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Read the following sentences carefully.
1. The exam will begin from 2:00
p.m. on January 8th.
2. While entering into the college building, he saw the statue
of Mahatma Gandhi.
3. The government has entered into a discussion with the local
bodies for keeping the streets clean.
4. I will start my world tour from Sri Lanka.
5. Amitabh Bacchan is married with Jaya Bacchan
6. I have been working on this
project for three weeks.
From the following, choose the option having all the
CORRECT sentences.
Read the following passage and answer the question that follows.
More
people signed up for Harvard’s online courses in a year, for example, than have
attended the university in its 377 years of existence. In the same spirit, there are
more unique visits each month to the WebMD network, a collection of health websites,
than to all the doctors working in the United States. In the legal world, three times as
many disagreements each year amongst eBay traders are resolved using ‘online
dispute resolution’ than there are lawsuits filed in the entire US court system.
On its sixth birthday, the Huffington Post had more unique monthly visitors than the
website of the New York Times, which is almost 164 years of age. The British tax
authorities use a fraud-detection system that holds more data than the British Library
(which has copies of every book ever published in the UK). In 2014, the US tax
authorities received electronic tax returns from almost 48 million people who had used
online tax preparation software rather than a tax professional to help them. The
architectural firm Gramazio & Kohler used a group of autonomous flying robots to
assemble a structure out of 1500 bricks. The consulting firm Accenture has 750 hospital
nurses on its staff, while Deloitte, founded as an audit practice 170 years ago, now has
over 200,000 professionals and its own full-scale corporate university set in a
700,000-square-foot campus in Texas.
The author of the above paragraph is
trying to conclude something by citing different pieces of evidence. What could the
author be trying to prove?
Read the following passage and answer the question that follows.
As a
generation, we are rethinking what we are to others. Our technological prowess has
become a wireless lifeline for others. Some of us apply ourselves to innovation:
hackathons and other forms of technological creativity. Our families look to us to know
how to use technology both to waste time and to make meaning. Some of us set up Facetime
for those denied face‐to‐face time. We show them it will be OK, that
digital relationships are real relationships – though in fact we are not always
sure.
Which of the following, will be a most MEANINGFUL conclusion of the
passage?
Which of the following sentences have the CORRECT usage of punctuation?
When facing various challenges, people in today’s digital world heavily rely on
private, online information-seeking behaviour. Individuals who experience depression
will often attempt to understand their predicament and seek remedy by searching the
Internet for depression-related information and treatment. A recent report says that
there exists evidence of many searches comprising the word depression, during and just
after the elections, in country Y. So, it can be concluded that the election is
experienced by many people in country Y as a truly psychologically traumatizing
event—and as such as being potentially depressionogenic.
Which of the
following statements MOST seriously weakens the conclusion drawn in the passage?
Read the following excerpt carefully.
In the future, hydrogen may form a
significant part of our energy systems. Today it is mostly used in oil refineries and
fertiliser but in the future hydrogen could power our cars, heat our homes, and fuel
industry. A recent McKinsey study suggested that in less than 25 years, hydrogen could
account for 18% of global energy consumption and reduce carbon dioxide emissions from
current levels by some 6 gigatons….
Which of the following sentences
will MOST logically complete the above excerpt?
Read the following paragraph and answer the question that follows.
The
fundamental laws that govern the smallest constituents of matter and energy, when
applied to the Universe over long enough cosmic timescales, can explain everything that
will ever emerge. This means that the formation of literally everything in our Universe,
from atomic nuclei to atoms to simple molecules to complex molecules to life to
intelligence to consciousness and beyond, can all be understood as something that
emerges directly from the fundamental laws underpinning reality, with no additional laws
and forces.
Which of the following can be BEST inferred from the paragraph
above?
Arrange the following into a meaningful sequence:
1. I’m not sure
when I first became aware of the Singularity.
2. In the almost half century that
I've immersed myself in computer and related technologies, I've sought to understand the
meaning and purpose of the continual upheaval that I have witnessed at many levels.
3. Gradually, I've become aware of a transforming event looming in the first half of
the twenty first century.
4. I'd have to say it was a progressive awakening.
5.
Just as a black hole in space dramatically alters the patterns of matter and energy
accelerating toward its event horizon, this impending Singularity in our future is
increasingly transforming every institution and aspect of human life, from sexuality to
spirituality.
Fill up the blanks with appropriate words.
Oil painting did to appearance
what capital did to social____________. It reduced everything to the __________of
objects. Everything became __________because everything became a commodity. All reality
was mechanically__________ by its materiality.
Read the following statements.
The leave policy is bound to be unpopular
either with the management or among workers. If the leave policy is unpopular with the
management, it should be modified. We should adopt a new policy if it is unpopular with
workers.
If the above statements are true, which one of the following MUST also
be true?
Arrange the following into a meaningful sequence:
1. Our knowledge about
life developed over the centuries thanks to the many philosophers, physicists, chemists
and biologists, who examined such complex matters according to their different points of
view.
2. Out of this long history, I wish to quote here only one date, the year
1953.
3. In that year, Miller and Urey carried out their famous experiment about the
primordial universal soup, whose foundations had already been expounded by the Russian
chemist Alexandre Oparin in 1924.
4. From a mixture of five gases, methane, ammonia,
carbon dioxide, hydrogen and water vapor, and an electric discharge as the source of
energy, complex molecules were produced, including amino acids.
Read the following sentences carefully.
1. The boss accused her employee
for stealing information.
2. The boss had better discuss the issue with the employee
concerned.
3. The India of 2022 is very different from the India of 1947.
4. The
government is committed to providing people with food.
5. He is good in playing the
piano.
From the following, identify the option with INCORRECT sentences.
Read the following passage and answer the THREE questions that follow.
Corporations continue to ignore the threat of global warming, probably because global
warming is a hyper-object, very difficult to touch and feel. Because hyper-objects have much
wider time-space boundaries than human beings, we tend to consider hyper-objects as given
and non-existent. Therefore, it is very difficult to deal with hyper-objects as their common
understanding is lacking. Some of us continue to believe that global warming is blown out of
proportion-it is not a serious threat. Even those who understood hyper-objects have yet to
figure out right response to them.
The lack of understanding and response from corporations to “climate change” is evident from
the fact that most of businesses have remained largely human-centric. Some businesses have
adopted green practices- voluntarily, or involuntary. These efforts attempt to reduce
emissions through better energy efficiency. Though laudable, the efforts have failed to make
any significant dent at the global level; the planet continues to get warmer. Moreover, most
of the efforts are still in the sphere of “business as usual” and “what is good for us”.
Business as usual, the current model of economic production and distribution is deeply
flawed as it is based mainly on the capitalistic ethos of free-market legitimized through
private property, competition, and unlimited consumption. The word “free” has come to mean
that there are no constraints on individuals, and the word market has come to mean that
buying and selling are the primary mechanisms, and everything is a transaction. Private
property gives individuals/nations a chance to create legal rights to own more and more,
subject to very little constraints. It is evident in income inequalities witnessed across
the world. The very notion of ownership is control-oriented and human-centric that promotes
unlimited extraction from environment, hyper-nationalism, and hyper-individualism. The
extraction and exploitation of the environment has served our economic interests, and led to
the growth and survival of businesses. However, it has also led to the destruction of
environment. Global warming is the response of nature to human actions driven by businesses
operating on the principles of surplus, predictability, control, hyper-rationality,
linearity, and quantification. In other words, “business as usual” has yet to dance to the
rhythm of nature.
According to the passage, which of the following will be closest to the idea of hyper-object?
Based on the passage, which of the following is NOT an example of human-centric statement?
Which of the following statement(s) is NOT in consonance with the author’s
views, as expressed in the passage?
1. Patents should be respected.
2. Trading of shares on the free stock markets should be promoted.
3. Building a
beautiful resort on a hilltop.
Read the following passage and answer the THREE questions that follow.
Interpretation in our own time, however, is even more complex. For the contemporary zeal for
the project of interpretation is often prompted not by piety toward the troublesome text
(which may conceal an aggression), but by an open aggressiveness, an overt contempt for
appearances. The old style of interpretation was insistent, but respectful; it erected
another meaning on top of the literal one. The modern style of interpretation excavates, and
as it excavates, destroys; it digs “behind” the text, to find a sub-text which is the true
one. The most celebrated and influential modern doctrines, those of Marx and Freud, actually
amount to elaborate systems of hermeneutics, aggressive and impious theories of
interpretation. All observable phenomena are bracketed, in Freud’s phrase, as manifest
content. This manifest content must be probed and pushed aside to find the true meaning—the
latent content beneath. For Marx, social events like revolutions and wars; for Freud, the
events of individual lives (like neurotic symptoms and slips of the tongue) as well as texts
(like a dream or a work of art)—all are treated as occasions for interpretation. According
to Marx and Freud, these events only seem to be intelligible. Actually, they have no meaning
without interpretation. To understand is to interpret. And to interpret is to restate the
phenomenon, in effect to find an equivalent for it.
Thus, interpretation is not (as most people assume) an absolute value, a gesture of mind
situated in some timeless realm of capabilities. Interpretation must itself be evaluated,
within a historical view of human consciousness. In some cultural contexts, interpretation
is a liberating act. It is a means of revising, of transvaluing, of escaping the dead past.
In other cultural contexts, it is reactionary, impertinent, cowardly and stifling.
What does the author mean by “Thus, interpretation is not…a gesture of mind situated in some timeless realm of capabilities?”
According to the passage, which of the following is NOT an act of interpretation?
Which of the following BEST differentiates manifest content from the latent content?
Read the poem and answer the TWO questions that follow.
The slow person you left behind when, finally,
you mastered the world, and scaled the heights you now command,
where is he while you
walked around the shaved lawn in your plus fours,
organizing with an electric clipboard
your big push to tomorrow?
Oh, I have come across him, yes, I have, more than once,
coaxing his battered grocery cart down the freeway meridian,
Others see in you sundry mythic types distinguished
not just in themselves but by the stories
we put in with beginnings, ends, surprises:
the baby Oedipus on the hillside with his broken feet
or the dog whose barking saves the grandmother
flailing in the millpond beyond the weir,
dragged down by her woolen skirt.
He doesn’t see you as a story, though.
He feels you as his atmosphere. When your sun shines,
he chorteles. When your barometric pressure drops
and the thunder heads gather,
he huddles under the overpass and writes me long letters with
the study little pencil he steals from the public library.
He asks me to look out for you.
Which of the following BEST captures the theme of the poem?
Which of the following statements BEST interprets the lines “He doesn’t see you as a story, though/He feels you as his atmosphere”?
Read the following passage and answer the THREE questions that follow.
Socrates believed that akrasia (meaning procrastination) was, strictly speaking, impossible,
since we could not want what is bad for us; if we act against our own interests, it must be
because we don’t know what’s right. Loewenstein, similarly, is inclined to see the
procrastinator as led astray by the “visceral” rewards of the present. As the
nineteenth-century Scottish economist John Rae put it, “The prospects of future good, which
future years may hold on us, seem at such a moment dull and dubious, and are apt to be
slighted, for objects on which the daylight is falling strongly, and showing us in all their
freshness just within our grasp.” Loewenstein also suggests that our memory for the
intensity of visceral rewards is deficient: when we put off preparing for that meeting by
telling ourselves that we’ll do it tomorrow, we fail to take into account that tomorrow the
temptation to put off work will be just as strong.
Ignorance might also affect procrastination through what the social scientist Jon Elster
calls “the planning fallacy.” Elster thinks that people underestimate the time “it will take
them to complete a given task, partly because they fail to take account of how long it has
taken them to complete similar projects in the past and partly because they rely on smooth
scenarios in which accidents or unforeseen problems never occur.”
According to the passage, in regard to time, which of the following statements gives the BEST reason for procrastination?
Which of the following statements can be BEST inferred from the passage about procrastination?
Which of the following is the meaning that comes CLOSEST to “our memory for the intensity of visceral rewards is deficient” as suggested by Loewenstein?
Read the following passage and answer the THREE questions that follow.
It is harder and harder to make sense of life. Everything is changing, all the time, at a
faster and faster pace. Our civilization is struggling to keep up with exponential
technology and disruptive change. Our age-old institutions, politics, economics, ethics,
religion and laws, even our environment, are so fundamentally challenged, that we risk
collapse. Our stories have gotten so divorced from reality, so divisive, so inflexible and
so inept to adapt to and explain our present, let alone guide us towards a better future,
that we often feel like helpless passengers on a Titanic spaceship Earth. No wonder
Aristotle observed that “When the storytelling goes bad in a society, the result is
decadence.”
But why is this the case? And, perhaps more importantly, how is it that bad storytelling can
keep, if not bring, a whole society down? Is that not simply overstating the power of story?
Literary theorist Kenneth Burke famously noted: “Stories are equipment for human living. We
need storytelling in order to make certain sense out of life.” If that is true then our
equipment for living has gone obsolete. And unless we upgrade it we are going to go obsolete
too.
It was this process that Fred Polak had in mind in 1961 while observing:
Any student of the rise and fall of cultures cannot fail to be impressed by the role played
in this historical succession by the image of the future. The rise and fall of images
precede or accompany the rise and fall of cultures. As long as a society’s image is positive
and flourishing, the flower of culture is in full bloom. Once the image begins to decay and
lose its vitality, however, the culture does not long survive.
That is why we desperately need a new story. A story that will not only help us make sense
of the world today but also unite us as a species of human beings. A story that will
motivate us to stop bickering and resolve our common problems. A story that will inspire us
to achieve our common goals and guide us towards a better future for all sentient beings on
our planet.
We have to rewrite the human story. Because the old stories that brought us thus far are no
longer useful. They’ve lost their vision and grandeur. They’ve become petty and
short-sighted. They’re stuck in a past that never was at the expense of a future that can
be. They divide us and keep us bickering while our civilization is facing unprecedented
diversity and depth of existential challenges. Those stories are not simply our history.
They are now our chains. And unless we break them, they will be our death sentence.
So, it is worth exploring if or how new stories, good stories can bring us up.
The human story that brought us into the 21st century was written and rewritten several
times. The latest major update was perhaps during the industrial revolution. It is time to
rewrite it again. We need a new story. A brave story. An unreasonable story. A story that
can inspire, unite and motivate us to break free from the past and create the best possible
future.
According to the passage, which of the following is NOT associated with bad storytelling in a society?
Which of the following options BEST captures the essence of a GOOD STORY?
Read the following statements:
1. A story without connections and coherence.
2.
A story that talks about recreating the past glory.
3. A story may not be factually
true.
4. A story that is meaningful and compelling for humanity
Which of
the above statements can be ASSOCIATED with the meaning of “unreasonable
story”, as used in the passage?
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