Question Description
Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question.The 'selfie' or self-taken picture was invented in 1839 1839 - but its time is now. As people hang selfies in every tech space, on mobile phones, social media and messages, the selfie's bloomed into a million forms. We love our everyday selfie — a self-taken picture of you or me, working out, dancing at a wedding, eating cheesecake, even brushing our teeth. But there's also the glittering celeb-selfie, memorably mirrored in Ellen de Generes snap of 10 Hollywood superstars taking a break from bagging Oscars to huddle together and say cheese. There are political selfies, epitomised by the media-savvy Obamas, Barack even pausing from mourning Nelson Mandela at Madiba's funeral to take a cheery selfie with David Cameron. The latter's blasé-attitude - I love my selfie! — perhaps inspired our own Narendra Modi to take a lotus-pose selfie by an election booth, distance be damned, which put him in trouble with the Election Commission. But other selfies make you acutely aware of distances. Like that taken by a Japanese astronaut, all alone in deep, dark space, a planet glowing philosophically before him, his camera reflecting poignantly in his glass helmet.The selfie works in wondrous ways - it says hello to the world while recording intimate histories. It's self-art, selfie-takers figuring the finest angles, the right light, the shadow play, that best captures them against the Qutub-Minar, sporting that new skirt, deep in their lover's arms. Nowadays they are redesigning mobile phones and their cameras to be able to capture better selfies. The selfie is your very own archive, your personal canvas and emotion, aided by constant technological innovation. For cynics who argue this is pure self-love, why not? It's nice to love yourself and your life - and to share this through a selfie of your times.Q. The mobile phones and their cameras are being redesigned to ______.a)Capture better and glittering celeb-selfies.b)Say hello to the world while recording intimate histories.c)Make budget-friendly phones for the people who are fond of taking selfies.d)Be able to capture better selfies.Correct answer is option 'D'. 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 Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question.The 'selfie' or self-taken picture was invented in 1839 1839 - but its time is now. As people hang selfies in every tech space, on mobile phones, social media and messages, the selfie's bloomed into a million forms. We love our everyday selfie — a self-taken picture of you or me, working out, dancing at a wedding, eating cheesecake, even brushing our teeth. But there's also the glittering celeb-selfie, memorably mirrored in Ellen de Generes snap of 10 Hollywood superstars taking a break from bagging Oscars to huddle together and say cheese. There are political selfies, epitomised by the media-savvy Obamas, Barack even pausing from mourning Nelson Mandela at Madiba's funeral to take a cheery selfie with David Cameron. The latter's blasé-attitude - I love my selfie! — perhaps inspired our own Narendra Modi to take a lotus-pose selfie by an election booth, distance be damned, which put him in trouble with the Election Commission. But other selfies make you acutely aware of distances. Like that taken by a Japanese astronaut, all alone in deep, dark space, a planet glowing philosophically before him, his camera reflecting poignantly in his glass helmet.The selfie works in wondrous ways - it says hello to the world while recording intimate histories. It's self-art, selfie-takers figuring the finest angles, the right light, the shadow play, that best captures them against the Qutub-Minar, sporting that new skirt, deep in their lover's arms. Nowadays they are redesigning mobile phones and their cameras to be able to capture better selfies. The selfie is your very own archive, your personal canvas and emotion, aided by constant technological innovation. For cynics who argue this is pure self-love, why not? It's nice to love yourself and your life - and to share this through a selfie of your times.Q. The mobile phones and their cameras are being redesigned to ______.a)Capture better and glittering celeb-selfies.b)Say hello to the world while recording intimate histories.c)Make budget-friendly phones for the people who are fond of taking selfies.d)Be able to capture better selfies.Correct answer is option 'D'. Can you explain this answer? covers all topics & solutions for CLAT 2025 Exam.
Find important definitions, questions, meanings, examples, exercises and tests below for Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question.The 'selfie' or self-taken picture was invented in 1839 1839 - but its time is now. As people hang selfies in every tech space, on mobile phones, social media and messages, the selfie's bloomed into a million forms. We love our everyday selfie — a self-taken picture of you or me, working out, dancing at a wedding, eating cheesecake, even brushing our teeth. But there's also the glittering celeb-selfie, memorably mirrored in Ellen de Generes snap of 10 Hollywood superstars taking a break from bagging Oscars to huddle together and say cheese. There are political selfies, epitomised by the media-savvy Obamas, Barack even pausing from mourning Nelson Mandela at Madiba's funeral to take a cheery selfie with David Cameron. The latter's blasé-attitude - I love my selfie! — perhaps inspired our own Narendra Modi to take a lotus-pose selfie by an election booth, distance be damned, which put him in trouble with the Election Commission. But other selfies make you acutely aware of distances. Like that taken by a Japanese astronaut, all alone in deep, dark space, a planet glowing philosophically before him, his camera reflecting poignantly in his glass helmet.The selfie works in wondrous ways - it says hello to the world while recording intimate histories. It's self-art, selfie-takers figuring the finest angles, the right light, the shadow play, that best captures them against the Qutub-Minar, sporting that new skirt, deep in their lover's arms. Nowadays they are redesigning mobile phones and their cameras to be able to capture better selfies. The selfie is your very own archive, your personal canvas and emotion, aided by constant technological innovation. For cynics who argue this is pure self-love, why not? It's nice to love yourself and your life - and to share this through a selfie of your times.Q. The mobile phones and their cameras are being redesigned to ______.a)Capture better and glittering celeb-selfies.b)Say hello to the world while recording intimate histories.c)Make budget-friendly phones for the people who are fond of taking selfies.d)Be able to capture better selfies.Correct answer is option 'D'. Can you explain this answer?.
Solutions for Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question.The 'selfie' or self-taken picture was invented in 1839 1839 - but its time is now. As people hang selfies in every tech space, on mobile phones, social media and messages, the selfie's bloomed into a million forms. We love our everyday selfie — a self-taken picture of you or me, working out, dancing at a wedding, eating cheesecake, even brushing our teeth. But there's also the glittering celeb-selfie, memorably mirrored in Ellen de Generes snap of 10 Hollywood superstars taking a break from bagging Oscars to huddle together and say cheese. There are political selfies, epitomised by the media-savvy Obamas, Barack even pausing from mourning Nelson Mandela at Madiba's funeral to take a cheery selfie with David Cameron. The latter's blasé-attitude - I love my selfie! — perhaps inspired our own Narendra Modi to take a lotus-pose selfie by an election booth, distance be damned, which put him in trouble with the Election Commission. But other selfies make you acutely aware of distances. Like that taken by a Japanese astronaut, all alone in deep, dark space, a planet glowing philosophically before him, his camera reflecting poignantly in his glass helmet.The selfie works in wondrous ways - it says hello to the world while recording intimate histories. It's self-art, selfie-takers figuring the finest angles, the right light, the shadow play, that best captures them against the Qutub-Minar, sporting that new skirt, deep in their lover's arms. Nowadays they are redesigning mobile phones and their cameras to be able to capture better selfies. The selfie is your very own archive, your personal canvas and emotion, aided by constant technological innovation. For cynics who argue this is pure self-love, why not? It's nice to love yourself and your life - and to share this through a selfie of your times.Q. The mobile phones and their cameras are being redesigned to ______.a)Capture better and glittering celeb-selfies.b)Say hello to the world while recording intimate histories.c)Make budget-friendly phones for the people who are fond of taking selfies.d)Be able to capture better selfies.Correct answer is option 'D'. 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 Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question.The 'selfie' or self-taken picture was invented in 1839 1839 - but its time is now. As people hang selfies in every tech space, on mobile phones, social media and messages, the selfie's bloomed into a million forms. We love our everyday selfie — a self-taken picture of you or me, working out, dancing at a wedding, eating cheesecake, even brushing our teeth. But there's also the glittering celeb-selfie, memorably mirrored in Ellen de Generes snap of 10 Hollywood superstars taking a break from bagging Oscars to huddle together and say cheese. There are political selfies, epitomised by the media-savvy Obamas, Barack even pausing from mourning Nelson Mandela at Madiba's funeral to take a cheery selfie with David Cameron. The latter's blasé-attitude - I love my selfie! — perhaps inspired our own Narendra Modi to take a lotus-pose selfie by an election booth, distance be damned, which put him in trouble with the Election Commission. But other selfies make you acutely aware of distances. Like that taken by a Japanese astronaut, all alone in deep, dark space, a planet glowing philosophically before him, his camera reflecting poignantly in his glass helmet.The selfie works in wondrous ways - it says hello to the world while recording intimate histories. It's self-art, selfie-takers figuring the finest angles, the right light, the shadow play, that best captures them against the Qutub-Minar, sporting that new skirt, deep in their lover's arms. Nowadays they are redesigning mobile phones and their cameras to be able to capture better selfies. The selfie is your very own archive, your personal canvas and emotion, aided by constant technological innovation. For cynics who argue this is pure self-love, why not? It's nice to love yourself and your life - and to share this through a selfie of your times.Q. The mobile phones and their cameras are being redesigned to ______.a)Capture better and glittering celeb-selfies.b)Say hello to the world while recording intimate histories.c)Make budget-friendly phones for the people who are fond of taking selfies.d)Be able to capture better selfies.Correct answer is option 'D'. Can you explain this answer? defined & explained in the simplest way possible. Besides giving the explanation of
Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question.The 'selfie' or self-taken picture was invented in 1839 1839 - but its time is now. As people hang selfies in every tech space, on mobile phones, social media and messages, the selfie's bloomed into a million forms. We love our everyday selfie — a self-taken picture of you or me, working out, dancing at a wedding, eating cheesecake, even brushing our teeth. But there's also the glittering celeb-selfie, memorably mirrored in Ellen de Generes snap of 10 Hollywood superstars taking a break from bagging Oscars to huddle together and say cheese. There are political selfies, epitomised by the media-savvy Obamas, Barack even pausing from mourning Nelson Mandela at Madiba's funeral to take a cheery selfie with David Cameron. The latter's blasé-attitude - I love my selfie! — perhaps inspired our own Narendra Modi to take a lotus-pose selfie by an election booth, distance be damned, which put him in trouble with the Election Commission. But other selfies make you acutely aware of distances. Like that taken by a Japanese astronaut, all alone in deep, dark space, a planet glowing philosophically before him, his camera reflecting poignantly in his glass helmet.The selfie works in wondrous ways - it says hello to the world while recording intimate histories. It's self-art, selfie-takers figuring the finest angles, the right light, the shadow play, that best captures them against the Qutub-Minar, sporting that new skirt, deep in their lover's arms. Nowadays they are redesigning mobile phones and their cameras to be able to capture better selfies. The selfie is your very own archive, your personal canvas and emotion, aided by constant technological innovation. For cynics who argue this is pure self-love, why not? It's nice to love yourself and your life - and to share this through a selfie of your times.Q. The mobile phones and their cameras are being redesigned to ______.a)Capture better and glittering celeb-selfies.b)Say hello to the world while recording intimate histories.c)Make budget-friendly phones for the people who are fond of taking selfies.d)Be able to capture better selfies.Correct answer is option 'D'. Can you explain this answer?, a detailed solution for Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question.The 'selfie' or self-taken picture was invented in 1839 1839 - but its time is now. As people hang selfies in every tech space, on mobile phones, social media and messages, the selfie's bloomed into a million forms. We love our everyday selfie — a self-taken picture of you or me, working out, dancing at a wedding, eating cheesecake, even brushing our teeth. But there's also the glittering celeb-selfie, memorably mirrored in Ellen de Generes snap of 10 Hollywood superstars taking a break from bagging Oscars to huddle together and say cheese. There are political selfies, epitomised by the media-savvy Obamas, Barack even pausing from mourning Nelson Mandela at Madiba's funeral to take a cheery selfie with David Cameron. The latter's blasé-attitude - I love my selfie! — perhaps inspired our own Narendra Modi to take a lotus-pose selfie by an election booth, distance be damned, which put him in trouble with the Election Commission. But other selfies make you acutely aware of distances. Like that taken by a Japanese astronaut, all alone in deep, dark space, a planet glowing philosophically before him, his camera reflecting poignantly in his glass helmet.The selfie works in wondrous ways - it says hello to the world while recording intimate histories. It's self-art, selfie-takers figuring the finest angles, the right light, the shadow play, that best captures them against the Qutub-Minar, sporting that new skirt, deep in their lover's arms. Nowadays they are redesigning mobile phones and their cameras to be able to capture better selfies. The selfie is your very own archive, your personal canvas and emotion, aided by constant technological innovation. For cynics who argue this is pure self-love, why not? It's nice to love yourself and your life - and to share this through a selfie of your times.Q. The mobile phones and their cameras are being redesigned to ______.a)Capture better and glittering celeb-selfies.b)Say hello to the world while recording intimate histories.c)Make budget-friendly phones for the people who are fond of taking selfies.d)Be able to capture better selfies.Correct answer is option 'D'. Can you explain this answer? has been provided alongside types of Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question.The 'selfie' or self-taken picture was invented in 1839 1839 - but its time is now. As people hang selfies in every tech space, on mobile phones, social media and messages, the selfie's bloomed into a million forms. We love our everyday selfie — a self-taken picture of you or me, working out, dancing at a wedding, eating cheesecake, even brushing our teeth. But there's also the glittering celeb-selfie, memorably mirrored in Ellen de Generes snap of 10 Hollywood superstars taking a break from bagging Oscars to huddle together and say cheese. There are political selfies, epitomised by the media-savvy Obamas, Barack even pausing from mourning Nelson Mandela at Madiba's funeral to take a cheery selfie with David Cameron. The latter's blasé-attitude - I love my selfie! — perhaps inspired our own Narendra Modi to take a lotus-pose selfie by an election booth, distance be damned, which put him in trouble with the Election Commission. But other selfies make you acutely aware of distances. Like that taken by a Japanese astronaut, all alone in deep, dark space, a planet glowing philosophically before him, his camera reflecting poignantly in his glass helmet.The selfie works in wondrous ways - it says hello to the world while recording intimate histories. It's self-art, selfie-takers figuring the finest angles, the right light, the shadow play, that best captures them against the Qutub-Minar, sporting that new skirt, deep in their lover's arms. Nowadays they are redesigning mobile phones and their cameras to be able to capture better selfies. The selfie is your very own archive, your personal canvas and emotion, aided by constant technological innovation. For cynics who argue this is pure self-love, why not? It's nice to love yourself and your life - and to share this through a selfie of your times.Q. The mobile phones and their cameras are being redesigned to ______.a)Capture better and glittering celeb-selfies.b)Say hello to the world while recording intimate histories.c)Make budget-friendly phones for the people who are fond of taking selfies.d)Be able to capture better selfies.Correct answer is option 'D'. Can you explain this answer? theory, EduRev gives you an
ample number of questions to practice Directions: Read the following passage and answer the question.The 'selfie' or self-taken picture was invented in 1839 1839 - but its time is now. As people hang selfies in every tech space, on mobile phones, social media and messages, the selfie's bloomed into a million forms. We love our everyday selfie — a self-taken picture of you or me, working out, dancing at a wedding, eating cheesecake, even brushing our teeth. But there's also the glittering celeb-selfie, memorably mirrored in Ellen de Generes snap of 10 Hollywood superstars taking a break from bagging Oscars to huddle together and say cheese. There are political selfies, epitomised by the media-savvy Obamas, Barack even pausing from mourning Nelson Mandela at Madiba's funeral to take a cheery selfie with David Cameron. The latter's blasé-attitude - I love my selfie! — perhaps inspired our own Narendra Modi to take a lotus-pose selfie by an election booth, distance be damned, which put him in trouble with the Election Commission. But other selfies make you acutely aware of distances. Like that taken by a Japanese astronaut, all alone in deep, dark space, a planet glowing philosophically before him, his camera reflecting poignantly in his glass helmet.The selfie works in wondrous ways - it says hello to the world while recording intimate histories. It's self-art, selfie-takers figuring the finest angles, the right light, the shadow play, that best captures them against the Qutub-Minar, sporting that new skirt, deep in their lover's arms. Nowadays they are redesigning mobile phones and their cameras to be able to capture better selfies. The selfie is your very own archive, your personal canvas and emotion, aided by constant technological innovation. For cynics who argue this is pure self-love, why not? It's nice to love yourself and your life - and to share this through a selfie of your times.Q. The mobile phones and their cameras are being redesigned to ______.a)Capture better and glittering celeb-selfies.b)Say hello to the world while recording intimate histories.c)Make budget-friendly phones for the people who are fond of taking selfies.d)Be able to capture better selfies.Correct answer is option 'D'. Can you explain this answer? tests, examples and also practice CLAT tests.