Study the following arrangement carefully and answer the questions given below:
R % E 5 D 2 # 9A F B @ J 3 I K M $ I W U 8 V Ó N H G Z d 6 7
Q.
Which of the following is the fifth to the left of the sixteenth from the left end of the above arrangement?
Study the following arrangement carefully and answer the questions given below:
R % E 5 D 2 # 9A F B @ J 3 I K M $ I W U 8 V Ó N H G Z d 6 7
Q.
How many such symbols are there in the above arrangement, each of which is immediately followed by a consonant and immediately preceded by a number?
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Study the following arrangement carefully and answer the questions given below:
R % E 5 D 2 # 9A F B @ J 3 I K M $ I W U 8 V Ó N H G Z d 6 7
Q.
How many such consonants are there in the above arrangement, each of which is immediately preceded by a number and immediately followed by a letter?
Study the following arrangement carefully and answer the questions given below:
R % E 5 D 2 # 9A F B @ J 3 I K M $ I W U 8 V Ó N H G Z d 6 7
Q.
Four of the following five are alike in a certain way based on their positions in the given arrangement and so form a group. Which is the one that does not belong to that group?
In each question below are given four statements followed by four conclusions numbered I, II, III and IV. You have to take the given statements to be true even if they seem to be at variance with commonly known facts. Read the entire conclusion and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statement disregarding commonly known facts.
Q.
Statements:
All planets are stars.
All stars are asteroids.
All asteroids are moons.
Some moons are rocks.
Conclusions:
I. All asteroid are planets.
II. All asteroids are stars.
III. All moons are stars.
IV. Some rocks are stars.
In each question below are given four statements followed by four conclusions numbered I, II, III and IV. You have to take the given statements to be true even if they seem to be at variance with commonly known facts. Read the entire conclusion and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statement disregarding commonly known facts.
Q.
Statement:
Some bats are toys.
Some toys are plastics.
Some plastics are mirrors.
No mirror are glass.
Conclusions:
I. Some toys are mirror.
II. Some plastics are glasses.
III. Some bats are mirrors.
IV. No glass is Plastic.
In each question below are given four statements followed by four conclusions numbered I, II, III and IV. You have to take the given statements to be true even if they seem to be at variance with commonly known facts. Read the entire conclusion and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statement disregarding commonly known facts.
Q.
Statement:
All graduates are advocates
Some advocates are judges.
All judges are lawyers.
Some lawyers are doctors.
Conclusion:
I. Some doctors are advocates.
II. All graduates are judges.
III. Some doctors are graduates.
IV. Some lawyers are advocates.
In each question below are given four statements followed by four conclusions numbered I, II, III and IV. You have to take the given statements to be true even if they seem to be at variance with commonly known facts. Read the entire conclusion and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statement disregarding commonly known facts.
Q.
Nitin correctly remembers that Nidhi’s birthday is before Friday but after Tuesday. Derek correctly remembers that Nidhi’s birthday is after Wednesday but before Saturday. On which of the following days does Nidhi’s birthday definitely fall?
Read the following passage carefully and answers and answer the question given below it.
A group of friends having seven members A, B, C, D, E, F and G contains four men and three ladies. Each one of them has a different profession—stockbroker, lawyer, doctor, professor, engineer, businessman and banker and each one has passed out of a different college—P, S, V, W, X, Y and Z, not necessarily in the same order. None of the ladies is a businessman or a stockbroker. C is a doctor and she has passed out from ‘college X’. A is a ‘College Y’ passout. B is not a professor. E is a banker and is a ‘College S’ passout. F is a stockbroker and has not studied in ‘College P’. G is a businessman and has studied in ‘College V’. The Professor is a ‘College Z’ passout. The lawyer has studied in ‘College P’. None of the males studied in ‘College P’ or ‘College Z’.
Q.
What is the profession D?
Read the following passage carefully and answers and answer the question given below it.
A group of friends having seven members A, B, C, D, E, F and G contains four men and three ladies. Each one of them has a different profession—stockbroker, lawyer, doctor, professor, engineer, businessman and banker and each one has passed out of a different college—P, S, V, W, X, Y and Z, not necessarily in the same order. None of the ladies is a businessman or a stockbroker. C is a doctor and she has passed out from ‘college X’. A is a ‘College Y’ passout. B is not a professor. E is a banker and is a ‘College S’ passout. F is a stockbroker and has not studied in ‘College P’. G is a businessman and has studied in ‘College V’. The Professor is a ‘College Z’ passout. The lawyer has studied in ‘College P’. None of the males studied in ‘College P’ or ‘College Z’.
Q.
Who among the following is a lawyer?
Read the following passage carefully and answers and answer the question given below it.
A group of friends having seven members A, B, C, D, E, F and G contains four men and three ladies. Each one of them has a different profession—stockbroker, lawyer, doctor, professor, engineer, businessman and banker and each one has passed out of a different college—P, S, V, W, X, Y and Z, not necessarily in the same order. None of the ladies is a businessman or a stockbroker. C is a doctor and she has passed out from ‘college X’. A is a ‘College Y’ passout. B is not a professor. E is a banker and is a ‘College S’ passout. F is a stockbroker and has not studied in ‘College P’. G is a businessman and has studied in ‘College V’. The Professor is a ‘College Z’ passout. The lawyer has studied in ‘College P’. None of the males studied in ‘College P’ or ‘College Z’.
Q.
Which of the following groups represents ladies in the group of friends?
Read the following passage carefully and answers and answer the question given below it.
A group of friends having seven members A, B, C, D, E, F and G contains four men and three ladies. Each one of them has a different profession—stockbroker, lawyer, doctor, professor, engineer, businessman and banker and each one has passed out of a different college—P, S, V, W, X, Y and Z, not necessarily in the same order. None of the ladies is a businessman or a stockbroker. C is a doctor and she has passed out from ‘college X’. A is a ‘College Y’ passout. B is not a professor. E is a banker and is a ‘College S’ passout. F is a stockbroker and has not studied in ‘College P’. G is a businessman and has studied in ‘College V’. The Professor is a ‘College Z’ passout. The lawyer has studied in ‘College P’. None of the males studied in ‘College P’ or ‘College Z’.
Q.
From which of the following colleges has the stockbroker passed out?
Read the following passage carefully and answers and answer the question given below it.
A group of friends having seven members A, B, C, D, E, F and G contains four men and three ladies. Each one of them has a different profession—stockbroker, lawyer, doctor, professor, engineer, businessman and banker and each one has passed out of a different college—P, S, V, W, X, Y and Z, not necessarily in the same order. None of the ladies is a businessman or a stockbroker. C is a doctor and she has passed out from ‘college X’. A is a ‘College Y’ passout. B is not a professor. E is a banker and is a ‘College S’ passout. F is a stockbroker and has not studied in ‘College P’. G is a businessman and has studied in ‘College V’. The Professor is a ‘College Z’ passout. The lawyer has studied in ‘College P’. None of the males studied in ‘College P’ or ‘College Z’.
Q.
Which of the following combinations is correct?
In these question symbols @, $, #,* and % are used with different meaning as follows:
‘A@B’ means ‘A is smaller than B’
‘A$B’ means ‘A is greater than B’
‘A#B’ means ‘A is either smaller than or equal to B’
‘A*B’ means ‘A is either greater than or equal to B’
‘A%B’ means ‘A is neither smaller than nor greater than B’
Q.
Statements:
H#T T@L L%F
Conclusion:
I. F$H II.H#L
In these question symbols @, $, #,* and % are used with different meaning as follows:
‘A@B’ means ‘A is smaller than B’
‘A$B’ means ‘A is greater than B’
‘A#B’ means ‘A is either smaller than or equal to B’
‘A*B’ means ‘A is either greater than or equal to B’
‘A%B’ means ‘A is neither smaller than nor greater than B’
Q.
Statements:
V $ I I*M M#Q
Conclusion:
I. I#Q II.I*Q
In these question symbols @, $, #,* and % are used with different meaning as follows:
‘A@B’ means ‘A is smaller than B’
‘A$B’ means ‘A is greater than B’
‘A#B’ means ‘A is either smaller than or equal to B’
‘A*B’ means ‘A is either greater than or equal to B’
‘A%B’ means ‘A is neither smaller than nor greater than B’
Q. Statements:
P@W W*D D$J
Conclusion:
I. J @ P II.J@W
In these question symbols @, $, #,* and % are used with different meaning as follows:
‘A@B’ means ‘A is smaller than B’
‘A$B’ means ‘A is greater than B’
‘A#B’ means ‘A is either smaller than or equal to B’
‘A*B’ means ‘A is either greater than or equal to B’
‘A%B’ means ‘A is neither smaller than nor greater than B’
Q.
Statements:
E@U U%R R$F
Conclusion:
I.E$F II.E*F
In these question symbols @, $, #,* and % are used with different meaning as follows:
‘A@B’ means ‘A is smaller than B’
‘A$B’ means ‘A is greater than B’
‘A#B’ means ‘A is either smaller than or equal to B’
‘A*B’ means ‘A is either greater than or equal to B’
‘A%B’ means ‘A is neither smaller than nor greater than B’
Q.
Statements:
T#J J*I I@W
Conclusion:
I.J@W II.T%I
In these question symbols @, $, #,* and % are used with different meaning as follows:
‘A@B’ means ‘A is smaller than B’
‘A$B’ means ‘A is greater than B’
‘A#B’ means ‘A is either smaller than or equal to B’
‘A*B’ means ‘A is either greater than or equal to B’
‘A%B’ means ‘A is neither smaller than nor greater than B’
Q.
Statements:
K*D D$L L@J
Conclusion:
I.K$L II.K#J
1 videos|19 docs|124 tests
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1 videos|19 docs|124 tests
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