Wednesday, 4 November 2015

Q.1-5. Read each part of the sentence to find out if there is any error in it. The error, if any, will be in one part of the sentence. The number of that part is the answer. If there is no error, mark your answer as (5).

Q.1. The alleged trade-based money laundering in the Bank of Baroda (1)/ shows that procedures at the bank (2)/ were clearly wanting as money was remitted (3)/ against imports that perhaps were not made. (4)/ No error (5)

Q.2. Two statements by the Prime Minister (1)/ over the last few days (2)/ on the Dadri incident have done much (3) too( Replace with to )restore equilibrium in political discourse. (4)/ No error (5)



Q. (1 - 7) Read the following information carefully and answer the questions given below:
A group of seven friends Amarjeet, Balbir, Chiman, Dimple, Eshmeet, Fateh and Gurpreet are working in different departments as agriculture officer, IT officer, economist,  terminal operator, clerk, forex 
officer and research analyst for the banks namely Lucky, Major, New, Profit, Quiet, Royal and Smriddhi but not necessarily in the same order.



Ques 1.      3,  3,  4.5,   ..........,   22.5,     67.5 ?
a) 13.5
b) 8.5
c) 9.0
d) 10.5
e) None of The Above




Directions (1-5): Rearrange the following six sentences (A), (B), (C), (D), (E) and (F) in the proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph; then answer the  questions given below them.
(A) To address these issues Indian corporates are increasingly turning eco-friendly.
(B) At present however there are only a dozen green buildings in the private sector.
(C) However though an eco-friendly building may cost more upfront however it is cost effective because of lower operating costs in the long run.
(D) Today there is growing concern about global warming, energy and water crises.
(E) The reason is the construction cost of an eco-friendly building is 15% to 20% more than putting up a conventional building.
(F) Planting tree, using energy saving lighting systems and constructing eco-friendly green buildings are some of the measures they are taking.
 


Study the following pie chart and table to answer these questions.


di set



Directions (Q. 1-10): Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions given below it. Certain words are given in bold to help you locate them while answering some of the questions.

After the “Liberal” a new catch-phrase is being coined: ‘A New Health Order’. Talking about setting it up is the theme of the WHO-sponsored international conference on primary health and medical care, currently being held at Milan in Italy. While much has been said and written on establishing “new order”, little has actually been done. Will the conference at Milan too swear by the “new health order”, go home and then forget about it, while the present medical and healthcare set-up in poor countries further entrenches itself? This does not have to be the fate of the radical resolutions that will undoubtedly be passed Milan. Unlike creating a new world economic of information order, establishing a new world economic or information order, establishing a new health setup is essentially a matter for individual countries to accomplish. No conflict of international interests is involved. But this advantage is, at lease until it begins to take concrete shape, only theoretical. The million dollar question is whether individual thir-world governments are able and willing to muster the will, the resources, the administrative and other infrastructure to carry out what it is entirely within their power to attain and implement.



Tuesday, 3 November 2015


Directions (1-5): Study the following information and answer the questions.
Seven friends, namely A, B, C, D, E, F and G are standing in a straight line facing north but not necessarily in the same order. D stands exactly in the centre of the line. Only two people stand between D and F. A stands to the immediate left of C. A stands to the right of D ( may or may not be the immediate right). Only one person stands between A and B. G stands second to the left of B.




The evolution of the internet from a forum for communication and commerce to a medium of free exchange of opinion and views has been so rapid that the nearly ubiquitous worldwide network of computers is now almost an extension of social life for many on the planet. It is therefore a discomfiting fact that despite the communitarian growth of the internet, the threats to freedom of expression on the medium, such as content takedowns, online surveillance and other forms of state control, have increased in the past year. A report on “Freedom on the Net”, released by Freedom House, the U.S.-based, government-funded organisation, points to the overall decline in internet freedom following a country-wise analysis of 65 nation-states. Freedom House’s reports in the past have been subjected to criticism for its perceived “bias” towards the U.S. and regimes friendly to it. But the “Freedom on the Net” report is fairly comprehensive in its categorisation of online freedom and curbs on it through different mechanisms adopted by nation-states.


Monday, 2 November 2015

After 35 years, China is set to change its one-child policy, allowing all couples to have at most two children. Since its introduction in 1980 with the aim of slowing population growth in the world’s most populous country, an estimated 400 million births have been prevented in China. From 5.5 births per woman in 1970, the country’s fertility rate is now well below the replacement level of 2.1. The policy also led to countless forced abortions, maternal and child deaths, untold trauma especially to mothers, and one of the world’s most skewed sex ratios. Yet, it is difficult to offer unqualified praise for China’s decision. For one, the limit on family size has simply moved from one child to two children, and coercive restrictions on what should be a private decision remain. Second, the decision has been taken in response to the decline in China’s working population relative to its elderly population. China’s dependancy ratio — the ratio of children and elderly to its working age population — has declined from 63.4 in 1950 to 34.5 in 2010, as against 56.3 for India, meaning far fewer working people support a far larger number of dependants. All countries will move through cycles of demographic dividends followed by rapid ageing, and must plan for their own unique challenges without intervening in family lives to engineer change.



Q.1-5. Read the following information carefully and answer the question given below:

Eight friends Kamla, Rano, Pooja, Poonam, Seema, Mita, Twist and Divya are sitting in a circle and facing towards the centre but not necessarily in the same order.

(A) Those two friends are not neighbours to each other whose names are starting with letter P.



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