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Questions for INFOSYS


Logical Reasoning Questions For INFOSYS
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Munish, the great mathematician, met his friend Atul after many years. He enquired about his family. Atul said, “I have three sons. Their names are Jai, Kamal and Lakhu. Jai is the eldest. Lakhu is the youngest. No twins. The product of their age is 1400. Lakhu is at least 2 year old. None of them is more than 45. “The sum of their ages is equal to the age of my neighbour Eshwer. But even if I tell you Eshwer’s age you will not be able to arrive at my sons’ ages (though you are a great mathematician). So I shall not tell you Eshwer’s age. But Lakhu is younger than my neighbour’s daughter Pinky. If I tell you the age of Pinky, Munish was now able to deduce the ages of all. Now answer the questions.
Q. No. : 1
Question :Jai’s age is
A :
25
B :
28
C :
35
D :
20
Answer: A
Q. No. : 2
Question :Kamal's age is
A :
8
B :
10
C :
20
D :
14
Answer: D
Q. No. : 3
Question : Lakhu's age is
A :
7
B :
2
C :
5
D :
4
Answer: D
Solution
Q. No. : 4
Question :Eshwer’s age is
A :
48
B :
37
C :
43
D :
39
Answer: C
Q. No. : 5
Question :Pinky’s age is
A :
5
B :
6
C :
3
D :
8
Answer: A
A cube is cut into 2 equal parts along a plane parallel to one of its faces. One piece is then coloured red on the two larger faces and green on the remaining, while the other is coloured green on two smaller adjacent faces and red on the remaining Each is then cut into 32 cubes of same size and mixed up.
Q. No. : 6
Question :How many cubes have no coloured face at all?
A :
32
B :
8
C :
16
D :
None
Answer: D
Q. No. : 7
Question :How many cube have only one coloured face each?
A :
32
B :
8
C :
16
D :
0
Answer: C
Q. No. : 8
Question :How many cubes have faces each of one red and another green?
A :
0
B :
8
C :
16
D :
24
Answer: D
Q. No. : 9
Question :How many cubes have two red and one green faces?
A :
0
B :
8
C :
16
D :
24
Answer: D
Q. No. : 10
Question :What is the number of cubes with at least one green faces each
A :
36
B :
32
C :
38
D :
48
Answer: C
A,B,C,D,E,F,G and H are sitting in the circle and facing to the centre
1)A is second to the right of E who is the neighbour of C and G
2)D is not the neighbour of A
3)G is the neighbour of F
4)B is not between D and H. H is not  between F and D.
Q. No. : 11
Question :What is the position of D?
A :
Between F and G
B :
Second to the right of A
C :
To the immidiate right of H
D :
data inadequate
Answer: A
Q. No. : 12
Question :which two of the following are not neighbours?
A :
Cg
B :
FG
C :
CA
D :
BH
Answer: C
Q. No. : 13
Question :Which one is immidiate right to the G?
A :
A
B :
F
C :
C
D :
E
Answer: D
Q. No. : 14
Question :Which of the following is correct
A :
A is to the immediate right of B
B :
C is between F and G
C :
B is to immediate left of H
D :
F is between H and D
Answer: C
Q. No. : 15
Question :The calender of the year 2007 will be same as for year
A :
2014
B :
2017
C :
127
D :
2018
Answer: D
A pet store owner is setting up several fish tanks, each to contain exactly six fish so chosen from species F, G, H, I, J, K and L that none of the fish in any given tank will fight. Fish of any of the species above can be placed in a tank together except for the following.
(i)Fish of species F will fight with fish of species H, J and K.
(ii)Fish of species I will fight with fish of species G, and K
(iii)If three or more fish of species I are in one tank they will fight with one another
(iv)Fish of species J will fight with fish of species L.
(v)If a fish of species G is to be in a tank, at least one fish of species K must also be in the tank
Q. No. : 16
Question :If a tank is to contain fish of exactly three different species, these species could be
A :
F, G and I
B :
F, I and K
C :
G, H and I
D :
H, I and J
Answer: D
Q. No. : 17
Question :If there are to be exactly two species represented in a tank, and three fish of species J are to be in the tank, the other three fish in that tank could be from which of the following species?
A :
F
B :
G
C :
H
D :
I
Answer: C
Q. No. : 18
Question :If a tank is to contain fish of exactly four different species, it cannot contain fish of species
A :
F
B :
G
C :
H
D :
K
Answer: A
Q. No. : 19
Question :Fish of which of the following species could be put into a tank with fish of species G?
A :
F and I
B :
F and J
C :
H and I
D :
H and K
Answer: D
Directions to Solve

Dev, Kumar, Nilesh, Ankur and Pintu are standing facing to the North in a playground such as given below:

1. Kumar is at 40 m to the right of Ankur.
2. Dev is are 60 m in the south of Kumar.
3. Nilesh is at a distance of 25 m in the west of Ankur.
4. Pintu is at a distance of 90 m in the North of Dev.
Q. No. : 20
Question : Which one is in the North-East of the person, who is to the left of Kumar?
A :
Dev
B :
Nilesh
C :
Ankur
D :
Pintu
Answer: D
Solution
Q. No. : 21
Question :If a boy starting from Nilesh, met to Ankur and then to Kumar and after this he to Dev and then to Pintu and whole the time he walked in a straight line, then how much total distance did he cover?
A :
215 m
B :
155 m
C :
245 m
D :
185 m
Answer: A
Refer to the data below and answer the questions that follow:-

A family consist of seven members P,Q,R,S,T,,U,V. There are three married couple. Q is an engineer and father of T. U is grandfather of T and is a contractor. R is daughter-in-law of S who is a nurse by occupation, V is T's uncle who is a professor. there is one student, one house wife and one doctor in the family. The student is unmarried and R is the sister-in-law of Q.
Q. No. : 22
Question :Who is R's husband?
A :
V
B :
Q
C :
T
D :
R
Answer: A
Q. No. : 23
Question : Who is T's aunt?
A :
S
B :
P
C :
U
D :
None of these
Answer: D
Q. No. : 24
Question :What is the profession of P?
A :
Housewife
B :
Nurse
C :
Doctor
D :
A or C
Answer: D
Q. No. : 25
Question :Which of the following are married couples?
A :
PV, QR, US
B :
PQ, RV, US
C :
VT, PQ, US
D :
None of these
Answer: B
Q. No. : 26
Question :Which of the following is definitely a group of female members?
A :
PRST
B :
PRT
C :
PRS
D :
None of these
Answer: C
Refer to the data below and answer the questions that follow:-
Three decoits D1,D2 and D3 each has been terrorising three different men, M1, M2 and M3 not necessarily in that order. Each of these men is a citizen of three different areas A1, A2 and A3 not necessarily in that order. Each of the decoit favours a different mode of transport, horses, jeeps and boats, again not necessarily in that order.
- D2 and his horseman do not terrorise M3.
- D3 is not water borne and does not operate in A2.
- Neither M3 nor M2 has anything to do with A3 which has been terrorised by decoits in jeeps.
- D1 is not from area A1.
Q. No. : 27
Question : D3's mode of transport is :
A :
Horse
B :
Jeep
C :
Boat
D :
Cannot be determined
Answer: B
Solution
Q. No. : 28
Question :M3 has been terrorised by
A :
D1
B :
D2
C :
D3
D :
cannot be determined
Answer: A
Q. No. : 29
Question : The bandit on horse back is the terror of
A :
A2
B :
A3
C :
A1
D :
Cannot be determined
Answer: C
Q. No. : 30
Question :D3 has been terrorising
A :
M3
B :
M1
C :
M2
D :
Cannot be determined
Answer: B
Q. No. : 31
Question :A2has been terrorised by
A :
D1
B :
D2
C :
D3
D :
Cannot be determined
Answer: A
Directions to Solve

In an Exhibition seven cars of different companies - Cadillac, Ambassador, Fiat, Maruti, Mercedes, Bedford and Fargo are standing facing to east in the following order :

1. Cadillac is next to right of Fargo.
2. Fargo is fourth to the right of Fiat.
3. Maruti car is between Ambassador and Bedford.
4. Fiat which is third to the left of Ambassador, is at one end.
Q. No. : 32
Question : Which one of the following is the correct position of Mercedes ?
A :
Next to the left of Cadillac
B :
Next to the left of Bedford
C :
Between Bedford and Fargo
D :
Fourth to the right of Maruti.
Answer: D
Solution
Q. No. : 33
Question : Which one of the following statements is correct ?
A :
Fargo car is in between Ambassador and Fiat.
B :
Cadillac is next left to Mercedes car.
C :
Fargo is next right of Cadillac.
D :
Maruti is fourth right of Mercedes.
Answer: B
Solution
Q. No. : 34
Question :Which of the cars are on both the sides of cadillac car ?
A :
Ambassador and Maruti
B :
Maruti and Fiat
C :
Fargo and Mercedes
D :
Ambassador and Fargo
Answer: C
Q. No. : 35
Question :Which of the following statement is correct ?
A :
Maruti is next left of Ambassador.
B :
Bedford is next left of Fiat.
C :
Bedford is at one end.
D :
Fiat is next second to the right of Maruti.
Answer: A
Q. No. : 36
Question :Which of the following groups of cars is to the right of Ambassador ?
A :
Cadillac, Fargo and Maruti
B :
Mercedes, Cadillac and Fargo
C :
Maruti, Bedford and Fiat
D :
Bedford, Cadillac and Fargo
Answer: B
Directions to Solve

Each of the following questions is based on the following information:

1. 8-trees → mango, guava, papaya, pomegranate, lemon, banana, raspberry and apple are in two rows 4 in each facing North and South.
2. Lemon is between mango and apple but just opposite to guava.
3. Banana is at one end of a line and is just next in the right of guava or either banana tree is just after guava tree.
4. Raspberry tree which at one end of a line, is just diagonally opposite to mango tree.
Q. No. : 37
Question : Which tree is just opposite to banana tree?
A :
Mango
B :
Pomegranate
C :
Papaya
D :
Data inadequate
Answer: A
Solution
Q. No. : 38
Question : Which tree is just opposite to raspberry tree?
A :
Papaya
B :
Pomegranate
C :
Papaya or Pomegranate
D :
Data inadequate
Answer: C
Solution
Q. No. : 39
Question : Which of the following statements is definitely true?
A :
Papaya tree is just near to apple tree.
B :
Apple tree is just next to lemon tree.
C :
Raspberry tree is either left to Pomegranate or after.
D :
Pomegranate tree is diagonally opposite to banana tree.
Answer: B
Solution
Q. No. : 40
Question :How many candidates were interviewed everyday by the panel A out of the three panels A, B and C?
I. The three panels on average interview 15 candidates every day.
II. Out of a total of 45 candidates interviewed everyday by the three panels, the number of candidates interviewed by panel A is more by 2 than the candidates interviewed by panel c and is more by 1 than the candidates interviewed by panel B.
A :
I alone sufficient while II alone not sufficient to answer
B :
II alone sufficient while I alone not sufficient to answer
C :
Either I or II alone sufficient to answer
D :
Both I and II are not sufficient to answer
Answer: B
Solution
Q. No. : 41
Question :The average age of P, Q, R and S is 30 years. How old is R?
I.The sum of ages of P and R is 60 years.
II. S is 10 years younger than R.
A :
I alone sufficient while II alone not sufficient to answer
B :
II alone sufficient while I alone not sufficient to answer
C :
Either I or II alone sufficient to answer
D :
Both I and II are not sufficient to answer
Answer: D
Solution
Q. No. : 42
Question :What is the average age of children in the class?
I. The age of the teacher is as many years as the number of children.
II. Average age is increased by 1 year if the teacher's age is also included.
A :
I alone sufficient while II alone not sufficient to answer
B :
II alone sufficient while I alone not sufficient to answer
C :
Either I or II alone sufficient to answer
D :
Both I and II are not sufficient to answer
Answer: D
Solution
Directions to Solve:

Each of the questions given below consists of a question followed by three statements. You have to study the question and the statements and decide which of the statement(s) is/are necessary to answer the question.
Q. No. : 43
Question :How many marks did Tarun secure in English?
I. The average mark obtained by Tarun in four subjects including English is 60.
II.The total marks obtained by him in English and Mathematics together are 170.
III. The total marks obtained by him in Mathematics and Science together are 180.
A :
I and II only
B :
II and III only
C :
I and III only
D :
None of these
Answer: D
Solution
Q. No. : 44
Question :In a cricket team, the average age of eleven players in 28 years. What is the age of the captain?
I. The captain is eleven years older than the youngest player.
II. The average age of 10 players, other than the captain is 27.3 years.
III. Leaving aside the captain and the youngest player, the average ages of three groups of three players each are 25 years, 28 years and 30 years respectively.
A :
Any two of the three
B :
All I, II and III
C :
II only or I and III only
D :
None of these
Answer: C
Solution
Q. No. : 45
Question : If the average marks of three batches of 55, 60 and 45 students respectively is 50, 55, 60, then the average marks of all the students is:
A :
53.33
B :
54
C :
54.68
D :
55
Answer: C
Solution

Verbal Questions For INFOSYS
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Magical realism provides the reader with a unique perspective of the world -we look on it with new eyes. The reader must go beyond reality to understand magical realism. Magical realism may be related to certain academic fields such as psychology because of the state of mind one must use to really know what is happening.

Magical realism can be characterized in many ways. Mainly, it depends on one's own opinion, but for me reading certain selections about it, one can get basically the same point of view from it. "Meticulous craftsmen all, one finds them In the same preoccupation with style and also the same transformation of the common and everyday into the awesome and unreal"(Flores 114). The "awesome and the unreal" are characteristics that usually represent what magical realism is. Many magical realists use it in their selections to give readers a brief idea about magical realism. It is not just the everyday word or meaning to life. It is an outlook on what life has to give one if he or she is willing to look further into it.

In the psychological field, Victor Frankl discusses something called "will-to-meaning." Frankl says that in one life meaning is love for one's children to tie to; in another life, a talent to be used; in a third, perhaps only lingering memories worth preserving. In his studies, he stated that people survive to weave those slender threads of a broken life into a firm pattern of meaning and responsibility. Frankl poses three different lives in his theory. Either a person could be living one of the three or he or she could be living all three at one time. People just do not realize the magic. If one cannot find his or her "will-to-meaning in life, Frankl says that the sufferer fails to find meaning and a sense of responsibility in his existence. Later on, Frankl puts an answer issue to this by saying "A human suddenly realizes he has nothing to lose except his so ridiculously naked life." Frankl titles this idea as a mixed flow of emotion and apathy that is simply arresting. Also, Frankl gave a good meaning to his theory by quoting Nietzsche, "He who has a why to live can bear with almost any how." That quote was a really moving statement to me.

In the story Like Water For Chocolate, a young woman named Tita was haunted by her mother when she died. The love for a man made her mother haunt her because of Tita's disobedience to her mother after she had died. In relation to Frankl's ideas to this story, Tita had a reason to live as well as Frankl did. Frankl lived to write about what he had learned. His family all died in concentration camps with no meaning to life whatsoever. Tita at first thought she had no reason to live until meeting the love of her life. As Nietzsche said, "He who has a why to live can bear almost any how."

Magical realism relates to certain academic fields such as psychology because of the state of mind one must use to really know what is happening. In Frankl's will-to-meaning, like magical realism, one has to have a realization of what is going on and a "why and how" attitude towards it. Both are based upon the "real and unreal" where a person look upon things with other minds, not just a person's own natural state (psychologically)-(magically). I think magical realism has become more popular over the last sixty years because it is shown to be a relation to things used today in our academic fields. I think that if it was not used then it would not be as fun to learn about it. When there are more perspectives, learning is a lot more interesting.
Q. No. : 1
Question :Psychology can have the following connection with magical realism except:
A :
Unsoundness in one draws out the meaning in other.
B :
It draws its theoretical relevance from psychology
C :
The correlation between the two makes it academically more acceptable.
D :
Certain paradigms of psychology exemplify the phenomenon of magical realism.
Answer: A
Q. No. : 2
Question :What role does Tita’s story play in the passage?
A :
It supports the claim made by the author
B :
It exemplifies the main concept given in the passage
C :
It is an example showing the relevance of a person finding sense in his being.
D :
It explains how non-reality can sometimes save us from the reality
Answer: C
Q. No. : 3
Question :The following can be derived about Magical Realism from the passage except:
A :
The main essence behind it is being rooted in reality and still be able to analyze it.
B :
The magical part is its capacity to convert banal into extraordinary.
C :
It is mystical because it is so rational.
D :
It is a way of life
Answer: A
Q. No. : 4
Question :The term ‘magic’ is used in the following context in the passage except:
A :
Something unperceived.
B :
delightful
C :
impalpable
D :
elusive
Answer: D
Q. No. : 5
Question :From the passage, it can be inferred that the reason a person is most liable to lose his will-to-meaning can be best described as:
A :
The ties with the loved ones are broken.
B :
When a person is submerged in overwhelming sorrow.
C :
When a person loses the perspective on the relevance of his life and equates it merely with being.
D :
When a person cannot find any psychological significance in life.
Answer: D
To entertain any theory about revolution," writes John Dunn, "--and it is not even possible to identify just what events do constitute revolutions without assuming some theory about the meaning of revolution--is to assume a political posture.... The value-free study of revolutions is a logical impossibility for those who live in the real world" (Dunn, 1972: 1-2). For the student of revolutions the problem is complicated by the fact that the political postures assumed spontaneously by those who write or speak about them, and, if not careful, by himself or herself, are not necessarily coherent or consistent. We live in an era when rapid and fundamental change has become the norm in everyday life, so that the terms "revolution" and "revolutionary" extend far beyond the field of political science. Moreover, common discourse identifies them, much in the eighteenth-century manner, with progress and the improvement of life, so that, as advertising agencies understand only too well, the word "revolutionary," when attached to a new microwave oven as distinct from a political regime, will sell the product more effectively, even among those most passionately committed to the defense of the status quo against subversion.

Nevertheless, the primary political meaning of "revolution" remains profoundly controversial, as the historiography of the subject demonstrates, and as the debates surrounding the bicentenary of the French Revolution of 1789 demonstrate even more unmistakably. What usually happens to revolutions sufficiently distant from the present--and two centuries are, by the news agency standards that dominate our information, almost beyond the range of the remembered past--is that they are either transformed into nonrevolutions--that is, integrated into historical continuity or excluded from it as insignificant temporary interruptions--or else they are celebrated by public rites of passage suitable to the occasions that mark the birth of nations and/or regimes. They remain controversial only among historians. Thus the English Revolution or revolutions of the seventeenth century has been tacitly eliminated from political discourse: even in the tercentenary year of what used to be called the "Glorious Revolution" of 1688 and the constituting event of British parliamentary sovereignty, its presence in public rhetoric has been subdued and marginal. On the other hand, a celebratory consensus has marked the various bicentenaries connected with the American Revolution, and even opponents of those aspects of it which are still--or again--highly controversial, such as its deliberate refusal to give public recognition to religion, would not dream of using this as an argument against it. Its public face, jubilees and centenaries apart, is that of a rite of passage in the life of the nation, independence (celebrated on the Fourth of July) taking its place after first settlement (celebrated on Thanksgiving).

Attempts to apply these two techniques of eliminating the controversial aspects of the French Revolution have been made, by republicans and by the political right respectively, and the contention that it achieved little or nothing other than what would have happened without it, and thus constitutes not a major transforming set of events but only a sort of stumble on the long path of French history, is one of the main weapons in the intellectual war against those who wish to celebrate its bicentenary. Yet these attempts have failed. On the one hand, the revolution never gained the general retrospective consensus without which such events cannot become harmless national birthdays, not even after World War II briefly eliminated from the political scene that French Right that defined itself by its rejection of 1789. On the contrary, since the revolution inspired not only the Left of the relatively remote past but also the contemporary Left, it could not but remain contentious. As is quite evident from the pre-bicentenary debates in France, the traditional opponents of 1789 have been reinforced by the opponents of 1917; by reactionaries who would not disclaim that label, by liberals who certainly would. Yet the antirevolutionary attempt to demote the revolution, or shunt it onto a sidetrack of French historical development, has also failed, since, if it had succeeded, it would no longer need to be seriously argued. Indeed, the mere project of trying to prove that the French Revolution is not an altogether major event in modern history must strike non-Frenchmen as brave and quixotic--that is, as absurd.
Q. No. : 6
Question :The author is likely to agree with all the following statements except:
A :
Historians can no more escape taking a political posture about revolutions than anybody else, but, they can at least avoid seeing and judging them unhistorically.
B :
French Revolution belongs to the class of historical phenomena whose significance is not to be judged by the intentions or expectations of those who make them, or even those which could be imputed to them by subsequent analysis.
C :
In great revolutions, as in the great mass wars of modern times, the unintended consequences are almost certainly more important than the intended ones.
D :
To be able to reflect upon the revolution without being judgemental poses a bit of a struggle but is definitely not unfeasable.
Answer: D
Q. No. : 7
Question :It can be derived from the passage that all the following questions about any revolution can be considered political and not historical except:
A :
Was the revolution therefore avoidable?
B :
Did it produce results that could have been achieved only through revolution and not in other ways?
C :
What gives the revolutions a right to call themselves revolutions?
D :
Did it pursue a logical line of development that then skidded off course?
Answer: C
Q. No. : 8
Question :The primary purpose of the passage is:
A :
To study a making of an emblematic revolution along with an example.
B :
To study the uncontrollability of process and outcome of a revolution.
C :
To study the terms dictating the success or failure of French Revolution getting its deserved position
D :
To study the historical dimentions of a revolution.
Answer: A
Q. No. : 9
Question :The following can be inferred from the passage.

I. The recent and modern practice of giving revolution a mundane reposition has played an active role in repositioning it historically as well.
II. The archaic definition of revolution seems to be becoming ambiguous because of the change in the conception of various important historical events.
III.The historical conception of everyting related to a revolution is to a great extent dependent on the political conception of the revolution.
A :
1
B :
2
C :
1 and 2
D :
2 and 3
Answer: D
Q. No. : 10
Question :Which of the following statements can be most directly extracted from the passage?
A :
The controversy behind the political meaning of revolution provides it with whatever historical relevance it has.
B :
Inspite of all the attempts being made to the contrary, revolution will always remain a separate and important political and historical entity.
C :
When we are dealing with the concept of a revolution, we are basically dealing with a phenomenon to which the criteria of social problem-solving apply more than peripherally.
D :
A revolution depicts a time where human agencies can effectively choose between correct and incorrect solutions, alternative strategies or more or less wasteful or elegant methods of achieving ends specifiable in advance.
Answer: B
Few areas of neuron behavioral research seemed more promising is the early sixties than that investigating the relationship between protein synthesis and learning. The conceptual framework for the research was derived directly from molecular biology, which had shown that genetic information is stored in nucleic acids and expressed in proteins why not acquired information as well.

The first step towards establishing a connection between protein synthesis and learning seemed to be to block memory (cause adhesion) by interrupting the production of proteins. We were fortunate in finding a non lethal dosage of puromycin that could, it first appealed, thoroughly inhibit brain protein synthesis as well as reliability produce amnesia.

Before the actual connection between protein synthesis and learning could be established however we began to have douche about whether inhibition of protein synthesis was in fact the method by which puromycin produced amnesia. First, ocher drugs, glutavimides themselves potent protein synthesis inhibitors either failed to cause amnesia in some situations where it could easily be induced by puromycin or produced an amnesia with a different time course from that of puromycin. Second, puromycin was found to inhabit protein synthesis by breaking certain amino acid chaim, and the resulting fragments were suspected of being the actual cause of amnesia is some eases. Third, puromycin was reported to cause abnormalities in the train, including seizures. Thus, not only were decreased protein synthesis and amnesia dissociated, but alternative mechanism for the amnestic action of puromycin were readily suggested.

So, puromycin turned out to be a disappointment. It came to be regarded as a poor agent for amnesia studies, although, of course, it was poor only in the context of our original paradigm of protein synthesis inhibition. In our frustration, our initial response was simply to change dregs rather than our conceptual orientation. After many such disappointments, however, it now appears unlikely, that we will make a firm connection between protein synthesis and learning merely by pursuing the approaches of the past our experience with drugs has shown that all the amnestic agents, often interfere with memory in ways that seem unrelated to their inhibition of protein synthesis. More importantly, the notion that the interruption or intensification of protein production in the train can be related in cause and affect fashion to learning non seems simplistic and unproductive. Remove the battery from a car and the car will not go Drive the car a long distance at high speed and the battery will become more highly charged. Neither of these facts proves that the battery power the car, only knowledge of the overall automotive system will reveal it mechanism of locomotion and the role of the battery with in the system.
Q. No. : 11
Question :The primary purpose a the passage is to show that extensive experimentation has
A :
Mot supported the hypothesis that learning is directly dependent on protein synthesis
B :
Cast doubt on the value of puromycin in the newer behavioral study of learning
C :
Revealed the importance of amnesia in the neuron behavioral study of learning
D :
Demonstrated the importance of amino acid fragmentation in the induction of amnesia.
Answer: A
Q. No. : 12
Question :According to the passage, neuron behaviorists initially based their belief that protein synthesis was related to learning on which of the following?
A :
Specific research into learning on which of the following
B :
Traditional theories about learning
C :
Historic experiments on the effects puromycin
D :
Previous discoveries in molecular biology
Answer: D
Q. No. : 13
Question :It can be inferred from the passage that after puromycin was perceived to be a disappointment, researches did which of the following?
A :
They continued to experiment with puromycin until a neuron anatomical framework was developed.
B :
They continued to experiment with puromycin, but also tried other protein synthesis inhibitors
C :
They ceased to experiment with puromycin and shifted to other promising protein synthesis inhibitors.
D :
They ceased to experiment with puromycin and reexamined through experiments the relationship between genetic information and acquired information.
Answer: C
Q. No. : 14
Question :The passage all of the following as effects of puromycin except
A :
Fragmentation of amino-acid chaim
B :
Destruction of genetic information
C :
Brain seizures
D :
Memory loss
Answer: B
Q. No. : 15
Question :Which of the following statements would be most likely to come after the last sentences of the passage?
A :
It is important in the future, therefore for behavioral bio- chemist to focus on the several components of the total learning system.
B :
The ambivalent status of current research, however should not deter neuron behaviorists from exploring the deeper connection between protein production and learning.
C :
It is important in the future, therefore, for behavioral biochemist to emphasize more strongly place of their specific findings within the overall protein synthesis model of learning.
D :
It is a legacy of this research, therefore, that molecular biology's genetic models have led to disagreement among neuron behaviorists.
Answer: A
Everyone conforms to infancy, infancy conforms to nobody, so that one babe commonly makes four or five out of the adults who prattle and play to it. So God has armed youth and puberty and manhood no less with its own piquancy and charm, and made it enviable and gracious and its claims not to be put by, if it will stand by itself. Do not think the youth has no force, because he cannot speak to you and me. Hark! In the next room his voice is sufficiently clear and emphatic. It seems he knows how to speak to his contemporaries. Bashful or bold, then, he will know how to make us seniors very unnecessary.

The healthy attitude of human nature can be seen in the nonchalance of boys who are sure of a dinner, and would disdain as much as a lord to do or say aught to conciliate one. A boy is in the parlor what the pit is in the playhouse; independent, irresponsible, looking out from his corner on such people and facts as pass by, he tries and sentences them on their merits, in the swift, summary way of boys, as good, bad, interesting, silly, eloquent, troublesome. He never cumbers himself regarding consequences, about interests and he gives an independent, genuine verdict. You should court him: he will not court you. But the man is, as it were, clapped into jail by his consciousness. As soon as he has once acted or spoken with eclat, he is a committed person, watched by the sympathy or the hatred of hundreds, whose affections must now enter into his account. There is no Lethe for this. Ah, that he could pass again into his neutrality.

These are the voices, which we hear in solitude, but they grow faint and inaudible as we enter into the world. Everywhere society is conspiring against the manhood of every one of its members. Society is joint - stock company, in which members agree, for the better securing of his bread to each shareholder, to surrender the liberty and culture of the eater. The virtue in most request is conformity. It is averse to self-reliance. What it loves is names and customs and not realities and creators.

Whosoever is a man has to be a nonconformist. He who would gather immortal palms must not be hindered by the name of goodness, but must explore if it be goodness. Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind.

No law can be sacred to me but that of my nature. Good and bad are but names very readily transferable to that to this; the only right is what is after my constitution, the only right is what is after me constitution, the only wrong what is against it. A man is to carry himself in the presence of all opposition as if every thing were titular and ephemeral but he. I am ashamed to think how easily we capitulate to badges and names, to large societies and dead institutions. Every decent and well-spoken individual affects and sways me more than is right. I ought to go upright and vital, and speak the rude truth in all ways.

I shun father and mother and wife and brother, when my genius calls me. I would write on the lintels of the doorpost, whim. I hope it is somewhat better than whim at last, but we cannot spend the day in explanation. Except me not to show cause why I seek or why I exclude company. Then, again, do not tell me, as a good man did not to-day, of my obligation to put all poor men in good situations. Are they my poor? I tell thee, thou foolish philanthropist, that I grudge the dollar, the time, the cent, I give to such men as do not belong to me and to whom I do not belong. There is a class of person to whom by all spiritual affinity I am bought and sold; for them I will go to prison, if need be; but your miscellaneous popular charities; the education at collage of fools; the building of meeting - house to the vain end to which many now stand; alms to sots; and the thousandfold Relief Societies; - though I confess with shame I sometimes succumb and give the dollar, it is a wicked dollar which by and by I shall have the manhood to withhold.

If you refuse to conform, you can experience the displeasure of the world. Hence, a man should know how to estimate a sour face. The by - standers look askance on him in the public street or in the friend's parlor. In case this aversion originates from contempt and resistance similar to his own, it might result in a sad countenance; but the sour faces of the multitude, like their sweet faces, have no deep cause, but are caused by reasons as diverse as the direction of the wind and what he reads in the newspapers. Yet is the discontent of the multitude more formidable than that of the senate and the collage.

Another factor, which frightens us from self - trust in our consistency; a reverence for our past act or word, because the eyes of others have no other data for computing our orbit than our past acts, and we are loath to disappoint them.

But why should you keep your head over your shoulder? Why drag about this corpse of your memory, lest you contradict somewhat you have stated in this or that public place? Suppose you should contradict yourself; what then?

This is a rather silly consistency in our minds, which is adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines. Uniformly a great soul has almost nothing to do, he could just occupy himself with his shadow on the wall. Speak what you think now in hard words; and to-morrow speak what tomorrow thinks in hard words again, though it contradict everything you said to-day. - ''Ah, so you shall be sure to be misunderstood.'' - Is it so bad, then, to be misunderstood? Pythagoras was misunderstood, and Socrates, and Jesus, and Luther, and Copernicus, and Galileo, and Newton, and every pure and wise spirit that ever took flesh. What can be considered to be truly great is to be misunderstood.
Q. No. : 16
Question :Which of the following statements would best describe the main theme of the above passage?
A :
"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little mind."
B :
"Eternal youth means eternal independence."
C :
"Whoso would be a man must be a nonconformist."
D :
"Colleges are designed to educate fools."
Answer: C
Q. No. : 17
Question :When is the period during which we are most nonconformist?
A :
infancy
B :
youth
C :
manhood
D :
oldage
Answer: A
Q. No. : 18
Question :In his statement ''What can be considered to be truly great is to be misunderstood'' the author means:
A :
One should refrain from saying, what one exactly means
B :
Being misunderstood, equals being great
C :
All great man have always been misunderstood
D :
Even though a person might be considered inconsistent, he shouldn't hesitate to change his mind if he feels the need to.
Answer: D
Q. No. : 19
Question :As inferred from the passage, the refusal of young people to cater to accept public opinion is:
A :
A feature of the rebelliousness of youth
B :
A healthy attitude of human nature
C :
A manifestation of deep - seated immaturity
D :
Part of growing up
Answer: B
Q. No. : 20
Question :" I would write on the lintels of the doorpost, whim." What does the author mean by this statement:
A :
That one should renounce his immediate family
B :
That signposts have an important educational function in our society
C :
That an impulsive action may have a subsequent rational explanation
D :
That one must never be held responsible for what one says and does
Answer: C
According to Albert Einstein the non mathematician, is seized by a mysterious shuddering when he hears of 'four-dimensional' things, he is seized by a feeling, which is very similar to the thoughts awakened by the occult. And at the same time the statement that the world in which we live is a four-dimensional space - time continuum is quite a common place statement.

This might lead to an argument regarding the use of the term ''commonplace'' by Einstein. Yet the difficulty lies more in the wording than the ideas. Einstein's concept of the universe as a four-dimensional space-time continuum becomes plain and clear, when what he means by ''continuum'' becomes clear. A continuum is something that is continuous, A ruler, for example, is a one-dimensional space continuum. Most rulers are divided into inches and fractions, scaled down to one-sixteenth of an inch.

Will it be possible to conceive a ruler, which is calibrated to a millionth or billionth of an inch. In theory there is no reason why the steps from point to point should not be even smaller. What distinguishes a continuum is the fact that the space between any two points can be sub-divided into an infinite number of smaller divisions.

A railroad track is a one-dimensional space continuum and on it the engineer of a train can describe his position at any time by citing a single co-ordinate point - i.e., a station or a milestone. A sea captain, however, has to worry about two dimensions. The surface of the sea is a two-dimensional continuum and the co-ordinate points by which sailor fixes his positions in his two dimensional continuum are latitude and longitude. An airplane pilot guides his plane through a three - dimensional continuum, hence he has to consider not only latitude and longitude, but also his height above the ground. The continuum of an airplane pilot constitutes space as we perceive it. In other words, the space of our world is a three-dimensional continuum.

Just indicating its position in space is not enough while describing any physical event, which involves motion. How position changes in time also needs to be mentioned. Thus to give an accurate picture of the operation of a New York - Chicago express, one must mention not only that it goes from New - York to Albany to Syracuse to Cleveland to Toledo to Chicago, but also the times at which it touches each of those points. This can be done either by means of a timetable or a visual chart. If the miles between New York and Chicago are plotted horizontally on a piece of ruled paper and the hours and minutes are plotted vertically, then a diagonal line properly drawn across the page illustrates the progress of the train in two - dimensional space - time continuum. This type of graphic representation is familiar to most newspaper readers; a stock market chart, for example, pictures financial events in a two - dimensional dollar - time continuum. Similarly for the best picturization of the flight of an airplane from New York to Los Angeles a four - dimensional space - time continuum is essential. The latitude, longitude and altitude will only make sense to the traffic manager of the airline if the time co - ordinate is also mentioned. Therefore time is the fourth dimension. If a flight has to be looked at, perceived as a whole, it wouldn't work if it is broken down into a series of disconnected take - offs, climbs, glides, and landing, it needs to be looked at and perceived as a continuous four - dimensional space - time continuum curve.
Q. No. : 21
Question :The significant feature of a continuum, according to the passage, revolves around
A :
The divisibility of the interval between any two points
B :
An ordinary ruler's caliber for marking
C :
Its lucid from providing comprehensibility to the non - scientists as well
D :
Its variety of co - ordinates.
Answer: A
Q. No. : 22
Question :The purpose of this passage is to highlight the point that
A :
Plots and sea captains have something in common
B :
Non - mathematician's are often afraid of the commonplace
C :
The fourth dimension is time.
D :
There is a marked quality to distance
Answer: C
Q. No. : 23
Question :The underlying tone of this selection is
A :
persuasive
B :
deferential
C :
candid
D :
instructive
Answer: D
Q. No. : 24
Question :According to the author if on wishes portray a physical event in which motion plays a role - one has to
A :
Make use of a time-table
B :
Indicate how position changes in time
C :
Be conversant with the scientist's theories
D :
Describe it graphically
Answer: B
Q. No. : 25
Question :The sea-captain's example has been cited in order to
A :
Help understand a two - dimensional continuum
B :
Set up a logical progression
C :
Mitigate the gap between the engineer and pilot
D :
To sustain out interest in the reading of the passage.
Answer: A
In each of the following questions, four different ways of phrasing a particular sentence are given. Choose the best alternative from among the four.
Q. No. : 26
Question : 
A :
Pete would have written a far sweeter letter, but he drank a little too much at the pub and found himself inebriated.
B :
Pete would have wrote a far sweeter letter, but he drank a little too much at the pub and found himself inebriated.
C :
Pete would have wrote a far sweeter letter; but he drank a little too much at the pub; and found himself inebriated.
D :
Pete would have written a far sweeter letter  but he drank a little too much at the pub and found himself inebriated.
Answer: A
Q. No. : 27
Question : 
A :
Alicia who has been infamous across the country pubs and is undoubtedly the heroine of bar girls are now going to become an international icon.
B :
Alicia who has been infamous across the country pubs and is undoubtedly the heroine of bar girls is now going to become an international icon.
C :
Alicia who has been infamous across the country pubs and are undoubtedly the heroine of bar girls is now going to become an international icon.
D :
Alicia who has been infamous across the country pubs; and is undoubtedly the heroine of bar girls; is now going to become an international icon.
Answer: B
Q. No. : 28
Question : 
A :
I cannot dance the minuet like I did before the war.
B :
I cannot dance the minuet as I did before the war.
C :
I cannot dance to the minuet like I did before the war.
D :
I cannot dance to the minuet as I did before the war.
Answer: B
Q. No. : 29
Question : 
A :
The boy accompanied by his nurse are arriving this afternoon in an automobile.
B :
The boy accompanied by his nurse is arriving this afternoon in a automobile.
C :
The boy accompanied by his nurse is arriving this afternoon in an automobile.
D :
The boy accompanied by his nurse are arriving this afternoon in a automobile.
Answer: C
Q. No. : 30
Question : 
A :
Each of the doctors are concerned about the rising death rate from asthma.
B :
Each of the doctors' is concerned about the rising death rate from asthma.
C :
Each of the doctors are concerned, about the rising death rate from asthma.
D :
Each of the doctors is concerned about the rising death rate from asthma.
Answer: D
The following sentence test correctness and effectiveness of expression. Part of each sentence or the entire sentence is underlined, Replace that with the suitable sentences given below:-
Q. No. : 31
Question :Since 1970, Canada has had a rail road system comparable to California.
A :
had a rail road system comparable to that of California.
B :
had a rail road system similar to that of California.
C :
a rail road system comparable to California.
D :
a rail road system comparable to that of California
Answer: A
Q. No. : 32
Question :In order to help the Tsunami victims, the Indian government initiated plans for the preparation, delivering and transportation of foodstuffs to the Tsunami hit areas.
A :
initiated plans for preparing, delivering and transportation of foodstuffs to the Tsunami hit areas
B :
for preparing, delivering and transporting of foodstuffs to the Tsunami hit areas, initiated plans.
C :
developed plans for preparation, delivering and transportation of foodstuffs to the Tsunami hit areas.
D :
initiated plans for the preparation, delivery and transportation of foodstuffs to the Tsunami hit areas
Answer: D
Q. No. : 33
Question :The temperature of the village was so reduced by the snowfall that most of the villagers moved their livestock down south.
A :
The temperature of the village was so reduced by the snowfall that
B :
So reduced was the temperature of the village by the snowfall as to make
C :
The snowfall made such a reduction of the temperature of the village that
D :
There was such a reduction of the temperature of the village by the snowfall as to make
Answer: A
Q. No. : 34
Question :In studying an assignment it is wise to read it over quickly at first, than see the major points, and finally outline the material.
A :
In studying an assignment it is wise to read it over quickly at first, than see the major points
B :
In studying an assignment than see the major points, it is wise to read it over quickly at first
C :
In studying an assignment it is wise to read it over quickly at first, then see the major points
D :
In studying an assignment then see the major points, it is wise to read it over quickly at first
Answer: C
Q. No. : 35
Question :To play a trumpet, it requires not only manual dexterity but also breath control as well.
A :
To play a trumpet requires both manual dexterity and breath control as well.
B :
Playing the trumpet requires both manual dexterity and breath control.
C :
Playing the trumpet requires not manual dexterity only but breath control too.
D :
Playing the trumpet, it requires manual dexterity and breath control.
Answer: B
Q. No. : 36
Question :Trying to catch, I stare even harder the momentary glow of eyes.
A :
I stare trying to catch the momentary glow of eyes even harder.
B :
I stare even harder, trying to catch the momentary glow of eyes.
C :
Even harder to catch the momentary glow of eyes, I stare.
D :
Momentary glow of eyes trying to catch, I stare even harder.
Answer: B
Q. No. : 37
Question :A balding, smooth faced man, he could have been anywhere between forty and sixty, lured many women towards him
A :
A balding, smooth faced man, he could have been anywhere between forty and sixty
B :
He could have been anywhere between forty and sixty, a balding, smooth faced man.
C :
Anywhere between forty and sixty he could have been, a balding smooth faced man.
D :
He could have been a balding, smooth faced man, between forty and sixty.
Answer: A
Q. No. : 38
Question :I saw my parents decorating the hall for my surprise birthday party, while I was outside their room door.
A :
I saw my parents decorating the hall for my surprise birthday party, while I was outside their room door.
B :
I saw my parents, while I was outside their room door decorating the hall for my surprise birthday party.
C :
My parents, I saw, while decorating the hall for my surprise birthday party outside their room door.
D :
While I was outside their room door, I saw my parents decorating the hall for my surprise birthday party.
Answer: D
In each of the following sentences, replaces the underlined part with the most suitable sentences as given in the choices.
Q. No. : 39
Question :The unskilled workers at the Allen by plant realized that their hourly rate of $4.11 to $4.75 was better than many nearby factory wages.
A :
many wages in nearby factories
B :
what are offered by many nearby factories
C :
it is in many nearby factories
D :
that offered by many nearby factories
Answer: D
Q. No. : 40
Question :Since 1970 the number of Blacks elected to state and federal offices in the United States has multiplied nearly four times.
A :
has multiplied nearly four times
B :
has almost quadrupled
C :
has almost multiplied by four
D :
is almost four times as great
Answer: B
Q. No. : 41
Question :India is country with at least fifty major regional languages, of whom fourteen have official recognition.
A :
of whom fourteen have official recognition
B :
fourteen that have official recognition
C :
fourteen of which are officially recognized
D :
fourteen that are officially recognized
Answer: C
Q. No. : 42
Question :Wind resistance created by opening windows while driving results in a fuel penalty as great or greater than is incurred by using air conditioning.
A :
at least as great as that incurred by using air conditioning
B :
as great or greater than is incurred by using air conditioning
C :
that is as great or greater than is incurred using air conditioning
D :
as great as or greater than that of using air conditioning
Answer: A
Q. No. : 43
Question :To ensure consistently high quality in its merchandise, the chain of retail stores became involved in every aspect of their suppliers' operations, dictating not only the number of stitches and the width of the hem in every garment as well as the profit margins of those suppliers.
A :
their suppliers' operations, dictating not only the number of stitches and the width of the hem in every garment as well as
B :
its suppliers' operations, dictating not only the number of stitches and the width of the hem in every garment as well as
C :
their suppliers' operations, dictating not only the number of stitches and the width of the hem in every garment but also
D :
its suppliers' operations, dictating not only the number of stitches and the width of the hem in every garment but also
Answer: D
Q. No. : 44
Question :The medieval scholar made almost no attempt to investigate the anatomy of plants, their mechanisms of growth, nor the ways where each was related to the other.
A :
nor the ways where each was related to the other
B :
nor how each was related to some other
C :
or the ways in which they are related to one another
D :
or the ways that each related to some other
Answer: C
Q. No. : 45
Question :By installing special electric pumps, farmers' houses could be heated by the warmth from cows' milk, according to one agricultural engineer.
A :
farmers, according to one agricultural engineer, could use the warmth from cows' milk to heat their houses
B :
farmers' houses could be heated by the warmth from cows' milk, according to one agricultural engineer.
C :
one agricultural engineer reports that farmers could use the warmth from cows' milk to heat their houses
D :
one agricultural engineer reports that farmers' houses could be heated by the warmth from cows' milk
Answer: A
Q. No. : 46
Question :In the traditional Japanese household, most clothing could be packed flatly, and so it was not necessary to have elaborate closet facilities.
A :
flatly, and so it was not necessary to have elaborate closet facilities
B :
flat, and so elaborate closet facilities were unnecessary
C :
flatly, and so there was no necessity for elaborate closet facilities
D :
flat, there being no necessity for elaborate closet facilities
Answer: B
In each of the following sentences, replaces the underlined part with the most suitable sentences as given in the choices.
Q. No. : 47
Question :Even though Bela Bartok's music has proved less popular than Igor Stravinsky's and less influential than Arnold Schonberg's, it is no less important.
A :
Stravinsky's and less influential than Arnold Schonberg's, it
B :
Stravinsky's is and less influential than Arnold Schonberg's is, it
C :
Stravinsky and not as influential as Arnold Schonberg, he
D :
Stravinsky and not as influential as Arnold Schonberg, it
Answer: A
Q. No. : 48
Question :According to United States Air Force officials, a cannon shooting dead chickens at airplanes has proved helpful to demonstrate what kind of damage can result when jets fly into a flock of large birds.
A :
shooting dead chickens at airplanes has proved itself helpful as a demonstration of
B :
shooting dead chickens at airplanes proves itself helpful as demonstrating
C :
that shoots dead chickens at airplanes proves itself helpful to demonstrate
D :
that shoots dead chickens at airplanes has proved helpful in demonstrating
Answer: D
Q. No. : 49
Question :In his eagerness to find a city worthy of Priam, the German archaeologist Schliemann cut through Troy and uncovered a civilization a thousand years older as was the city Homer's heroes knew.
A :
older as was the city Homer's heroes knew
B :
more ancient than the city known to Homer's heroes
C :
older than was the city known to Homer's heroes
D :
more ancient of a city than Homer's heroes knew
Answer: B
Q. No. : 50
Question :To speak habitually of the "truly needy" is gradually instilling the notion that many of those who are just called "needy" actually have adequate resources; such a conclusion is unwarranted.
A :
To speak habitually of the "truly needy" is gradually instilling the notion
B :
To speak habitually of the "truly needy" is instilling the notion gradually
C :
To speak habitually of the "truly needy" is gradually to instill the notion
D :
Speaking habitually of the "truly needy" is to instill the gradual notion
Answer: C
Q. No. : 51
Question :At the time of the Mexican agrarian revolution, the most radical faction, that of Zapata and his followers, proposed a return to communal ownership of land, to what had been a pre-Columbian form of ownership respected by the Spaniards.
A :
land, to what had been a pre-Columbian form of ownership respected by the Spaniards
B :
land, a form of ownership of the pre-Columbians and respected by the Spaniards
C :
land in which a pre-Columbian form of ownership was respected by the Spaniards
D :
land that had been a pre-Columbian form of ownership respected by the Spaniards
Answer: A
In each of the following questions, four different ways of phrasing a particular sentence are given. Choose the best alternative from among the four.
Q. No. : 52
Question :
A :
The talent of Indian I.T companies to identify new area of business opportunities early enough is well known as their skill to coin new terms.
B :
The talent of Indian I.T companies to identify the newest areas of business opportunities early enough is as well known as their skill to coin new terms.
C :
The talent of Indian I.T companies to identify newer areas of business opportunities early enough is as well known as their skill to coin new terms.
D :
The talent of Indian I.T companies to identify the newer area of business opportunities early enough is well known as their skill to coin new terms.
Answer: C
Q. No. : 53
Question :
A :
Aliabad Serai is a symbol of the destruction a decade and a half of conflict has caused to Pir Panjal.
B :
Aliabad Serai is a reflection  to the destruction a decade and a half of conflict has caused to Pir Panjal.
C :
Aliabad Serai is a symbol of the destruction one and a half decade of conflict has caused to Pir Panjal.
D :
Aliabad Serai is a reflection to the destruction one and a half decade of conflict has caused to Pir Panjal.
Answer: A
Q. No. : 54
Question :
A :
By casteism, groupism and sycophany stirring the boiling cauldron of the star egos, there is the tickling time bomb called star rage that could explode without provocation.
B :
With casteism, groupism and sycophany stirring the boiling cauldron of the star egos, there is the tickling time bomb called star rage that could explode without provocation.
C :
By casteism, groupism and sycophany stirring the boiling cauldron of the star egos, there is the tickling time bomb called star rage that had exploded without provocation.
D :
With casteism, groupism and sycophany stirring the boiling cauldron of the star egos, there is the tickling time bomb called star rage that had exploded without provocation.
Answer: B
Q. No. : 55
Question :Our work proves to be very successful. In the past three years, each of our five clients has experienced the fastest growth of sales in their history. Therefore, if your company wants to increase sales, do not hesitate to call Sigma & Max, since we are the solution.

Which of the following, if true, most seriously jeopardizes the validity of the argument by the speaker above?
A :
Most of the consultants at Sigma & Max hold MBA degrees.
B :
Even without the help of Sigma & Max, the five clients of Sigma & Max will achieve the same growth rate in sale.
C :
Sigma & Max is one of the five leading management consulting companies.
D :
Sigma & Max uses an updated accounting approach to help companies to cut cost.
Answer: B
Q. No. : 56
Question :The price of purchasing a car in Country Q is 120 percent less than the price of purchasing a car in Country Y. Even after transportation fees and tariff charges are added, it is still cheaper for a buyer to import car from Country Q to Country Y than to buy car in Country Y.

The statements above, if true, best support which of the following assertions?
A :
Gasoline prices in Country Q are 120 percent below those in Country Y.
B :
Importing cars from Country Q to Country Y will eliminate 120 percent of the sales of cars in Country Y.
C :
The tariff on a car imported from Country Q to Country Y is less than 120 percent of the price of a car in Country Y.
D :
The fee for transporting a car from Country Q to Country Y is more than 120 percent of the price of a car in Country Q.
Answer: C
Q. No. : 57
Question :Find The Most suitable word to make the sentence meaningfully:-
A nation that loses the _______ of honesty loses its __________.
A :
power, will
B :
appeal, charisma
C :
Stamina, courage
D :
Virtue, soul
Answer: D
Q. No. : 58
Question :Find The Most suitable word to make the sentence meaningfully:
It is quite true that when the whole economy is in ________, raising the rate of interest has other ________.
A :
seize, burdens
B :
shambles, dimensions
C :
jeopardy, glimpse
D :
distress, implications
Answer: D
Q. No. : 59
Question :Fill the blanks given below with the most suitable word to make the sentence meaningfully:-

Now, the management graduate can expect to have a prosperous life on a .........income without having to depend on finding a place in family business having to tend the paternal estates.
A :
professional
B :
Regular
C :
Meaningful
D :
Dependable
Answer: B