not
90. I have lost (A)/ a pen which (B) / I bought (C)/
unlimited, and since the income of Japan’s central
yesterday (D). No error (E)
government consisted in part of taxes collected by the
91. He said, (A)/ and everybody agreed with him, (B)/ shogun from his huge domain, the government too was
that beast (C)/ in man is responsible for great cruelties constrained. Therefore, the Tokugawa shoguns began to
(D). No error (E) look to other sources for revenue. Cash profits from
government-owned mines were already on the decline
92. ‘Paradise Lost’ is (A)/ one of those world’s epics because the most easily worked deposits of silver and
(B)/ which have carved out immortal (C)/ niches in the gold had been exhausted, although debasement of the
literary history of the world (D). No error (E) coinage had compensated for the loss. Opening up new
farmland was a possibility, but most of what was
93. He saw many deers (A)/ running along (B)/ the
suitable had already been exploited and further
river bank; one of them really captivated (C)/ his heart
reclamation was technically unfeasible. Direct taxation
with its beautiful form (D). No error (E)
of the samurai themselves would be politically
94. The man and his horse (A)/ which you saw (B)/ on dangerous. This left the shoguns only commerce as a
the road yesterday (C)/ are dead (D). No error (E) potential source of government income.
95. Neither of these five boys (A)/ present in the (B)/ Most of the country’s wealth, or so it seemed, was
restaurant was (C)/ involved in the conspiracy (D). No finding its way into the hands of city merchants. It
error (E) appeared reasonable that they should contribute part of
that revenue to ease the shogun’s burden of financing
Directions (Q. 96 – 100): Read the passage given the state. A means of obtaining such revenue was soon
below and answer the questions that follow based found by levying forced loans, known as goyo-kin;
on the information given in the passage. although these were not taxes in the strict sense, since
they were irregular in timing and arbitrary in amount,
they were high in yield. Unfortunately, they pushed up
prices. Thus, regrettably, the Tokugawa shoguns’ search 100. The passage implies that individual samurai
for solvency for the government made it increasingly did not find it easy to recover from debt for which of
difficult for individual Japanese who lived on fixed the following reasons?
stipends to make ends meet.
1. Agricultural production had increased.
96. The passage is most probably an excerpt from 2. Taxes were irregular in timing and arbitrary in
amount.
1. an economic history of Japan 3. The Japanese government had failed to adjust
2. the memoirs of a samurai warrior to the needs of a changing economy.
3. a modern novel about eighteenth-century Japan 4. The domains of samurai overlords were
4. an essay contrasting Japanese feudalism with its becoming smaller and poorer as government
Western counterpart revenues increased.
5. an introduction to a collection of Japanese 5. There was a limit to the amount in taxes that
folktales farmers could be made to pay.
97. Which of the following financial situations is
most analogous to the financial situation in which
Japan’s Tokugawa shoguns found themselves in the
eighteenth century?
1. Warmly approving
2. Mildly sympathetic
3. Bitterly disappointed
4. Harshly disdainful
5. Profoundly shocked
1. 2 2. 1 3. 4
5. 4
23 - 4
Ans (6 - 10)
6. 5 7. 4 8. 1 9. 2 10. 4
28. 2 U<V<W=X≤Y>Z
60. (3)
50. (2) 13 + 3 = 16, 16 + 5 = 21, 21 + 7
= 28 + 11 = 39 25 × 124 + 389 × 15 = 3100 + 5835 = 8935
27 is wrong no.
61. (1)
54. (2) 15
66. (1) Required percentage = × 100 = 43%
3 35
(i) b = r
4
67. (3) Required amount = 30% of 500 lakh 90. 2 Substitute ‘a’ by definite article ‘the’. ‘Pen’ here has
= Rs150 lakh been particularized. Hence, it must be preceded by
definite article ‘the’.
68. (4) Fund acquired = 45% of 500 = Rs 225 lakh
91. 3 Put ‘the’ before ‘beast’. Definite article ‘the’ is used
before a common noun to give it the meaning of an
69. (1) 3e = 4E abstract noun.
English Language
Ans 71 – 75
CEFADB
Ans 76 – 85
Ans 86 – 95
89. 2 Delete ‘to’ before ‘help’. The word ‘help’ here has
been used as a noun and not as a verb or infinitive.