SECTION A : VERBAL AND LOGICAL ABILITY

Analyse the following passage and provide an appropriate answer for the question nos. 1 through 2 that follow.

In Hume’s eyes productive labour was the greatest asset of a country, and foreign trade was valuable because it enabled a nation to use more and more varied labour than would otherwise be possible. But commerce was of mutual advantage to the nations involved, not a benefit to one and injury to other. “The increase of riches and commerce in any one nation,” added Hume, “instead of hurting, commonly, promotes the riches and commerce of all its neighbours.” “The emulation in rival nations serves . . . to keep industry alive in all of them.”

1. The importance of foreign trade, in eyes of Hume, was due to that:

A.  it allowed the employment of surplus labour in a nation.

B.  it allowed the diversion of labour to export oriented industries.

C.  it allowed the deeper specialisation of the same labour force.

D.  it allowed varied application of labour force in a nation.

E.  it allowed application of varied labour force in a nation.

2. As per Hume, free trade between nations was made advantageous by the outcome of:

A.  mutual increase in riches and commerce.

B.  emulation of industrial activity by different nations.

C.  affable promotion of industrial activity among nations.

D.  productive employment of labour in different nations.

E.  higher wages received by labour in exporting nations.

Questions (3-5): Identify the correct sentences from the options given below.

3. A.  When kite flying you can always tell when you lose a kite because the string feels loose.

B.  When kite flying you can always tell when you loose a kite because the string feels lose.

C.  When kite flying you can always tell when you loose a kite because the string feels loose.

D.  While flying a kite you can always tell when you lose a kite because the string feels lose.

E.  While flying a kite, you can always tell when you lost a kite when the string felt lose.

4. A.  If XAT aspirants had not taken so long checking each question before attempting the next question they might not have run out of time.

B.  If XAT aspirants had taken so long checking each question before attempting the next question they might not have run out of time.

C.  Had XAT aspirants had not took so long checking every question before attempting the next question they might not have run out of time.

D.  If XAT aspirants had took so long checking each question before attempting the next question they might not have run out of time.

E.  Had XAT aspirants not took so long checking all question before attempting the next question they might not have run out of time.

5. A.  The news channel agreed to report that next Sunday the couple had been married for 10 years.

B.  The news channel agreed to report that next Sunday the couple will have been married for 10 years.

C.  The news channel agreed to report that next Sunday the couple will be married for 10 years.

D.  The news channel agreed to report that next Sunday the couple could have been married for 10 years.

E.  The news channel agreed to report that next Sunday the couple has been married since 10 years.

For questions 6 & 7 go through the following passage.

The Yoga system is divided into two principal parts—Hatha and Raja Yoga. Hatha Yoga deals principally with the physiological part of man with a view to establish his health and train his will. The processes prescribed to arrive at this end are so difficult that only a few resolute souls go through all the stages of its practice. Many have failed and some have died in the attempt. It is therefore strongly denounced by all the philosophers. The most illustrious Shankaracharya has remarked in his treatise called Aparokshanubhuti that “the system of Hatha Yoga was intended for those whose wordly desires are not pacified or uprooted.”

6. Which one of the following, if true, most substantially strengthens the idea given in the passage?

A.  The percentage of people in a given ashram practicing Raja Yoga is more than the percentage of people practising Hatha Yoga.

B.  The number of people in a given ashram practicing Raja Yoga is more than the number of people practising Hatha Yoga.

C.  The number of Yoga schools teaching Raja Yoga is more than the number of Yoga schools teaching Hatha Yoga.

D.  The number of teachers teaching Raja Yoga is more than the number of teachers teaching Hatha Yoga.

E.  The percentage of students who have successfully learnt Raja Yoga is more than the percentage of students who have successfully learnt Hatha Yoga.

7. Which of the following option best reflects Shankaracharya’s comments on Hatha Yoga?

A.  Hatha Yoga is for those whose wordly desires are not placated.

B.  Hatha Yoga has desastrous consequences for Yoga practitioners.

C.  Practised under the guidance of experts, Hatha Yoga is better than Raja Yoga for some people.

D.  Raja Yoga gives better results and in a shorter time period for most people, and therefore it should be encouraged.

E.  Hatha Yoga is ill-suited for people with strong worldly desires.

Analyse the following passage and provide an appropriate answer for the questions 8 through 10 that follow.

Number of words in this passage : 329

The greens’ success has clear policy implications, especially on issues of nuclear power, ecological tax reform, and citizenship rights. But success also has implications for parties themselves. Greens have always faced a unique ‘strategic conundrum’ arising from their unique beliefs and movement roots. Put simply, how can they reconcile their radical alternative politics with participation in mainstream or ‘grey’ parliamentary and government structures? Throughout the 1990s most parties shed their radical cloth in an attempt to capture votes, even at the expense of party unity and purity. Most were rewarded with electoral success well beyond what had been imaginable in the 1980s. The price to pay has been tortured internal debates about strategy, and new questions about green party identity and purpose. Today the key questions facing green parties revolve around not whether to embrace power, but what to do with it. More especially, green parties face three new challenges in the new millennium: first, how to carve out a policy niche as established parties and governments become wiser to green demands, and as green concerns themselves appear more mainstream. Second, how to take green ideas beyond the confines of rich industrialised states into Eastern Europe and the developing world where green parties remain marginal and environmental problems acute. Third, how to ensure that the broader role of green parties–as consciousness raisers, agitators, conscience of parliament and politics– is not sacrificed on the altar of electoral success. Green parties have come a long way since their emergence and development in the 1970s and 1980s. They have become established players able to shape party competition, government formation, and government policy. But this very ‘establishment’ carries risks for a party whose core values and identities depend mightily on their ability to challenge the conventional order, to agitate and to annoy. For most green parties, the greatest fear is not electoral decline so much as the prospect of becoming a party with parliamentary platform, ministerial voice, but nothing new to say.

8. Which out of the following is closest in meaning to the first of three challenges mentioned in the paragraph?

A.  Niche of green parties is being eroded by mainstream parties.

B.  Green parties are finding it difficult to find new strategy.

C.  Green parties have become stronger over a period of time.

D.  Some green parties are becoming grey.

E.  Non green parties are becoming less relevant than green parties.

9. Which of the following is the most important point that author highlights?

A.  Challenges before green parties to change their strategy from green activism to green governance.

B.  How should green parties win confidence and support of governments?

C.  Transformation of green parties in recent decades.

D.  Green movement is not strong in developing countries.

E.  Non green parties are becoming less relevant than green parties.

10. How best can mainstream political parties, in India, keep green parties at bay?

A.  By imposing green tax.

B.  By allowing carbon trading.

C.  By including green agenda in their governance.

D.  By hiring Al Gore, the Nobel prize winner, as an ambassador.

E.  By not letting green parties fight elections.

Analyse the following passage and provide an appropriate answer for the questions 11 through 13 that follow.

Number of words in this passage : 302

The Sapir–Whorf hypothesis, also known as the linguistic relativity hypothesis, refers to the proposal that the particular language one speaks influences the way one thinks about reality. The linguistic relativity hypothesis focuses on structural differences among natural languages such as Hopi, Chinese, and English, and asks whether the classifications of reality implicit in such structures affect our thinking about reality. Analytically, linguistic relativity as an issue stands between two others: a semiotic-level concern with how speaking any natural language whatsoever might influence the general potential for human thinking (i.e., the general role of natural language in the evolution or development of human intellectual functioning), and functional- or discourse-level concern with how using any given language code in a particular way might influence thinking (i.e., the impact of special discursive practices such as schooling and literacy on formal thought). Although analytically distinct, the three issues are intimately related in both theory and practice. For example, claims bout linguistic relativity depend on understanding the general psychological mechanisms linking language to thinking, and on understanding the diverse uses of speech in discourse to accomplish acts of descriptive reference. Hence, the relation of particular linguistic structures to patterns of thinking forms only one part of the broader array of questions about the significance of language for thought. Proposals of linguistic relativity necessarily develop two linked claims among the key terms of the hypothesis (i.e., language, thought, and reality). First, languages differ significantly in their interpretations of experienced reality–both what they select for representation and how they arrange it. Second, language interpretations have influences on thought about reality more generally–whether at the individual or cultural level. Claims for linguistic relativity thus require both articulating the contrasting interpretations of reality latent in the structures of different languages, and assessing their broader influences on, or relationships to, the cognitive interpretation of reality.

11. Which of the following conclusions can be derived based on Sapir-Whorf hypothesis?

A.  Americans and Indians would have similar intelligence.

B.  South Indians and North Indians would have similar intelligence.

C.  Those with same intelligence would speak the same language.

D.  Those with similar intelligence may speak the same language.

E.  Structure of language does not affect cognition.

12. If Sapir-Whorf hypothesis were to be true, which of the following conclusions would logically follow?

1.   To develop vernacular languages, government should promote public debates and discourses.

2.   Promote vernacular languages as medium of instruction in school.

3.   Cognitive and cultural realities are related.

A.  1 only                        B.  2 only                        C.  3 only                        D.  1and 2                       E.  1, 2 and 3

13. Which of the following proverbs may be false, if above passage were to be right?

1.   If speech is silver, silence is gold.

2.   When you have spoken a word, it reigns over you. When it is unspoken you reign over it.

3.   Speech of yourself ought to be seldom and well chosen.

A.  1 and 2                      B.  2 and 3                      C.  3 only                        D.  1 only                        E.  1, 2 and 3

Analyse the following passage and provide an appropriate answer for the questions 14 through 17 that follow.

Number of words in this passage : 281

Demography of organisations, also called population ecology is an interesting field. It proposes that organisational mortality processes depend upon the age and size of the organisation, as well as on characteristics of populations and environments. Moreover, there is evidence of an imprinting process – meaning that environmental conditions at certain early phases in an organisation’s development have long-term consequences. In particular, organisations subject to intense competition have elevated mortality hazards at all ages. A central theme is structural inertia, the tendency for organisations to respond slowly relative to the speed of environmental change. A central argument holds that the inertia derives from the very characteristics that make organisations favoured actors in modern society in terms of reliability and (formal) accountability. It follows that changes in an organisation’s core features are disruptive and increase mortality hazards, at least in the short-run. Research on this subject tends to support this view. The concept of niche provides a framework for relating environmental variations and competition to population dynamics and segmentation. Much empirical work examines the niches of organisational populations in terms of dimensions of social, political, and economic environments. Most research in this field builds on theories of resource partition and density dependence. Resource-partitioning theory concerns the relationship between increasing market concentration and increasing proliferation of specialists in mature industries. The key implication of this theory concerns the effects of concentration on the viability of specialist organisations (those that seek to exploit a narrow range of resources). The theory of density-dependent organisational evolution synthesizes ecological and institutional processes. It holds that growth in the number of organisations in a population (density) drives processes of social legitimatisation and competition that, in turn, shape the vital rates.

14. Most top-notch business consultants recommend changing the entire configuration of an organisation’s strategy, structure and systems. If he ideas contained in the passage are agreed to, then such a recommendation:

A.  tends to rejuvenate the organisation.

B.  tends to make the organisation more aligned to the external environment.

C.  tends to increase the competitiveness of the organisation by redefining its core competence.

D.  tends to increase the vulnerability of the organisation.

E.  tends to make the organisation industry leader by reformulating its niche.

15. Consider the following: “Tata Steel, one of the biggest steel makers in the world, was born in Jamshedpur.” If above passage is true, then it can be concluded that the location of Tata Steel has been one of the reasons for its success.

1.   The conclusion is false.

2.   This is a farfetched conclusion.

3.   This is a valid conclusion.

A.  1 only                   B.  2 only                        C.  3 only                              D.  1 and 2                       E.  2 and 3

16. “Tata Steel, one of the biggest steel makers in the world, was born in Jamshedpur. The very success of Tata Steel could lead to its failure in the future and hence the challenge for Tata Steel is to recognise its strengths that made it successful in the initial conditions and stick to them.”

1.   This is a valid conclusion.

2.   The conclusion is contrary to the ideas described in the passage.

3.   The conclusion is internally contradictory.

A.  1 only              B.  2 only                              C.  3 only                              D.  1 and 2                       E.  2 and 3

17. Recently it was reported that the Indian textile sector was not doing well. If the ideas contained in the passage are agreed to, then which of the following could be the possible reason(s)?

1.   All Indian firms are as old as international firms.

2.   Indian textile firms are dispersed all over the country, with most of them also having international presence.

3.   Textile firms in India were subjected to trade union activity in the period from 1960s to 1980s.

A.  1               B.  2                                           C.  3                                     D.  1 and 2                 E.  1, 2 and 3

Analyse the following passage and provide an appropriate answer for the questions 18 and 19.

Since power is itself a value, forms of influence which include power in their scope are usually themselves forms of power. The king’s mistress, though she has only influence, not power, over the king, may have power over his subjects to the degree of that influence. Forms of influence based on power are themselves forms of power only if the scope of the influence is included within that of the power in question. The king may exercise influence over standards of morality, say, by virtue of his power position, but he does not necessarily exercise power over morality.

18. Which combination of following statements best summarises the idea expressed in the paragraph?

1.   Strength of an influence determines its power.

2.   Influence always contributes power to the wielder of influence beyond the scope of influence.

3.   Proximity to authority is itself a source of power.

4.   Forms of influence are power only if they can influence behaviour.

A.  1, 2                        B.  1, 3                        C.  1,4                  D.  1, 3, 4                   E.  1, 2, 4

19. Which of the following is similar to the ideas expressed in the paragraph?

A.  A king can influence what dramas are enacted by artists.

B.  A king can influence who acts in dramas in his kingdom.

C.  A king can indicate the appropriateness of dramas enacted.

D.  A king can influence the prices charged from drama groups by actors.

E.  A king can influence on what drama audience spend their money.

Questions 20-33: Go through the questions below and answer them.

20. As man casts off worn-out garments and puts on others that are new, similarly the embodied soul, casting off worn-out bodies, enters into others, which are new.

Of the following, which one best typifies the argument?

A.  Inductive generalization

B.  Predictive argument

C.  Argument from authority

D.  Causal argument

E.  Argument from analogy

21. All the parliamentarians whom the reporter interviewed told that they had voted as per their conscience. Therefore, probably all the parliamentarians voted as per their conscience. This argument is an example of:

A.  Inductive generalization

B.  Predictive argument

C.  Generalization based on authority

D.  Deduction generalization

E.  Argument from analogy

22. Nature lovers are attracted to forests and nature parks. Just look at the number of people visiting the Corbett national park.

Which of the following exhibits a pattern of reasoning least dissimilar to the one exhibited in the argument above?

A.  Defence personnel who are trained in extremely rigorous procedures often end up as dysfunctional members of the society. Hence if an officer is not trained rigorously, such an officer is more likely to be useful to the society.

B.  This machinery has increased the work efficiency of the workers. As a result, some of these workers are surplus to the company.

C.  Fleas must thrive in a warm environment. During warm weather my dog suffers from fleas more so than during cooler weather.

D.  Cigarette smoking is known to cause lung cancer in some people. However, most victims of lung cancer live in regions where smoking is uncommon.

E.  Alcoholics and teetotallers usually appear at the same restaurant at the same time of the day. Therefore, alcoholics and teetotallers must be hungry at the same time.

23. In this era of global capital flows, so much money is now flowing throughout the world that no single country can fight the problem of inflation effectively by tightening its monetary policy.

If the above is true, which of the following could be most logically concluded?

A.  Changes in cash reserve ratio by Reserve Bank of India will control the rate inflation in India.

B.  Countries’ finance ministries have sufficient control over their respective economies.

C.  Countries’ finance ministries have insufficient control over their respective economies.

D.  Inflation does not matter as long as incomes increase.

E.  Citizens should limit their consumption which will reduce the demand for products, thus reducing inflation.

24. Many entrepreneurs try to control the composition of their boards of directors, but more experienced entrepreneurs tend to share control, inviting participation from institutional investors and outside directors.

Which option best summarizes the idea that might be guiding experienced entrepreneurs’ behaviour?

A.  The experienced entrepreneurs expect experienced directors to monitor the performance of the enterprise and be a sounding board.

B.  The experienced entrepreneurs expect the institutional investors to support the opinion of entrepreneurs on all major decisions.

C.  The experienced entrepreneurs expect the institutional investors and outside directors to agree to higher remuneration for the board members.

D.  Experienced entrepreneurs expect the experienced directors to engage in day-to-day management of the company.

E.  The more the number of influential people on board, the easier it is to raise finances.

25. “There is nothing so stupid as an educated man, if you can get him off the thing he was educated in.”

Which of the following, if true, most seriously undermines the author’s contention?

A.  True education implies a well-rounded exposure to major subjects.

B.  An educated man will not discuss things which he does not understand.

C.  The cost of a general education has led to the unfortunate fact that a person’s education is confined to one field.

D.  Stupidity, like intelligence, is relative and therefore depends on the intelligence of the persons’ peers.

E.  Education is one of the main causes of people recognizing their capabilities and developing them further.

26. Ram, an economist, and Ramesh, an atrologer, had a debate. Ram said “Astrology does not work. It just cannot predict.” “It can predict better than your subject,” rebutted Ramesh.

The evidence that best resolves the above debate will be:

A.  Conduct a survey among scientists asking which one of the two should be considered as a science.

B.  Compare past performance of astrologers and economists in terms of number of predictions which have come true.

C.  Conduct a survey among economists asking their opinion regarding the ability of economic theory to predict economic phenomena.

D.  Conduct an experiment where both astrologers and economists would be asked to predict the future. Compare the number of predictions that come true.

E.  Conduct an experiment where both astrologers and economists would be asked to predict the future. Compare the percentage of predictions that come true.

27. Which of the following sentences draws a metaphor?

A.  Karl Marx argued that the interests of two classes – the proletariat and the bourgeois – are always in conflict and irreconcilable.

B.  Karl Marx labelled the capitalist a parasite on the back of labour because the whole value or produce created by the labouring man was expropriated by the capitalist.

C.  Weber held that the protestant ethic was responsible for the rise of capitalism in medieval Europe.

D.  Galbraith argued for a better balance between private affluence and public poverty, including measures to protect the environment against the excesses of private companies.

E.  Schumpeter argued that changes in economy are brought about by creative destruction.

28. Which sentence includes an example of personification?

A.  Banjaras of Rajasthan are the human equivalent of an endangered species and have no defence against the encroachment of farmers onto their ancestral lands.

B.  Take airline pilots for example; they do not need to be graduates to qualify for this job and most pilots are on a salary Rs.300,000 per month or more.

C.  Recent research provided stark evidence that in education money still plays an important role; it was found that children from poor households could not perform as well as children from rich households.

D.  Girls in the family should have a share in the ancestral property as a matter of right whether the will includes it explicity or not.

E.  Democracy does not help the common citizen and it ultimately degenerates into an oligarchy.

29. Which sentence suffers most from hyperbole?

A.  Most collectors of coins would give the Earth to own one of the copper coins issued byMohammad Bin Tughlaq.

B.  It is thought that eating raw tomatoes would greatly reduce the risk of cancer, but tomato sauce can have a greater effect since it is made from many raw tomatoes.

C.  Cricket has a great following in India, but the twenty-twenty format took the game to every nook and corner of the world.

D.  We face an imminent drinking water crisis in India as the population growth is accompanied by a general decrease in rainfall.

E.  Nuclear fusion has the potential to solve the energy crisis of not only our country, but that of the entire world.

30. Which sentence includes a euphemism?

A.  Cell phone network signals are weak in the hilly regions.

B.  Bottled water is reputed to be safe for drinking under all circumstances.

C.  A cemetery is a place where people are buried when they pass away.

D.  It is stupid to cry over spilt milk.

E.  Criminal court arbitrates between the parties to the case.

31. Which of the following contains a non-sequitur?

A.  If statisticians are made judges, they will accept or reject arguments based on probability analyses.

B.  Public trust in politicians is at an all time low and we can’t insist that the politicians go back to school.

C.  Before preparing the annual budget, the CEO of XYZ Steel Limited takes the opinions of all the stakeholders.

D.  In cricket, the batting average does not always reflect a batman’s ability because it does not reflect how many wins he was instrumental for.

E.  Ordinary citizens do not have sufficient grasp of economic indicators to validate published inflation data.

32. Recommence is to suspend as: nonchalant is to:

A.  carefree                      B.  beleaguered                      C.  tirade                    D.  agreement                  E.  disagreement

33. Which sentence includes an oxymoron?

A.  On weekends, we ate and drank a lot.

B.  Meena corrected me by pointing out that she wanted pizza instead of burger.

C.  Media reported the attack on media-persons.

D.  He loved his aunt but found her kindness suffocating.

E.  One should not compare apples and oranges.

From questions 34 to 35, read the sentences and choose the option that best arranges them in a logical order.

34. 1.   The moral will arise when, for the reasons we saw earlier, this negation has to be negated; the individual moral will understands that it is the existence of the universal will, which is therefore internal to it.

2.   This constitutes a negation, because the individual will is understood not to be the existence of the universal will.

3.   This says that in abstract right, as we have just seen, the individual will takes its freedom (the universal will that has being in itself) to exist independent of (that is, in opposition to) itself and its particular contents.

4.   Rather, the universal will is thought to exist outside any individual will, in the contracts that bind a number of property-owing wills together, and in the punishments that enforce breaches of those contracts.

A.  1, 2, 3, 4               B,  3, 2, 4, 1                    C.  3, 1, 2, 4                    D.  1, 3, 2, 4                    E.  4, 3, 2, 1

35. 1.   In the concept, universality, particularity, and individuality are understood as being immediately identical to each other.

2.   As immediately identical, these “moments of the concept” cannot be separated.

3.   This means that they must be thought of as a single unity, that none of three can be understood apart from the others, since in the concept their identity is posited, each of its moments can only be grasped immediately on the basis of and together with the others.

4.   The interrelation of universality, particularity, and individuality is otherwise in judgement.

A.  1, 2, 3, 4               B.  3, 2, 4, 1                C.  4, 1, 2, 3               D.  2, 3, 1, 4               E.  2, 3, 4, 1

SECTION B: DATA INTERPRETATION AND QUANTITATIVE ABILITY

36. In an examination there are 30 question. 1 mark is given for each correct answer and 0.25 is deducted for every incorrect answer. Ankur attempted all the questions and scored 13.75. How many incorrect answers did he have?

A.  10             B,  11             C.  12             D.  15             E.  None of the above

37. A salesman sells two kinds of trousers: cotton and woollen. A pair of cotton trousers is sold at 30% profit and a pair of woollen trousers is sold at 50% profit. The salesman has calculated that if he sells 100% more woollen trousers than cotton trousers, his overall profit will be 45%. However he ends up selling 50% more cotton trousers than woollen trousers. What will be his overall profit?

A.  37.5%                  B,  40%                     C.  41%                     D.  42.33%                 E.  None of the above

Question Nos. 38-39 are followed by two statements labelled as I and II. You have to decide if these statements are sufficient to conclusively answer the question. Choose the appropriate answer from options given below:

A.  If statement I alone is sufficient to answer the question.

B.  If statement II alone is sufficient to answer the question.

C.  If statement I and statement II together are sufficient but neither of the two alone is sufficient to answer the question.

D.  If either Statement I or Statement II are insufficient to answer the question.

E.  Both statements I and statement II are insufficient to answer the question.

38. For each rupee in monthly advertising expenditure, KUMAR & Co. experiences a Rs.6 increase in sales. How much KUMAR & Co. has to spend on advertising to attain Rs.1000000 in sales revenue for the month?

I.    Without advertising KUMAR & Co. earns Rs.200000 sales revenue per month.

II.   When KUMAR & Co. spends Rs.15000 on advertising, it earns Rs.290000 as sales revenue.

39. Geetanjali Express, which is 250 metre long when moving from Howrah to Tatanagar crosses Subarnarekha bridge in 30 seconds. What is the speed of Geetanjali Express?

I.    Bombay Mail, which runs at 60 km/hour crosses the Subarnarekha bridge in 30 seconds.

II.   Bombay Mail, when running at 90 km/hour crosses a lamp post in 10 seconds.

40. Rajesh walks to and fro to a shopping mall. He spends 30 minutes shopping. If he walks at speed of 10 km an hour, he returns to home at 19.00 hours. If he walks at 15 km an hour, he returns to home at 18.30 hours. How fast must he walk in order to return home at 18.15 hours?

A.  17 km/hour           B.  17.5 km/hour         C.  18 km/hour’           D.  19 km/hour            E.  None of the above.

41. A shop sells two kinds of rolls – egg roll and mutton roll. Onion, tomato, carrot, chilli sauce and tomato sauce are the additional ingredients. You can have any combination of additional ingredients, or have standard rolls without any additional ingredients subject to the following constraints:

(a)  You can have tomato sauce if you have an egg roll, but not if you have a mutton roll.

(b)  If you have onion or tomato or both you can have chilli sauce, but not otherwise.

How many different rolls can be ordered according to these rules?

A.  21             B.  33             C.  40             D.  42             E.  None of the above

42. Given five points A = (7, 4), B = (–10, 0), C = (–10, 3), D = (0, 10) and E = (7, 7). Every second all the points move by halving their abscissas and by doubling their ordinates. This process continues for 500 years. After 500 years, which two points are closest?

A.  A and B                B.  B and C                C.  A and E                D.  D and E                E.  A and C

Instructions: Answer the question no.43 and 44 on the basis of the data given in the chart.

The chart above gives per unit selling prices and costs in rupees of 11 items prepared by a sweetshop. Margins are calculated on percentage basis. Based on the chart above, answer the questions that follow:

43. Which of the following conclusions can be made?

A.  Producer’s margin for panir kachouri is less than retailer’s margin.

B.  Producer’s margin for chicken pizza is more than retailer’s margin.

C.  Producer’s margin for fish spring roll is more than retailer’s margin.

D.  Producer’s and retailer’s margin are highest for panir kachouri alone.

E.  Retailer made losses in a few products.

44. Which of the following conclusion can be drawn from diagram above?

A.  Retailers’ selling price for mistisukh was more than producer’s selling price for chicken titbit.

B.  Difference between retailer’s selling price and producer’s selling price for fish kachouri was more than that of cream roll.

C.  There are three types of margins for all items.

D.  Of all the margins, both for retailer and producer, producer’s margin for chicken pizza was the maximum.

E.  The three lines that connect different points, in the diagram above are superfluous.

45. Mungeri Lal has two investment plans – A and B, to choose from. Plan A offers interest of 10% compounded annually while plan B offers simple interest of 12% per annum. Till how many years is plan B a better investment?

A.  3               B.  4               C.  5               D.  6               E.  7

47. Two teams Arrogant and Overconfident are participating in a cricket tournament. The odds that team Arrogant will be champion is 5 to 3, and the odds that team Overconfident will be the champion is 1 to 4. What are the odds that either team Arrogant or team Overconfident will become the champion?

A.  3 to 2                    B.  5 to 2                    C.  6 to 1                   D.  7 to 1                    E.  9 to 1

Answer the questions 48 to 50 on the basis of the data given in the table.

A cake chain manufactures two types of products – ‘cakes/pastries/gateaux’ and savouries. The chain was concerned about high wastage (in terms of leftover) and wanted to reduce it. Table 1 provides information about sales, costs and wastage for both products.

Table 1: Revenue Statement

48. Which of the following statement(s) is (are) right?

1.   The worth of leftover for cakes/pastries/gateaux increased from 1993 to 2004.

2.   The worth of leftover for cakes/pastries/gateaux, kept on fluctuating, many a times between 1993 and 2004.

3.   The worth of leftover for savouries and cakes/pastries/gateaux was highest in 2004.

4.   The worth of leftover for savouries kept on fluctuating, many a times, between 1993 and 2004.

Choose the right combination from the following:

A.  1 and 4                 B.  3 and 4                 C.  1 and 2                 D.  3 only              E.  2 and 3

49. Maximum decline in amount of leftover of cakes/pastries/gateaux occurred in the year:

A.  From 1997 to 1998

B.  From 1995 to 1996

C.  From 1998 to 1999

D.  There was always an increase in worth of leftover.

E.  Cannot be calculated from the data.

50. If profit = sales – cost – leftover, in which year did the cake chain was in losses?

1.   1993    2.   1997    3.   1998    4.   2000

Choose the right option:

A.  1, 2, 3, 4               B.  3, 4                  C.  2, 3                 D.  1, 2, 3              E.  It was always in profit.

51. Let a and b be the roots of the quadratic equation x2 + 3x – 1 = 0

If Pn = an + bn for n ≥ 0, then, for n ≥ 2, Pn =

A.  3Pn–1 + Pn–2 B.  3Pn–1 – Pn–2 C.  –Pn–1 + 3Pn–2 D.  Pn–1 + 3Pn–2 E.  None of the above

52. A rural child specialist has to determine the weight of five children of different ages. He knows from his past experience that each of the children would weigh less than 30 Kg and each of them would have different weights. Unfortunately, the scale available in the village can measure weight only over 30 kg. The doctor decides to weigh the children in pairs. However his new assistant weighted the children without noting down the names. The weights were: 35, 36, 37, 39, 40, 41, 42, 45, 46 and 47 kg. The weight of the lightest child is:

A.  15 kg.                        B.  16 kg.                        C.  17 kg.                        D.  18 kg.                      E.  20 kg.

53. Sangeetha and Swathi bought two wristwatches from Jamshedpur Electronics at 11.40 A.M. IST. After purchasing they found that when 60 minutes elapses on a correct clock (IST), Sangeeta’s wristwatch registers 62 minutes whereas Swati’s wristwatch registers 56 minutes. Later in the day Sangeeta’s wristwatch reads 10 P.M., then the time on Swati’s wristwatch is:

A.  8:40 PM          B.  9:00 PM          C.  9:20 PM          D.  8:40 PM          E.  CBD

54. F(x) is a fourth order polynomial with integer coefficients and with no common factor. The roots of F(x) are –2, –1, 1, 2. If p is a prime number greater than 97, then the largest integer that divides F(p) for all values of p is:

A.  72                   B.  120                      C.  240                       D.  360                 E.  None of the above

Instructions: Consider the information given below for questions 55 and 56.

In the diagram below, the seven letters correspond to seven unique digits chosen from 0 to 9. The relationship among the digits is such that:

55. The value of A is:

A.  0                    B.  2                    C.  3                    D.  6               E.  None of the above

56. The sum of digits which are not used is:

A.  8                B.  10              C.  14             D.  15              E.  None of the above

59. ABCD is a square with sides of length 10 units. OCD is an isosceles triangle with base CD.OC cuts AB at point Q and OD cuts AB at point P. The area of trapezoid PQCD is 80 square units. The altitude from O of the triangle OPQ is:

A.  12             B.  13             C.  14             D.  15             E.  None of the above.

60. How many differently shaped triangles exist in which no two sides are of the same length, each side is of integral unit length and the perimeter of the triangle is less than 14 units?

A.  3               B.  4               C.  5               D.  6               E.  None of the above.

61. Company BELIANCE hosted a party for 8 members of Company AXIAL. In the party no member of AXIAL had interacted with more than three members of BELIANCE. Out of all the members of BELIANCE, three members – each interacted with four members of AXIAL and the remaining members – each interacted with two members of AXIAL. The greatest possible number of members of company BELIANCE in the party is

A.  9               B.  10             C.  11             D.  12             E.  None of the above.

Answer the questions 62 to 64 on the basis of the following information.

KK, an aspiring entrepreneur wanted to set up a pen drive manufacturing unit. Since technology was changing very fast, he wanted to carefully gauge the demand and the likely profits before investing. Market survey indicated that he would be able to sell 1 lac units before customers shifted to different gadgets. KK realized that he had to incur two kinds of costs – fixed costs (the costs which do not change, irrespective of number of units of pen drives produced) and variable costs (= variable cost per unit multiplied by number of units). KK expected fixed cost to be Rs.40 lac and variable cost to be Rs.100 per unit. He expected each pen drive to be sold at Rs. 200.

62. What would be the break-even point (defined as no profit, no loss situation) for KK’s factory, in term of sales?

A.  Rs. 80 lac             B.  Rs.100 lac              C.  Rs.120 lac               D.  Rs.140 lac            E.  CBD

63. KK was sceptical that per unit variable cost might increase by 10% though the demand might remain same. What will be the expected changes in profit in such a case?

A.  Profit would decrease by 10.33%

B.  Profit will increase will by 15.75%

C.  Profit would decrease by 15.75%

D.  Profit will decrease by 16.67%

E.  Profit will increase by 16.67%

64. He discussed his business plan with a chartered accountant. KK informed that he was contemplating a loan of Rs.20 lac at simple interest of 10% per annum for starting the business. The chartered accountant informed him that in such a case KK has to pay interest, followed by 30 % tax. By how much does KK’s earnings change with 20% growth in sales vis-a-vis the original sales volume, in both cases considering tax and interest on loan?

A.  20%                B.  16.7%             C.  25.6%             D.  33.3%             E.  34.5%

65. Let X be a four-digit number with exactly three consecutive digits being same and is a multiple of 9. How many such X’s are possible?

A.  12             B.  16              C.  19        D.  21             E.  None of the above.

Questions 66 – 67

66. Time taken by the inspector to catch the thief is:

A.  12 minutes            B.  15 minutes            C.  18 minutes            D.  20 minutes            E.  30 minutes

67. The distance the inspector has to travel is:

A.  3 km                     B.  3.75 km                      C.  5 km                    D.  6 km                     E.  7.5 km

Instructions: Answer the questions 68 to 72 on the basis of the data given in two charts.

Sodium carbonate, also called as soda ash is an important ingredient for glass, soaps and detergents, and many other products. There were two ways of producing soda ash. The first is producing soda ash from trona obtained naturally. The second method was producing soda ash from common salt through Solvay process. Soda ash produced thus was called synthetic soda ash. Tata Chemicals was one of largest producer of soda ash. Given below are two charts- first chart shows production of two varieties of soda ash at Tata Chemicals. The second chart shows production of two varieties of soda ash in the world.

68. It was expected that global soda ash production would be same for 2006, 2007 and 2008 (only for this question). What could be a possible reason for different patterns of production in Tata Chemicals and the world?

A.  Tata Chemicals built new plants of 2.2 MT natural soda ash capacity in 2007.

B.  Tata Chemicals built 3.2 MT of natural soda ash capacity from 2005 to 2008.

C.  Tata Chemicals produced 2.7% of total soda ash in the world.

D.  Tata Chemicals might have acquired 0.3 MT of natural soda ash facility in 2007.

E.  None of the above conclusions could possibly be drawn.

69. Suppose the total global production increased (year on year) from 2005 to 2008 by the amount Tata Chemicals’ synthetic production (year on year) increased in the same period. By what percentage did the total global production increase from 2007 to 2008?

A.  Cannot be calculated at all from the tables above.

B.  Increased by 10.16%

C.  Increased by 9.48%

D.  Did not increase at all.

E.  Increased by 8.64%

70. Which of the following statements are true?

1.   Proportion of natural soda ash to synthetic soda has decreased from 2001 to 2006 globally.

2.   Proportion of natural soda ash to synthetic soda ash has increased from 2001 to 2006 globally.

3.   Proportion of synthetic soda ash to total soda ash has decreased for Tata Chemicals from 2005 to 2007 globally.

4.   Proportion of synthetic soda ash to total soda ash has increased for Tata Chemicals.

A.  1 and 3                 B.  1 and 4                 C.  2 and 4                  D.  2 and 3                 E.  1, 2 and 3 only

71. What is Tata Chemicalss’ share of global production in 2008?

A.  12.86%                 B.  17.42%                 C.  59.34%                 D.  Incomplete data           E.  None of the above

72. Suppose total global production of soda ash in 2008 was 40 MT and Tata Chemicals was second highest producer of soda ash globally after another company called Solvay. FMC Wyoming was the third highest producer. Two Indian giants, Tata Chemicals and Nirma have a combined production capacity of 8.8 MT. Which of the following statements are right?

1.   Solvay’s market share was more than 20.66%

2.   Solvay’s market share was more than 13.5%

3.   FMC’s share was less than 10.33%

4.   FMC share was less than 13.5%

5.   Nirma, which was sixth largest producer, had a share of less than 8.5%.

Choose the right option.

A.  1 and 3                 B.  1 and 5                 C.  2 and 4                 D.  1, 3, and 5            E.  2, 4 and 5

73. Raj Travels has the following revenue model for a group package. Owner charges Rs.20,000 per person till group size of 200. For every additional traveller beyond 200, he starts offering discount of 50 rupees to all members of the group. The maximum possible income for Raj travels from the package is:

A.  Rs.4000000                 B.  Rs.4200000                C.  Rs.4500000                 D.  Rs.5000000                E.  Rs.5500000

SECTION C: ANALYTICAL REASONING AND DECISION MAKING

Directions (Question No 74-85): Each group of questions in this section is based on a set of conditions. In answering some of the questions, it may be useful to draw a rough diagram. Choose the response that most accurately and completely answers each question.

Questions (74-76): Four married couples competed in a signing competition. Each couple had a unique team name. Points scored by the teams were 2, 4, 6 and 8. The “Sweet Couple” won 2 points. The “Bindas Singers” won two more points than Laxman’s team. Mukesh’s team won four points more than Lina’s team, but Lina’s team didn’t score the least amount of points. “Just Singing” won 6 points. Waheda wasn’t on the team called “New Singers”. Sanjeev’s team won 4 points. Divya wasn’t on the “Bindas Singers” team. Tapas and Sania were on the same team, but it wasn’t the “Sweet Couple”.

74. Laxman’s teammate and team’s name were:

A.  Divya and Sweet Couple

B.  Divya and Just Singing

C.  Waheda and Bindas Singers

D.  Lina and Just Singing

E.  Waheda and Sweet Couple

75. The teams arranged in the ascending order of points are:

A.  Bindas Singers, Just Singing, New Singers, Sweet Couple

B.  Sweet Couple, New Singers, Just Singing, Bindas Singers

C.  New Singers, Sweet Couple, Bindas Singers, Just Singing

D.  Sweet Couple, Bindas Singers, Just Singing, New Singers

E.  Just Singing, Bindas Singers, Sweet Couple, New Singers

76. The combination which has the couples rightly paired is:

A.  Mukesh, Lina

B.  Mukesh, Waheda

C.  Sanjeev, Divya

D.  Sanjeev, Divya

E.  Sanjeev, Waheda

Questions (77-80): The regular mathematics faculty could not teach because of being sick. As a stop gap arrangement, different visiting faculty taught different topics on 4 different days in a week. The scheduled time for class was 7:00 am with maximum permissible delay of 20 minutes. The monsoon made the city bus schedules erratic and therefore the classes started on different times on different days.

Mr. Singh didn’t teach on Thursday. Calculus was taught in the class that started at 7:20 am. Mr.Chatterjee took the class on Wednesday, but he didn’t teach probability. The class on Monday started at 7:00 am, but Mr.Singh didn’t teach it. Mr.Dutta didn’t teach ratio and proportion. Mr.Banerjee, who didn’t teach set theory, taught a class that started five minutes later than the class featuring the teacher who taught probability. The teacher in Friday’s class taught set theory. Wednesday’s class didn’t start at 7:10am. No two classes started at the same time.

77. The class on Wednesday started at:

A.  7:05 am and topic was ratio and proportion.

B.  7:20 am and topic was calculus.

C.  7:00 am and topic was calculus.

D.  7:20 am and topic was calculus.

E.  7:05 am and topic was probability.

78. The option which gives the correct teacher – subject combination is:

A.  Mr. Chatterjee – ratio and proportion

B.  Mr. Banerjee – calculus

C.  Mr.Chatterjee – set theory

D.  Mr. Singh – calculus

E.  Mr. Singh – set theory

79. Probability was taught by:

A.  Mr. Dutta on Monday

B.  Mr. Dutta on Thursday

C.  Mr. Singh on Wednesday

D.  Mr. Singh on Monday

E.  None of these

80. The option which gives a possible correct class time – week day combination is:

A.  Wednesday–7:10 am, Thursday – 7:20 am, Friday – 7:05 am

B.  Wednesday–7:20 am, Thursday – 7:15 am, Friday – 7:20 am

C.  Wednesday–7:05 am, Thursday – 7:20 am, Friday – 7:10 am

D.  Wednesday–7:10 am, Thursday – 7:15 am, Friday – 7:05 am

E.  Wednesday–7:20 am, Thursday – 7:05 am, Friday – 7:10 am

Questions (81-85): Five people joined different engineering colleges. Their first names were Sarah (Ms.), Swati (Ms.), Jackie, Mohan and Priya (Ms.). The surnames were Reddy, Gupta, Sanyal, Kumar and Chatterjee. Except for one college which was rated 3 star, all other colleges were rated either 4 star or 5 star.

The “Techno Institute” had a higher rating than college where Priya studied. The three-star college was not “Deccan College.” Mohan’s last name was Gupta but he didn’t study at “Barla College.” Sarah, whose last name wasn’t Sanyal, joined “Techno Institute.” Ms.Kumar and Jackie both studied at four-star colleges. Ms. Reddy studied at the “Anipal Institute,” which wasn’t a five-star college. The “Barla College” was a five-star college. Swati’s last name wasn’t Chatterjee. The “Chemical College” was rated with one star less than the college where Sanyal studied. Only one college was rated five star.

81. Which is the correct combination of first names and surnames?

A.  Mohan Gupta, Sarah Kumar, Priya Chatterjee

B.  Priya Chatterjee, Sarah Sanyal, Jackie Kumar

C.  Jackie Sanyal, Swati Reddy, Mohan Gupta

D.  Mohan Gupta, Jackie Sanyal, Sarah Reddy

E.  Jackie Chatterjee, Priya Reddy, Swati Sanyal

82. Which option gives a possible student – institute combination?

A.  Priya – Anipal, Swati – Deccan, Mohan – Chemical

B.  Swati – Barla, Priya – Anipal, Jackie – Deccan

C.  Joydeep – Chemical, Priya – Techno, Mohan – Barla

D.  Priya – Anipal, Joydeep – Techno, Sarah – Barla

E.  Swati – Deccan, Priya – Anipal, Sarah –Techno

83. Mohan Gupta may have joined:

A.  Techno – Institute which had 5 star rating

B.  Deccan College which had 5 star rating

C.  Anipal Institute which had 4 star rating

D.  Chemical College which had 4 star rating

E.  Techno – Institute which had 4 star rating

84. In which college did Priya study?

A.  Anipal Institute      B.  Chemical Institute

C.  Barla College        D.  Deccan College

E.  Techno-Institute

85. The person with surname Sanyal was:

A.  Sarah studying in Chemical College

B.  Swati studying in Barla College

C.  Priya studying in Deccan College

D.  Jackie studying in Deccan College

E.  Sarah studying in Techno-Institute

Read the following and choose the best alternative (Questions 86-89):

Decisions are often ‘risky’ in the sense that their outcomes are not known with certainty. Presented with a choice between a risky prospect that offers a 50 percent chance to win $200 (Otherwise nothing) and an alternative of receiving $100 for sure, most people prefer the sure gain over the gamble, although the two prospects have the same expected value. (Expected value is the sum of possible outcomes weighted by their probability of occurrence.) Preference for a sure outcome over a risky prospect of equal expected value is called risk averse; indeed, people tend to be risk averse when choosing between prospects with positive outcomes. The tendency towards risk aversion can be explained by the notion of diminishing sensitivity, first formalized by Daniel Bernoulli in 1738. Just as the impact of a candle is greater when it is brought into a dark room then into a room that is well lit so, suggested Bernoulli, the utility resulting from a small increase in wealth will be inversely proportional to the amount of wealth already in one’s possession. It has since been assumed that people have a subjective utility function, and that preferences should be described using expected utility instead of expected value. According to expected utility, the worth of a gamble offering a 50 percent chance to win $200 (otherwise nothing) is 0.50*u($200), where u is the person’s concave utility function. (A function is concave or convex if a line joining two points on the curve lies entirely below or above the curve, respectively). It follows from a concave function that the subjective value attached to a gain of $100 is more than 50 percent of the value attached to a gain of $200, which entails preference for the sure $100 gain and, hence, risk aversion.

Consider now a choice between losses. When asked to choose between a prospect that offers a 50 percent chance to lose $200 (otherwise nothing) and the alternative of losing $100 for sure, most people prefer to take an even chance at losing $200 or nothing over a sure $100 loss. This is because diminishing sensitivity applies to negative as well as to positive outcomes: the impact of an initial $100 loss is greater than that of the next $100. This results in a convex function for losses and a preference for risky prospects over sure outcomes of equal expected value, called risk seeking. With the exception of prospects that involve very small probabilities, risk aversion is generally observed in choices involving gains, whereas risk seeking tends to hold in choices involving losses.

Based on the above passage, analyse the decision situations faced by three persons: Babu, Babitha and Bablu.

86. Suppose instant and further utility of each unit of gain is same for Babu. Babu has decided to play as many times as possible, before he dies. He expected to live for another 50 years. A game does not last more than ten seconds. Babu is confused which theory to trust for making decision and seeks help of renowed decision making consultant: Roy Associates. what should be Roy Associates’ advice to Babu?

A.  Babu can decide on the basis of Expected Value hypothesis.

B.  Babu should decide on the basis of Expected Utility hypothesis.

C.  “Mr.Babu, I’m redundant”.

D.  A and B

E.  A, B and C

87. Babitha played a game wherein she had three options with following probabilities: 0.4, 0.5 and 0.8. The gains from three outcomes are likely to be $100, $80 and $50. An expert has pointed out that Babitha is a risk taking person. According to expected utility hypotheis, which option is Babitha most likely to favour?

A.  First

B.  Second

C.  Third

D.  Babitha would be indifferent to all three actions.

E.  None of the above.

88. Continuing with previous question, suppose Babitha can only play one more game, which theory would help in arriving at better decision?

A.  Expected Value.

B.  Expected Utility.

C.  Both theories will give same results.

D.  None of the two.

E.  Data is insufficient to answer the question.

89. Bablu had four options with probability of 0.1, 0.25, 0.5 and 1. The gains associated with each options are: $1000, $400, $200 and $100 respectively. Bablu chose the first option. As per expected value hypothesis:

A.  Bablu is risk taking.

B.  Expected value function is concave.

C.  Expected value function is convex.

D.  It does not matter which option should Babu choose.

E.  None of above.

Directions (Question No 90-94): This group of questions is based on a set of conditions. In answering some of the questions, it may be useful to draw a rough diagram. Choose the response that most accurately and completely answers each question.

A circular field, with inner radius of 10 meters and outer radius of 20 meters, was divided into five successive stage for ploughing. The ploughing of each stage was handed over to a different farmer.

1.   Farmers are referred to by following symbols: F1, F2, F3, F4, F5.

2.   The points between different stages of project are referred to by the following symbols: P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, not necessarily in the order.

3.   Farmer F5 was given the work of ploughing stage starting at point P4.

4.   The stage from point P5 to point P3 was not the first stage.

5.   Farmer F4 was given the work of the fourth stage.

6.   Stage 3 finished at point P1, and the work of which was not given to farmer F1.

7.   Farmer F3 was given work of stage ending at point P5.

90. Which was the finish point for farmer F2?

A.  P1                        B.  P2                        C.  P3                        D.  P4                        E.  P5

91. Which stage was ploughed by farmer F5?

A.  First                     B.  Second                 C.  Third                     D.  Fourth                  E.  Fifth

92. Which were the starting and finish points of stage 2?

A.  P2 and P5            B.  P5 and P3            C.  P3 and P1            D.  P5 and P4            E.  P3 and P2

93. For which farmer was P2 a finishing point?

A.  F1                        B.  F2                        C.  F3                        D.  F4                        E.  F5

94. Which was the starting point for Farmer F3?

A.  P2                        B.  P3                        C.  P4                        D.  P1                        E.  None of the above

95. Children are in pursuit of a dog whose leash has broken. Krishnarajan is directly behind the dog. Rangarajan is behind Krishnarajan. Natrajan is behind Rangarajan. Premrajan is ahead of the dog walking down the street in the opposite direction. As the children and dog pass, Premrajan turns around and joins the pursuit. He runs in behind Rangarajan. Krishnarajan  runs faster and is alongside the dog on the left. Rangarajan runs faster and is alongside the dog on the right. Which child is directly behind the dog?

A.  Krishnarajan          B.  Rangarajan           C.  Natrajan                D.  Premarajan                 E.  None of above

Read the following caselet and choose the best alternative (Question 97 – 100):

Om Chowdary was one of the supervisors in the Fire and Safety (F&S) department of Maqsood Textile Mills. He was a distant cousin to Mr. Bhiwani, General Manager (personal & Administration). Personnel & Administration department was given the responsibility of all personnel related decisions. It was often rumoured that Om had obtained the job due to his cousin’s influence. However, Om was meticulous in the performance of his duties and didn’t give anyone a reason for complaint. It was known that Om was not much given to talking and kept to himself and to his duties.

All F&S supervisors reported to Mr.Rabindra, the shop-floor manager. The mill operated on a three-shift basis and Rabindra allocated the supervisors to different shifts. They were required to be present at all times during the shift operation and carry out scheduled checks of machinery and fire fighting equipments. For some reasons, Om was allotted the night shift more often than other supervisors. Om accepted these allocations without any objection, while it was known that other supervisors would often plead and bargain with Rabindra to be allocated the day shifts. During the night shift, keeping awake and remaining mentally alert were some of the major challenges faced by the supervisors.

Of late, Rabindra observed signs of indifference from Om. On two occasions he found Om absent from his cabin. Rabindra heard from others that Om was often found in different parts of the shop floor talking to employees. Rabindra called him to his office and reminded Om of his responsibilities. Om did not counter Rabindra. He promised that he would not be lax in his duties again. Rabindra also braoched the subject with Mr.Bhiwani. Mr.Bhiwani called Om to his office and talked on a very personal basis. He reminded Om that their family relations made it uncomfortable to all concerned. Om nodded and agreed to do better. Soon his performance became that of a model supervisor. It was often found he went beyond his official duties to sort out problems of employees.

About three months later, Rabindra happened to visit the plant during night. As he looked into F&S office, he found Om playing solitaire on the office computer. Mr. Rabindra immediately fired Om.

The next morning Mr. Bhivani called Mr.Rabindra and asked how he can fire an employee. He suggested that Mr. Rabindra reconsider Om’s dismissal. “This decision has already been made. There will be no turning back” replied Rabindra.

97. The options below give combinations of possible root cause of the problem and the justifications thereof. Given the details in the case, which one can be inferred to be the best option?

A.  Hiring of Om. Reason: that ensured Om was perpetually casual towards his duties.

B.  Om favrouring to work during the night shift. Reason: Absence of Rabindra ensured that Om could relax.

C.  Rabindra’s bias against Om. Reason: Rabindra had been assigning too many night shifts to Om while for other supervisors he was lenient.

D.  Rabindra jumping to conclusions. Reason: He should have investigated whether Om had carried out his duties.

E.  Rabindra’s firing of Om. Reason: It led to clash between Rabindra and Mr.Bhiwani.

98. The details of the entire episode have become common knowledge among all the employees of the company. Out of the options below, which one presents the best way for the top management to resolve the issue so as to benefit the organisation as a whole?

A.  Revoke Rabindra’s order. It can be communicated to others that firing was too severe a punishment for such a small incident of indiscipline.

B.  Ask Om for clarification. It can be communicated that since Om had clarified regarding his duties, the order has been taken back.

C.  Declare Rabindra’s order as void. Reiterate officially the disciplinary processes that need to be followed by managers along with their scope of authority.

D.  Ask feedback from other employees on the shop-floor regarding Om’s performance. This can be used to revoke Rabindra’s order.

E.  Take the feedback of other F&S supervisors as to the work involved during night shift. This would better explain Om’s behaviour.

99. Out of the options below, which one best summarizes the learning from solitaire incident?

A.  Managers often do not take any responsibility towards training juniors.

B.  People tend to become relaxed during night shift and require surprise checks to keep them on their toes.

C.  Certain roles would have different ways of carrying out their duties.

D.  Having relatives in the same organisation can be a source of potential problems.

E.  Managers tend to allocate silent people to difficult positions.

100. Of the options below, which could have been a better response from Mr. Rabindra when he saw Om playing?

A.   He should have clarified about his authority to fire employees.

B.   He should have informed Mr.Bhiwani about the incident and asked him to take necessary action.

C.   He should have asked the employees of the shift regarding Om’s performance of his duties.

D.   He should have checked if Om had done his duties or not.

E.   He should have checked the production levels in the shift to see if it was required.

Read the following caselet and choose the best alternative (Questions 101-104):

Shekhar, an MBA from Singapore returned to his hometown – Jamshedpur. Jamshedpur had a population of 10 lacs with one of the highest per capita income among Indian cities. Shekhar loved music. While listening to his favourite song on “satellite radio”, he wondered if he could mix his passion with business. Incidentally, a few weeks later, while browsing the Internet, he came across an advertisement from Music world, which called for expression of interest from potential franchisees. Jamshedpur did not have a single good music outlet, where its residents could buy quality, variety and the latest from the world of music.

Music world wanted the potential franchisees to own minimum 1200 square feet space and invest Rs.30 lacs. Profits were to be shared in the ratio of 3:7 between Music World and the franchisee. While Shekhar was excited about working with a renowed brand, he was worried if Rs.30 lacs was too high an amount to shell out. He did not have the entire amount with him and was thinking of borrowing from the bank. He made enquiries with other Music world franchisees located in towns like Patna and Ranchi, as he expected similar footfall in Jamshedpur. A franchisee in Patna had sales revenue varying from 1-2 lacs rupees per month with profit margin in the range of 25-30%. Satisfied, Shekhar decided to proceed.

Soon, he was on a look out for the space. Jamshedpur had three main areas – Bistpur, Sakchi and Sonari. All areas were inter-connected by good roads. Bistupur was a business area where most of high end retail formats were located. Most upper middle class and higher class customers shopped there. It was also the education hub of the city. On the other hand, Sakchi was growing lower middle class business area and Sonari had mostly residential population.

Shekhar was in favour of choosing Bistupur as it was the place where he shopped. However, he soon stumbled across problems. Not only it was difficult to obtain space in Bistupur but property rentals touched 30-40 rupees per square feet per month. Rentals at Sakchi and Sonari were in the range of 15-20 rupees per square feet per month. Also, Shekhar’s friend, who stayed in Sakchi told him that a few branded outlets were opening in Sakchi and it seemed to be the fastest growing market in Jamshedpur, with highest ratio of teenagers. But, Shekhar was not in favour of Sakchi due to its low image. He expected to target college going crowd in Bistupur.

High real estate prices in Bistupur and his low assessment of Sakchi market created confusion in Shekhar’s mind. To give the decision a serious and fresh thought, he decided to hit Jamshedpur-Ranchi highway in his newly acquired car.

101. How best should Shekhar resolve his confusion?

A.   By investing in the franchise.

B.   Do not invest in the franchise and look for different brand name.

C.   Go back to Singapore and start looking for a job.

D.   Do a further in-depth study to find the drives and potential of the business.

E.   Approach another music company for setting up a franchise.

102. Suppose scales in Patna and Bistupur are likely to be same, how many years would it take for Shekhar to recoup the investment (consider zero inflation)?

A.   Less than five years.

B.   Less than seven years.

C.   Less than eight years.

D.   Less than nine years.

E.   May be never.

103. What could be the most likely reason for Shekhar’s bias in favour of Bistupur?

A.   Presence of college going crowd, as he felt they were the customers for the latest music.

B.   Crowded (hoi polio) image of Sakchi.

C.   It was difficult for Shekhar to asociate non-Bistupur areas with good quality products.

D.   Higher rentals in Bistupur.

E.   Patronage of Bistupur shops by executives and their families.

104. Which one of the following is the most important decision criterion in such a business situation?

A.   Financial capability of entrepreneur.

B.   Changes in music industry.

C.   Future market growth.

D.   Profitability of business in first couple of years.

E.   Real Estate prices.

Answer key:

1. E                        2. B                       3. A                       4. A                       5. B                       6. E

7. A                       8. A                       9. A                       10. C                     11. D                     12. C

13. A                     14. D                     15. C                     16. A                     17. B                     18. C

19. C                     20. E                     21. A                     22. C                     23. E                     24. A

25. A                     26. E                     27. B                     28. C                     29. A                     30. C

31. B                     32. B                     33. D                     34. B                     35. A                     36. E

37. B                     38. D                     39. C                     40. E                     41. D                     42. E

43. C                     44. E                     45. B                     46. B                     47. (33:7)             48. D

49. C                     50. A                     51. A                     52. B                     53. B                     54. D

55. B                     56. E                     57. C                     58. C                     59. D                     60. C

61. A                     62. A                     63. D                     64. E                     65. E                     66. D

67. C                     68. B                     69. D                     70. A                     71. D                     72. C

73. C                     74. E                     75. D                     76. D                     77. (B,D)              78. E

79. A                     80. E                     81. E                     82. B                     83. D                     84. A

85. B                     86. C                     87. A                     88. B                     89. A                     90. A

91. E                     92. B                     93. E                     94. A                     95. D                     96. E

97. C                     98. C                     99. C                     100. D                  101. D                  102. E

103. A                   104. D

Slideshow

SECTION A : ANALYTICAL REASONING & DECISION MAKING

Directions (Question No. 1 – 21): Each group of questions in this section is based on a set of conditions. In answering some of the questions, it may be useful to draw a rough diagram. Choose the response that most accurately and completely answers each question and blacken the corresponding space on your answer sheet.

Question No. 1-4: Six square states having equal area in a country are located in North South direction in two columns next to each other. States are located in the given order, State 1, State 3, and State 5 are on the western side and State 2, State 4, and State 6 are on the eastern side. Within the six states, there are exactly four medical institutes,  two management institutes, and two technical institutes. These eight institutions are located as follows:

No institution is in more than one of the states.

None of the states contains more than one management institute, and none contains more than one technical institute. None of the states contains both a management institute and a technical institute.

Each management institute is located in a state that contains at least one medical institute.

The technical institutes are located in two states that do not share a common boundary. States 3 contains a technical institute, and State 6 contains a management institute.

1. If one of the states contains exactly two medical institutes and exactly one technical institute, then which combination of three states might contain no medical institute?

(A) 1, 3, 5             (B) 1, 4, 5             (C) 2, 3, 5             (D) 2, 4, 6             (E) 4, 5, 6

2. Which one of the following could be true?

(A) State 1 contains exactly one medical institute.

(B) State 1 contains exactly one technical institute.

(C) State 2 contains exactly one management institute.

(D) State 5 contains exactly one technical institute.

(E) State 6 contains exactly one technical institute.

3. A complete and accurate list of the states, any one of which could contain the management institute that is not in State 6, would be ______.

(A) 1, 4                 (B) 1, 4, 5             (C) 2, 4                 (D) 1, 2, 4, 5               (E) 4, 5

4. If each of the six states contain at least one of the eight institutions, then which one of the following must be true?

(A) There is a management institute in state 4

(B) There is a management institute in state 1

(C) There is a medical institute in state 2

(D) There is a medical institute in state 3

(E) There is a medical institute in state 4

Question No. 5-8: During a four-week period, each one of seven previously unadvertised products – G, H, J, K, L, M and O – will be advertised. A different pair of these products will be advertised each week. Exactly one of the products will be a member of two of these four pairs. None of the other products gets repeated in any pair. Further, the following constraints must be observed:

J is not advertised during a given week unless H is advertised during the immediately preceding week.

The product that is advertised twice is advertised during week 4 but is not advertised during week 3.

G is not advertised during a given week unless either J or O is also advertised that week.

K is advertised during one of the first two weeks.

O is one of the products advertised during week 3.

5. Which one of the following could be the schedule of the advertisements?

(A) Week 1 : G, J; week 2 : K, L; week 3 : O, M; week 4 : H, L

(B) Week 1 : H, K ; week 2 : J, M; week 3 : O, L; week 4 : G, M

(C) Week 1 : K, M ; week 2 : H, J; week 3 : O, G ; week 4 : L, M

(D) Week 1 : H, L ; week 2 : J, M; week 3 : O, G; week 4: K, L

(E) Week 1 : H, K ; week 2 : J, G; week 3 : O, L; week 4 : M, K

6. If L is the product that is advertised during two of the week, which one of the following is a product that MUST be advertised during one of the weeks in which L is advertised?

(A) M                         (B) G                         (C) H                         (D) J                          (E) K

7. Which one of the following is product that could be advertised in any of the four weeks?

(A) H                         (B) J                          (C) K                         (D) L                          (E) O

8. Which one of the following is a pair of products that could be advertised during the same week?

(A) M and O               (B) G and H                (C) H and J                 (D) H and O                (E) K and O

Question 9-12: There are exactly ten stores and no other buildings on a straight street in Bistupur Market. On the northern side of the street, from West to East, are stores 1, 3, 4, 7 and 9; on the southern side of the street, also from West to East, are stores 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10. The stores on the northern side are located directly across the street from those on the southern side, facing each other in pairs, as follows: 1 and 2; 3 and 4; 5 and 6; 7 and 8; 9 and 10. Each store is decorated with lights in exactly one of the following colours : green, red and yellow. The stores have been decorated with lights according to the following conditions:

No store is decorated with lights of the same colour as those of any store adjacent to it. No store is decorated with lights of the same as those of the store directly across the street from it.

Yellow lights decorate exactly one store on each side of the street.

Red lights decorate store 4.

Yellow lights decorate store 5.

9. Which one of the following could be an accurate list of the colours of the lights that decorate stores 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 respectively?

(A) green, red, green, red, green

(B) green, red, yellow, red, green

(C) green, red, green, yellow, red

(D) yellow, green, red, green, red

(E) yellow, red, green, red, yellow

10. If green lights decorate store 7, then each of the following statements could be false EXCEPT:

(A) Green lights decorate store 2

(B) Green lights decorate store 10

(C) Red lights decorate store 9

(D) Red lights decorate store 8

(E) Yellow lights decorate store 2

11. Suppose that yellow lights decorate exactly two stores on the south side of the street and exactly one store on the north side. If all other conditions remain the same, then which one of the following statements MUST be true?

(A) Green lights decorate store 1

(B) Red lights decorate store 7

(C) Red lights decorate store 10

(D) Yellow lights decorate store 2

(E) Yellow lights decorate store 8

12. Which one of the following statements MUST be true?

(A) Green lights decorate store 10

(B) Red lights decorate store 1

(C) Red lights decorate store 8

(D) Yellow lights decorate store 8

(E) Yellow lights decorate store 10

Question No. 13-17: In a game, “words” (meaningful or meaningless) consist of any combination of at least five letters of the English alphabets. A “sentence” consists of exactly six words and satisfies the following conditions:

The six words are written from left to right on a single line in alphabetical order.

The sentence can start with any word, and successive word is formed by applying exactly one of three operations to the preceding word: delete one letter; add a letter; replace a one letter with another. At the most three of the six words can begin with the same letter. Except for the first word, each word is formed by a different operation used for the preceding word.

13. Which one of the following could be a sentence in the word game?

(A) Bzaeak blaeak laeak paeak paea paean

(B) Doteam goleam golean olean omean omman

(C) Crobek croeek roeek soeek sxoeek xoeek

(D) Feted freted reted seted seteg aseteg

(E) Forod forol forols forpls orpls morpls

14. If the first word in a sentence is “illicit” and fourth word is “Iicit”, then the third word can be

(A) Elicit               (B) Implicit            (C) Explicit                 (D) Enlist              (E) Inlist

15. If “clean” is the first word in a sentence and “learn” is another word in the sentence, then which one of the following is a complete and accurate list of the positions “learn” cloud occupy?

(A) Third         (B) Second, third, fourth            (C) Third, fourth

(D) Third, fourth, fifth                 (E) Third, fourth, fifth, sixth

16. If the first word in a sentence consists of five letters, then the maximum number of letters that the fifth word in the sentence could contain is

(A) Seven             (B) Four          (C) Eight                          (D) Five                      (E) Six

17. The last letter of the English alphabet that the first word of a sentence in the word game can begin with is

(A) t                     (B) w              (C) x                               (D) d                          (E) z

Questions No 18–21: Prof. Mukhopadhay works only on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. She performs four different activities – lecturing, conducting quizzes, evaluating quizzes, and working on consultancy projects. Each working day she performs exactly one activity in the morning and exactly one activity in the afternoon. During each week her work schedule MUST satisfy the following restrictions:

She conducts quizzes on exactly three mornings.

If she conducts quizzes on Monday, she does not conduct a quiz on Tuesday.

She lectures in the afternoon on exactly two consecutive calendar days.

She evaluates quizzes on exactly one morning and three afternoons.

She works on consultancy project on exactly one morning.

On Saturday, she neither lectures nor conducts quizzes.

18. Which one of the following must be a day on which Professor lectures?

(A) Monday                (B) Tuesday               (C) Wednesday                (D) Friday             (E) Saturday

19. On Wednesday, the Professor could be scheduled to

(A) Work on a consultancy project in the morning and conduct a quiz in the afternoon

(B) Lecture in the morning and evaluate quizzes in the afternoon

(C) Conduct a quiz in the morning and lecture in the afternoon

(D) Conduct a quiz in the morning and work on consultancy project in the afternoon

(E) Evaluate quizzes in the morning and evaluate quizzes in the afternoon

20. Which one of the following statements must be true?

(A) There is one day on which she evaluates quizzes both in the morning and in the afternoon.

(B) She works on consultancy project on one of the days on which lectures.

(C) She works on consultancy project on one of the days on which she evaluates quizzes.

(D) She lectures on one of the days on which she conducts quiz.

(E) She lectures on one of the days on which evaluates quizzes.

21. If the Professor conducts a quiz on Tuesday, then her schedule for evaluating quizzes could be

(A) Monday morning, Monday afternoon, Friday morning, Friday afternoon

(B) Monday morning, Friday afternoon, Saturday morning, Saturday afternoon

(C) Monday afternoon, Wednesday morning, Wednesday afternoon, Saturday afternoon

(D) Wednesday afternoon, Friday afternoon, Saturday morning, Saturday afternoon

Read the following caselet and choose the best alternative (Questions 22-27):

Mr. Rajiv Singhal, Chairman of the Board of Directors of Loha India Ltd., (a steel manufacturing company) had just been visited by several other directors of the company. The directors were upset with recent actions of the company president, Mr. Ganesh Thakur. They demanded that the board consider fining the president.

Mr. Thakur, recently appointed as president, had undertaken to solve some of the management-employees problems by dealing directly with the individuals, as often as possible. The company did not have a history of strikes or any other form of collective actions and was considered to have good work culture. However, Mr. Thakur felt that by dealing directly with individuals, he could portray the management’s concern for the employees. An important initiative of Mr. Thakur was to negotiate wages of the supervisors with each supervisor. In these negotiation meetings, he would not involve anyone else, including the Personnel Department which reported to him, so as to take unbiased decision. After negotiation, a wage contract would be drawn up for each supervisor. This, he felt, would recognize and reward the better performers. Mr. Thakur successfully implemented the process for most of the supervisors, except those working in night shift. For them he had drawn up the contracts unilaterally benchmarking the wages of supervisors of night shift with that of supervisors of the day shift.

For several days Ram Lal, a night shift supervisor, had been trying to seek an appointment with Mr. Thakur about his wages. He was disgruntled, not only over his failure to see the president, but also over the lack of discussions about his wage contract prior to its being effected. As a family man with six dependents, he felt his weekly wage should be higher than that granted to him.

Last Thursday afternoon Ram Lal stopped by the president’s office and tried to see him. Mr. Thakur’s secretary refused his request on the grounds that Mr. Thakur was busy. Infuriated, Ram Lal stormed into the president’s office and confronted the startled Mr. Thakur, with his demands for a better wage. Mr. Thakur stood up and told Ram Lal to get our of his office and express his grievance through official channel. Ram Lal took a swing at the president, who in trun punched Ram Lal on the jaw and knocked him unconscious.

22. Out of the following, which one seems to be the most likely cause of Ram Lal’s grievance?

(A) His disappointment with the management’s philosophy of having one to one interaction as the supervisors were in a way being forced to accept the wage contracts.

(B) His being in the night shift had worked to his disadvantage as he could not interact with the management regarding his problem.

(C) His was not allowed to meet chairman of the board of directors of the company.

(D) Employment in the night shift forced him to stay away from his family during the day time and therefore he could not interact with his family members much.

(E) All of these

23. Apart from the supervisors working the night shift, executives of which department will have most justified reasons to be to disgruntled with Mr. Thakur’s initiative?

1.   Production department – for not being consulted regarding the behaviour of the supervisors on the shop floor.

2.   Finance department – for not taken into confidence regarding the financial consequences of the wage contracts.

3.   Marketing department – for not being consulted on the likely impact of the wage contracts on the image of the company.

4.   Quality control – for not being able to give inputs to Mr. Thakur on how to improve quality of steel making process.

5.   Personnel department – for it was their work to oversee wage policies for employees and they had been ignored by Mr. Thakur.

(A) 1 + 2 + 3              (B) 1 + 4 + 5              (C) 1 + 2 + 5              (D) 1 + 3 + 4               (E) 3 + 4 + 5

24. Which of the following managerial attributes does Mr. Thakur seem to lack the most?

(A) Emotional instability under pressure

(B) Emotional stability under pressure

(C) Proactive problem solving

(D) Ethical behaviour

(E) Independent decision making

25. The most important causal factor for this entire episode could be:

(A) Trying to follow a divide-and-rule policy in his dealings with the supervisors.

(B) Paternalistic approach towards mature individuals in the organization.

(C) Legalistic approach to employee problems.

(D) Inconsistent dealings of Mr. Thakur with supervisors.

(E) Inadequate standards for measurement of supervisors’ on-job performance.

26. The situation with Mr. Lal could have been avoided if Mr. Thakur had

1.   Delegated for night shift employees to Personnel department.

2.   Created a process for supervisors working the night shift so that they could have an opportunity to interact with him.

3.   Created an open door policy that would have allowed employees to see him without any appointment.

4.   Postponed the decision of wage revision for supervisors in the night shift for two months, since supervisors were rotated on different shifts after every two months.

The option that best arranges the above managerial interventions in decreasing order of organizational impact is:

(A) 4, 2, 3, 1               (B) 4, 3, 2, 1               (C) 2, 3, 1, 4               (D) 4, 3, 1, 2               (E) 4, 1, 2, 3

27. The most likely premise behind Mr. Thakur’s initiative regarding individualized meetings with the supervisors seems to be

(A) Involvement of company’s president in wage problems of employees will lead to a better goodwill towards the management among the workers.

(B) Employee related policies should allow scope for bargaining by employees which leads to unsatisfied employees.

(C) Individual agreements with supervisors would allow the management to prevent any possible collective action by the supervisors.

(D) Management will be able to force supervisors to accept lesser wages individually in this way.

(E) He would be able to know who the trouble makers in the plant are by interacting with the supervisors.

Go through the situation and the accompanying table, and pick up the best alternative to answer Question nos. 28-30

Question No 28-29: These are five sets of digits – Set A, Set B, Set C, Set D, and Set E as shown in given diagram. Set A contains one digit, Set B contains two digits, Set C contains three digits, Set D contains two digits, and Set E contains one digit.

Rearrange the digits, across the sets, such that the number formed out of digits of Set C is multiple of the numbers formed from digits in sets on either side. For example; in the given diagram, SET C is a multiple of digits in SET A and SET B but not of SET D and SET E.

28. What is the minimum number of rearrangements required to arrive at the solution? A rearrangement is defined as an exchanged with 5 of set E, it is counted as one rearrangement.

(A) 5                          (B) 2                          (C) 8                          (D) 3                          (E) 7

29. Which of the following pair of digits would occupy set A and E?

(A) 2 and 6                 (B) 3 and 6                 (C) 3 and 9                 (D) 4 and 8                 (E) 2 and 4

30. Magic Box


(A) 5                          (B) 6                          (C) 9                          (D) 10                        (E) 8

Questions 31-34: Read the following situations and choose the best possible alternative.

31. The city of Nagar has a population of 10 million, 2 millions amongst whom were rich, 3 million poor and 5 million belonged to the middle class. Saundarya Cosmetics manufactured and sold beauty product to rich class at a premium price. Its products were very popular with customers. Many people from middle and poor segments of population aspired to buy these products but could not afford because of high prices. Of late, sales growth was stagnating in the rich segment. Which of the following is the best option for Saundarya Cosmetics to maximize long-term profits?

(A) Sell the same products at lower prices to middle and poor classes.

(B) Sell its products under different brand names to middle and poor classes.

(C) Sell similar products, of different quality standards with different brand names, to middle classes and poor classes.

(D) Continue to target rich only and hope that today’s middle class would be tomorrow’s rich class.

(E) Target middle class as it is the largest segment and forget about the rich.

32. Seema was a finance manager in an MNC and felt that gender discrimination at the workplace hampered her career growth. Frustrated, she quit the job and started a company. While starting her company, Seema decide that she would have equal proportion of males and females. Over the last six years, Seema emerged as a very successful entrepreneur and expanded her business to eight locations in the country. However, Seema recently started facing an ethical dilemma because she realized that female employees were not willing to travel across cities and work late hours, as the work required them to do so. Male employees. On the other hand, she is aware that equal representation was one of the strongest reasons for here to have founded the company. What should she do as a conscientious female entrepreneur?

(A) Reduce the number of female employees, as it is a business requirement. She should not let anything affect her business.

(B) See if unwilling female employees could be given assignments which do not require travel and involve less overtime.

(C) Let the status quo continue.

(D) Henceforth hire only male employees.

(E) She should close the business.

33. A database software manufacturing company found out that a product it has launched recently has a few bugs. The product has already been bought by more than a million customers. The company realized that bugs could cost its customers significantly. However, if it informs the customers about the bug, it feared losing credibility. What would be the most ethical option for the company?

(A) Apologize and fix up the bug for all customers even if it has to incur losses.

(B) Do not tell customers about bugs and remove only when customers face problems, even if it means losses for the customers.

(C) keep silent and do nothing.

(D) Keep silent but introduce an improved product that is bug-free at the earliest.

(E) Take the product off the market and apologize to customers.

34. You, a recruitment manager, are interviewing Mayank, a hard-working young man, who has problems in speaking fluent English. He has studied in vernacular medium schools and colleges. Amongst the following options, what would you choose to do, if your company has vacancies?

(A) I would hire him at all costs.

(B) I would hire him for production or finance job but not for marketing job, which requires good communication skills.

(C) I would ask him to improve his communication skills and come back again.

(D) I would hire him for the job he is good at, and provide training in other areas.

(E) I would not hire him as he might be a burden on organization because of his poor communication skills.

Read the following situation and choose the best possible alternative.

35. The surnames of four professionals are: Bannerji, chatterji, Mukheji and Pestonji. Their professions are accountant, lawyer, dentist and doctor (not necessarily in this order). The accountant and lawyer work in their offices, while the dentist and doctor work in their nursing homes. The accountant looks after Mukherji’s and Chatterji’s account, Chatterji, does not know Bannerji, although his nursing home is in the same street as Bannerji’s office. Chatterji is not a doctor.

What are the occupations of the four people.

(A) Bannerji – Doctor, Chatterji – Dentist, Mukherji-accountant and Pestonji-Lawyer

(B) Bannerji-Lawyer, Chatterji-Dentist, Mukherji-accountant and pestonji-Doctor

(C) Bannerji-Lawyer, Chatterji-Dentist, Mukherji-Doctor and Pestonji-Accountant

(D) Bannerji-Doctor, Chatterji-Accountant, Mukherji-Dentist, and Pestonji-Lawyer

(E) Bannerji-Dentist, chatterji-Lawyer, Mukherji-Doctor andPestonji-Accountant

Go through the table that follows and pick up the best alternative to answer questions Question no. 36 to 38.

Teams A, B, C and D are participating in a cricket tournament. Team A has to pick up five batsmen out of the ten available. All batsmen have played 100 matches each in the past. Past data indicates that C beats A 8 out of 10 times. B beats A 5 out of 10 times and D beats A 1 out of 10 times. The conditions for series are likely to be normal and bowling strength of all teams is same. Manager of Team A, based on his past experience, feels that team should take high risk against stronger opponents and low risk against weaker opponents for maximizing chances of wining the game.

The average score of the top 10 batsmen of team A is provided in the table given below.

The average scores of the top 5 batsmen for each team playing in the tournament are: C (270); B (215); D (180) and A (215).

36. Team A is playing its first match with team C. Based on the statistics above, whom should be manager choose so that the team has maximum chances of winning?

(A) RD, ST, SG, MD, YS

(B) VS, YS, RU, MD, MT

(C)RD, ST, SG, VS, MD

(D) YS, RU, VS, MK, MD

(E) ST, VS, RU, MD, SG

37. Team A would play the second match with D. Based on the statistics above, whom should the manager choose so that A has maximum chances of winning?

(A) RD, ST, MD, VS, YS

(B) RD, ST, SG, VS, MD

(C) ST, RD, VV, SG, MD

(D) SG, RU, YS, MK, MD

(E) ST, RD, MK, MD, SG

38. Team A would play the third match with B. Based on the statistics above, whom should be manager choose so that A has maximum chances of winning?

(A) RD, RU, MK, VS, YS

(B) RD, VS, MT, RU, YS

(C) RD, VV, SG, VS, MD

(D) ST, RD, MK, MD, SG

(E) SG, RU, YS, MK, VV

Note: All units of measurement are in centimeters, unless otherwise specified.

For questions 39 & 40, a statement is followed by three conclusions. Select the answer from the following options.

(A) Using the given statement, only conclusion I can be derived.

(B) Using the given statement, only conclusion II can be derived.

(C) Using the given statement, only conclusion III can be derived.

(D) Using the given statement, all conclusions, I, II and III can be derived.

(E) Using the given statement, none of the three conclusions, I, II and III can be derived.

40. A, B, C and D are whole numbers such that

A + B + C = 118

B + C + D = 156

C + D + A = 166

D + A + B = 178

Conclusion I.   A is the smallest number and A = 21.

Conclusion II.   D is the largest number and D = 88.

Conclusion III.  B is the largest number and B = 56.

SECTION B: DATA INTERPRETATION AND QUANTITIATIVE ABILITY:

41. Let X = {a, b, c} and Y = {1, m}. Consider the following four subsets of X × Y.

F1 = {(a, 1), (a, m), (b, 1), (c, m)}

F2 = {(a, 1), (b, 1) (c, 1)}

F3 = {(a, 1), (b, m), (c, m)}

F4 = {(a, 1), (b, m)}

Which one, amongst the choices given below is a representation of functions from X to Y?

(A) F1, F2 and F3

(B) F2 and F3

(C) F2, F3 and F4

(D) F3 and F4

(E) None of the above

43. If F(x, n) be the number of ways of distributing “x” toys to “n” children so that each child received at the most 2 toys then F(4, 3) = ______ ?

(A) 2                     (B) 3                      (C) 4                     (D) 6                     (E) 5

44. In a cricket match, Team A scored 232 runs without losing a wicket. The score consisted of byes, wides and runs scored by two opening batsmen: Ram and Shyam. The runs scored by the two batsmen are 26 times wides. There are 8 more byes than wides. If the ratio of the runs scored by Ram and shyam is 6 : 7, then the runs scored by Ram is

(A) 88                        (B) 96                        (C) 102                            (D) 112                            (E) None of the above.

47. ABCD is a rectangle with AD = 10. P is a point on BC such that angle APD = 90°. If DP = 8 then the length of BP is _____?

(A) 3.6                  (B) 6.4                        (C) 5.2                        (D) 4.8                        (E) None of the above

48. Four digits of the number 29138576 are omitted so that the result is as large as possible. The largest omitted digit is

(A) 9                     (B) 8                          (C) 7                            (D) 6                          (E) 5

50. Rajiv is a student in a business school. After every test he calculates his cumulative average. QT and OB were his last two tests. 83 marks in QT increased his average by 2. 75 marks in OB further increased his average by 1. Reasoning is the next test, if he gets 51 in Reasoning, his average will be _____?

(A) 59                    (B) 60                    (C) 61                    (D) 62                    (E) 63

51. Interpret relationship between the returns of Stock X and Mutual Fund Y based on the following graph, where percentage return of Stock X and Mutual Fund Y are given for sixteen days of a month.

(A) Returns of stock X are directly proportional to mutual find Y.

(B) Average returns from stock X and mutual fund Y are the same.

(C) Stock X is less volatile than mutual fund Y.

(D) Stock X is inversely proportional to mutual fund Y.

(E) Stock X is more volatile than mutual fund Y.

52. For each p > 1, a sequence {An} is defined by A0 = 1 and An = pn + (- 1)n An-1 for each n ≥ 1. For how many integer values of p, 1000 is a term of the sequence?

(A) 8               (B) 7               (C) 5               (D) 4               (E) None of the above

53. If 0 < p < 1 then roots of the equation (1 – p)x2 + 4x + p = 0 are ______ ?

(A) Both 0

(B) Imaginary

(C) Real and both positive

(D) Real and both negative

(E) Real and of opposite sign.

54. Consider a sequence –6, –12, 18, 24, –30, –36, 42,…..if sum of the first n terms of the sequence is 132, then the value of n is ______ ?

(A) 11                        (B) 13                         (C) 18                         (D) 24                              (E) 22

55. The number of possible real solution(s) of y is equation y2 – 2y cos x + 1 = 0 is _____ ?

(A) 0               (B) 2               (C) 1               (D) 3               (E) None of the above

56. In a triangle ABC, AB = 3, BC = 4 and CA = 5. Point D is the midpoint of AB, point E is on segment AC and point F is on segment BC. If AE = 1.5 and BF = 0.5 then angle DEF =

(A) 30°              (B) 45°                       (C) 60°                            (D) 75°                       (E) CBD

58. A train left station X at A hour B minutes. It reached station Y at B hour C minutes on the same day, after traveling for C hours A minutes (clock shows time from 0 hours to 24 hours). Number of possible value(s) of A is ____.

(A) 3                           (B) 1                                (C) 2                           (D) 0                          (E) None of the above.

Questions 59-61: A, B, C, D, E and F are six positive integers such that

B + C + D + E = 4 A

C + F = 3 A

C + D + E = 2 F

F = 2 D

E + F = 2 C + 1

If A is a prime number between 12 and 20, then

59. The value of C is

(A) 13                        (B) 17                        (C) 19                        (D) 21                              (E) 23

60. The value of F is

(A) 14                        (B) 16                        (C) 28                        (D) 24                              (E) 20

61. Which of the following must be true?

(A) D is the lowest integer and D = 14

(B) C is the greatest integer and C = 23

(C) F is the greatest integer and F = 24

(D) A is the lowest integer and A = 13

(E) B is the lowest integer and B = 12

62. ABCD is a quadrilateral. The diagonals of ABCD intersect at the point P. The area of the triangle APD and BPC are 27 and 12, respectively. If the areas of the triangles APB and CPD are equal then the area of triangle APB is

(A) 12             (B) 18             (C) 15             (D) 16                   (E) 21

In the questions 64-65, one statement is followed by three conclusions. Section the appropriate answer from the options given below.

(A) Using the given statement, only conclusion I can be derived.

(B) Using the given statement, only conclusion II can be derived.

(C) Using the given statement, only conclusion III can be derived.

(D) Using the given statement, conclusions I, II and III can be derived.

(E) Using the given statement, none of the three conclusions I, II and III can be derived.

64. A0, A1, A2, …… is a sequence of numbers with A0 = 1, A1 = 3,

and At = (t + 1)At-1 – t At-2 for t = 2, 3, 4, ….

Conclusion I.   A8 = 77

Conclusion II.   A10 = 121

Conclusion III.  A12 = 145.

65. A, B, C be real numbers satisfying A < B < C, A + B + C = 6 and AB + BC + CA = 9

Conclusion I.   1 < B < 3

Conclusion II.   2 < A < 3

Conclusion III.  0 < C < 1

66. The coordinates of P and Q are (0, 4) and (a, 6), respectively. R is the midpoint of PQ. The perpendicular bisector of PQ cuts X-axis at point S(b, 0). For how many integer value(s) of “a”, b is an integer?

(A) 3    (B) 4    (C) 2    (D) 1    (E) 0

Answer the question no. 67 to 71 on the basis of the data given below.

67. What was the total value of surcharge paid – at the rate of 14% of sales value –by Jamshedpur Electronics, over the period of three months?

(A) CBD                 (B) 18522            (C) 18548         (D) 18425                    (E) 18485

68. 10% of sales price of Ipods and 20% of sales price of television contribute to the profits of Jamshedpur Electronics. How much profit did the company earn in the month of January from Bistupur and Kadma from the two products?

(A) 513                  (B) 4410                     (C) 3645                     (D) 5230                     (E) 5350

69. In the period from January to March, consider that Jamshedpur Electronics ordered 7560 units of Ipods for all three areas put together. What was unit sales price of Ipod during the period? The ending inventory was 6120 units and the beginning inventory stood at 5760.

(A) 14.00               (B) 14.65                    (C) 14.80                    (D) 13.00                    (E) 13.60

70. For Jamshedpur Electronics beginning inventory was 720 for televisions and 1800 for Ipods and ending inventory was 840 for televisions and 1920 for Ipods in the month of January. How many units of televisions and Ipods did Jamshdpur Electronics order for the month of January?

Additional data: In the month of February, 1050 units of televisions and 2400 units of Ipods were sold in all three areas put together.

(A) 1020, 2270            (B) 1020, 2370            (C) 2270, 1030            (D) 1030, 2370            (E) 1020, 2280

71. In the period from January to March, Jamshedpur Electronics sold 3150 units of televisions, having started with a beginning inventory of 2520 units and ending with an inventory of 2880. What was value of order placed (Rupees in thousands) by Jamshedpur Electronics during the three months period? [Profits are 25% of cost price, uniformly.]

(A) 2808               (B) 26325             (C) 22320             (D) 25200             (E) 28080

Questions 72-73: In Second year, students at a business school can opt for Systems, Operations, or HR electives only. The number of girls opting for Operations and the number of boys Opting for Systems elective is 37. Twenty-two students opt for operations electives. Twenty girls opt for System and Operation electives. The number of students opting for Systems electives and the number of boys opting for Operations electives is 37. Twenty-five students opt for HR electives.

72. The number of students in the second year is ____?

(A) 73             (B) 74             (C) 75             (D) 77              (E) 76

73. If 20% of the girls opt for HR electives, then the total number of boys in the second year is ___?

(A) 50             (B) 51             (C) 52             (D) 53             (E) 54

Question Nos. 74-75 are followed by two statements labeled as I and II. You have to decide if these statements are sufficient to conclusively answer the question. Choose the appropriate answer from options given below:

(A) If Statement I alone is sufficient to answer the question.

(B) If Statement II alone is sufficient to answer the question.

(C) If Statement I and Statement II together are sufficient but neither of the two alone is sufficient to answer the question

(D) If either Statement I or Statement II alone is sufficient to answer the question

(E) Both Statement I and Statement II are insufficient to answer the question.

74. The base of a triangle is 60 cms, and one of the base angles is 60 degrees. What is length of the shortest side of the triangle?

I.    The sum of lengths of other two sides is 80 cms.

II.   The other base angle is 45 degrees.

75. A, B, C, D, E and F are six integers such that E < F, B < A, A < D < B. C is the greatest integer. Is A the smallest integer?

I.    E + B < A + D

II.   D < F

Answer question nos. 76 to 78 on the basis of the graph given below.

76. In which month did the company earn maximum profits?

(A) 1                           (B) 4                           (C) 3                          (D) 2                          (E) 5

77. In which month did the company witness maximum sales growth?

(A) 9                           (B) 6                          (C) 4                          (D) 7                          (E) 1

78. What were average sales and costs figures for XYZ Co. over the period of ten months?

(A) 1919, 1751            (B) 1819, 1651            (C) 1969, 1762            (D) 1719, 1601            (E) 1619, 1661

Answer question nos. 79 through 82 on the basis of the data given below.

Gender Bias is defined as disproportion in percentage of drop-out rate of the two genders.

79. Based on the data above, choose the true statement from the following alternatives:

(A) Gender bias in primary education has consistently decreased over the years.

(B) Gender bias decreases as the students move from primary to secondary classes.

(C) Total dropout rate decreased consistently for primary classes children from 1996-97 to 2004-05.

(D) Gender bias was consistently highest for secondary classes.

(E) None of the above.

80. Assume that girls constituted 55% of the students entering school. In which year, as compared to the previous year, number of boys in secondary education would be more than the number of girls?

(A) 1997–98                     (B) 1996–98                     (C) 2000-01                      (D) 1998–99                     (E) 2001-02

81. Suppose, every year 7,000 students entered Class , out of which 45% were boys. What was the average number (integer value) of girls, who remained in educational system after elementary classes, from 1996-97 to 2004-05?

(A) 1475                          (B) 1573                          (C) 1743                          (D) 1673                           (E) 3853

82. Suppose the total number of students in 1996–97 were 1,000 and the number of students increased every year by 1000, up to 2004–05. The total number of drop outs from primary classes, from 1996–97 to 2004–05, were (approximately) ______?

(A) 18500                         (B) 19500                         (C) 16000                        (D) 24500                        (E) 11500

SECTION C: VERBAL AND LOGICAL ABILITY

Directions (83-87): Choose the appropriate words to fill in the blanks.

83. Mark Twain was responsible for many striking, mostly cynical ________, such as “Always do right. That will gratify some of the people, and astonish the rest. ________ can sometimes end up as ________, but rarely would someone use them as an _______.

(A) epitaphs, Epitaphs, epigrams, epigraph

(B) epigraphs, Epigraphs, epitaphs, epigraph

(C) epigrams, Epitaphs, epigrams, epigraph

(D) epigrams, Epigrams, epigraphs, epitaph

(E) epitaphs, Epitaphs, epigraphs, epigram

84. A candidate in the medical viva voice exam faced a tinge of intellectual ______ when asked to spell ______ gland. The fact that he carried notes on his person would definitely be termed as _______ by faculty, but may be termed as _____ by more generous sections of students.

(A) ambivalence, prostrate, amoral, immoral

(B) ambivalence, prostate, immoral, amoral

(C) ambiguity, prostrate, amoral, immoral

(D) ambivalence, prostrate, immoral amoral

(E) ambiguity, prostrate, immoral, amoral

85. It is not ________ democratic that the parliament should be _______ on issues and resort to passing ________ rather than have an open debate on the floor of the house.

(A) quite, quite, ordinances

(B) quite, quiet, ordnances

(C) quiet, quite, ordnances

(D) quite, quiet, ordinances

(E) quiet, quiet, ordinances

86. In a case of acute ______, _______ membranes secrete excessive ______.

(A) sinusitis, mucous, mucus

(B) sinus, mucous, mucous

(C) sinus, mucus, mucous

(D) sinus, mucous, mucus

(E) sinusitis, mucus, mucous

87. If a person makes the statement: “I never speak the truth.” The person can be said to be ______.

(A)speaking the truth.

(B) making a logically contradictory statement.

(C) lying.

(D) lying as well as speaking the truth.

(E) partially speaking the truth and partially lying.

Directions (88-90): Carefully read the statements in the questions below and arrange them in a logical order.

88. 1.   So too it is impossible for there to be proposition of ethics. Proposition cannot express that which is higher.

2.   The sense of the world must lie outside the world. In the world everything is as it is, and everything happens as it does happen: in it no value exists- and if it did exist, it would have no value. If there is any value that does have a value, it must lie outside the whole sphere of what happens and is the case. For all that happens and is the case is accidental. What makes it non-accidental cannot lie within the world, since if it did it would itself be accidental. It must lie outside world.

3.   It is clear that ethics cannot be put into words. Ethics is transcendental.

4.   All propositions are of equal value.

(A) 2-1-3-4            (B) 1-3-4-2             (C) 4-3-1-2            (D) 3-1-2-4             (E) 4-2-1-3

89. 1.   The facts all contribute only to setting the problem, not to its solution.

2.   How things are in the world is a matter of complete indifference for what is higher. God does not reveal himself in the world.

3.   To view the world sub specie aeterni is to view it as a whole- a limited whole. Feeling the world as a limited whole- it is this that is mystical.

4.   It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists.

(A) 1-2-3-4            (B) 2-1-4-3             (C) 2-1-3-4            (D) 3-1-4-2             (E) 3-4-1-2

90. 1.   The operation is what has to be done to one proposition in order to make other out of it.

2.   Structure of proposition stands in internal relations to one another.

3.   In order to give prominence to these internal relations we can adopt the following mode of expression: we can represent a proposition as the result of an operation that produces it out of other propositions (which are bases of the operation).

4.   an operation is the expression of a relation between the structures of its result and of its bases.

(A) 1-2-3-4            (B) 4-3-1-2             (C) 2-1-3-4             (D) 4-1-2-3             (E) 2-3-4-1

Analyse the following passage and provide an appropriate answer of the question nos. 91 through 97 that follow.

Number of words in this passage: 552

India is renowned for its diversity. Dissimilitude abounds in every sphere–from the physical elements of its land and people to the intangiable workings of its beliefs and practices. Indeed, given this variety, India itself appears to be not a single entity but an amalgamation, a “constructs” arising from the conjoining of innumerable, discrete parts. Modern scholarship has, quite properly, tended to explore these elements in isolation. (In part, this trend represents the conscious reversal of the stance taken by an earlier generation of scholars whose work reified India into a monolithic entity – a critical element in the much maligned “Orientalist” enterprise.) Nonetheless, the representation of India as a singular “Whole” is not an entirely capricious enterprise; for India is an indentifiable entity, united by – if not born out of – certain deep and pervasive structures. Thus, for example, the Hindu tradition has long maintained a body of mythology that weaves the disparate temples, gods, even geographic landscapes that exist throughout the subcontinent into a unified, albeit syncretic, whole.

In the realm of thought, there is no more pervasive, unifying structure than karma. It is the “doctrine” or “law” that ties actions to results and creates a determinant link between an individual’s status in this life and his or her fate in future lives. Following what is considered to be its appearances in the Upanishads, the doctrine reaches into nearly every corner of Hindu thought. Indeed, its dominance is such in the Hindu world view that karma encompasses, at the same time, life-affirming and life-negating functions; for just as it defines the world in terms of the “positive” function of delineating a doctrine of rewards and punishments, so too it defines the world through its “negative” representation of action as an all but inescapable trap, an unremitting cycle of death and rebirth.

Despite – or perhaps because of – karma’s ubiquity, the doctrine is not easily defined. Wendy Doniger O’Flaherty reports of a scholarly conference devoted to the study of karma that although the participants admitted to a general sense of the doctrine’s parameters, considerable time was in a “lively but ultimately vain attempt to define . . . . karma and rebirth”. The base meaning of the term “karma” (or, more precisely, in its Sanskrit stem form, karman a neuter substantive) is “action”. As a doctrine, karma encompasses a number of quasi-independent concepts: rebirth (punarjanam), consequence (phala, literally “fruit,” a term that suggests the “ripening” of actions into consequences), and the valuation or “ethic-ization” of acts, qualifying them as either “good” (punya or sukaman) or “bad” (papam or duskarman).

In a general way, however, for at least the past two thousand years, the following from the well known text, the Bhagavata Purana) has held true as representing the principal elements of the karma doctrine: “The same person enjoys the fruit of the same sinful or a meritorious act in the next world in the same manner and to the same extent according to the manner and extent to which that (sinful or meritorious) act has been done by him in this world.” Nevertheless, depending on the doctrine’s context, which itself ranges from its appearance in a vast number of literary sources to its usage on the popular level, not all these elements may be present (though in a general way they may be implicit).

91. “Reify” in the passage means:

(A) Reversal of stance

(B) Unitary whole

(C) Diversity

(D) Unity in diversity

(E) To make real out of abstract

92. “Ethic-ization” in the passage means

(A) Process of making something ethical

(B) Judging and evaluation

(C) Converting unethical persons into ethical

(D) Teaching ethics

(E) None of the above

93. Consider the following statements:

1.   Meaning of karma is contextual.

2.   Meaning of karma is not unanimous.

3.   Meaning of karma includes many other quasi-independent concepts.

4.   Karma also means actions and their rewards.

Which of the above statements are true?

(A) 1,2,3                    (B) 2,3,4               (C) 1,3,4                    (D) None of the above             (E) All the four are true

94. The base meaning of karma is:

(A) reward and punishment.

(B) only those actions which yield a “phala”.

(C) ripening of actions into consequences.

(D) any action.

(E) None of the above

95. As per the author, which of the following statements is wrong?

(A) India is a diverse country.

(B) Doctrine of karma runs across divergent Hindu thoughts.

(C) Doctrine of karma has a rich scholarly discourse.

(D) Modern scholars have studied Hinduism as a syncretic whole.

(E) Scholars could not resolve the meaning of karma.

96. Which of the following if true, would be required for the concept of karma – as defined in Bhagavata Purana – to be made equally valid across different space-time combinations?

(A) Karma is judged based on the observers’ perception, and hence the observer is a necessary condition for its validity.

(B) Karma is an orientalist concept limited to oriental countries.

(C) Each epoch will have its own understanding of karma and therefore there can not be uniform validity of the concept of karma.

(D) The information of the past action and the righteousness of each action would be embodied in the individual.

(E) Each space-time combination would have different norms of righteousness and their respective expert panels which will judge each action as per those norms.

97. The orientalist perspective, according to the author:

(A) Viewed India as a country of diversity.

(B) Viewed India both as single and diverse entity.

(C) Viewed India as land of karma.

(D) Viewed India in the entirety.

(E) Viewed India as if it was a single and unitary entity devoid of diversity.

Analyse the passage given and provide an appropriate answer for the question nos. 98 through 101 that follow.

Number of words in this passage: 278

Enunciated by Jung as an integral part of his psychology in 1916 immediately after his unsettling confrontation with the unconscious, the transcendent function was seen by Jung as uniting the opposites, transforming psyche, and central to the individuation process. It also undoubtedly reflects his personal experience in coming to terms with the unconscious. Jung portrayed the transcendent function as operating through symbol and fantasy and mediating between the opposites of consciousness and the unconscious to prompt the emergence of a new, third posture that transcends the two. In exploring the details of the transcendent function and its connection to other Jungian constructs, this work has unearthed significant changes, ambiguities, and inconsistencies in Jung’s writings. Further, it has identified two separate images of the transcendent function: (1) the narrow transcendent function, the function or process within Jung’s pantheon of psychic structures, generally seen as the uniting of the opposites of consciousness and the unconscious from which a new attitude emerges; and (2) the expansive transcendent function, the root metaphor for psyche or being psychological that subsumes Jung’s pantheon and that apprehends the most fundamental psychic activity of interacting with the unknown or other. This book has also posited that the expansive transcendent function, as the root metaphor for exchanges between conscious and the unconscious, is the wellspring from whence flows other key Jungian structures such as the archetypes and the Self, and is the core of the individuation process. The expansive transcendent function has been explored further by surveying other schools of psychology, with both depth and non-depth orientations, and evaluating the transcendent function alongside structures or processes in those other schools which play similar mediatory and/or transitional roles.

98. The above passage is most likely an excerpt from:

(A) A research note

(B) An entry on a psychopathology blog

(C) A popular magazine article

(D) A scholarly treatise

(E) A newspaper article

99. It can be definitely inferred from the passage above that

(A) The expansive transcendent function would include elements of both the Consciousness and the Unconscious.

(B) Archetypes emerge from the narrow transcendent function.

(C) The whole work, from which this excerpt is taken, primarily concerns itself with the inconsistencies in Jung’s writings.

(D) The transcendent is the core of the individuation process.

(E) Jung’s pantheon of concepts subsumes the root metaphor of psyche.

100. A comparison similar to the distinction between the two images of the transcendent function would be:

(A)  raucous: hilarious

(B)  synchronicity: ontology

(C)  recession: withdrawal

(D)  penurious: decrepit

(E)  None of the above

101. As per the passage, the key Jungian structure – other than the Self – that emerges from the expansive transcendent function may NOT be expressed as a(n):

(A)  Stereotype               (B) Anomaly               (C) Idealized model                (D) Original pattern                 (E) Epitome

Analyse the passage given and provide an appropriate answer for the question nos. 102 through 104 that follow.

Number of words in this passage: 371

Deborah Mayo is a philosopher of science who has attempted to capture the implications of the new experimentalism in a philosophically rigorous way. Mayo focuses on the detailed way in which claims are validated by experiment, and is concerned with identifying just what claims are borne out and how. A key idea underlying her treatment is that a claim can only be said to be supported by experiment if the various ways in which the claim could be a fault have been investigated and eliminated. A claim can only be said to be borne out by experiment, and a severe test of a claim, as usefully constructed by Mayo, must be such that the claim would be unlikely to pass it if it were false.

Her idea can be explained by some simple examples. Suppose Snell’s law of refraction of light is tested by some very rough experiments in which very large margins of error are attributed to the measurements of angles of incidence and refraction, and suppose that the results are shown to be compatible with the law within those margins of error. Has the law been supported by experiments that have severely tested it? From Mayo’s perspective the answer is “no” because, owing to the roughness of the measurements, the law of refraction would be quite likely to pass this test even if it were false and some other law differing not too much from Snell’s law true. An exercise  carried out in my school-teaching days serves to drive this point home. My students had conducted some not very careful experiments to test Snell’s law.  then presented them with some alternative laws of refraction that has been suggested in antiquity and mediaeval times, prior to the discovery of Snell’s law, and invited the students to test them with the measurements they had used to test Snell’s law; because of the wide margins of error they had attributed to their measurements, all of these alternative laws pass the test. This clearly brings out the point that the experiments in question did not constitute a severe test of Snell’s law. The law would have passed the test even if it were false and one of the historical alternatives true.

102. Which of the following conclusion can be drawn from the passage?

(A)  Precise measurement is a sufficient condition to ensure validity of conclusions resulting from an experiment.

(B)  Experimental data might support multiple theoretical explanations at the same time, hence validity of theories needs to be tested further.

(C)  Precise measurement is both a necessary and sufficient condition to ensure validity of conclusions resulting from an experiment.

(D)  Precise measurement along with experimenter’s knowledge of the theory underpinning the experiment is sufficient to ensure the validity of conclusions drawn from experiments.

(E)  All of these

103. As per Mayo’s perspective, which of the following best defines the phrase “scientific explanation?

(A)  One which is most detailed in its explanation of natural phenomena.

(B)  One which survives examinations better than other explanations.

(C)  One which has been thoroughly tested by scientific experts.

(D)  One which refutes other explanations convincingly.

(E)  All of these.

104. The author’s use of Snell’s law of refraction to illustrate Mayo’s perspective can best said to be

(A)  Contrived.           (B) Premeditated.             (C) Superfluous.               (D) Inadequate.                (E) Illustrative.

Directions (105-112): Go through the caselets below and answer the questions that follow.

Question No (105-106): According to recent reports, CEOs of large organizations are paid more than CEOs of small organizations. It does not seem fair that just because a CEO is heading a big organization s/he should be paid more. CEOs’ salary should be related to performance, especially growth in terms of sales and profits. Of course, big organizations are more complex than the small, but all CEOs require significant amount of energy and time in managing organizations. There is no proof that CEOs of big organizations are more stressed than CEOs of small organizations. All CEOs should be paid according to their performance.

105. A person seeking to refute the argument might argue that

(A)  CEOs should be paid equally.

(B)  Managing big organization is more challenging than small.

(C)  If CEOs of small companies perform well, the company would become big and so would be CEOs salary.

(D)  CEOs, who travel more should be paid more.

(E)  Highly qualified CEOs should be paid more because they have acquired difficult education.

106. Which of the following, if true, would strengthen the speaker’s argument?

(A)  CEOs of small organizations come from good educational background.

(B)  CEOs of big organizations are very difficult to hire.

(C)  A few big family businesses have CEOs from within the family.

(D)  CEOs in big organisation take much longer to reach top, as compared to their counterparts in small organizations.

(E)  Big orgainsations contribute more towards moral development of society.

Question No (107-108): Hindi ought to be the official language of India. There is no reason for the government to spend money printing documents in different languages, just to cater to people who cannot read/write Hindi. The government has better ways to spend tax payers’ money. People across India should read/write Hindi or learn it at the earliest.

107. Which of the following, if true, would weaken the speaker’s argument the most?

(A)  The government currently translates official documents into more than eighteen languages.

(B)  Hindi is the most difficult language in the world to speak.

(C)  Most people who travel across India learn Hindi within five years.

(D)  Making Hindi the official language is a politically unpopular idea.

(E)  People who are multilingual usually pay maximum taxes.

108. United Nations members contribute funds, proportionate to their population, for facilitating smooth functioning of the UN. By 2010. India, being the most populous nation on the planet, would contribute the maximum amount to the UN. Therefore, official language of United Nations should be changed to Hindi.

Which of the following is true?

(A)  The point above contradicts the speaker’s argument.

(B)  The point above is similar to speaker’s argument.

(C)  The point above concludes speaker’s argument.

(D)  The point above extends the speaker’s argument.

(E)  The point above strengthens the speaker’s argument.

Question No (109-110): The Bistupur Sakchi corner needs a speed-breaker. Loyola school children cross this intersection, on their way to the school, and many a times do not check out for traffic. I get to read regular reports of cars and other vehicles hitting children. I know that speed-breakers are irritating for drivers, and I know that children cannot be protected from every danger, but this is one of the worst intersections in town. There needs to be a speed-breaker so that vehicles have to slow down and the children be made safer.

109. Which of the following arguments is used in the above passage?

(A)  Emotive–referring to the safety of children to get people interested

(B)  Analogy–comparing the intersection to something dangerous

(C)  Statistical analysis–noting the number of children hit by vehicles

(D)  Personalization–telling the story of one child’s near accident at the intersection

(E)  Attack–pointing out people who are against speed-breakers as being uncaring about children

110. According to a recent research conducted by the district road planning department, ten percent students come with parents in cars, twenty percent students use auto-rickshaws, twenty percent students use taxis, forty percent students use the school buses and ten percent students live in the hostel inside the school.

Which of the following is true about the above paragraph?

(A)  It extends speaker’s argument using analogy.

(B)  It contradicts the speaker’s argument using statistical data.

(C)  It extends the speaker’s argument using statistical data.

(D)  It is similar to speaker’s argument.

(E)  It concludes speaker’s argument by using personalization.

Questions No (111-112): History, if viewed as a repository not merely of anecdotes or chronology, could produce a decisive transformation in the image of science by which we are now possessed. That image has previously been drawn, even by scientists themselves, mainly from the study of finished scientific achievements as these are recorded in the classics and, more recently, in the textbooks from which each new scientific generation learns to practice its trade.

111. Which of the following best summarizes the above paragraph?

(A)  Scientific achievements are recorded in classics and text books.

(B)  Different ways of looking at history can produce altogether different knowledge.

(C)  History of science can be inferred from finished scientific achievement.

(D)  Text books may be biased.

(E)  All of above.

112. Which of the following statements is the author most likely to agree with?

(A)  History of science presents a scientific way of looking at scientific developments and thus contributes to progress in science.

(B)  History of science should contain only the chronology of the scientific achievements.

(C)  More number of scientific theories results in more number of publications, which benefits publishers.

(D)  History of science should purposely present different images of science to people.

(E)  History of science can present multiple interpretations to people regarding the process of scientific developments.

Analyse the passage given and provide an appropriate answer for the question nos. 113 through 118 that follow.

Number of words in this passage: 832

Every conscious mental state has a qualitative character that we refer to as mood. We are always in a mood that is pleasurable or unpleasurable to some degree. It may be that bad moods relate to their being too positive reinforcement in a person’s current life and too many punishments. In any case, moods are distinguished from emotions proper by not being tied to any specific object. But, this distinction is not watertight, in that emotions need not be directed at objects that are completely specific (we can be angry just at people generally) while there is always a sense of a mood having a general objective like the state of the world at large. Moods manifest themselves in positive or negative feelings that are tied to health, personality, or perceived quality of life. Moods can also relate to emotions proper, as in the aftermath of an emotional incident such as the failure to secure a loan. A mood on this basis is the mind’s judgment on the recent past. For Goldie, emotion can bubble up and down within a mood, while an emotion can involve characteristics that are non-object specific.

What is important for marketing is that moods colour outlook and bias judgements. Hence the importance of consumer confidence surveys, as consumer confidence typically reflects national mood. There is mood – congruence when thoughts and actions fall inline with mood. As Goleman says, there is a “constant stream of feeling” that runs “in perfect to our steam of thought”. Mood congruence occurs because a positive mood evokes pleasant associations that lighten subsequent appraisals (thoughts) and actions, while a negative arouses pessimistic associations that influence future judgement and behaviour. When consumers are in a good mood, they are more optimistic about buying more confident in buying, and much more willing to tolerate things like waiting in line. On the other hand, being in a mood makes buying behaviour in the “right mood” by the use of music and friendly staff or, say, opens bakeries in shopping malls that delight the passer-by with the smell of fresh bread.

Thayer views moods as a mixture of biological and psychological influences and, as such, a sort of clinical thermometer, reflecting all the internal and external events that influence us. For Thayer, the key components of mood are energy and tension in different combinations. A specific mixture of energy and tension, together with the thoughts they influence, produces moods. He discusses four mood states:

i            Calm–energy: he regards this as the optimal mood of feeling good.

ii           Clam–tiredness: he regards this as feeling a little tired without any stress, which can be pleasant.

iii            Tense-energy: involves a low level of anxiety suited to a fight-or-flight disposition.

iv          Tense-tiredness: is a mixture of fatigue and anxiety, which underlines the unpleasant feeling of depression.

People generally can “feel down” or “feel good” as a result of happenings in the world around them. This represents the national mood. People feel elated when the national soccer team wins an international match or depressed when their team has lost. An elated mood of calm-energy is an optimistic mood, which is good for business. Consumers, as socially involved individuals, are deeply influenced by the prevailing social climate. Marketers recognize the phenomenon and talk about the national mood being, say for or against conspicuous consumption. Moods do change, though. Writing early in the nineteenth century, Toqeville describes an American elite embarrassed by the ostentation of material display; in the “Gilded Age”, sixty years later, many were only too eager to embrace a materialistic vulgarity. The problem lies in anticipating changes in national mood, since a change in mood affects everything from buying of equities to the buying of houses and washing machines. Thayer would argue that we should be interested in national events that are likely to produce a move toward a tense-tiredness state or toward a calm-energy state, since these are the polar extremes and are more likely to influence behaviour. Artists sensitive to national moods express the long-term changes. An example is the long – term emotional journey from Charles Dickens’s depiction of the death of little Nell to Oscar Wilde’s cruel flippancy about it. “One would have to have a heart of stone not to laugh at the death of little Nell”, which reflects the mood change from high Victorian sentimentality to the acerbic cynicism of the end of the century, as shown in writers like Thomas Hardy and artists like Aubrey Beardsley.

Whenever the mind is not fully absorbed, consciousness is no longer focused and ordered. Under such conditions the mind falls into dwelling on the unpleasant, with a negative mood developing.

Csikszentimihalyi argues that humans need to keep consciousness fully active is what influences a good deal of consumer behaviour. Sometimes it does not matter what we are shopping for – the point is to shop for anything, regardless, as consuming is one way to respond to the void in consciousness when there is nothing else to do.

113. Which one of the following statements best summarizes the above passage?

(A)  The passage highlights how moods affect nations.

(B)  The passage draws distinction between moods and emotions.

(C)  Some writers influenced national moods through their writings.

(D)  Thayer categorized moods into four states.

(E)  The passage highlights the importance of moods and emotions in marketing.

114. What is “moods congruence”?

(A)  When moods and emotions are synchronized.

(B)  When emotions are synchronous with actions and thoughts.

(C)  When moods are synchronous with thoughts and actions.

(D)  When moods are synchronous with thoughts but not with action.

(E)  When moods are synchronous with action but not with thought.

115. Implication and Proposition are defined as follows:

Implication: a statement which follows from the given text.

Proposition: a statement which forms a part of the given text.

Consider the two statements below and decide whether they are implications or propositions.

115. Implication and Proposition are defined as follows:

Implication: a statement which follows from the given text.

Proposition: a statement which forms a part of the given text.

Consider the two statements below and decide whether they are implications or propositions.

I.    The marketers should understand and make use of moods and emotions in designing and selling products and services.

II.   Consuming is nothing but way of filling the void in consciousness.

(A)  Both statements are implications.

(B)  First is implication second is proposition.

(C)  Both are propositions.

(D)  First is proposition, second is implication.

(E)  Both are neither implication nor proposition.

116. Which statements from the ones given below are correct?

1.   In general, emotions are object specific.

2.   In general, moods are not object specific.

3.   Moods and emotions are same.

4.   As per Thayer, moods are a mix of biological and psychological influence.

(A)  1,2,4                  (B) 1,2,3

(C)  2,3,4                  (D) 2,4,3

(E)  All four are right

117. The statement “Moods provide energy for human actions” is ______.

(A)  always right

(B)  always wrong

(C)  not derived from the passage.

(D)  contradictory.

(E)  sometimes right.

118. Which of the following is the closest to “conspicuous consumption” in the passage?

(A)  Audible consumption

(B)  Consumption driven by moods and emotions

(C)  Socially responsible consumption

(D)  Private but not public consumption

(E)  consumption of material items of impressing others

Directions (119-120): Go through the caselets below and answer the questions that follow.

119. The author reflects on the concept of Blue Ocean Strategy. He explains that this concept delivers an instinctive framework for developing uncontested market space and making the competition irrelevant. The author remarks that Blue Ocean Strategy is about having the best mix of attributes that result in creation of uncontested market space and high growth, and not about being the best.

The above paragraph appears to be an attempt at

(A)  defining Blue Ocean Strategy.

(B)  developing the framework for Blue Ocean Strategy.

(C)  reviewing an article or book on Blue Ocean Strategy.

(D)  highlighting how Blue Ocean Strategy leads to better returns.

(E)  None of above.

120. Goodricke Group Ltd is planning to give top priority to core competence of production and marketing of tea in 2007. The company intends to increase the production of orthodox varieties of tea. Goodricke is planning to invest Rs.10 crore to modernize the factories. The company has announced a net profit of Rs.5.49 crore for 2006 as against Rs.3.76 crore in 2005.

Which of the following can be deduced from the caselet?

(A)  Core competence can be used for furthering company’s interests.

(B)  Production and marketing is core competence of Goodricke Group.

(C)  Increase in production of existing products enchance core competence.

(D)  Core competence leads to modernization.

(E)  Goodricke has given top priority to production because it has earned net profit of Rs.5.49 core.

Answer key

1. (A)                     2. (A)                     3. (B)                     4. (E)                     5. (E)                     6. (A)

7. (D)                    8. (A)                     9. (C)                     10. (C)                   11. (D)                  12. (B)

13. (C)                   14. (A)                  15. (E)                   16. (A)                  17. (D)                  18. (B)

19. (C)                   20. (D)                  21. (E)                   22. (B)                  23. (C)                   24. (B)

25. (D)                  26. (C)                   27. (A)                  28. (D)                  29. (E)                   30. (ignore)

31. (C)                   32. (B)                  33. (A)                  34. (D)                  35. (C)                   36. (E)

37. (C)                   38. (D)                  39. (E)                   40. (B)                  41. (B)                  42. (B)

43. (D)                  44. (B)                  45. (B)                  46. (C)                   47. (A)                  48. (E)

49. (D)                  50. (E)                   51. (E)                   52. (C)                   53. (D)                  54. (ignore)

55. (B)                  56. (B)                  57. (E)                   58. (B)                  59. (E)                   60. (C)

61. (E)                   62. (B)                  63. (E)                   64. (E)                   65. (A)                  66. (B)

67. (B)                  68. (C)                   69. (A)                  70. (B)                  71. (E)                   72. (E)

73. (B)                  74. (D)                  75. (A)                  76. (A)                  77. (C)                   78. (B)

79. (E)                   80. (Ignore)         81. (D)                  82. (C)                   83. (D)                  84. (B)

85. (D)                  86. (A)                  87. (B)                  88. (D)                  89. (E)                   90. (D)

91. (E)                   92. (B)                  93. (C)                   94. (D)                  95. (D)                  96. (A)

97. (E)                   98. (A)                  99. (D)                  100. (B)                101. (B)                102. (C)

103. (C)                104. (E)                 105. (B)                106. (A)                107. (D)                108. (D)

109. (A)                110. (B)                111. (B)                112. (E)                 113. (E)                 114. (C)

115. (A)                116. (A)                117. (C)                118. (B)                119. (C)                120. (A)

Q81. In a retail outlet the average revenue was Rs. 10,000 per day over a 30 day period. During this period the average daily revenue on weekends (total 8 days ) was Rs 20,000 per day . What was the average daily revenue on weekdays

Answer: 6364

Solution: total money = 10,000 x 30=30000

Money on weekends = 20,000 x 8= 160000

money on weekdays= total-weekend = 300000-160000=140000

money on each weekday= 140000/22 =6363.something

Q82. Two different prime numbers X and Y , both greater than 2 , then which of the following must be true

Answer: X+Y NOT = 87

Solution: Two prime numbers greater than 2 must be odd , sum of two odd numbers must always be even thus X+Y = 87 is never possible

Q83. It takes 6 hours for pump A , used alone , to fill a tank of water . Pump B used alone takes 8 hours to fill the same tank. A, B and another pump C all together fill the tank in 2 hours. How long would pump C take , used alone to fill the tank .

Answer: 4.8

Solution: Assume the capacity of the tank is 24 liters (lcm of 6, 8, 2, ). Pipe A rate is 4 liters per hour , Pipe B rate is 3 liters per hour ,

A+B+C rate is 12 liters per hour , A and B account for 7 , C must be 5 liters per hour

To fill a 24 liter tank pipe C will take 24/5 = 4. 8 hrs

Q84. A swimming pool can be filled by Pipe A in 3 hours and Pipe B in 6 hours, Each pump working on its own. At 9 am Pump A is started . At what time will the swimming pool be filled if pump B is started at 10 am ?

Ans : 11:20 am

Solution : Assume the tank to be of 6 liters , A rate is 2 liters per hour and that of B is 1 liter per hour . At 9 am Pump A is started and at 10 am Pump B , in this 1 hour pump a will supply 2 liters of water , now tank needs 4 more liters to get full. Both the pumps working together supply 3 liters per hour and to fill 4 liters will take 4/3= 1.33 hours = 1 hours 20 minutes

Q85. The sum of prime numbers that are greater than 60 , but less than 70 is

Answer: 128

Solution: The answer can not be greater than 140 , the only option is 128

Q86.  0 (+2) 2(+4)6 (+6)12(+8)20(+10)30(+12)42(+14)56

Q87. A bakery opened with its daily supply of 40 dozen rolls. Half of the rolls were sold by noon, and 60% of the remaining rolls were sold between noon and closing time. How many dozen rolls were left unsold

Answer: 8

Half of 40 is 20 , 20 sold 20 remaining and 60% of 20 is 12 so 8 left.

Q 88.  Stuart , Jack and Leo are colleagues working in a plant . Stuart and jack can do a work in 10 days, jack and leo can do the same work in 15 days while stuart and leo can do it in 12 days. All of them started the work together / After two days , leo was shifted to some other work . How many daus will stuart and jack take to finsh the rest of the work

Answer: 7.5

Q89. The missing numbers in the below series would be 1:1 (1:1), 8:4 (2:1) ,9:27 (1:3) , 64:16 (4:1 ) , 25:125 (1:5)  216:36 (6:1 ) , 49:343 (1:7 )

Answer: 216:136

Q90. The difference between the value of a number cincreased by 25% and the value of the original number decreased by 30% is 22 . What is the original number

Answer: 40

Solution: try the options , get the answer in less than 30 seconds

(5/4) X- (7/10)X=22

91. Running at the same constant rate , 6 identical machines can produce a total of 180 bottles per hour. How many bottles could 15 such machines produce in 30 minutes ?

Answer: 225

Solution 180X(5/2)x(1/2)= 225

Q92. A number whose fifth part increased by 4 is equal to its fourth part diminished by 10 is

Answer: 280

Solution: plug the options

(1/5)X+4= (1/4)X-10

Q93. Which one of the following will completely divide (461+462+463+464)

Answer: 10

on the IIFT main page

Scorecard and List of Candidates for GD/PI

Best of Luck .

SNAP 2010 General english

Q41-44 (Reading comprehension passage and questions)

Q41. According to the passage , modernists are changing literary criticism by

answer: Seeing literature from fresh point of view

Support: “We are able to see in literary works the perspective we bring.  Perspective is a point of view

Q42. The author quptes James Jouce , Virginia Woolf and D.H Lawrence primarily  in order to show that

Answer: none of the above

Support: The author has quoted them in order to illustrate the importance of emancipation of women amongst the modernists . from the passage

” “The emancipation of women” , James Joyce told his friends ” has caused the greatest revolution in our time “. Other modernists agree”

Q43. The author’s attitude towards women’s  Reformation of literary canons can best be described as one of

Answer: Endorsement

Support: ” …and now that women are enough to make a difference in reforming canons and interpreting literature , the landscapes of literary history and features of individual books have begun to change ” . No negative words so Antagonism and ambivalence  is ruled out , since the author is talking about it it is unlikely  that he is indifferent to the topic .

Q44. Which of the following best describes the contents of the passage ?

answer: Transforming literature

Support: perspective changes ” features of individual books have begun to change” .

Q45. Choose the correct sentence

Answer: An anthropologist by profession , he is also a trained classical singer.

46 to 49

Fill in the blanks and choose the correct definition of punctuations

Q46. Apostrophe is used to indicate possession

Q47 . Period is used to mark the end of declarative and imperative sentences

Q48. When a subordinate clause is followed by the main clause , comma is required .

Q49. When no connecting word is used to connect two independent clauses , one should use Semi colon

Correct proverb

Q50. Answer: Let the sleeping dogs lie

Q51 . Answer: A fool and his money are parted easily

52-57

Choose the correct meaning of the following idioms

Q52. If someone said , “you are the bomb!” she or he probably would be telling you

answer : You are exceptional and/or wonderful

Q53. When someone is described as being “flighty” , the person described is probably

answer: Indecisive and irresponsible

Q54. What does ” to take down the enemy” mean ?

answer: To kill the enemy

Q55. What does , ” Dime a dozen” mean ?

answer: Anything that is common and easy to get

Q56 . ” Throw the baby out with the bath water” means

a. Throw out the good things with the unwanted

Q57. ” Bart up the wrong tree” means

Answer: Make the wrong choice

Q58. I rode my bike yesterday , so my legs are sore

Q59. Insulation was fitted to  prevent further heat loss from the building

Q60.  A high rate of inflation makes exports difficult

Q61. My boat has two Sails

Q62. Can you give me further details ,please ?

Q63. A baby dear is called a Fawn

Q64. The greatest discovery of my generation is that a human being can alter his life by altering his attitude.

Q65. When it comes to staying young , a mind-life beats a face-lift any day

Q66. None are so empty as those who are full of themselves

Q67. Your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of  worry/Learning

technically nothing to separate the two but the tone suggests Learning

Q68 . antonym Eulogize: Criticize

Q69. Synonym Pedantic : Finicky

Q70. Pyrophobia means fear of fire

71-72 Kangaroo words

Masculine  Maxxxlxxe

Respite       Resxxtz

Q73. Paper weight and weight lifter

74-75 , Choose the word that cannot be coupled with the given word

Q74. Outshine , Outnumber , Outrun , OutBug

Q75. Newsletter , Newsstand , Newspaper , Newsweek

Q76. I did not see you at the office party

77-78 Fill in the blanks with the correct simile

Q77. As cool as a cucumber

Q78 . As fresh as a daisy

Q79. Choose the option that does not belong

Answer:  Clear

Consort , Spouse , partner are all synonyms

Q80 Nerd means

nerd
noun informal
a foolish or contemptible person who lacks social skills or is boringly studious : one of those nerds who never asked a girl to dance.
• an intelligent, single-minded expert in a particular technical discipline or profession : he single-handedly changed the Zero image of the computer nerd into one of savvy Hero

SNAP 2010 is done and over and unlike the CAT there is no gag order on discussing it , so here is our take on the test .

The Test was easy

For any serious contender this was a dream paper , where question after question required the most basic information and thinking . If this is not considered easy i do not know what is . Since the test was on the easiest of the easy side , what would separate the aspirants is the speed in solving these questions and hence high attempt and high accuracy .

Break Up of Marks

Total marks             No of Questions.

General English            40                                     40

QA & DI , DS                  40                                     40

GA,GK,CA,BS                 40                                     40

AR, LR                              60                                     30

the SNAP 2010 GK Section

Q1. Name the Jailed Chinese pro-democracy activist who won this year’s Nobel Peace prize for his “long and non-violent struggle for fundamental human rights in China”

answer : Liu Xiaobo

Comment: Been in the newspaper , for getting the award , then not being able to attend the awards because of chinese restrictions , and for some actiists demonstrations in china , . And “The Nobel Awards” being such a global event , well covered in all major news dailies and online magazines , the question would be definitely  rated EASY

Q2. Which government is behind the “The Nalanda Propasal” , proposing Nalanda as an ideal site for establishing a 21st century learning institution.

Answer: Singapore

Comment :  No detailed coverage in mainstream media , the kind of information you will know only if you read the CSR daily. Rating: Difficult

Q3. Jimmy wales and Larry Sanger are known for founding

Answer: Wikipedia

Comment :  go visit wikipedia now and in the top banner you will see an appeal for donations from the Wikipedia founder . And since Wikipedia is such a daily tool for most of us , Rating : Easy

Q4. The year 2010 is represented in Roman numerals as

Answer : MMX

Roman Numerals  are written as combinations of the seven letters in the table below. The letters can be written as capital (XVI) or lower-case letters (xvi).

Roman Numerals
I = 1 C = 100
V = 5 D = 500
X = 10 M = 1000
L = 50

Comment: Is the kind of information that everybody is familiar with but may not remember in a crunch Rating : Tricky

Q5. IN which country is the seat of the United Nations International Court of Justice ?

Answer: Netherlands

Comment:  Since information (location , purpose , heads )  about all major world organizations and agencies is commonly tested and the info is there on our blog , this question is rated : Easy

Q6. In 1965 GOrdon Moore , Co-founder of Intel , made  aprediction about the future of computer processing. What does his prediction , known as Moore;s Law say ?

Answer: Computing ability will double every 18 months to two years

Comment : Any body from the computer science background show know this , often quoted in major dailies when they talk about computers or the speed of change of technology. Rated Easy

Q7. At 60 miles an hour the loudest noises in this new Rolls-Royce comes from the electrick clock” Who wrote this famous advertising headline

Answer: David Ogilvy

Comment: David ogilvy  is often considered the father of Advertising and is a famous enough personality ,  if you have been following  such . Rating : Difficult

Q8.  His life’s motto was ” simple living and high thinking” . He was one of the……….Who is this towering personality

Answer :Raja Ram Mohan Roy

Comment : A major figure in pre-independence history , He is definitely part of the school history syllabus and therefore rated easy

Q9. Eustace fernandes , who passed away in early 2010 was the much admired creator of

answer :  Amul Girl

Comment: People who are avid readers of Brand magazines and follow what happens in the advertising industry would be familiar this . Since that makes up a small percentage of test takers this question is rated Difficult

Q10. Find the mismatch

Answer: Somdev Devvarman is a tennis player , covered adequately in Major news dailies , especially because of the mentions in the Commonwealth and the Asian games. Most people read the sports page even if they do no read the editorial and thus this question is rated Easy :

Q11. Who designed the new Rupee symbol

Answer

Rating Easy since the symbo was unveiled this year itself and was in the news across all media .

Q12. What exactly is Cloud computing

Answer: Computing Resources that can be accessed on demand , like electricity from utility

Comment : Very easy for anybody from the IT , Computer science background , Has been given enough focus by news media too so the rating is Easy

Cloud computing for dummies

Q13. What is NDM -1

Answer: A bacterial gene called New Delhi Metallo-lactamase-1, dubbed the “superbug” because of being resistant to most antibiotics.

Comment: NDM -1 was on the front pages of most major news dailies for a couple of days at least , discovered in europe and traced back to poor practices in India , The Indian side called it an attempt to tarnish the reputation of Indian medical standards since they were eating into European Health care revenues. Rated Easy

Q14. “Niyamgiri hills” was in the news because of

Answer: Vedanta’s failed mining proposal in the area inhabited by Dongria Kondh tribals

Comment:  Environment ministry clamped down on Vedanta and it made very big news for a prolonged period of time , add to this Rahul gandhi’s picture with Dongri Kondh tribals made a splash too . Rated easy for being big news for many days

q15. Match the following husband-and-wife team with the awards they have received for exemplary work

Bill and Melinda Gates ——UN population Award

Sankarlingam and Krishnamal ——-Right to Livelihood award

Prakash and Manadkini Amte ——Magsaysay Award

Peter and Rosemary Grant ——Kyoto Prize

Comment : Since who won what is often tested in G.K this question should be rated easy , knowing two out of four would have been enough to solve the question.

Q16. What is Renminbi ?

Answer: It is the official currency of the People’s Republic of China , whose principal unit is Yuan

Comment: China major country , knowledge of World currencies expected , Rating Easy

Q17. Embraer is one of the world leaders in the manufacturing of Coroprate/business jets. Embraer belongs to which country

Answer: Brazil

Comment: Rating difficult. Very specific piece of information and a not a company that everybody is aware of (Coke , Mercedes , Sony , Toyota )

Q18. The UID Project,  headed by Nandan Nilekani has been renamed as

Answer: Adhaar

Comment: UID project has been in the news consistently this past year, most recently when the first batches of the IDs were given to village folk in Maharashtra by Sonia Gandhi herself. Thusly rated easy

q19. India’s first SEZ deciated to Aerospace industry has been launched at

Answer: Hallargi

Comment: Rating difficult , in the news last year , that too not too much so difficult for those who do not follow business information regularly

Q20 . The prime purpose of WTO is to promote

Answer: Multilateral Trade

Comment: Major World organization , expected in tests , very very easy

Q21.  On March 5 , 2010 , which of the following personalities from India is among 19 members chosen by UN chief Ban Ki-moon for a high level advisory group on Climate change financing tasked with mobilizing funds pledged during the Copenhagen meet to tackle global wrming ?

Answer : Montek Singh Ahluwalia

Comment: Definitely difficult , obscure piece of information . Even finding this information took time

The List of All members

Q22. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has termed the 11th five year plan as

Answer: India’s Education plan

Comment : Rating is difficult , for again the information is not something you will see day after day in the headlines unlike a lot of other questions in the section.

Q23. Which of the following milestones was achieved by New Zealand Cricket team captain Daniel vettori

Answer: 3000 runs and 300 wickets in Test Cricket

Comment : Easy for cricket lovers , difficult for the rest of the world

Q24. What is the full term “NPA” as used in banking environment ?

Answer: Non performing asset

comment : Easy for regular reader of the business section , NPA refers to bad assets controlled by banks and financial orgninzations

Q25. Which of the following contributes the highest share of revenue earned by the Government of India ?

Answer:

Comment: Difficult

Q26. Which country was world’s largest exporter with merchandise exports $14.7 trillion in 2008 , according to the WTO ?

Answer:

Comment: Easy if you have been specifically preparing for such data , difficult otherwise

Q27. Where in India , recently has the Clinton Foundation , founded by former US president BillClinton , firmed up its plans to srt up world’s largest silar park ?

Answer: Gujarat

Comment : In the news last year ,  Rated difficult for not being mainstream news , average difficulty for followers of business news

Q28 . Which three public sector lenders have enetred recently into a joint venture agreement for setting up a banking subsidary , India BIA Bank Bhd , In Malaysia ?

Answer: Bank of  Baroda , Indian Overseas bank , and Andhra Bank

Comment : Difficult , unless you are a regular reader of the business and finance sections of the newspapers

Q29. What is the campaign of Union and State government against the Naxalite movement called ?

Answer: Operation Green Hunt

Comment : Rated easy since news about the Naxal movement and the Indian  governments reaction to it have been well chronicled by all kind of media , not knowing this is a sin .

q 30 . The instrument used to measure the speed of the wind is

Answer: Anemometer

Comment : Altimeter is for height , Chrono is for time , leaving 2 to guess from , rated tricky

Q31. Which of the following countries is the first in the world to propose a carbon tax for its people to address global warming

Answer: Finland

Comment: Difficult , easy for those who have been researching Global warming and related topics

Q32. Amino Acids are found in

Answer: Proteins

Comment : Very easy , school chemistry , biology

q33. Which among the following is the world’s largest mill producing country ?

Answer: India

Comment : Very very easy (have you not seen the cows on the roads)

Q34. A group of words that share the same spelling and the same pronunciation but have different meanings , e.g l

answer: Homonyms

Comment: Easy if you been preparing for english tests

Q35. The national flag of India was designed by

Answer: Pingali Venkayya

Comment: Rating difficult , tricky . Looks easy but unlikely piece of information to be found in most sources.

Q36. In  1679, Denis papin……….what was the invention ?

Answer: Pressure cooker

Q37 . Mr Ratan Tata refused a job with one of the following companies to join Tata Steel in 1962

Answer: IBM

Comment : Difficult unless you are into reading Autobiographies of famous business heads .

Q38.  Which of the following have owned Land rover brand before Tata motors

Answer:  All of BMW , British Leyland , British aerospace have owned the Land rover over the years

Comment : Difficult for most , easy for car lovers and followers of top car brands

Q39.  Who is known as ” The mand who broke the bank of England after he made a reported $ 1 billion during the 1992 Black wednesday UK currency crisis

Answer: George soros

Comment: Rating difficult

Q40 . Who is the current dean of Harvard business school ?

Answer: Nitin Nohria

Comment: Easy , Indian at the head of the most reputed academic organization in the world is major news .

SNAP 2010 General english

Q41-44 (Reading comprehension passage and questions)

Q41. According to the passage , modernists are changing literary criticism by

answer: Seeing literature from fresh point of view

Support: “We are able to see in literary works the perspective we bring.  Perspective is a point of view

Q42. The author quptes James Jouce , Virginia Woolf and D.H Lawrence primarily  in order to show that

Answer: none of the above

Support: The author has quoted them in order to illustrate the importance of emancipation of women amongst the modernists . from the passage

” “The emancipation of women” , James Joyce told his friends ” has caused the greatest revolution in our time “. Other modernists agree”

Q43. The author’s attitude towards women’s  Reformation of literary canons can best be described as one of

Answer: Endorsement

Support: ” …and now that women are enough to make a difference in reforming canons and interpreting literature , the landscapes of literary history and features of individual books have begun to change ” . No negative words so Antagonism and ambivalence  is ruled out , since the author is talking about it it is unlikely  that he is indifferent to the topic .

Q44. Which of the following best describes the contents of the passage ?

answer: Transforming literature

Support: perspective changes ” features of individual books have begun to change” .

Q45. Choose the correct sentence

Answer: An anthropologist by profession , he is also a trained classical singer.

46 to 49

Fill in the blanks and choose the correct definition of punctuations

Q46. Apostrophe is used to indicate possession

Q47 . Period is used to mark the end of declarative and imperative sentences

Q48. When a subordinate clause is followed by the main clause , comma is required .

Q49. When no connecting word is used to connect two independent clauses , one should use Semi colon

Correct proverb

Q50. Answer: Let the sleeping dogs lie

Q51 . Answer: A fool and his money are parted easily

52-57

Choose the correct meaning of the following idioms

Q52. If someone said , “you are the bomb!” she or he probably would be telling you

answer : You are exceptional and/or wonderful

Q53. When someone is described as being “flighty” , the person described is probably

answer: Indecisive and irresponsible

Q54. What does ” to take down the enemy” mean ?

answer: To kill the enemy

Q55. What does , ” Dime a dozen” mean ?

answer: Anything that is common and easy to get

Q56 . ” Throw the baby out with the bath water” means

a. Throw out the good things with the unwanted

Q57. ” Bart up the wrong tree” means

Answer: Make the wrong choice

Q58. I rode my bike yesterday , so my legs are sore

Q59. Insulation was fitted to  prevent further heat loss from the building

Q60.  A high rate of inflation makes exports difficult

Q61. My boat has two Sails

Q62. Can you give me further details ,please ?

Q63. A baby dear is called a Fawn

Q64. The greatest discovery of my generation is that a human being can alter his life by altering his attitude.

Q65. When it comes to staying young , a mind-life beats a face-lift any day

Q66. None are so empty as those who are full of themselves

Q67. Your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of  worry/Learning

technically nothing to separate the two but the tone suggests Learning

Q68 . antonym Eulogize: Criticize

Q69. Synonym Pedantic : Finicky

Q70. Pyrophobia means fear of fire

71-72 Kangaroo words

Masculine  Maxxxlxxe

Respite       Resxxtz

Q73. Paper weight and weight lifter

74-75 , Choose the word that cannot be coupled with the given word

Q74. Outshine , Outnumber , Outrun , OutBug

Q75. Newsletter , Newsstand , Newspaper , Newsweek

Q76. I did not see you at the office party

77-78 Fill in the blanks with the correct simile

Q77. As cool as a cucumber

Q78 . As fresh as a daisy

Q79. Choose the option that does not belong

Answer:  Clear

Consort , Spouse , partner are all synonyms

Q80 Nerd means

nerd
noun informal
a foolish or contemptible person who lacks social skills or is boringly studious : one of those nerds who never asked a girl to dance.
• an intelligent, single-minded expert in a particular technical discipline or profession : he single-handedly changed the Zero image of the computer nerd into one of savvy Hero