Page 1
M
M
Date of Exam. :
Duration : 90 Minutes
Max. Marks : 150
Center's Name : ________________
Roll No. : ________________
OMR Sheet No. : ________________
Date of Birth : ________________
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
1. No clarification on the Question paper can be sought. Answer the questions as
they are.
2. There are 150 multiple choice objective type questions. Answer ALL the questions.
3. Each question carries ONE mark. Total marks are 150.
4. There will be negative marking. 0.25 marks will be deducted for every wrong answer.
5. Candidates have to indicate the most appropriate answer by darkening one of the four
responses provided, with BLACk/BLUE BALL pOINT pEN in the OMR Answer Sheet.
Example : For the question, “Where is the Taj Mahal located ?” the correct answer is (b).
(a) Kolkata (b) Agra (c) Bhopal (d) Delhi
Right Method Wrong Methods
——————— —————————————————————
a b c d a b c d a b c d a b c d
6. Answering the question by any method other than the method indicated above shall
be considered wrong answer.
7. More than one response to a question shall be counted as wrong answer.
8. The candidate shall not write anything on the OMR Answer Sheet other than the details
required and in the spaces provide for.
9. After the examination is over, the candidate can carry the test booklet along with
candidate’s copy of the OMR, after handing over the original OMR to the invigilator.
10. The use of any unfair means by any candidate shall result in the cancellation of his/her
candidature.
11. Impersonation is an offence and the candid ate, apart from disqualification, may have
to face criminal prosecution.
12. Electronic gadgets like mobile phones, pagers or calculators etc. are strictly
not permitted inside the Test Centre/Hall.
13. The candidates shall not leave the hall before the end of the test.
?
Question Booklet Sl. No.
Page 2
M
M
Date of Exam. :
Duration : 90 Minutes
Max. Marks : 150
Center's Name : ________________
Roll No. : ________________
OMR Sheet No. : ________________
Date of Birth : ________________
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
1. No clarification on the Question paper can be sought. Answer the questions as
they are.
2. There are 150 multiple choice objective type questions. Answer ALL the questions.
3. Each question carries ONE mark. Total marks are 150.
4. There will be negative marking. 0.25 marks will be deducted for every wrong answer.
5. Candidates have to indicate the most appropriate answer by darkening one of the four
responses provided, with BLACk/BLUE BALL pOINT pEN in the OMR Answer Sheet.
Example : For the question, “Where is the Taj Mahal located ?” the correct answer is (b).
(a) Kolkata (b) Agra (c) Bhopal (d) Delhi
Right Method Wrong Methods
——————— —————————————————————
a b c d a b c d a b c d a b c d
6. Answering the question by any method other than the method indicated above shall
be considered wrong answer.
7. More than one response to a question shall be counted as wrong answer.
8. The candidate shall not write anything on the OMR Answer Sheet other than the details
required and in the spaces provide for.
9. After the examination is over, the candidate can carry the test booklet along with
candidate’s copy of the OMR, after handing over the original OMR to the invigilator.
10. The use of any unfair means by any candidate shall result in the cancellation of his/her
candidature.
11. Impersonation is an offence and the candid ate, apart from disqualification, may have
to face criminal prosecution.
12. Electronic gadgets like mobile phones, pagers or calculators etc. are strictly
not permitted inside the Test Centre/Hall.
13. The candidates shall not leave the hall before the end of the test.
?
Question Booklet Sl. No.
M
LLB
BREAk-Up OF MARkS
Section Subject Marks Q. No. Page No.
A English 35 1 – 35 3 – 8
B
General
Knowledge
35 36 – 70 9 – 13
C Legal Aptitude 35 71 – 105 14 – 28
D Reasoning 35 106 – 140 29 – 36
E Mathematics 10 141 – 150 37 – 38
Total Marks 150
Page 3
M
M
Date of Exam. :
Duration : 90 Minutes
Max. Marks : 150
Center's Name : ________________
Roll No. : ________________
OMR Sheet No. : ________________
Date of Birth : ________________
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
1. No clarification on the Question paper can be sought. Answer the questions as
they are.
2. There are 150 multiple choice objective type questions. Answer ALL the questions.
3. Each question carries ONE mark. Total marks are 150.
4. There will be negative marking. 0.25 marks will be deducted for every wrong answer.
5. Candidates have to indicate the most appropriate answer by darkening one of the four
responses provided, with BLACk/BLUE BALL pOINT pEN in the OMR Answer Sheet.
Example : For the question, “Where is the Taj Mahal located ?” the correct answer is (b).
(a) Kolkata (b) Agra (c) Bhopal (d) Delhi
Right Method Wrong Methods
——————— —————————————————————
a b c d a b c d a b c d a b c d
6. Answering the question by any method other than the method indicated above shall
be considered wrong answer.
7. More than one response to a question shall be counted as wrong answer.
8. The candidate shall not write anything on the OMR Answer Sheet other than the details
required and in the spaces provide for.
9. After the examination is over, the candidate can carry the test booklet along with
candidate’s copy of the OMR, after handing over the original OMR to the invigilator.
10. The use of any unfair means by any candidate shall result in the cancellation of his/her
candidature.
11. Impersonation is an offence and the candid ate, apart from disqualification, may have
to face criminal prosecution.
12. Electronic gadgets like mobile phones, pagers or calculators etc. are strictly
not permitted inside the Test Centre/Hall.
13. The candidates shall not leave the hall before the end of the test.
?
Question Booklet Sl. No.
M
LLB
BREAk-Up OF MARkS
Section Subject Marks Q. No. Page No.
A English 35 1 – 35 3 – 8
B
General
Knowledge
35 36 – 70 9 – 13
C Legal Aptitude 35 71 – 105 14 – 28
D Reasoning 35 106 – 140 29 – 36
E Mathematics 10 141 – 150 37 – 38
Total Marks 150
M
LLB
SECTION – A : ENglISH
Questions 1 – 5 : Read the given passage and answer the questions that follow.
“The night I arrived in Delhi on a visit in January 1996, the elevator at the Maurya Sheraton
took us up to the twelfth floor in a breath-taking six or seven seconds. “Remarkable,” I
commented admiringly to the friendly hotel employee in a maroon sari and business-like
pageboy haircut, who had draped a three-kilogram marigold garland around my neck as
I stepped across the threshold. “We couldn’t have ascended faster in the U. S. of A.”
She took my praise in stride, as well she should have. Jet-lagged after an eighteen-hour
journey from New York, I had failed to notice that this was not some superfast new elevator
technology that the Maurya had brought to Delhi, but rather some highly creative labelling.
W h e n I fi n a l l y w o k e u p a n d l o o k e d o u t m y w i n d o w , I r e a l i z e d t h a t w h a t t h e e l e v a t o r b u t t o n s
had called the twelfth floor was in fact the second. The gleaming Maurya elevator had
merely taken me for a ride – and a shorter ride I’d imagined.
I couldn’t help the accusatory tone out of my voice the next time I ran into the maroon
sari. “Twelfth floor, huh ?” I said pointedly. “I didn’ t think liberalization meant being liberal
with the facts.”
She was surprised that I had taken offense. “Our foreign visitors much prefer to think of
themselves as being on eleventh and twelfth floors than the first or second,” she replied
with wide-eyed innocence. “And they don’t look out of the windows that much.”
Welcome, I thought, to the new India. An India I was discovering for the first time: an India
of five-star hotels, welco ming garlands, and smooth-talking hotel staff, where nothing is
quite what it seems (not even the elevator buttons), where windows are not meant to be
opened and appearances are the only reality. [Shashi Tharoor, India : From Midnight to
the Millennium and Beyond (Arcade Publishing, 1997) 275-276]
1. After reading the last line of the first paragraph, “We couldn’t have ascended faster
in the U. S. of A.”, which of the options do you think the author is most likely to agree
with ?
(a) India never fails to surprise
(b) Indians have been great innovators
(c) Foreigners are turning to India’s technical advancement
(d) It’s a fact that India hasn’t made significant progress
2. As used in the third paragraph, the underlined word “accusatory” most nearly means
all options, except
(a) denunciative (b) criminate
(c) eulogistic (d) censuring
Page 4
M
M
Date of Exam. :
Duration : 90 Minutes
Max. Marks : 150
Center's Name : ________________
Roll No. : ________________
OMR Sheet No. : ________________
Date of Birth : ________________
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
1. No clarification on the Question paper can be sought. Answer the questions as
they are.
2. There are 150 multiple choice objective type questions. Answer ALL the questions.
3. Each question carries ONE mark. Total marks are 150.
4. There will be negative marking. 0.25 marks will be deducted for every wrong answer.
5. Candidates have to indicate the most appropriate answer by darkening one of the four
responses provided, with BLACk/BLUE BALL pOINT pEN in the OMR Answer Sheet.
Example : For the question, “Where is the Taj Mahal located ?” the correct answer is (b).
(a) Kolkata (b) Agra (c) Bhopal (d) Delhi
Right Method Wrong Methods
——————— —————————————————————
a b c d a b c d a b c d a b c d
6. Answering the question by any method other than the method indicated above shall
be considered wrong answer.
7. More than one response to a question shall be counted as wrong answer.
8. The candidate shall not write anything on the OMR Answer Sheet other than the details
required and in the spaces provide for.
9. After the examination is over, the candidate can carry the test booklet along with
candidate’s copy of the OMR, after handing over the original OMR to the invigilator.
10. The use of any unfair means by any candidate shall result in the cancellation of his/her
candidature.
11. Impersonation is an offence and the candid ate, apart from disqualification, may have
to face criminal prosecution.
12. Electronic gadgets like mobile phones, pagers or calculators etc. are strictly
not permitted inside the Test Centre/Hall.
13. The candidates shall not leave the hall before the end of the test.
?
Question Booklet Sl. No.
M
LLB
BREAk-Up OF MARkS
Section Subject Marks Q. No. Page No.
A English 35 1 – 35 3 – 8
B
General
Knowledge
35 36 – 70 9 – 13
C Legal Aptitude 35 71 – 105 14 – 28
D Reasoning 35 106 – 140 29 – 36
E Mathematics 10 141 – 150 37 – 38
Total Marks 150
M
LLB
SECTION – A : ENglISH
Questions 1 – 5 : Read the given passage and answer the questions that follow.
“The night I arrived in Delhi on a visit in January 1996, the elevator at the Maurya Sheraton
took us up to the twelfth floor in a breath-taking six or seven seconds. “Remarkable,” I
commented admiringly to the friendly hotel employee in a maroon sari and business-like
pageboy haircut, who had draped a three-kilogram marigold garland around my neck as
I stepped across the threshold. “We couldn’t have ascended faster in the U. S. of A.”
She took my praise in stride, as well she should have. Jet-lagged after an eighteen-hour
journey from New York, I had failed to notice that this was not some superfast new elevator
technology that the Maurya had brought to Delhi, but rather some highly creative labelling.
W h e n I fi n a l l y w o k e u p a n d l o o k e d o u t m y w i n d o w , I r e a l i z e d t h a t w h a t t h e e l e v a t o r b u t t o n s
had called the twelfth floor was in fact the second. The gleaming Maurya elevator had
merely taken me for a ride – and a shorter ride I’d imagined.
I couldn’t help the accusatory tone out of my voice the next time I ran into the maroon
sari. “Twelfth floor, huh ?” I said pointedly. “I didn’ t think liberalization meant being liberal
with the facts.”
She was surprised that I had taken offense. “Our foreign visitors much prefer to think of
themselves as being on eleventh and twelfth floors than the first or second,” she replied
with wide-eyed innocence. “And they don’t look out of the windows that much.”
Welcome, I thought, to the new India. An India I was discovering for the first time: an India
of five-star hotels, welco ming garlands, and smooth-talking hotel staff, where nothing is
quite what it seems (not even the elevator buttons), where windows are not meant to be
opened and appearances are the only reality. [Shashi Tharoor, India : From Midnight to
the Millennium and Beyond (Arcade Publishing, 1997) 275-276]
1. After reading the last line of the first paragraph, “We couldn’t have ascended faster
in the U. S. of A.”, which of the options do you think the author is most likely to agree
with ?
(a) India never fails to surprise
(b) Indians have been great innovators
(c) Foreigners are turning to India’s technical advancement
(d) It’s a fact that India hasn’t made significant progress
2. As used in the third paragraph, the underlined word “accusatory” most nearly means
all options, except
(a) denunciative (b) criminate
(c) eulogistic (d) censuring
M
LLB
3. It can be inferred from the passage that the author’s impression
(a) transgresses from being proud to being even prouder
(b) plummets from a sense of pride to a sense of disillusionment
(c) trends from a level of disappointment to a level of condemnation
(d) remains steadfast on the thought of being an Indian
4. In the line, “…taken me for a ride – and a shorter ride I’d imagined”. means
(a) the elevator had taken them very swiftly
(b) the hotel was treating its guests like royalties
(c) technology had advanced in third world countries
(d) people were being hoodwinked
5. The tone of the passage could be summed up to be
(a) pensive and remorseful
(b) matter of fact and sombre
(c) humorous and reflective
(d) fiery and critical
Questions 6 – 11 : Choose an appropriate word to fill in each blank space.
________ (6) are increasingly awarding large _________ (7) to plaintiffs who have
experienced _________ (8) comments and harassment or been denied promotions and
________ (9) because of their family responsibilities. These _________ (10) are more
likely to prevail than other employment-related cases. _________ (11) suits on behalf of
caregivers are on the rise as well.
6. (a) Judge (b) Juries (c) Prosecutors (d) Defendants
7. (a) personal injuries (b) kickbacks (c) rewards (d) settlements
8. (a) derogatory (b) directive (c) abusive (d) adulatory
9. (a) perks (b) raises (c) rises (d) reimbursements
10. (a) suits (b) complains (c) accusations (d) remarks
11. (a) Torts (b) Act of Law (c) Class Action (d) Procedural Law
Page 5
M
M
Date of Exam. :
Duration : 90 Minutes
Max. Marks : 150
Center's Name : ________________
Roll No. : ________________
OMR Sheet No. : ________________
Date of Birth : ________________
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
1. No clarification on the Question paper can be sought. Answer the questions as
they are.
2. There are 150 multiple choice objective type questions. Answer ALL the questions.
3. Each question carries ONE mark. Total marks are 150.
4. There will be negative marking. 0.25 marks will be deducted for every wrong answer.
5. Candidates have to indicate the most appropriate answer by darkening one of the four
responses provided, with BLACk/BLUE BALL pOINT pEN in the OMR Answer Sheet.
Example : For the question, “Where is the Taj Mahal located ?” the correct answer is (b).
(a) Kolkata (b) Agra (c) Bhopal (d) Delhi
Right Method Wrong Methods
——————— —————————————————————
a b c d a b c d a b c d a b c d
6. Answering the question by any method other than the method indicated above shall
be considered wrong answer.
7. More than one response to a question shall be counted as wrong answer.
8. The candidate shall not write anything on the OMR Answer Sheet other than the details
required and in the spaces provide for.
9. After the examination is over, the candidate can carry the test booklet along with
candidate’s copy of the OMR, after handing over the original OMR to the invigilator.
10. The use of any unfair means by any candidate shall result in the cancellation of his/her
candidature.
11. Impersonation is an offence and the candid ate, apart from disqualification, may have
to face criminal prosecution.
12. Electronic gadgets like mobile phones, pagers or calculators etc. are strictly
not permitted inside the Test Centre/Hall.
13. The candidates shall not leave the hall before the end of the test.
?
Question Booklet Sl. No.
M
LLB
BREAk-Up OF MARkS
Section Subject Marks Q. No. Page No.
A English 35 1 – 35 3 – 8
B
General
Knowledge
35 36 – 70 9 – 13
C Legal Aptitude 35 71 – 105 14 – 28
D Reasoning 35 106 – 140 29 – 36
E Mathematics 10 141 – 150 37 – 38
Total Marks 150
M
LLB
SECTION – A : ENglISH
Questions 1 – 5 : Read the given passage and answer the questions that follow.
“The night I arrived in Delhi on a visit in January 1996, the elevator at the Maurya Sheraton
took us up to the twelfth floor in a breath-taking six or seven seconds. “Remarkable,” I
commented admiringly to the friendly hotel employee in a maroon sari and business-like
pageboy haircut, who had draped a three-kilogram marigold garland around my neck as
I stepped across the threshold. “We couldn’t have ascended faster in the U. S. of A.”
She took my praise in stride, as well she should have. Jet-lagged after an eighteen-hour
journey from New York, I had failed to notice that this was not some superfast new elevator
technology that the Maurya had brought to Delhi, but rather some highly creative labelling.
W h e n I fi n a l l y w o k e u p a n d l o o k e d o u t m y w i n d o w , I r e a l i z e d t h a t w h a t t h e e l e v a t o r b u t t o n s
had called the twelfth floor was in fact the second. The gleaming Maurya elevator had
merely taken me for a ride – and a shorter ride I’d imagined.
I couldn’t help the accusatory tone out of my voice the next time I ran into the maroon
sari. “Twelfth floor, huh ?” I said pointedly. “I didn’ t think liberalization meant being liberal
with the facts.”
She was surprised that I had taken offense. “Our foreign visitors much prefer to think of
themselves as being on eleventh and twelfth floors than the first or second,” she replied
with wide-eyed innocence. “And they don’t look out of the windows that much.”
Welcome, I thought, to the new India. An India I was discovering for the first time: an India
of five-star hotels, welco ming garlands, and smooth-talking hotel staff, where nothing is
quite what it seems (not even the elevator buttons), where windows are not meant to be
opened and appearances are the only reality. [Shashi Tharoor, India : From Midnight to
the Millennium and Beyond (Arcade Publishing, 1997) 275-276]
1. After reading the last line of the first paragraph, “We couldn’t have ascended faster
in the U. S. of A.”, which of the options do you think the author is most likely to agree
with ?
(a) India never fails to surprise
(b) Indians have been great innovators
(c) Foreigners are turning to India’s technical advancement
(d) It’s a fact that India hasn’t made significant progress
2. As used in the third paragraph, the underlined word “accusatory” most nearly means
all options, except
(a) denunciative (b) criminate
(c) eulogistic (d) censuring
M
LLB
3. It can be inferred from the passage that the author’s impression
(a) transgresses from being proud to being even prouder
(b) plummets from a sense of pride to a sense of disillusionment
(c) trends from a level of disappointment to a level of condemnation
(d) remains steadfast on the thought of being an Indian
4. In the line, “…taken me for a ride – and a shorter ride I’d imagined”. means
(a) the elevator had taken them very swiftly
(b) the hotel was treating its guests like royalties
(c) technology had advanced in third world countries
(d) people were being hoodwinked
5. The tone of the passage could be summed up to be
(a) pensive and remorseful
(b) matter of fact and sombre
(c) humorous and reflective
(d) fiery and critical
Questions 6 – 11 : Choose an appropriate word to fill in each blank space.
________ (6) are increasingly awarding large _________ (7) to plaintiffs who have
experienced _________ (8) comments and harassment or been denied promotions and
________ (9) because of their family responsibilities. These _________ (10) are more
likely to prevail than other employment-related cases. _________ (11) suits on behalf of
caregivers are on the rise as well.
6. (a) Judge (b) Juries (c) Prosecutors (d) Defendants
7. (a) personal injuries (b) kickbacks (c) rewards (d) settlements
8. (a) derogatory (b) directive (c) abusive (d) adulatory
9. (a) perks (b) raises (c) rises (d) reimbursements
10. (a) suits (b) complains (c) accusations (d) remarks
11. (a) Torts (b) Act of Law (c) Class Action (d) Procedural Law
M
LLB
For Questions 12 – 14 : Find the correct meaning of the highlighted word in each
of the sentences from the choices given below.
12. Ravi was an impecunious student noted for his academic excellence.
(a) brilliant and studious
(b) rude and arrogant
(c) shrewd and manipulative
(d) having little or no money
13. The lady looked rather lugubrious.
(a) sad and sorrowful
(b) eager and anxious
(c) happy and cheerful
(d) high and energetic
14. She displayed a recalcitrant attitude.
(a) enthusiastic
(b) resisting authority or discipline
(c) weak and frightened
(d) hollow and insincere
Questions 15 and 16 : Choose the most appropriate option that completes the
given sentences.
15. To be successful, managers must see themselves more as catalysts for problem
solving than as problem solvers _____________.
(a) per se (b) a priori (c) pro rata (d) faux pas
16. The art of speaking or writing effectively is _____________
(a) Rhetoric (b) Brevity
(c) Garrulousness (d) Verbosity
17. What do we call someone who tries to “put something across”, good or bad and
who does not want scrutiny or criticism, but a specific action ?
(a) Enthusiast
(b) Sloganeer
(c) Propagandist
(d) Zealot
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