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DAILY TEST | 1 ST AUGUST 2021

 Logical Reasoning


1.

A lady is facing South-East. She turns 180 degrees in the clockwise direction, then 360 degrees in the
anticlockwise direction and then another 270 degrees in the clockwise direction. Which direction is she
facing now?
South
South-West
West
South-East


2.

Find the next number in the series. 10,7,12,10, 14, ........
18
12
13
16
 

 

3.

Problem question: Vikas ranks 9th in the class. How many students are there in the class? Statements: I)
His friend got the 35th rank which is the last rank II) His rank from the last is 27th
Statement I alone is sufficient
Statement II alone is sufficient
Both Statements put together are sufficient
Both the statements even put together are not sufficient
Either of the statements is sufficient
 

 

4.

Choose the answer option that arranges the given set of words in the 'most' meaningful order.
The words when put in order should make logical sense according to size, quality, quantity, occurrence
of events, value, appearance, nature, process etc. 1.Restaurant 2.Plan 3.Menu 4.Celebrate 5.Order
1,2,3,4,5
2,1,5,3,4
1,2,3,5,4
2,1,3,5,4

 

5.

Choose the answer option that arranges the given set of words in the 'most' meaningful order.
The word when put in order should make logical sense according to size, quality, quantity, occurrence of
events, values, appearance, nature, process etc.
1.water 2.kneading 3.Flour 4.baking 5.wheat
5,3,1,4,2
5,1,3,2,4
5,3,1,2,4
5,1,3,4,2
 

 

6.

Based on the given passage find out which of the statement can be inferred from the passage The
world production of sugar has been reported to be very scarce as compared to the global sales for
four years. The demand for sugar is extremely high but the supply has been low for quite some time
now. This could be because of the awful weather and also because some chief sugar growers have
switched to high-priced jute. The price of sugar has soared in response to the phenomena of the
demand supply disparity. The price of sugar now equals that of jute.
Sugar production is profitable only when the price of sugar is as high as that of jute
The sugar growers who had shifted to the higher priced jute, will now move back to producing
sugar

Demand for jute was higher than the demand for sugar which made sugar growers shift their
production
If there continues to be a shortfall in the production of sugar, the price of sugar may even exceed
that of jute
 

 

7.

Meeru has lost her way home and was standing 25 meters away from her house in the south-west
direction. She walks 20 meters north and reaches point A. How far and in which direction would she
have to walk to reach her house?
20 meters, east
15 meters, east
15 meters, west
20 meters, west

 

8.

Given signs signify something and on that basis, assume the given statement to be true. Answer the
question basis the information provided. "x" denotes " larger than" "+" denotes " equal to" "-" denotes "
not equal to" "/" denotes " smaller than" "%" denotes " not smaller than" "*" denotes "not larger than" If A/B
and B/C, then
A+C
A*C
A-C
A%C
 

 

9.

Pointing to a woman in the photograph, Ram said, "She is the only Daughter of my mother's father". How
is Ram related to the woman in the photograph?
Neice
Son
Mother
Daughter

 

10.

From the given anagrams select the odd one out.
RKOC
RRIV
ADNS
LNDA

 

11.

If UFYBW represents RIVET, what does TRDOWBU stand for?
QUTAR
QUARTER
TARTAR
TUARTAR

 

12.

Select the right option from the given alternatives
Looking at a man's portrait, Harsh said, "His mother is the wife of my father's son. Brothers and sisters I
have none." At whose portrait was Harsh looking?
His son's portrait
His cousin's portrait
His uncle's portrait
His nephew's portrait
None of these
 

 

13.

Given signs signify something and on that basis, assume the given statement to be true. Answer the
question basis the information provided. '#' denotes "greater than" '/' denotes "equal to" '&' denotes "not
equal to" '+' denotes "lesser than" '%' denotes " a little more than" '*' denotes " a little less than" If AC%BC,
then
A/C
B#C
C#B
B+A
 

 

14.

From Chennai to Himachal Pradesh the new culture vultures are tearing down acres of India's
architectural treasures. Ancestral owners are often fobbed off with a few hundred rupees for an
exquisitely carved door or window. Which fetches fifty times that/ much from foreign dealers and yet
more from the drawing shop sophisticates of the western countries. The reason for such shameless
rape of the Indian architectural wealth can perhaps, not wrongly, be attributed to the unfortunate
behind of activist disunity and the local indifference.
India provides a rich market for unscrupulous antique dealers
Most Indian families have heirlooms which can be sold at high prices to Europeans and Americans
Only Indians are not proud of their cultural heritage and are hungry for foreign currency that is
easily available in return of artifacts
The environment created by the activist disunity and local indifference is the reason for antique
dealers to strive in India

 

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 Quantitative Aptitude


1.

Manu has invested 30% of his capital in petro bonds and rest in a life insurance plan. He has invested Rs.
34,000 more in life insurance plan than in petro bonds. How much is the total investment made by
Manu?
Rs. 25,500
Rs. 59,500
Rs. 85,000
Rs. 95,000
 

 

2.

Simple interest on an amount at 4% per annum for 13 months is more than the simple interest on the
same sum for 8 months at 6% per annum by Rs. 40. What is the principal amount?
Rs. 3,600
Rs. 12,000
Rs. 4,800
Rs. 24,000

 

3.

Sudhir goes to the market once every 64 days and Sushil goes to the same market once every 72 days.
They met each other one day. How many days later will they meet each other again?
16
64
240
576
 

 

4.

In a test called ACSAT the average marks of 15 test takers is 240. If the marks of 5 test takers are
subtracted the average marks decreases by 40. What is the average marks of 5 test takers?
1600
320
200
40

 

5.

A car is 250 meters behind the bus. The car and bus are moving with the spend of 60 km/hr and 35
km/hr respectively. The car will be ahead of bus by 250 meters in:
37 seconds
48 seconds
72 seconds
68 seconds
None of the above

 

6.

A contractor estimates that 3 people can paint Mr. Khan's house in 4 days. If he uses 4 people instead of
3, how long will they take to complete the job?
4
2
3
5
 

 

7.

Which one of the following numbers is exactly divisible by 11?
235641
245642
315624
415624

 

8.

Nine days ago, the area covered by the mold on a piece of bread was 3 square inches. Today the mold
covers 9 square inches. What is the rate of change in mold's area?
2 square inches per day
3 square inches per day
2/5 square inches per day
2/3 square inches per day

 

9.

Martha was supposed to multiply the number of cans sold with the price of one can to ascertain the
amount earned by her. Instead of talking 41 as the number of cans, she wrote 14 by mistake. As a result
the product went down by 135. What is the other multiplier?
5
7
9
12
 

 

10.

A content manager is working on an excel sheet. She has 6 columns in the sheet. A,B,C,D,E and F. she has
to check that no two columns should have the same entry. She can check only 2 columns at a time. How
many times will she have to repeat the comparing process to complete the process for the whole file
7
8
15
10
 

 

11.

A street seller sells 2 Chinese toys at the cost price of 3 toys. What is the profit percent earned by him?
0.1
0.3
0.4
0.5
 

 

12.

The difference of LCM and HCF of two numbers is 1572 and the sum of their LCM and HCF is 1596. If one
of the numbers is 144, find the other
128
132
134
136

 

13.

The value of (1/512)1/9 is
1/2
1/3
1/4
1/6
 

 

14.

A company decides a new identity code for all its employees. The identity code would comprise of five
letter initials that can be formed using the alphabets of English language such that the fifth letter is
always a consonant. How many such combinations are possible?
26^3 * 21^2
21^4 * 26
21^3 * 26^2
26^4 * 2

 

15.

Malini solved the following question in her Mathematics examination: (6/4 + 5 1/6 of 3/7)/(5 + 2 1/3) and
her answer was 38/77. By how much was her answer wrong?
1
1/77
2
2/77
39/77
 

 

16.

A long distance train is scheduled to reach its destination in 19 hours. After 10 hours of journey, due to
disruption of rail traffic the train has to be stationed for 1 hour. If the average speed of the train is 100
km/hr at what speed should it travel to cover the same amount of time?
110
110.5
112.5
112
 

 

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 Computer Programming 


1.

Is the following statement a declaration or definition extern int i;
Declaration
Definition
Both A and B
None of these

 

2.

1 What should be the output :
2 void main()
3 {
4 int a=10/3;
5 printf(“%d”,a)
6 }
7
3.33
3.0
3
0

 

3.

1 What is the output of the following C code?
2 int main()
3 {
4 int _=10;
5 int __=20;
6 int =+;
7 printf(“%d”,_);
8 }
Compilation Error
Runtime Error
__0 

__30

 

4.

How many main() function we can have in our project?
1
2
No Limit
Depends on Compiler
 

 

5.

What is sizeof() in C?
Operator
Function
Macro
None of these

 

6.

1 What is the output of the following C code?
2 int main()
3 {
4 int a=6;
5 int b=10;
6 int c=a+b;
7 printf(“%i”,c);
8 }
9
0
16
Undefined i

ant other compilation error

 

7.

1 What will be the output of the following C code?
2 int main()
3 {
4 int a=320;
5 char *ptr;
6 ptr=(char *)&a;
7 printf(“%d”,*ptr);
8 return 0;
9 }
1
320
60
160

64

 

8.

1 What is the output of the following C code?
2 int main()
3 {
4 int a=10.5;
5 printf(“%d”,a);
6 }
7
10.5
10
0

error

 

9.

Which of the following is executed by preprocess?
#include<stdio.h>
return 0;
void main(int argc,char **argv)
None of these
 

 

10.

Which programming language is more faster among these?
Java
PHP
C
Visual Basic
 

 

11.

1 What is the output of the C program?
2 //This program is compiled on 32 bit DEV-C++
3 int main()
4 {
5 char ptr1,ptr2;
6 printf(“%d %d”,sizeof(ptr1),sizeof(ptr2));
7 return 0;
8 }
0 0
2 2
4 4

unde
 

 

12.

1 How many times Hello is printed on console?
2 void main()
3 {
4 int a=0;
5 while(a++)
6 {
7 printf(“Hello”);
8 } }
Nothing is printed on screen
0 time
1 time
 

 

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Automata Fix

 

1.

Analyze and debug the program below.
Input Format
Read a number with n digits.
Output Format
Print whether the n digits satisfy the features of Armstrong Number

 

while (num != 0)
 {
 r=num % 10;
 res += pow(r, n);
 num /= 10;
 }

 

2.

A train of compartments are reserved only with the seat numbers like digits 4 and 7 such as 4, 7, 44, 47,
74,...... 44744,.. etc. Given a ticket K, we need to nd K-th seat number in the train. The code is given
below, fill the missing code such that it passes through all the test cases.
Input Format
The first line of input contains an integer T denoting the number of test cases. Then T test cases follow.
Each test case contains an integer k.
Output Format
Print in a new line the Kth number in the series.

 

if (i%2 != 0)

 a[i] = a[i/2]*10 + 4;

 else

 a[i] = a[(i/2)-1]*10 + 7;

 }

 

3.

Given a program to generate the first n terms in the series --- 34,18,10,6,4,... The program has logical
errors.
Debug the program such that the program passes through the test cases.
Input Format
Input consists of a single integer which corresponds to n.
Output Format
Output consists of the terms in the series separated by a blank space

 

for(i=1;i<n;i++)

 

4.

Roy bought a new bike last Sunday. He needs to decide the number plate number now. Though he likes
0’s and 1’s most out of number system, he wants his number plate to start with 1. Lets help him in
finding out how many unique permutations start with 1 when he is given with N 0’s and M 1’s.
The code is given below. Complete the missing lines of code to execute the program. Try printing the
answer modulo (109+7).
Input Format
First line contains T, the number of test cases.
Each test case consists of N and M separated by a space.
Output Format
For each test case, print the answer modulo (109+7).
 

int s=n+m;
long long res=1;
if(n<m)
{
n=n+m;
m=n-m;
n=n-m;
}
int f=1,i;
for(i=s;i>n;i--)
{
res*=i;res%=MOD;
res/=f++;res%=MOD;
}
return res;

 

5.

Nikki has a row of N white tiles indexed from 1 to N. This time, she's painting them blue! The code is
given to nd the number of ways Nikki can paint certain tiles in green so that the indices of the blue tiles
form an Arithmetic Progression. As this value can be quite large, your answer must be modulo 109 + 7.
Note: Nikki must paint at least 1 tile.
The code below has syntax/logical errors. Debug the program so as to pass through all the test cases.
Input Format
The first line contains a single integer, T , denoting the number of test cases.
Each test case consists of a single line containing an integer, N, denoting the length of row of tiles.
Output Format
On a new line for each test case, print the number of ways Nikki can paint her white tiles blue so that
the indices of the blue tiles form an Arithmetic Progression. Because this number can be quite large,
your answer must be modulo (109 + 7).

 

 

for(int i = 0;i < N;i++){
 for(int j = i+1;j < N;j++) 

 

6.

Given a program to generate the first n terms in the series --- 2,15,41,80,.... But the program fails to
compile as it has logical errors.
Debug the program such that it passes all the test cases.
Input Format
Input consists of a single integer which corresponds to n.
Output Format
Output consists of the terms in the series separated by a blank space

 

a=a+(13*i);


 

7.

Me and my friend always play a game. For every integer X I give, my friend has to nd the smallest
positive integer Y such that X *Y ( X multiplied by Y) contains only 4s and 0s and starts with one or
more 4s followed by zero or more 0s. For example, 404 is an invalid number but 4400, 440, and 444
are valid numbers. If a is the number of 4s and b is the number of 0s, can you print the value of (2 x a)
+ b ? The code is given below, but it has logical errors in it. Debug and execute the code.
Input Format
The first line of input contains a single integer T, the number of test cases.
T lines follow, each line containing the integer X as stated above.
Output Format
For every X, print the output (2 x a) + b in a newline as stated in the problem statement

 

for(i=power,j=1;j<=k;i=i/10,j+=1) 

 

 

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Essay Writing 


Write an essay on the below topic as per the directions given
"Culture and tradition are as important as science to the progress and well-being of society"
Directions
1. Please express your opinion on the given topic in 220-250 words. You advised adhering to the
word limit to avoid any scoring penalty.
2. Common grammatical rules, punctuation should be according to standard English


The outlook of culture has greatly widened with the development of science and technology. International mass communications have broken down the frontiers of narrow traditions of culture. They are helping now in bringing about an international modern culture in which man is giving up not only the tribal, local, racial and communal culture but adopting national and international culture. It is a very healthy development. The barriers of man-made borders of States and nations are fast becoming insignificant in respect of the lifestyles and day-today occupations. A common code of living among nations is developing very fast. The cable-T.V. culture is contributing enormously towards this end. Gone are the days when there used to be local traditions and habits which were considered the uppermost. The modern life especially in urban areas in almost all the countries of the world are developing a common attitude in lifestyle, manners, education and thought. The people belonging to different countries and backgrounds are seen working in a common environment of work and lifestyle. There are common attitudes in learning, education and training seen in almost all the countries of the world. The reputed educational and technical institutions around the globe invite students from all countries and cultures in a single class-room to train them for work wherever they are able to fit themselves. An attitude of international character and belongingness is seen developing very fast.

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English 

 

1.

Select the word or phrase which best expresses the meaning of the given word. VANISH
Evacuate
Decrease
Disappear
Harm
 

 

2.

Read the following passage and answer the question below: Fasting is an act of homage to the majesty
of appetite. So, I think we should arrange to give up our pleasures regularly-our food, our friends, our
lovers- in order to preserve their intensity, and the moment of coming back to them. For this is the
moment that renews and refreshes both oneself and the thing one loves. Sailors and travellers enjoyed
this once, and so did hunters, I suppose. Part of the weariness of modern life may be that we live too
much on top of each other and are entertained and fed too regularly. Once we were separated by
hunger both from our food and families, and then we learned to value both. The men went off hunting,
and the dogs went with them; the women and children waved goodbye. The cave was empty of men for
days on end; nobody ate or knew what to do. The women crouched by the fire the wet smoke in their
eyes; the children wailed; everybody was hungry. Then one night there were shouts and the barking of
dogs from the hills, and the men came backloaded with meat. This was the great reunion, and
everybody gorged themselves silly, and appetite came into its own; the long-awaited meal became a
feast to remember and an almost sacred celebration of life. Now we go off to the office and come
home in the evenings to cheap chicken and frozen peas.
What is the author's main argument in the passage?
 

We should deny ourselves pleasures once in a while ......

 

3.

Sixty years ago, on the evening of August 14, 1947, a few hours before Britain's Indian Empire was
formally divided into the nation states of India and Pakistan, Lord Louis Mountbatten and his wife,
Edwina, sat down in the viceregal mansion in New Delhi to watch the latest Bob Hope movie, "My
Favorite Brunette." Large parts of the subcontinent were descending into chaos, as the implications of
partitioning the Indian Empire along religious lines became clear to the millions of Hindus, Muslims, and
Sikhs caught on the wrong side of the border. In the next few months, some twelve million people
would be uprooted and as many as a million murdered. But on that night in mid-August the bloodbath
and the fuller consequences of hasty imperial retreat still lay in the future, and the Mountbatten
probably felt they had earned their evening's entertainment. Mountbatten's, the last viceroy of India,
had arrived in New Delhi in March, 1947, charged with an almost impossible task. Irrevocably enfeebled
by the Second World War, the British belatedly realized that they had to leave the subcontinent, which
had spiraled out of their control through the nineteen-forties. But plans for brisk disengagement
ignored messy realities on the ground. Mountbatten had a clear remit to transfer power to the Indians
within fifteen months. Leaving India to God, or anarchy, as Mohandas Gandhi, the foremost Indian
leader, exhorted, wasn't a political option, however tempting. Mountbatten had to work hard to figure
out how and to whom power was to be transferred. The dominant political party, the Congress Party,
took inspiration from Gandhi in claiming to be a secular organization, representing all four hundred
million Indians. But many Muslim politicians saw it as a party of upper-caste Hindus and demanded a
separate homeland for their hundred million coreligionists, who were intermingled with non-Muslim
populations across the subcontinent's villages, towns, and cities. Eventually, as in Palestine, the British
saw partition along religious lines as the quickest way to the exit But sectarian riots in Punjab and
Bengal dimmed hopes for a quick and dignified British withdrawal, and boded ill for India's assumption
of power. Not surprisingly, there were some notable absences at the Independence Day celebrations in
New Delhi on August 15th. Gandhi, denouncing freedom from imperial rule as a "wooden loaf," had
remained in Calcutta, trying, with the force of his moral authority, to stop Hindus and Muslims from
killing each other. His great rival Mohammed Ali Jinnah, who had fought bitterly for a separate
homeland for Indian Muslims, was in Karachi, trying to hold together the precarious nation-state of
Pakistan. Nevertheless, the significance of the occasion was not lost on many. While the Mountbatten's
were sitting down to their Bob Hope movie, India's constituent assembly was convening in New Delhi.
The moment demanded grandiloquence, and Jawaharlal Nehru, Gandhi's closest disciple and soon to
be India's first Prime Minister, provided it. "Long years ago, we made a tryst with destiny," he said. "At the
stroke of the midnight hour, while the world sleeps, India will awaken to life and freedom. A moment
comes, which comes but rarely in history, when we step out from the old to the new, when an age ends, 

A symbol of the ills of the partition

 

4.

Sixty years ago, on the evening of August 14, 1947, a few hours before Britain's Indian Empire was
formally divided into the nation states of India and Pakistan, Lord Louis Mountbatten and his wife,
Edwina, sat down in the viceregal mansion in New Delhi to watch the latest Bob Hope movie, "My
Favorite Brunette." Large parts of the subcontinent were descending into chaos, as the implications of
partitioning the Indian Empire along religious lines became clear to the millions of Hindus, Muslims, and
Sikhs caught on the wrong side of the border. In the next few months, some twelve million people
would be uprooted and as many as a million murdered. But on that night in mid-August the bloodbath
and the fuller consequences of hasty imperial retreat still lay in the future, and the Mountbatten
probably felt they had earned their evening's entertainment. Mountbatten's, the last viceroy of India,
had arrived in New Delhi in March, 1947, charged with an almost impossible task. Irrevocably enfeebled
by the Second World War, the British belatedly realized that they had to leave the subcontinent, which
had spiraled out of their control through the nineteen-forties. But plans for brisk disengagement
ignored messy realities on the ground. Mountbatten had a clear remit to transfer power to the Indians
within fifteen months. Leaving India to God, or anarchy, as Mohandas Gandhi, the foremost Indian
leader, exhorted, wasn't a political option, however tempting. Mountbatten had to work hard to figure
out how and to whom power was to be transferred. The dominant political party, the Congress Party,
took inspiration from Gandhi in claiming to be a secular organization, representing all four hundred
million Indians. But many Muslim politicians saw it as a party of upper-caste Hindus and demanded a
separate homeland for their hundred million coreligionists, who were intermingled with non-Muslim
populations across the subcontinent's villages, towns, and cities. Eventually, as in Palestine, the British
saw partition along religious lines as the quickest way to the exit But sectarian riots in Punjab and
Bengal dimmed hopes for a quick and dignified British withdrawal, and boded ill for India's assumption
of power. Not surprisingly, there were some notable absences at the Independence Day celebrations in
New Delhi on August 15th. Gandhi, denouncing freedom from imperial rule as a "wooden loaf," had
remained in Calcutta, trying, with the force of his moral authority, to stop Hindus and Muslims from
killing each other. His great rival Mohammed Ali Jinnah, who had fought bitterly for a separate
homeland for Indian Muslims, was in Karachi, trying to hold together the precarious nation-state of
Pakistan. Nevertheless, the significance of the occasion was not lost on many. While the Mountbatten's
were sitting down to their Bob Hope movie, India's constituent assembly was convening in New Delhi.
The moment demanded grandiloquence, and Jawaharlal Nehru, Gandhi's closest disciple and soon to
be India's first Prime Minister, provided it. "Long years ago, we made a tryst with destiny," he said. "At the
stroke of the midnight hour, while the world sleeps, India will awaken to life and freedom. A moment
comes, which comes but rarely in history, when we step out from the old to the new, when an age ends 


His asassin though he was partial to the muslims

 

5.

Sixty years ago, on the evening of August 14, 1947, a few hours before Britain's Indian Empire was
formally divided into the nation states of India and Pakistan, Lord Louis Mountbatten and his wife,
Edwina, sat down in the viceregal mansion in New Delhi to watch the latest Bob Hope movie, "My
Favorite Brunette." Large parts of the subcontinent were descending into chaos, as the implications of
partitioning the Indian Empire along religious lines became clear to the millions of Hindus, Muslims, and
Sikhs caught on the wrong side of the border. In the next few months, some twelve million people
would be uprooted and as many as a million murdered. But on that night in mid-August the bloodbath
and the fuller consequences of hasty imperial retreat still lay in the future, and the Mountbatten
probably felt they had earned their evening's entertainment. Mountbatten's, the last viceroy of India,
had arrived in New Delhi in March, 1947, charged with an almost impossible task. Irrevocably enfeebled
by the Second World War, the British belatedly realized that they had to leave the subcontinent, which
had spiraled out of their control through the nineteen-forties. But plans for brisk disengagement
ignored messy realities on the ground. Mountbatten had a clear remit to transfer power to the Indians
within fifteen months. Leaving India to God, or anarchy, as Mohandas Gandhi, the foremost Indian
leader, exhorted, wasn't a political option, however tempting. Mountbatten had to work hard to figure
out how and to whom power was to be transferred. The dominant political party, the Congress Party,
took inspiration from Gandhi in claiming to be a secular organization, representing all four hundred
million Indians. But many Muslim politicians saw it as a party of upper-caste Hindus and demanded a
separate homeland for their hundred million coreligionists, who were intermingled with non-Muslim
populations across the subcontinent's villages, towns, and cities. Eventually, as in Palestine, the British
saw partition along religious lines as the quickest way to the exit But sectarian riots in Punjab and
Bengal dimmed hopes for a quick and dignified British withdrawal, and boded ill for India's assumption
of power. Not surprisingly, there were some notable absences at the Independence Day celebrations in
New Delhi on August 15th. Gandhi, denouncing freedom from imperial rule as a "wooden loaf," had
remained in Calcutta, trying, with the force of his moral authority, to stop Hindus and Muslims from
killing each other. His great rival Mohammed Ali Jinnah, who had fought bitterly for a separate
homeland for Indian Muslims, was in Karachi, trying to hold together the precarious nation-state of
Pakistan. Nevertheless, the significance of the occasion was not lost on many. While the Mountbatten's
were sitting down to their Bob Hope movie, India's constituent assembly was convening in New Delhi.
The moment demanded grandiloquence, and Jawaharlal Nehru, Gandhi's closest disciple and soon to
be India's first Prime Minister, provided it. "Long years ago, we made a tryst with destiny," he said. "At the
stroke of the midnight hour, while the world sleeps, India will awaken to life and freedom. A moment
comes, which comes but rarely in history, when we step out from the old to the new, when an age ends

 

He uses it to show apathy of the britishers towarsa the sub-continent 

 

6.

Neither Surekha ____ Ravi will be able to attend the meeting on Sunday.
or
nor
and
but also
 

 

7.

In the question each passage consists of six sentences. The first and the sixth sentences are given in
the beginning. The middle four sentences have been removed and jumbled up. These are labeled P, Q, R
and S. Select the proper order for the four sentences.
S1: Hi Sandeep, hope all is well with you.
S6: Nonetheless, we had great fun while rafting.
P: We all went for a short trip last weekend to Rishikesh for camping and rafting.
Q: It was a lot of fun as we all stayed in camp at the river side. /
R: Everybody here is doing great.
S: There weren't many rapids in the river this year due to less rain.
PSRQ
SPQR
RPQS

QPRS
 

 

8.

Read the sentence to find out whether there is any grammatical error in it The error, if any, will be in one
part of the sentence. The letter of that part is the answer. Ignore the error of punctuation, if any.
(A)Juhu beach in Mumbai was filled with (B) innumerable people who had gathered there (C) to see the
discovered newly ancient temple.
A
B
C
No error

 

9.

Improve the sentence by selecting the correct alternative to the italicized part of the sentence
As per the weather prediction, it will rain heavily for the next one week.
Observation
Report
News
Forecast

 

10.

Read the following passage and answer the question below: Fasting is an act of homage to the majesty
of appetite. So, I think we should arrange to give up our pleasures regularly-our food, our friends, our
lovers- in order to preserve their intensity, and the moment of coming back to them. For this is the
moment that renews and refreshes both oneself and the thing one loves. Sailors and travellers enjoyed
this once, and so did hunters, I suppose. Part of the weariness of modern life may be that we live too
much on top of each other and are entertained and fed too regularly. Once we were separated by
hunger both from our food and families, and then we learned to value both. The men went off hunting,
and the dogs went with them; the women and children waved goodbye. The cave was empty of men for
days on end; nobody ate or knew what to do. The women crouched by the fire the wet smoke in their
eyes; the children wailed; everybody was hungry. Then one night there were shouts and the barking of
dogs from the hills, and the men came backloaded with meat. This was the great reunion, and
everybody gorged themselves silly, and appetite came into its own; the long-awaited meal became a
feast to remember and an almost sacred celebration of life. Now we go off to the office and come
home in the evenings to cheap chicken and frozen peas.
What commonality has been highlighted between the sailors and hunters? 

They renew and refresh themselves regularly

 

11.

Arrange the fragments A, B, C, D, E and F in order to form a meaningful sentence
A- disappointed if B- not fulfilled C- do not be D- or E- promises are F- friends let you down
CFDAEB
CABDEF
CAFDBE
CAFDEB

 

12.

Select the correct option that fills the blanks(s) to make the sentence meaningfully complete
Garima said, "There are so many people in the house, I wonder who ate the ice-cream." Garima is _.
doubtful
amazed
shocked
worried
 

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