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Read the given passage and answer the question that follows.
"Did you continue firing?"
"Yes," replied the general.
There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the table's edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:
"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?"
"I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all."
"What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?"
"Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing."
"Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question.
"I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."
A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation.
"You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred."
"Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number."
"I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?"
"No, there was no volley shooting."
"The crowd was very dense?"
"It was very dense."
"It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?"
"No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."
Q. Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?
  • a)
    To maximise the number of casualties hit by the firing
  • b)
    To leave room for the crowd to disperse in peace
  • c)
    To break up the crowd quicker as it was very dense
  • d)
    To simply fire a warning shot and ask the crowd to disperse
Correct answer is option 'C'. Can you explain this answer?
Verified Answer
Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did ...
The answer can be made out from the General's response to His Lordship's question about there being no volley shooting. This is again followed by the His Lordship's question about the crowd's density to which the general confirms that it was very dense. Moreover, earlier in the passage, the general states several times that the crowd would not disperse quickly enough. From this, we can infer that the general opted to use individual firing to break up the crowd more quickly.
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Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the table's edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q. Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?

Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.What can be inferred from the passage about the general regarding his decision to fire at the crowd?

Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.According to the passage, why did the crowd in the room gasp when they heard the generals answer?

Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.According to the passage, why did the general believe it was his duty to continue firing?

Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."[This is an extract from Stanley Wolperts fictionalised account entitled Massacre at Jallianwala Bagh, published by Penguin Books India, 1988. The extract is from a section entitled Lahore: November 19, 1919 and deals with the Committee of Inquiry into the Amritsar massacre which condemned the conduct of General Reginald Dyer.]Q.Which of the following CANNOT be inferred from the passage?

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Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?a)To maximise the number of casualties hit by the firingb)To leave room for the crowd to disperse in peacec)To break up the crowd quicker as it was very densed)To simply fire a warning shot and ask the crowd to disperseCorrect answer is option 'C'. Can you explain this answer?
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Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?a)To maximise the number of casualties hit by the firingb)To leave room for the crowd to disperse in peacec)To break up the crowd quicker as it was very densed)To simply fire a warning shot and ask the crowd to disperseCorrect answer is option 'C'. Can you explain this answer? for CLAT 2025 is part of CLAT preparation. The Question and answers have been prepared according to the CLAT exam syllabus. Information about Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?a)To maximise the number of casualties hit by the firingb)To leave room for the crowd to disperse in peacec)To break up the crowd quicker as it was very densed)To simply fire a warning shot and ask the crowd to disperseCorrect answer is option 'C'. Can you explain this answer? covers all topics & solutions for CLAT 2025 Exam. Find important definitions, questions, meanings, examples, exercises and tests below for Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?a)To maximise the number of casualties hit by the firingb)To leave room for the crowd to disperse in peacec)To break up the crowd quicker as it was very densed)To simply fire a warning shot and ask the crowd to disperseCorrect answer is option 'C'. Can you explain this answer?.
Solutions for Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?a)To maximise the number of casualties hit by the firingb)To leave room for the crowd to disperse in peacec)To break up the crowd quicker as it was very densed)To simply fire a warning shot and ask the crowd to disperseCorrect answer is option 'C'. Can you explain this answer? in English & in Hindi are available as part of our courses for CLAT. Download more important topics, notes, lectures and mock test series for CLAT Exam by signing up for free.
Here you can find the meaning of Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?a)To maximise the number of casualties hit by the firingb)To leave room for the crowd to disperse in peacec)To break up the crowd quicker as it was very densed)To simply fire a warning shot and ask the crowd to disperseCorrect answer is option 'C'. Can you explain this answer? defined & explained in the simplest way possible. Besides giving the explanation of Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?a)To maximise the number of casualties hit by the firingb)To leave room for the crowd to disperse in peacec)To break up the crowd quicker as it was very densed)To simply fire a warning shot and ask the crowd to disperseCorrect answer is option 'C'. Can you explain this answer?, a detailed solution for Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?a)To maximise the number of casualties hit by the firingb)To leave room for the crowd to disperse in peacec)To break up the crowd quicker as it was very densed)To simply fire a warning shot and ask the crowd to disperseCorrect answer is option 'C'. Can you explain this answer? has been provided alongside types of Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?a)To maximise the number of casualties hit by the firingb)To leave room for the crowd to disperse in peacec)To break up the crowd quicker as it was very densed)To simply fire a warning shot and ask the crowd to disperseCorrect answer is option 'C'. Can you explain this answer? theory, EduRev gives you an ample number of questions to practice Read the given passage and answer the question that follows."Did you continue firing?""Yes," replied the general.There was an audible gasp that echoed through this crowded room in response to that single word. His Lordship waited for silence to be restored, sitting with eyes lowered, hands clasped tightly on the long table that separated the Committee from everyone else. The folds of his black robe pinched against the tables edge as he hunched forward, leaning heavily on his elbows, asking in a voice strained thin by incredulity:"If the crowd was going to disperse, why did you not stop firing?""I thought it my duty to go on firing until it dispersed. If I fired a little, the effect would not be sufficient. If I had fired a little I should be wrong in firing at all.""What reason had you to suppose that if you had ordered the assembly to leave the Bagh they would not have done so without the necessity of your firing, continued firing for a length of time?""Yes, I think it is quite possible that I could have dispersed them perhaps even without firing.""Why did you not adopt that course" His Lordship asked, shaking his head, more in wonder than horror, as he asked the question."I could not disperse them for some time," the General answered, speaking slowly, sounding distracted as he stared over the heads of the judges, "then they would all come back and laugh at me, and I considered I would be making myself a fool."A wave of startled comment greeted this remark, and the clamour became so loud that His Lordship was obliged to rap his gavel before continuing his interrogation."You know that the casualties were something between four hundred and five hundred.""Yes I have seen it in the papers. I divided all my rounds by five--" He paused and touched his fingertips to his lips, staring vacantly at the ceiling, mumbling, "I am in doubt whether by five or six--to arrive at the number.""I understood that the shooting that took place was individual shooting, and it was not volley shooting?""No, there was no volley shooting.""The crowd was very dense?""It was very dense.""It was unlikely that a man shooting into the crowd will miss?""No, according to the circumstances of the case," the General replied, shaking his head, sounding bewildered. "They were running, and I noticed only a certain number of men were hit. In the centre of the section, the crowd was very dense and therefore if a man directed his fire well he should not miss."Q.Why would the general have resorted to individual firing over volley firing?a)To maximise the number of casualties hit by the firingb)To leave room for the crowd to disperse in peacec)To break up the crowd quicker as it was very densed)To simply fire a warning shot and ask the crowd to disperseCorrect answer is option 'C'. Can you explain this answer? tests, examples and also practice CLAT tests.
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