Direction: In the following question the 1st and the last part of the sentence/passage are numbered S1 and S6 The rest of the sentence/ passage is split into four parts and named P, Q, R and S. These four parts are not given in their proper order. Read the sentence/passage and find out which of the four combinations is correct.
Right now, I am looking at a shelf full of relics, a collection of has-beens, old-timers, antiques, fossils.
S1. Right now, I am looking at a shelf full of relics, a collection of has-beens, old-timers, antiques, fossils.
P. If you haven’t heard of an e-reader, then please permit the following explanation.
Q. E-readers are replacing the books of old, and I welcome them with open arms.
R. I am actually going through an e-reader.
S. Right now I am looking at a shelf full of books.
S6. An e-reader is a device that allows you to read e-books.
Direction: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow.
Scientists from four Canadian universities used Fitbits and spy mics to record over 14,000 hours of sound from the secret lives of Canada lynx, a medium-sized cat-like North American predator. It is usually found across Canada and the north-American US region. Canada lynx are difficult to study for researchers because of their elusive nature. This led researchers to use the latest miniaturized technology to gain insights into their lives, a first in remote wildlife research. Researchers attached accelerometers and small audio recorders as collars to the animals, which are one of the top predators of the boreal forest of Canada.
On 26 lynx that were the subject of the study, researchers deployed a total of 39 collars with the recording devices that captured over 14,470 hours of data. “The first time going through the audio files… you just hear the chaos. And then click a little bit further along and you hear what you think is bones cracking," said Emily Studd, the lead researcher and a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Alberta, in an interview to CBS.
In the recorded audio, the animals can be heard bonding, fighting, cleaning themselves, and even whining after losing a meal. Studd and her colleagues spent five years on the study that offers the science community a peek into the animals’ lives. "I spent three years in the field specifically tracking them, and rarely ever saw them," Studd underscores the challenges of studying the predators’ lives. According to her, because predators need to sneak up on their prey, they are naturally secretive animals.
The new study, which was published in the British Ecological Society’s journal Methods of Ecology and Evolution, opens up a new possibility of using such technologies to study and monitor the hunting behavior of predators. These technologies can make documentation of even the smallest activities of elusive animals possible.
Q. Researchers deployed a total of how many collars?
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Direction: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow.
Scientists from four Canadian universities used Fitbits and spy mics to record over 14,000 hours of sound from the secret lives of Canada lynx, a medium-sized cat-like North American predator. It is usually found across Canada and the north-American US region. Canada lynx are difficult to study for researchers because of their elusive nature. This led researchers to use the latest miniaturized technology to gain insights into their lives, a first in remote wildlife research. Researchers attached accelerometers and small audio recorders as collars to the animals, which are one of the top predators of the boreal forest of Canada.
On 26 lynx that were the subject of the study, researchers deployed a total of 39 collars with the recording devices that captured over 14,470 hours of data. “The first time going through the audio files… you just hear the chaos. And then click a little bit further along and you hear what you think is bones cracking," said Emily Studd, the lead researcher and a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Alberta, in an interview to CBS.
In the recorded audio, the animals can be heard bonding, fighting, cleaning themselves, and even whining after losing a meal. Studd and her colleagues spent five years on the study that offers the science community a peek into the animals’ lives. "I spent three years in the field specifically tracking them, and rarely ever saw them," Studd underscores the challenges of studying the predators’ lives. According to her, because predators need to sneak up on their prey, they are naturally secretive animals.
The new study, which was published in the British Ecological Society’s journal Methods of Ecology and Evolution, opens up a new possibility of using such technologies to study and monitor the hunting behavior of predators. These technologies can make documentation of even the smallest activities of elusive animals possible.
Q. Emily Studd, the lead researcher and a postdoctoral fellow interviewed to CBS at which university?
Direction: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow.
Scientists from four Canadian universities used Fitbits and spy mics to record over 14,000 hours of sound from the secret lives of Canada lynx, a medium-sized cat-like North American predator. It is usually found across Canada and the north-American US region. Canada lynx are difficult to study for researchers because of their elusive nature. This led researchers to use the latest miniaturized technology to gain insights into their lives, a first in remote wildlife research. Researchers attached accelerometers and small audio recorders as collars to the animals, which are one of the top predators of the boreal forest of Canada.
On 26 lynx that were the subject of the study, researchers deployed a total of 39 collars with the recording devices that captured over 14,470 hours of data. “The first time going through the audio files… you just hear the chaos. And then click a little bit further along and you hear what you think is bones cracking," said Emily Studd, the lead researcher and a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Alberta, in an interview to CBS.
In the recorded audio, the animals can be heard bonding, fighting, cleaning themselves, and even whining after losing a meal. Studd and her colleagues spent five years on the study that offers the science community a peek into the animals’ lives. "I spent three years in the field specifically tracking them, and rarely ever saw them," Studd underscores the challenges of studying the predators’ lives. According to her, because predators need to sneak up on their prey, they are naturally secretive animals.
The new study, which was published in the British Ecological Society’s journal Methods of Ecology and Evolution, opens up a new possibility of using such technologies to study and monitor the hunting behavior of predators. These technologies can make documentation of even the smallest activities of elusive animals possible.
Q. What is the opposite of 'Predator'?
Direction: Read the given passage and answer the question that follow by selecting the most appropriate option.
One of the main reasons of corruption in elections today is the lure of power which haunts the politicians so much that they feel no qualms of conscience in adopting any underhand method to come out successful. The Watergate Scandal in the U.S.A. is an eloquent example to testify to the fact how even the top level politicians can stoop to the lowest level in order to maintain themselves in power. Who does not remember how Adolf Hitler rode roughshod overall canons of electoral pro-priety to capture power ? In India also the record of the various political parties is not clean. Corruption thrives in elections because those in the field play on the psychology of the electorate. The voters are swayed by the tall promises of the candidates to whose machinations they fall an easy prey. They are also susceptible to fall an easy prey to the adulations of the politicians due to their illiteracy. Besides, in the representative democracies today and particularly in big countries the constituencies are quite extensive obviating the possibility of corrupt practices being discovered. Anti-corruption laws are honored more in their breach than in their observance. Even the code of conduct to be observed by the parties fighting the elections becomes a dead letter in as much as it is jettisoned out of existence and thrown unscrupulously over board by the unfair politicians whose only aim is to maintain themselves in the saddle.
Q. What happens to the anti-corrpution laws?
Direction: Read the given passage and answer the question that follow by selecting the most appropriate option.
One of the main reasons of corruption in elections today is the lure of power which haunts the politicians so much that they feel no qualms of conscience in adopting any underhand method to come out successful. The Watergate Scandal in the U.S.A. is an eloquent example to testify to the fact how even the top level politicians can stoop to the lowest level in order to maintain themselves in power. Who does not remember how Adolf Hitler rode roughshod overall canons of electoral pro-priety to capture power ? In India also the record of the various political parties is not clean. Corruption thrives in elections because those in the field play on the psychology of the electorate. The voters are swayed by the tall promises of the candidates to whose machinations they fall an easy prey. They are also susceptible to fall an easy prey to the adulations of the politicians due to their illiteracy. Besides, in the representative democracies today and particularly in big countries the constituencies are quite extensive obviating the possibility of corrupt practices being discovered. Anti-corruption laws are honored more in their breach than in their observance. Even the code of conduct to be observed by the parties fighting the elections becomes a dead letter in as much as it is jettisoned out of existence and thrown unscrupulously over board by the unfair politicians whose only aim is to maintain themselves in the saddle.
Q. What happens to the code of conduct?
Direction: In the following question, an idiomatic expression is followed by four alternatives.
Choose the one which best expresses the meaning of the given idiom.
Q. Like a fish out of water
Direction: In the following question, an idiomatic expression is followed by four alternatives.
Choose the one which best expresses the meaning of the given idiom.
Q. A gentleman at large
Direction: In the following question, an idiomatic expression is followed by four alternatives.
Choose the one which best expresses the meaning of the given idiom.
Q. To make both ends meet
Direction: Fill in the blank with an appropriate option:
Q. The ancient fountain was hidden _______ the trees.
Direction: Fill in the blank with an appropriate option:
Q. The salesman was _______ travelling up and down the country.
Direction: Fill in the blank with an appropriate option:
Q. Annu, though ill-equipped for the project, had _______ tried her best.
Direction: Fill in the blank with an appropriate option:
Q. The nation’s _____ has made two and even three-car families the norm.
Direction: Fill in the blank with an appropriate option:
Padamse worked like a mathematician and was a true ______ who experimented with numerous mediums.
Direction: Give below, each item consists of six sentences of a passage. The first and sixth sentences are given in the beginning as S1 and S6. The middle four sentences have been jumbled up and labelled as P, Q, R and S. You are required to find the proper sequence of the four sentences and choose the correct option accordingly.
S1: "When I was alive and had a human heart," answered the statue, "I did not know what tears were, for I lived in the Palace of Sans-Souci where sorrow is not allowed to enter.
S6: And now that I am dead they have set me up here so high that I can see all the ugliness and all the misery of my city, and though my heart is made of lead yet I cannot choose but weep."
P: So I lived, and so I died.
Q: Round the garden ran a very lofty wall, but I never cared to ask what lay beyond it, everything about me was so beautiful.
R: My courtiers called me the Happy Prince, and happy indeed I was, if pleasure be happiness.
S: In the daytime I played with my companions in the garden, and in the evening I led the dance in the Great Hall.
The correct sequence should be:
Direction: Give below, each item consists of six sentences of a passage. The first and sixth sentences are given in the beginning as S1 and S6. The middle four sentences have been jumbled up and labelled as P, Q, R and S. You are required to find the proper sequence of the four sentences and choose the correct option accordingly.
S1: One day her mother, having made some cakes, said to her, "Go, my dear, and see how your grandmother is doing, for I hear she has been very ill. Take her a cake, and this little pot of butter."
S6: "Does she live far off?" said the wolf.
P: He asked her where she was going.
Q: The poor child, who did not know that it was dangerous to stay and talk to a wolf, said to him, "I am going to see my grandmother and carry her a cake and a little pot of butter from my mother."
R: As she was going through the wood, she met with a wolf, who had a very great mind to eat her up, but he dared not, because of some woodcutters working nearby in the forest.
S: She set out immediately to go to her grandmother, who lived in another village.
The correct sequence should be:
Direction: Give below, each item consists of six sentences of a passage. The first and sixth sentences are given in the beginning as S1 and S6. The middle four sentences have been jumbled up and labelled as P, Q, R and S. You are required to find the proper sequence of the four sentences and choose the correct option accordingly.
S1: Each organism is adapted to its environment.
S6: What can be taken in and broken down depends on the body design and functioning.
P: There is a range of strategies by which the food is taken in and used by the organism.
Q: For example, whether the food source is stationary (such as grass) or mobile (such as deer), would allow for differences in how the food is accessed and what is nutritive apparatus used by a cow or a lion.
R: The form of nutrition differs depending on the type and availability of food material as well as how it is obtained by an organism.
S: Some organisms break down the food material outside the body and then absorb it and others take in the whole material and break it down inside their bodies.
The correct sequence should be:
Direction: Give below, each item consists of six sentences of a passage. The first and sixth sentences are given in the beginning as S1 and S6. The middle four sentences have been jumbled up and labelled as P, Q, R and S. You are required to find the proper sequence of the four sentences and choose the correct option accordingly.
S1: One of the most important forces in the modem world, socialism was a direct result of the Industrial Revolution.
S6: This is how socialism as a theory and practice came into being.
P: Socialism was a direct challenge to capitalism and sought to put an end to such an exploitative economic structure.
Q: The gulf between the 'haves' and the 'have nots' continued to increase and out of this gap between the rich and poor sprang disputes.
R: It generated new wealth but as this new wealth only went to a minority, it could not solve the question of distribution.
S: The Industrial Revolution solved the question of production.
The correct sequence should be:
Direction: Select the most appropriate antonym of the given word.
PROLIFIC
Direction: Select the most appropriate antonym of the given word.
DENOUNCE
Direction: Select the most appropriate antonym of the given word.
PLACATE
Direction: Question consists of a sentence with an underlined word followed by four words. Select the option that is nearest in meaning to the underlined word and mark your answer.
Q. Her smile was contagious.
Direction: Question consists of a sentence with an underlined word followed by four words. Select the option that is nearest in meaning to the underlined word and mark your answer.
Q. Under his leadership the company grew in an organic manner.
Direction: Question consists of a sentence with an underlined word followed by four words. Select the option that is nearest in meaning to the underlined word and mark your answer.
Q. She was lamenting her destiny.
Direction: In the following question, out of the four alternatives, select the alternative which best expresses the meaning of the idiom/phrase.
Q. In a flutter
Direction: Fill the blanks in with the correct article.
Q. _______ lioness was very fierce but she could not save herself from ______ flood.
Direction: Read the passage given below and answer the following question.
The quiet, sleepy, yet mesmerizing village of Mawsynram trounced Cherrapunji to become the wettest place in the world. Mawsynram receives over 10,000 millimetres of rain in a year. A recent study that looked at the rainfall pattern in the past 119 years found a decreasing trend at Cherrapunji and nearby areas. The team analyzed daily rain gauge measurements during 1901–to 2019 and noted that the changes in the Indian Ocean temperature have a huge effect on the rainfall in the region. They also analyzed satellite data and add that there was a reduction in the vegetation area in northeast India in the past two decades, implying that human influence also plays an important role in the changing rainfall patterns. “The traditional way of cultivation known as Jhum cultivation or shifting cultivation is now decreased and being replaced by other methods. Also, previous studies have noted there is sizable deforestation in the region. Our study also saw the decrease in vegetation cover and increase in the areas of cropland mainly from the year 2006 onwards,” says Jayanarayanan Kuttippurath from Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur. He is the lead author of the paper published last month in Environmental Research Letters.
The analysis showed reductions in vegetation with 104.5 sq km lost per year. On the other hand, there were significant increases in crop-land (182.1 sq km per year) and urban and built-up lands (0.3 sq km per year) during the period 2001–2018. The team noted that the annual mean rainfall for the period 1973–2019 showed decreasing trends of about 0.42 mm per decade. It was statistically significant along with seven stations (Agartala, Cherrapunji, Guwahati, Kailashahar, Pasighat, Shillong, and Silchar).
But why study the northeast region? The team writes that since northeast India is mostly hilly and is an extension of the Indo-Gangetic Plains, the region is highly sensitive to changes in regional and global climate. “It has to be noted that the first signs of the effect of climate change will be evident for the extreme cases such as the rainfall at Cherrapunji,” adds the paper. “Northeast India has the highest vegetation cover in India and includes 18 biodiversity hotspots of the world, indicating the importance of the region in terms of its greenery and climate-change sensitivity.”
Q. What is the antonym of the word "mesmerizing"?
Direction: Read the passage given below and answer the following question.
The quiet, sleepy, yet mesmerizing village of Mawsynram trounced Cherrapunji to become the wettest place in the world. Mawsynram receives over 10,000 millimetres of rain in a year. A recent study that looked at the rainfall pattern in the past 119 years found a decreasing trend at Cherrapunji and nearby areas. The team analyzed daily rain gauge measurements during 1901–to 2019 and noted that the changes in the Indian Ocean temperature have a huge effect on the rainfall in the region. They also analyzed satellite data and add that there was a reduction in the vegetation area in northeast India in the past two decades, implying that human influence also plays an important role in the changing rainfall patterns. “The traditional way of cultivation known as Jhum cultivation or shifting cultivation is now decreased and being replaced by other methods. Also, previous studies have noted there is sizable deforestation in the region. Our study also saw the decrease in vegetation cover and increase in the areas of cropland mainly from the year 2006 onwards,” says Jayanarayanan Kuttippurath from Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur. He is the lead author of the paper published last month in Environmental Research Letters.
The analysis showed reductions in vegetation with 104.5 sq km lost per year. On the other hand, there were significant increases in crop-land (182.1 sq km per year) and urban and built-up lands (0.3 sq km per year) during the period 2001–2018. The team noted that the annual mean rainfall for the period 1973–2019 showed decreasing trends of about 0.42 mm per decade. It was statistically significant along with seven stations (Agartala, Cherrapunji, Guwahati, Kailashahar, Pasighat, Shillong, and Silchar).
But why study the northeast region? The team writes that since northeast India is mostly hilly and is an extension of the Indo-Gangetic Plains, the region is highly sensitive to changes in regional and global climate. “It has to be noted that the first signs of the effect of climate change will be evident for the extreme cases such as the rainfall at Cherrapunji,” adds the paper. “Northeast India has the highest vegetation cover in India and includes 18 biodiversity hotspots of the world, indicating the importance of the region in terms of its greenery and climate-change sensitivity.”
Q. What effects the rainfall in the region?
Direction: Read the passage given below and answer the following question.
The quiet, sleepy, yet mesmerizing village of Mawsynram trounced Cherrapunji to become the wettest place in the world. Mawsynram receives over 10,000 millimetres of rain in a year. A recent study that looked at the rainfall pattern in the past 119 years found a decreasing trend at Cherrapunji and nearby areas. The team analyzed daily rain gauge measurements during 1901–to 2019 and noted that the changes in the Indian Ocean temperature have a huge effect on the rainfall in the region. They also analyzed satellite data and add that there was a reduction in the vegetation area in northeast India in the past two decades, implying that human influence also plays an important role in the changing rainfall patterns. “The traditional way of cultivation known as Jhum cultivation or shifting cultivation is now decreased and being replaced by other methods. Also, previous studies have noted there is sizable deforestation in the region. Our study also saw the decrease in vegetation cover and increase in the areas of cropland mainly from the year 2006 onwards,” says Jayanarayanan Kuttippurath from Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur. He is the lead author of the paper published last month in Environmental Research Letters.
The analysis showed reductions in vegetation with 104.5 sq km lost per year. On the other hand, there were significant increases in crop-land (182.1 sq km per year) and urban and built-up lands (0.3 sq km per year) during the period 2001–2018. The team noted that the annual mean rainfall for the period 1973–2019 showed decreasing trends of about 0.42 mm per decade. It was statistically significant along with seven stations (Agartala, Cherrapunji, Guwahati, Kailashahar, Pasighat, Shillong, and Silchar).
But why study the northeast region? The team writes that since northeast India is mostly hilly and is an extension of the Indo-Gangetic Plains, the region is highly sensitive to changes in regional and global climate. “It has to be noted that the first signs of the effect of climate change will be evident for the extreme cases such as the rainfall at Cherrapunji,” adds the paper. “Northeast India has the highest vegetation cover in India and includes 18 biodiversity hotspots of the world, indicating the importance of the region in terms of its greenery and climate-change sensitivity.”
Q. Which of the following given statements/statements is/are correct according to the passage?
Northeast India is mostly hilly and is an extension of the Indo-Gangetic Plains.
Study also saw a decrease in vegetation cover and an increase in the areas of cropland.
The analysis showed reductions in vegetation with 104.5 sq km lost per year.
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