Page 1
RBI Grade B Previous Year Question Paper 2016
English Language (Questions & Answers)
Directions Q. (1 - 7): In the given passage, there are blanks, each of which has been numbered.
Against each, five words are suggested, one of which fits the blank appropriately.
We all have a ___ (1) ___ in the infrastructure surrounding us-the roads, buildings, power lines and
telephone networks that we __ (2) _____ on daily. How well they are built and operated is __ (3) ____
to economic growth and is a key arbiter of an economy's competitiveness- and yet, virtually every
economy faces an array of infrastructure challenges. Just a few examples illustrate some of the
pressing issues. South Africa's power distribution network has an estimated maintenance backlog of $4
billion- equivalent to half of the country's total investment in electronic power generation and distribution
in 2011. The U.S. Department of Transportation estimates that 15% of the country's roads are in an
unacceptable condition and says that road congestion costs the US an estimated $100 billion per year.
Just to keep _____ (4) _____ with anticipated global GDP growth, the world needs to spend $57 trillion,
or on average $3.2 trillion a year, on infrastructure over the next 18 years. That is more than the entire
worldwide stock of infrastructure on the ground today-and nearly 60% more than the world has invested
over the past 18 years. Tackling maintenance backlogs, future-proofing infrastructure to cope with
climate change and ___ (5) _____development goals such as access to clean water and all-weather
roads to transport goods to markets would cost a great deal. The bill for all of that looks prohibitive at a
time when many governments are highly indebted and capital is tight. A focus on both, the huge need
for additional investment and potential difficulties in financing it, ___ (6) ____ the debate Pessimism
rules, but it needn't be that way. There are ways of cutting the bill down to size and dealing with the
challenge. The answer ___ (7) ____ in improving the way we plan, build and operate infrastructure- in
other words, we need to boost its productivity.
Q. (1)
1. Stake
2. Interest
3. Compromise
4. Decision
5. Subsidy
Page 2
RBI Grade B Previous Year Question Paper 2016
English Language (Questions & Answers)
Directions Q. (1 - 7): In the given passage, there are blanks, each of which has been numbered.
Against each, five words are suggested, one of which fits the blank appropriately.
We all have a ___ (1) ___ in the infrastructure surrounding us-the roads, buildings, power lines and
telephone networks that we __ (2) _____ on daily. How well they are built and operated is __ (3) ____
to economic growth and is a key arbiter of an economy's competitiveness- and yet, virtually every
economy faces an array of infrastructure challenges. Just a few examples illustrate some of the
pressing issues. South Africa's power distribution network has an estimated maintenance backlog of $4
billion- equivalent to half of the country's total investment in electronic power generation and distribution
in 2011. The U.S. Department of Transportation estimates that 15% of the country's roads are in an
unacceptable condition and says that road congestion costs the US an estimated $100 billion per year.
Just to keep _____ (4) _____ with anticipated global GDP growth, the world needs to spend $57 trillion,
or on average $3.2 trillion a year, on infrastructure over the next 18 years. That is more than the entire
worldwide stock of infrastructure on the ground today-and nearly 60% more than the world has invested
over the past 18 years. Tackling maintenance backlogs, future-proofing infrastructure to cope with
climate change and ___ (5) _____development goals such as access to clean water and all-weather
roads to transport goods to markets would cost a great deal. The bill for all of that looks prohibitive at a
time when many governments are highly indebted and capital is tight. A focus on both, the huge need
for additional investment and potential difficulties in financing it, ___ (6) ____ the debate Pessimism
rules, but it needn't be that way. There are ways of cutting the bill down to size and dealing with the
challenge. The answer ___ (7) ____ in improving the way we plan, build and operate infrastructure- in
other words, we need to boost its productivity.
Q. (1)
1. Stake
2. Interest
3. Compromise
4. Decision
5. Subsidy
Answer: 1 (We all have a stake in the infrastructure)
Q. (2)
1. Use
2. Rely
3. Confide
4. Commute
5. Charge
Answer: 2 (We all have a stake in the infrastructure surrounding us-the roads, buildings, power lines
and telephone networks that we rely on daily)
Q. (3)
1. Close
2. Deciding
3. Trivial
4. Crucial
5. Insistent
Answer: 4 (How well they are built and operated is crucial to economic growth and is a key arbiter of
an economy's competitiveness- and yet, virtually every economy faces an array of infrastructure
challenges)
Q. (4)
1. Gait
2. Stride
3. Walk
4. Tread
5. pace
Page 3
RBI Grade B Previous Year Question Paper 2016
English Language (Questions & Answers)
Directions Q. (1 - 7): In the given passage, there are blanks, each of which has been numbered.
Against each, five words are suggested, one of which fits the blank appropriately.
We all have a ___ (1) ___ in the infrastructure surrounding us-the roads, buildings, power lines and
telephone networks that we __ (2) _____ on daily. How well they are built and operated is __ (3) ____
to economic growth and is a key arbiter of an economy's competitiveness- and yet, virtually every
economy faces an array of infrastructure challenges. Just a few examples illustrate some of the
pressing issues. South Africa's power distribution network has an estimated maintenance backlog of $4
billion- equivalent to half of the country's total investment in electronic power generation and distribution
in 2011. The U.S. Department of Transportation estimates that 15% of the country's roads are in an
unacceptable condition and says that road congestion costs the US an estimated $100 billion per year.
Just to keep _____ (4) _____ with anticipated global GDP growth, the world needs to spend $57 trillion,
or on average $3.2 trillion a year, on infrastructure over the next 18 years. That is more than the entire
worldwide stock of infrastructure on the ground today-and nearly 60% more than the world has invested
over the past 18 years. Tackling maintenance backlogs, future-proofing infrastructure to cope with
climate change and ___ (5) _____development goals such as access to clean water and all-weather
roads to transport goods to markets would cost a great deal. The bill for all of that looks prohibitive at a
time when many governments are highly indebted and capital is tight. A focus on both, the huge need
for additional investment and potential difficulties in financing it, ___ (6) ____ the debate Pessimism
rules, but it needn't be that way. There are ways of cutting the bill down to size and dealing with the
challenge. The answer ___ (7) ____ in improving the way we plan, build and operate infrastructure- in
other words, we need to boost its productivity.
Q. (1)
1. Stake
2. Interest
3. Compromise
4. Decision
5. Subsidy
Answer: 1 (We all have a stake in the infrastructure)
Q. (2)
1. Use
2. Rely
3. Confide
4. Commute
5. Charge
Answer: 2 (We all have a stake in the infrastructure surrounding us-the roads, buildings, power lines
and telephone networks that we rely on daily)
Q. (3)
1. Close
2. Deciding
3. Trivial
4. Crucial
5. Insistent
Answer: 4 (How well they are built and operated is crucial to economic growth and is a key arbiter of
an economy's competitiveness- and yet, virtually every economy faces an array of infrastructure
challenges)
Q. (4)
1. Gait
2. Stride
3. Walk
4. Tread
5. pace
Answer: 5 (Just to keep pace with anticipated global GDP growth, the world needs to spend $57
trillion, or on average $3.2 trillion a year, on infrastructure over the next 18 years)
Q. (5)
1. Competing
2. Meeting
3. Succeeding
4. Engaging
5. Agreeing
Answer: 2 (Tackling maintenance backlogs, future-proofing infrastructure to cope with climate change
and meeting development goals such as access to clean water and all-weather roads to transport
goods to markets would cost a great deal)
Q. (6)
1. Convey
2. Subject
3. Dominates
4. Command
5. Prompt
Answer: 3 (A focus on both, the huge need for additional investment and potential difficulties in
financing it, dominates the debate Pessimism rules, but it needn't be that way)
Q. (7)
1. Reclines
2. Lay
3. Expects
4. Lies
5. Belongs
Page 4
RBI Grade B Previous Year Question Paper 2016
English Language (Questions & Answers)
Directions Q. (1 - 7): In the given passage, there are blanks, each of which has been numbered.
Against each, five words are suggested, one of which fits the blank appropriately.
We all have a ___ (1) ___ in the infrastructure surrounding us-the roads, buildings, power lines and
telephone networks that we __ (2) _____ on daily. How well they are built and operated is __ (3) ____
to economic growth and is a key arbiter of an economy's competitiveness- and yet, virtually every
economy faces an array of infrastructure challenges. Just a few examples illustrate some of the
pressing issues. South Africa's power distribution network has an estimated maintenance backlog of $4
billion- equivalent to half of the country's total investment in electronic power generation and distribution
in 2011. The U.S. Department of Transportation estimates that 15% of the country's roads are in an
unacceptable condition and says that road congestion costs the US an estimated $100 billion per year.
Just to keep _____ (4) _____ with anticipated global GDP growth, the world needs to spend $57 trillion,
or on average $3.2 trillion a year, on infrastructure over the next 18 years. That is more than the entire
worldwide stock of infrastructure on the ground today-and nearly 60% more than the world has invested
over the past 18 years. Tackling maintenance backlogs, future-proofing infrastructure to cope with
climate change and ___ (5) _____development goals such as access to clean water and all-weather
roads to transport goods to markets would cost a great deal. The bill for all of that looks prohibitive at a
time when many governments are highly indebted and capital is tight. A focus on both, the huge need
for additional investment and potential difficulties in financing it, ___ (6) ____ the debate Pessimism
rules, but it needn't be that way. There are ways of cutting the bill down to size and dealing with the
challenge. The answer ___ (7) ____ in improving the way we plan, build and operate infrastructure- in
other words, we need to boost its productivity.
Q. (1)
1. Stake
2. Interest
3. Compromise
4. Decision
5. Subsidy
Answer: 1 (We all have a stake in the infrastructure)
Q. (2)
1. Use
2. Rely
3. Confide
4. Commute
5. Charge
Answer: 2 (We all have a stake in the infrastructure surrounding us-the roads, buildings, power lines
and telephone networks that we rely on daily)
Q. (3)
1. Close
2. Deciding
3. Trivial
4. Crucial
5. Insistent
Answer: 4 (How well they are built and operated is crucial to economic growth and is a key arbiter of
an economy's competitiveness- and yet, virtually every economy faces an array of infrastructure
challenges)
Q. (4)
1. Gait
2. Stride
3. Walk
4. Tread
5. pace
Answer: 5 (Just to keep pace with anticipated global GDP growth, the world needs to spend $57
trillion, or on average $3.2 trillion a year, on infrastructure over the next 18 years)
Q. (5)
1. Competing
2. Meeting
3. Succeeding
4. Engaging
5. Agreeing
Answer: 2 (Tackling maintenance backlogs, future-proofing infrastructure to cope with climate change
and meeting development goals such as access to clean water and all-weather roads to transport
goods to markets would cost a great deal)
Q. (6)
1. Convey
2. Subject
3. Dominates
4. Command
5. Prompt
Answer: 3 (A focus on both, the huge need for additional investment and potential difficulties in
financing it, dominates the debate Pessimism rules, but it needn't be that way)
Q. (7)
1. Reclines
2. Lay
3. Expects
4. Lies
5. Belongs
Answer: 4 (The answer lies in improving the way we plan, build and operate infrastructure- in other
words, we need to boost its productivity)
Directions Q. (8 - 10): Select the phrase/connector from the given three options which can be used to
form a single sentence from the two sentences given below, implying the same meaning expressed in
the statement sentences.
Q. (8) Higher prices of cereals, rice, fruits and pulses led to an increase in food inflation. Non – food
inflation was driven mainly by fibres and oilseeds.
A. While higher prices of cereals
B. Despite the higher price of rice, fruits and pulses
C. Non- food inflation was always driven by
1. Both A and B
2. Only B
3. Both B and C
4. Only A
5. None of these
Answer: 4
Q. (9) The entrepreneurship ethos in India has come a long way and has made rapid strides in recent
years. It now ranks in the top five start-up communities in the world.
A. India ranks fifth among the start-up communities in the world
B. he country has made rapid strides in recent years because
C. Moreover, the entrepreneurship ethos in India has come a long way
1. Both A and B
2. Only B
3. Only C
4. Only A
5. None of these
Page 5
RBI Grade B Previous Year Question Paper 2016
English Language (Questions & Answers)
Directions Q. (1 - 7): In the given passage, there are blanks, each of which has been numbered.
Against each, five words are suggested, one of which fits the blank appropriately.
We all have a ___ (1) ___ in the infrastructure surrounding us-the roads, buildings, power lines and
telephone networks that we __ (2) _____ on daily. How well they are built and operated is __ (3) ____
to economic growth and is a key arbiter of an economy's competitiveness- and yet, virtually every
economy faces an array of infrastructure challenges. Just a few examples illustrate some of the
pressing issues. South Africa's power distribution network has an estimated maintenance backlog of $4
billion- equivalent to half of the country's total investment in electronic power generation and distribution
in 2011. The U.S. Department of Transportation estimates that 15% of the country's roads are in an
unacceptable condition and says that road congestion costs the US an estimated $100 billion per year.
Just to keep _____ (4) _____ with anticipated global GDP growth, the world needs to spend $57 trillion,
or on average $3.2 trillion a year, on infrastructure over the next 18 years. That is more than the entire
worldwide stock of infrastructure on the ground today-and nearly 60% more than the world has invested
over the past 18 years. Tackling maintenance backlogs, future-proofing infrastructure to cope with
climate change and ___ (5) _____development goals such as access to clean water and all-weather
roads to transport goods to markets would cost a great deal. The bill for all of that looks prohibitive at a
time when many governments are highly indebted and capital is tight. A focus on both, the huge need
for additional investment and potential difficulties in financing it, ___ (6) ____ the debate Pessimism
rules, but it needn't be that way. There are ways of cutting the bill down to size and dealing with the
challenge. The answer ___ (7) ____ in improving the way we plan, build and operate infrastructure- in
other words, we need to boost its productivity.
Q. (1)
1. Stake
2. Interest
3. Compromise
4. Decision
5. Subsidy
Answer: 1 (We all have a stake in the infrastructure)
Q. (2)
1. Use
2. Rely
3. Confide
4. Commute
5. Charge
Answer: 2 (We all have a stake in the infrastructure surrounding us-the roads, buildings, power lines
and telephone networks that we rely on daily)
Q. (3)
1. Close
2. Deciding
3. Trivial
4. Crucial
5. Insistent
Answer: 4 (How well they are built and operated is crucial to economic growth and is a key arbiter of
an economy's competitiveness- and yet, virtually every economy faces an array of infrastructure
challenges)
Q. (4)
1. Gait
2. Stride
3. Walk
4. Tread
5. pace
Answer: 5 (Just to keep pace with anticipated global GDP growth, the world needs to spend $57
trillion, or on average $3.2 trillion a year, on infrastructure over the next 18 years)
Q. (5)
1. Competing
2. Meeting
3. Succeeding
4. Engaging
5. Agreeing
Answer: 2 (Tackling maintenance backlogs, future-proofing infrastructure to cope with climate change
and meeting development goals such as access to clean water and all-weather roads to transport
goods to markets would cost a great deal)
Q. (6)
1. Convey
2. Subject
3. Dominates
4. Command
5. Prompt
Answer: 3 (A focus on both, the huge need for additional investment and potential difficulties in
financing it, dominates the debate Pessimism rules, but it needn't be that way)
Q. (7)
1. Reclines
2. Lay
3. Expects
4. Lies
5. Belongs
Answer: 4 (The answer lies in improving the way we plan, build and operate infrastructure- in other
words, we need to boost its productivity)
Directions Q. (8 - 10): Select the phrase/connector from the given three options which can be used to
form a single sentence from the two sentences given below, implying the same meaning expressed in
the statement sentences.
Q. (8) Higher prices of cereals, rice, fruits and pulses led to an increase in food inflation. Non – food
inflation was driven mainly by fibres and oilseeds.
A. While higher prices of cereals
B. Despite the higher price of rice, fruits and pulses
C. Non- food inflation was always driven by
1. Both A and B
2. Only B
3. Both B and C
4. Only A
5. None of these
Answer: 4
Q. (9) The entrepreneurship ethos in India has come a long way and has made rapid strides in recent
years. It now ranks in the top five start-up communities in the world.
A. India ranks fifth among the start-up communities in the world
B. he country has made rapid strides in recent years because
C. Moreover, the entrepreneurship ethos in India has come a long way
1. Both A and B
2. Only B
3. Only C
4. Only A
5. None of these
Answer: 2
Q. (10) There are enough dirges being sung for public sector banks, but strangely the performance of
their stocks does not reflect this. Five out of the seven public sector banks made losses and the profit –
makers showed a worse bad loans ratio.
A. On account of the fact that five out of seven public sector banks made losses
B. The performance of public sector banks does not reflect
C. Although dirges are being sung for public sector banks
1. Both A and B
2. Only B
3. Only C
4. Only A
5. None of these
Answer: 4
Directions Q. (11 - 15): Each question given below has two blanks, each blank indicates that
something has been omitted. Choose the word that best fits in the meaning of the sentence as a
whole.
Q. (11) Most auto-rickshaw drivers in the city __________ to ply for short distances since doing so
does not ________ them much.
1. agree, profit
2. Refuse, earn
3. disagree, revenue
4. accept, affects
5. ask, comfort
Answer: 2 (Most auto-rickshaw drivers in the city refuse to ply for short distances since doing so does
not earn them much)
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