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illilil1Itilil ililil
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tI I ttIIrI! I ttI III II I ItlI I I I IIr tIt
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ADMISSION TEST
-
2015
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!
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I
Date of Exam.
Duration
Max. l\ilarks
03dMay, 2015 (Sunday)
90 Minutes
150
Center's Name
Roll No.
ONiIR Sheet No.
Date of Birth
I 2. There are 150 multiple choice objective type questions.
Answer ALLthe questions.
I
i
3. Each question
carries ONE matk. Total marks are 150.
Question Booklet
Sl. No.
19876
'1
't.
ttlo ctarification on the question paper can be sought. An"*"r rr" qru*,
*, n".
I
4. There is no negative marking.
!
5. Candidates have to indicate the correct answer by darkening one ot the four responses
!
T
I
provided,
with HB Pencil in the OMR Answer Sheet.
(c) Bhopal
I
I
I
I
I
I
-
Example : Forthe question,
"where is the Taj N4ahal located ?", the correct answer is (b).
I
Example : Forthe question, "where is the Taj N4ahal located ?", the correct anr
I
The candidate has to darken the corresponding cjrcle as indicated below :
|
{a)
xotkara (b) Asra
I
Right Method
! @oo@ @@o@ @@@@ @(5)o@
r
I ---- I
I
6, Answering the questions
by any method other than the method indicated above shall
I
I
be considered incorrect and no marks will be awarded for the same.
I
17.
Morethanone respcnse to a question shall be counted aswrong.
I
I 8. The candidate shall not write anything on the OMR Answer Sheet other than the details I
I
required and in the spaces
providedfor.
I
I 9. After the Test is over, the candidate has to return the test booklet along with the OMR I
I
Answer Sheet to the invigilator.
I
l'10.
The use of any unfair means by any candidate shall result in the cancellation of
I
I
his / her candidature.
I
l1
1. lmpersonation is an otfence and the candidate, apart from disqualification, may have
I
I
to face criminal
prosecution.
I
112.
Electronic gadgets like mobile phones, pagers
or calculators are strictly not
I
I
permitted
insidethe Test Cenire/Hall.
t
113.
The candidates shall notleavethehall belore the Test is over.
I
lr rr rr r r:rrrrr rrr rrr rrr rllr I r t:rr rr tl
(d) Delhi
Wrong Methods
Page 2
illilil1Itilil ililil
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tI I ttIIrI! I ttI III II I ItlI I I I IIr tIt
I
ADMISSION TEST
-
2015
I
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!
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I
Date of Exam.
Duration
Max. l\ilarks
03dMay, 2015 (Sunday)
90 Minutes
150
Center's Name
Roll No.
ONiIR Sheet No.
Date of Birth
I 2. There are 150 multiple choice objective type questions.
Answer ALLthe questions.
I
i
3. Each question
carries ONE matk. Total marks are 150.
Question Booklet
Sl. No.
19876
'1
't.
ttlo ctarification on the question paper can be sought. An"*"r rr" qru*,
*, n".
I
4. There is no negative marking.
!
5. Candidates have to indicate the correct answer by darkening one ot the four responses
!
T
I
provided,
with HB Pencil in the OMR Answer Sheet.
(c) Bhopal
I
I
I
I
I
I
-
Example : Forthe question,
"where is the Taj N4ahal located ?", the correct answer is (b).
I
Example : Forthe question, "where is the Taj N4ahal located ?", the correct anr
I
The candidate has to darken the corresponding cjrcle as indicated below :
|
{a)
xotkara (b) Asra
I
Right Method
! @oo@ @@o@ @@@@ @(5)o@
r
I ---- I
I
6, Answering the questions
by any method other than the method indicated above shall
I
I
be considered incorrect and no marks will be awarded for the same.
I
17.
Morethanone respcnse to a question shall be counted aswrong.
I
I 8. The candidate shall not write anything on the OMR Answer Sheet other than the details I
I
required and in the spaces
providedfor.
I
I 9. After the Test is over, the candidate has to return the test booklet along with the OMR I
I
Answer Sheet to the invigilator.
I
l'10.
The use of any unfair means by any candidate shall result in the cancellation of
I
I
his / her candidature.
I
l1
1. lmpersonation is an otfence and the candidate, apart from disqualification, may have
I
I
to face criminal
prosecution.
I
112.
Electronic gadgets like mobile phones, pagers
or calculators are strictly not
I
I
permitted
insidethe Test Cenire/Hall.
t
113.
The candidates shall notleavethehall belore the Test is over.
I
lr rr rr r r:rrrrr rrr rrr rrr rllr I r t:rr rr tl
(d) Delhi
Wrong Methods
rIililril
BREAK-UP OF MARKS
English
Gen€ral Knowledge
Legal Aptitude
Reasoning
141
-
150
Mathematics
Page 3
illilil1Itilil ililil
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tI I ttIIrI! I ttI III II I ItlI I I I IIr tIt
I
ADMISSION TEST
-
2015
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!
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I
Date of Exam.
Duration
Max. l\ilarks
03dMay, 2015 (Sunday)
90 Minutes
150
Center's Name
Roll No.
ONiIR Sheet No.
Date of Birth
I 2. There are 150 multiple choice objective type questions.
Answer ALLthe questions.
I
i
3. Each question
carries ONE matk. Total marks are 150.
Question Booklet
Sl. No.
19876
'1
't.
ttlo ctarification on the question paper can be sought. An"*"r rr" qru*,
*, n".
I
4. There is no negative marking.
!
5. Candidates have to indicate the correct answer by darkening one ot the four responses
!
T
I
provided,
with HB Pencil in the OMR Answer Sheet.
(c) Bhopal
I
I
I
I
I
I
-
Example : Forthe question,
"where is the Taj N4ahal located ?", the correct answer is (b).
I
Example : Forthe question, "where is the Taj N4ahal located ?", the correct anr
I
The candidate has to darken the corresponding cjrcle as indicated below :
|
{a)
xotkara (b) Asra
I
Right Method
! @oo@ @@o@ @@@@ @(5)o@
r
I ---- I
I
6, Answering the questions
by any method other than the method indicated above shall
I
I
be considered incorrect and no marks will be awarded for the same.
I
17.
Morethanone respcnse to a question shall be counted aswrong.
I
I 8. The candidate shall not write anything on the OMR Answer Sheet other than the details I
I
required and in the spaces
providedfor.
I
I 9. After the Test is over, the candidate has to return the test booklet along with the OMR I
I
Answer Sheet to the invigilator.
I
l'10.
The use of any unfair means by any candidate shall result in the cancellation of
I
I
his / her candidature.
I
l1
1. lmpersonation is an otfence and the candidate, apart from disqualification, may have
I
I
to face criminal
prosecution.
I
112.
Electronic gadgets like mobile phones, pagers
or calculators are strictly not
I
I
permitted
insidethe Test Cenire/Hall.
t
113.
The candidates shall notleavethehall belore the Test is over.
I
lr rr rr r r:rrrrr rrr rrr rrr rllr I r t:rr rr tl
(d) Delhi
Wrong Methods
rIililril
BREAK-UP OF MARKS
English
Gen€ral Knowledge
Legal Aptitude
Reasoning
141
-
150
Mathematics
lmuilil
Directions (O-
1
-
6) : The questions
in this section are based on the passage.
The
questions
are to be answered on the basis of what is stated or implied in the pass;ge.
For
some of the questions,
more than one ol the choices could conceivabiy answer the question.
However, you are to choose the best answer; that is, the responsd that most ac;urately
and completely answers the questions.
The Constitution ofthe United States
protects
both property
rights and freedom ol speech.
At times these rights conflict. Resolution then requires a determination as to the
ipe
of
property
involved. lf the property
is private
and not open to the general public,
the owner
may absolutely deny the exercise of the right of free speech theraon. On the other hand, if
public
land is at issue, the First Amendment protections
of expression are applicable.
However, lhe exercise ol lree speech thereon is not absolute. Bather it |s necessarv lo
determine the appropriateness of the Iorum. This requires that consideration be oiven io a
number ol factors including: character and normaluse ofthe property,
lhe extent t-o which it
is open to the public,
and the number and types of persons
who frequent it. lf the forum is
clearly public
or clearly private, the resolution of the greater
of rights is relatively straight
forward,
ln the area of quasi-public property,
balancing these rights has produced
a dilemma. This
is the situation when a private
owner permits
the general public
to use his property.
When
persons
seekto use the land for passing
out handbills orpicketing, how is a conflict between
property
rights and freedom of expression resolved ?
The precept
thata private property
owner surrenders his rights in proportion
to the extent to
which he opens up his property to the
public
is not new. In 1675, Lord Chief Justice Hale
wrote that when private property is "atfected with a
public
interest, it ceases to be orivate.'
Throughout the development of Anglo-American taw, the individual has never
ooasessed
absolute dominion over property. Land becomes clothed with a Dublic interest when the
owner devotes his property
to a use in which the public has an interesl- In support of this
position
the chairman ol the board of the Wilde Lake Shopping Centre in Columbia,
Maryland said :
The only real purpose
and
justification
of any ot these centres is to serve the DeoDle in the
area-notthe merchants, notthe developers, notthe architects. The success ortailure of a
regionalshopping centre will be measured by what it does forthe people
it seeks to serve.
These doctrines should be applied when accommodation must be made between a
shopping centre owner's private property rights and the public's
right to free expression. lt
is hoped that when the Court is asked to balance these conflicting rights itwillkeep in mind
what Justice Black said in 1945: "When we balance the constitutional rights of owners of
property
against lhose ol the people
to enjoy (First
Amendment) freedom(s) ..... we remain
mindful of the fact that the latter occupy a preterred position."
1. In which one of the lollowing cases would the owner of the property probably
be
most free to restrict the lreedom of sDeech ?
(a) an amusement park
attended by live million people
each year
owned by a
multinational company.
(b) a small grocery
shopping mall owned by a husband and wife
(c) an enclosed shopping mall owned by a single woman
(d) an eighl-unit residentialapartment building owned bya targe realesiate company
Page 4
illilil1Itilil ililil
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tI I ttIIrI! I ttI III II I ItlI I I I IIr tIt
I
ADMISSION TEST
-
2015
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!
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I
Date of Exam.
Duration
Max. l\ilarks
03dMay, 2015 (Sunday)
90 Minutes
150
Center's Name
Roll No.
ONiIR Sheet No.
Date of Birth
I 2. There are 150 multiple choice objective type questions.
Answer ALLthe questions.
I
i
3. Each question
carries ONE matk. Total marks are 150.
Question Booklet
Sl. No.
19876
'1
't.
ttlo ctarification on the question paper can be sought. An"*"r rr" qru*,
*, n".
I
4. There is no negative marking.
!
5. Candidates have to indicate the correct answer by darkening one ot the four responses
!
T
I
provided,
with HB Pencil in the OMR Answer Sheet.
(c) Bhopal
I
I
I
I
I
I
-
Example : Forthe question,
"where is the Taj N4ahal located ?", the correct answer is (b).
I
Example : Forthe question, "where is the Taj N4ahal located ?", the correct anr
I
The candidate has to darken the corresponding cjrcle as indicated below :
|
{a)
xotkara (b) Asra
I
Right Method
! @oo@ @@o@ @@@@ @(5)o@
r
I ---- I
I
6, Answering the questions
by any method other than the method indicated above shall
I
I
be considered incorrect and no marks will be awarded for the same.
I
17.
Morethanone respcnse to a question shall be counted aswrong.
I
I 8. The candidate shall not write anything on the OMR Answer Sheet other than the details I
I
required and in the spaces
providedfor.
I
I 9. After the Test is over, the candidate has to return the test booklet along with the OMR I
I
Answer Sheet to the invigilator.
I
l'10.
The use of any unfair means by any candidate shall result in the cancellation of
I
I
his / her candidature.
I
l1
1. lmpersonation is an otfence and the candidate, apart from disqualification, may have
I
I
to face criminal
prosecution.
I
112.
Electronic gadgets like mobile phones, pagers
or calculators are strictly not
I
I
permitted
insidethe Test Cenire/Hall.
t
113.
The candidates shall notleavethehall belore the Test is over.
I
lr rr rr r r:rrrrr rrr rrr rrr rllr I r t:rr rr tl
(d) Delhi
Wrong Methods
rIililril
BREAK-UP OF MARKS
English
Gen€ral Knowledge
Legal Aptitude
Reasoning
141
-
150
Mathematics
lmuilil
Directions (O-
1
-
6) : The questions
in this section are based on the passage.
The
questions
are to be answered on the basis of what is stated or implied in the pass;ge.
For
some of the questions,
more than one ol the choices could conceivabiy answer the question.
However, you are to choose the best answer; that is, the responsd that most ac;urately
and completely answers the questions.
The Constitution ofthe United States
protects
both property
rights and freedom ol speech.
At times these rights conflict. Resolution then requires a determination as to the
ipe
of
property
involved. lf the property
is private
and not open to the general public,
the owner
may absolutely deny the exercise of the right of free speech theraon. On the other hand, if
public
land is at issue, the First Amendment protections
of expression are applicable.
However, lhe exercise ol lree speech thereon is not absolute. Bather it |s necessarv lo
determine the appropriateness of the Iorum. This requires that consideration be oiven io a
number ol factors including: character and normaluse ofthe property,
lhe extent t-o which it
is open to the public,
and the number and types of persons
who frequent it. lf the forum is
clearly public
or clearly private, the resolution of the greater
of rights is relatively straight
forward,
ln the area of quasi-public property,
balancing these rights has produced
a dilemma. This
is the situation when a private
owner permits
the general public
to use his property.
When
persons
seekto use the land for passing
out handbills orpicketing, how is a conflict between
property
rights and freedom of expression resolved ?
The precept
thata private property
owner surrenders his rights in proportion
to the extent to
which he opens up his property to the
public
is not new. In 1675, Lord Chief Justice Hale
wrote that when private property is "atfected with a
public
interest, it ceases to be orivate.'
Throughout the development of Anglo-American taw, the individual has never
ooasessed
absolute dominion over property. Land becomes clothed with a Dublic interest when the
owner devotes his property
to a use in which the public has an interesl- In support of this
position
the chairman ol the board of the Wilde Lake Shopping Centre in Columbia,
Maryland said :
The only real purpose
and
justification
of any ot these centres is to serve the DeoDle in the
area-notthe merchants, notthe developers, notthe architects. The success ortailure of a
regionalshopping centre will be measured by what it does forthe people
it seeks to serve.
These doctrines should be applied when accommodation must be made between a
shopping centre owner's private property rights and the public's
right to free expression. lt
is hoped that when the Court is asked to balance these conflicting rights itwillkeep in mind
what Justice Black said in 1945: "When we balance the constitutional rights of owners of
property
against lhose ol the people
to enjoy (First
Amendment) freedom(s) ..... we remain
mindful of the fact that the latter occupy a preterred position."
1. In which one of the lollowing cases would the owner of the property probably
be
most free to restrict the lreedom of sDeech ?
(a) an amusement park
attended by live million people
each year
owned by a
multinational company.
(b) a small grocery
shopping mall owned by a husband and wife
(c) an enclosed shopping mall owned by a single woman
(d) an eighl-unit residentialapartment building owned bya targe realesiate company
2.
3.
illilltfrtfin||[
A conflict between
property rights and lreedom of speech might arise in all ot the
following situations, EXCEPT
(a) protestors carrying signs outside a cinema in an enclosed shopping mall
(b) a disqruntled employee
passing out leaflets in front of a hairdresseis salon
(c) a religious order soliciting funds and converts in the swimming
pool area ot a
condominium
(d) a candidate for mayor handing out flyers in lront of his opponent's headquarters
According to the passage, an owner's freedom to deny freedom of speech on his
property is determined by all ol the following EXCEPT
(a) whether or not the land is open to the
public
(b)
the nature of and the usual use ofthe
property
(c) the type of
persons who frequents the land
(d)
the nature of character of the owner
We can infer trom the
passage that the author believes that shopping malls in
America
(a)
should be in the service of the
people who frequent them
(b) have a right to
prohibit
distribution of advertising handbills
(c) have a right to control any distributed materials
(d) should
permit any charitable solicitations
5. According to the
passage, the idea that a property owner's rights decline as the
property is more used by the general public
(a) is
peculiar to recent Supreme Court decisions
(b) is attested by a three-hundred-year-old opinion
(c)
conflicts with the idea that property atfected with a
public interest ceases to be
pnvare
(d) is now universally accepted in Great Britain and in Canada
6. All other things being equal, the courts must
(a) lavour First Amendment rights over
property rights
(b) favour
property rights over First Amendment rights
(c) treat property rights and First Amendment rights equally
(d) protect property rights of the owners
Directions
(Q. 7
-
11) : For each of the following words below, a context is provided. From
the alternatives
given, pickthe word or
phrase that is closest in meaning in the given context.
7. Alphanumeric : The inclusion ol alphanumeric features in cellular
phones has made
sending Slvlss very convenient.
(a) using only alphabets
(c) using OSCOLA
(b)
(d)
using digital codes
using both letters and numerals
Page 5
illilil1Itilil ililil
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tI I ttIIrI! I ttI III II I ItlI I I I IIr tIt
I
ADMISSION TEST
-
2015
I
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t
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t
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T
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!
I
I
I
I
I
Date of Exam.
Duration
Max. l\ilarks
03dMay, 2015 (Sunday)
90 Minutes
150
Center's Name
Roll No.
ONiIR Sheet No.
Date of Birth
I 2. There are 150 multiple choice objective type questions.
Answer ALLthe questions.
I
i
3. Each question
carries ONE matk. Total marks are 150.
Question Booklet
Sl. No.
19876
'1
't.
ttlo ctarification on the question paper can be sought. An"*"r rr" qru*,
*, n".
I
4. There is no negative marking.
!
5. Candidates have to indicate the correct answer by darkening one ot the four responses
!
T
I
provided,
with HB Pencil in the OMR Answer Sheet.
(c) Bhopal
I
I
I
I
I
I
-
Example : Forthe question,
"where is the Taj N4ahal located ?", the correct answer is (b).
I
Example : Forthe question, "where is the Taj N4ahal located ?", the correct anr
I
The candidate has to darken the corresponding cjrcle as indicated below :
|
{a)
xotkara (b) Asra
I
Right Method
! @oo@ @@o@ @@@@ @(5)o@
r
I ---- I
I
6, Answering the questions
by any method other than the method indicated above shall
I
I
be considered incorrect and no marks will be awarded for the same.
I
17.
Morethanone respcnse to a question shall be counted aswrong.
I
I 8. The candidate shall not write anything on the OMR Answer Sheet other than the details I
I
required and in the spaces
providedfor.
I
I 9. After the Test is over, the candidate has to return the test booklet along with the OMR I
I
Answer Sheet to the invigilator.
I
l'10.
The use of any unfair means by any candidate shall result in the cancellation of
I
I
his / her candidature.
I
l1
1. lmpersonation is an otfence and the candidate, apart from disqualification, may have
I
I
to face criminal
prosecution.
I
112.
Electronic gadgets like mobile phones, pagers
or calculators are strictly not
I
I
permitted
insidethe Test Cenire/Hall.
t
113.
The candidates shall notleavethehall belore the Test is over.
I
lr rr rr r r:rrrrr rrr rrr rrr rllr I r t:rr rr tl
(d) Delhi
Wrong Methods
rIililril
BREAK-UP OF MARKS
English
Gen€ral Knowledge
Legal Aptitude
Reasoning
141
-
150
Mathematics
lmuilil
Directions (O-
1
-
6) : The questions
in this section are based on the passage.
The
questions
are to be answered on the basis of what is stated or implied in the pass;ge.
For
some of the questions,
more than one ol the choices could conceivabiy answer the question.
However, you are to choose the best answer; that is, the responsd that most ac;urately
and completely answers the questions.
The Constitution ofthe United States
protects
both property
rights and freedom ol speech.
At times these rights conflict. Resolution then requires a determination as to the
ipe
of
property
involved. lf the property
is private
and not open to the general public,
the owner
may absolutely deny the exercise of the right of free speech theraon. On the other hand, if
public
land is at issue, the First Amendment protections
of expression are applicable.
However, lhe exercise ol lree speech thereon is not absolute. Bather it |s necessarv lo
determine the appropriateness of the Iorum. This requires that consideration be oiven io a
number ol factors including: character and normaluse ofthe property,
lhe extent t-o which it
is open to the public,
and the number and types of persons
who frequent it. lf the forum is
clearly public
or clearly private, the resolution of the greater
of rights is relatively straight
forward,
ln the area of quasi-public property,
balancing these rights has produced
a dilemma. This
is the situation when a private
owner permits
the general public
to use his property.
When
persons
seekto use the land for passing
out handbills orpicketing, how is a conflict between
property
rights and freedom of expression resolved ?
The precept
thata private property
owner surrenders his rights in proportion
to the extent to
which he opens up his property to the
public
is not new. In 1675, Lord Chief Justice Hale
wrote that when private property is "atfected with a
public
interest, it ceases to be orivate.'
Throughout the development of Anglo-American taw, the individual has never
ooasessed
absolute dominion over property. Land becomes clothed with a Dublic interest when the
owner devotes his property
to a use in which the public has an interesl- In support of this
position
the chairman ol the board of the Wilde Lake Shopping Centre in Columbia,
Maryland said :
The only real purpose
and
justification
of any ot these centres is to serve the DeoDle in the
area-notthe merchants, notthe developers, notthe architects. The success ortailure of a
regionalshopping centre will be measured by what it does forthe people
it seeks to serve.
These doctrines should be applied when accommodation must be made between a
shopping centre owner's private property rights and the public's
right to free expression. lt
is hoped that when the Court is asked to balance these conflicting rights itwillkeep in mind
what Justice Black said in 1945: "When we balance the constitutional rights of owners of
property
against lhose ol the people
to enjoy (First
Amendment) freedom(s) ..... we remain
mindful of the fact that the latter occupy a preterred position."
1. In which one of the lollowing cases would the owner of the property probably
be
most free to restrict the lreedom of sDeech ?
(a) an amusement park
attended by live million people
each year
owned by a
multinational company.
(b) a small grocery
shopping mall owned by a husband and wife
(c) an enclosed shopping mall owned by a single woman
(d) an eighl-unit residentialapartment building owned bya targe realesiate company
2.
3.
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A conflict between
property rights and lreedom of speech might arise in all ot the
following situations, EXCEPT
(a) protestors carrying signs outside a cinema in an enclosed shopping mall
(b) a disqruntled employee
passing out leaflets in front of a hairdresseis salon
(c) a religious order soliciting funds and converts in the swimming
pool area ot a
condominium
(d) a candidate for mayor handing out flyers in lront of his opponent's headquarters
According to the passage, an owner's freedom to deny freedom of speech on his
property is determined by all ol the following EXCEPT
(a) whether or not the land is open to the
public
(b)
the nature of and the usual use ofthe
property
(c) the type of
persons who frequents the land
(d)
the nature of character of the owner
We can infer trom the
passage that the author believes that shopping malls in
America
(a)
should be in the service of the
people who frequent them
(b) have a right to
prohibit
distribution of advertising handbills
(c) have a right to control any distributed materials
(d) should
permit any charitable solicitations
5. According to the
passage, the idea that a property owner's rights decline as the
property is more used by the general public
(a) is
peculiar to recent Supreme Court decisions
(b) is attested by a three-hundred-year-old opinion
(c)
conflicts with the idea that property atfected with a
public interest ceases to be
pnvare
(d) is now universally accepted in Great Britain and in Canada
6. All other things being equal, the courts must
(a) lavour First Amendment rights over
property rights
(b) favour
property rights over First Amendment rights
(c) treat property rights and First Amendment rights equally
(d) protect property rights of the owners
Directions
(Q. 7
-
11) : For each of the following words below, a context is provided. From
the alternatives
given, pickthe word or
phrase that is closest in meaning in the given context.
7. Alphanumeric : The inclusion ol alphanumeric features in cellular
phones has made
sending Slvlss very convenient.
(a) using only alphabets
(c) using OSCOLA
(b)
(d)
using digital codes
using both letters and numerals
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8. Oligarchy : Mrigank argued that all political parties,
including those which profess
democratic values become the instruments of their leaders who eventually become
a self-interested and self-satisf ied oligarchy.
(a)
rule of a mob or crowd
(b) small group
of
people
having control of state
(c)
an iron-rule of democrats
(d) a socialist rule of activists
9. Perestroika : In the 1980's, the "state socialist' tradiiion became totally discredited
as Gorbachev's programme
of
perestrolka
revealed the fundamental failures of the
planned
economies of the Communist bloc.
(a) closing off all entries (b)
manifesto of failure
(c) opening up (d)
nagging poticies
'10.
Bequeath : In consequences, they bequeathed to their followers no clear vision of
the economics of socialism, that is state ownership and planning the means of
production,
distribution and exchange, and others had to advocate market socialism,
the state regulation of capital rather than state ownership of planning.
(a) hand down or pass on (b) a powerful
will of the people
(c) a method of governing (d) to gjve in promise
1 1. Redundancy : Communication is a subtle, complex and continuously fluctuating
process,
affected by a multitude of factors both external and
'nternal,
and two such
elements are noise and redundancy.
(a) that part of message that is predictable
or conventional
(b)
that word or
phrase
which is surprising
(c) that meaning of a word whjch is sparingly used
(d) that message which has no clear meaning
Directions (Q. 12
-
15) : In the following questions,
choose the word which is odd one out.
12. (a) bedlam (b)
anarchy (c) anatomise (d) insurrection
13. (a) miscreant (b)
defendant (c) accused (d) ptaintitf
14. (a) assault (b) extortion (c) sub-poena (d) battery
15. (a)
barrister (b) attorney (c) juror (d)
advocare
Direction (Q. 16
-
20) : Choose the exact meaning of the idioms/phrases.
'16.
Alpha and Omega
(a) related to science (b) the beginning and the end
(c) AtoZ (d)
noneofthese
'17.
Ante-diluvium
(a) old time (b) up-to-dare
(c) time period (d)
against dualism
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