Directions: Choose the correct synonym out of the four choices given below.
Gimmick
Directions: Choose the correct synonym out of the four choices given below.
Pilfered
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Directions: Choose the correct synonym out of the four choices given below.
Scathing
Directions: Choose the correct synonym out of the four choices given below.
Slovenly
Directions: Choose the correct synonym out of the four choices given below.
Tutelage
Directions: Each of the following questions consists of a word, followed by four words or group of words. Select the antonym of the words given below.
Pretext
Directions: Each of the following questions consists of a word, followed by four words or group of words. Select the antonym of the words given below.
Divulge
Directions: Each of the following questions consists of a word, followed by four words or group of words. Select the antonym of the words given below.
Murky
Directions: Each of the following questions consists of a word, followed by four words or group of words. Select the antonym of the words given below.
Tyro
Directions: Each of the following questions consists of a word, followed by four words or group of words. Select the antonym of the words given below.
Vaunt
Directions: Choose the correct option out of the four choices given below.
Q. He did not dare to venture ......... new enterprise.
Directions: Choose the correct option out of the four choices given below.
Q. He glanced ......... the letter in a hurry and handed it back to me.
Directions: Choose the correct option out of the four choices given below.
Q. She felt remorse later on ...... neglecting her old parents.
Choose the correct option out of the four choices given below.
Q. Some say that taking liquor ......... limits does not harm a person.
Directions: Choose the correct option out of the four choices given below.
Q. Some say that taking liquor ......... limits does not harm a person.
Directions: Select the correct meaning of the bold idioms and phrases out of the four choices given below.
Q. The judiciary and legislature in the country are at logger heads.
Directions: Select the correct meaning of the bold idioms and phrases out of the four choices given below.
Q. The party leaders said that the membership growing by leaps and bounds.
Directions: Select the correct meaning of the bold idioms and phrases out of the four choices given below.
Q. A lot of these boys push their bodies to the max, spending three or more hours a day in the gym.
Directions: Select the correct meaning of the bold idioms and phrases out of the four choices given below.
Q. China is trying to mend fences with Russia after the recent border dispute.
Directions: Select the correct meaning of the bold idioms and phrases out of the four choices given below.
Q. Most people know that the politician was just using smoke and mirrors to make things look better than they really were.
Directions: Each passage consists of six sentences. The first and the sixth sentences are given in the beginning. The middle four sentences in each have been jumbled up. These are labelled, P, Q, R and S. You are required to find out the proper order of the four sentences.
S1 : Our house is high up on the Yorkshire coast and close to the sea
S6 : Between the two, shifting backwards and forwards at certain seasons of the year, lies the most horrible quicks and on the shores of Yorkshire.
P : One is called the North spit and another the South
Q : The sand hills here run down to the sea and end in two stretches of rock, sticking out opposite to each other
R : This one leads through a dark plantation of fir trees and brings you out between low cliffs to the loveliest and ugliest little bay on all our coasts
S : There are beautiful walls all around us in every direction except one
The proper sequence should be
Directions: Each passage consists of six sentences. The first and the sixth sentences are given in the beginning. The middle four sentences in each have been jumbled up. These are labelled, P, Q, R and S. You are required to find out the proper order of the four sentences.
S1 : Unhappiness and discontent spring not only from poverty
S6 : We suffer from sickness of spirit and hence, we should discover our.
P : Man is a strange creature, fundamentally different from other animals
Q : If they are undeveloped and unsatisfied, he may have all the comforts of the wealth, but still feel that life is not worthwhile
R : He has far horizons, invariable hopes and spiritual powers
S : What is missing in our age is the soul, there is nothing wrong with the body
The proper sequence should be
Directions: Given below are a few commonly used foreign language phrases, select the correct answer from the four options given below.
En bloc
Directions: Given below are a few commonly used foreign language phrases, select the correct answer from the four options given below.
Detenu
Directions: Given below are a few commonly used foreign language phrases, select the correct answer from the four options given below.
Gratis
Directions: Given below are a few commonly used foreign language phrases, select the correct answer from the four options given below.
Mutatis mutandis
Given below are a few commonly used foreign language phrases, select the correct answer from the four options given below.
Matinee
Directions: Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.
After the ‘Liberalisation’, ‘Globalisation’ and the consequent change in the new international economic order as well as new information technology order, a new catchy phrase is being coined. ‘A New Health Order’ talking about setting it up is the theme of the WHO-sponsored international conference on primary health and medical care, currently being held at Milan in Italy. While much has been said and written on establishing ‘new order’, little has actually been done. Will the conference at Milan too swear by the ‘new health order’, go home and then forget about it.
While the present medical and health care set-up in poor countries further entrenches itself ? This does not have to be the fate of the radical resolutions that will undoubtedly be passed at Milan. Unlike creating a new world economic or information order, establishing a new health set-up is essentially a matter for individual countries to accomplish. No conflict of international interests is involved. But this advantage is, at least until it begins to take concrete shape, only theoretical. The million-dollar question is whether individual third-world governments are able and willing to muster the will, the resources, the administrative and other infrastructure to carry out what it is entirely within their power to attain and implements.
The dimensions of the problem are known and the solutions broadly agreed on. The present medical and health care system is urban-based, closely geared to drugs, hospitals and expensively trained apathetic doctors. The bulk of the population in poor countries, who live in rural areas, are left untouched by all this and must rely on traditional healers. The answer is to turn out medical/health personnel sufficiently but not expensively, trained to handle routine complaints and to get villagers to pay adequate attention to cleanliness, hygienic sanitation, garbage disposal and other elementary but crucial matters. More complicated ailments can be referred to properly equipped centres in district towns, cities and metropolises. Traditional healers, whom villagers trust, can be among these intermediate personnel. Some third-world countries, including India, have launched or are preparing elaborate schemed of this nature. But the experience is not quite happy. There is resistance from the medical establishment which sees them as little more than licensed quackery, but is not prepared either to offer condensed medical courses such as the former licentiate course available in this country and unwisely scrapped. There is the question of how much importance to give to indigenious system of medicine. And there is the difficult matter of striking the right balance between preventive health care and curative medical attention. These are complex issues and the Milan conference would perhaps be more fruitful, if it were to discuss such specific subjects.
Q. The author is doubtful whether
Directions: Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.
After the ‘Liberalisation’, ‘Globalisation’ and the consequent change in the new international economic order as well as new information technology order, a new catchy phrase is being coined. ‘A New Health Order’ talking about setting it up is the theme of the WHO-sponsored international conference on primary health and medical care, currently being held at Milan in Italy. While much has been said and written on establishing ‘new order’, little has actually been done. Will the conference at Milan too swear by the ‘new health order’, go home and then forget about it.
While the present medical and health care set-up in poor countries further entrenches itself ? This does not have to be the fate of the radical resolutions that will undoubtedly be passed at Milan. Unlike creating a new world economic or information order, establishing a new health set-up is essentially a matter for individual countries to accomplish. No conflict of international interests is involved. But this advantage is, at least until it begins to take concrete shape, only theoretical. The million-dollar question is whether individual third-world governments are able and willing to muster the will, the resources, the administrative and other infrastructure to carry out what it is entirely within their power to attain and implements.
The dimensions of the problem are known and the solutions broadly agreed on. The present medical and health care system is urban-based, closely geared to drugs, hospitals and expensively trained apathetic doctors. The bulk of the population in poor countries, who live in rural areas, are left untouched by all this and must rely on traditional healers. The answer is to turn out medical/health personnel sufficiently but not expensively, trained to handle routine complaints and to get villagers to pay adequate attention to cleanliness, hygienic sanitation, garbage disposal and other elementary but crucial matters. More complicated ailments can be referred to properly equipped centres in district towns, cities and metropolises. Traditional healers, whom villagers trust, can be among these intermediate personnel. Some third-world countries, including India, have launched or are preparing elaborate schemed of this nature. But the experience is not quite happy. There is resistance from the medical establishment which sees them as little more than licensed quackery, but is not prepared either to offer condensed medical courses such as the former licentiate course available in this country and unwisely scrapped. There is the question of how much importance to give to indigenious system of medicine. And there is the difficult matter of striking the right balance between preventive health care and curative medical attention. These are complex issues and the Milan conference would perhaps be more fruitful, if it were to discuss such specific subjects.
Q. The author has reservations about the utility of the Milan conference because
Directions: Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.
After the ‘Liberalisation’, ‘Globalisation’ and the consequent change in the new international economic order as well as new information technology order, a new catchy phrase is being coined. ‘A New Health Order’ talking about setting it up is the theme of the WHO-sponsored international conference on primary health and medical care, currently being held at Milan in Italy. While much has been said and written on establishing ‘new order’, little has actually been done. Will the conference at Milan too swear by the ‘new health order’, go home and then forget about it.
While the present medical and health care set-up in poor countries further entrenches itself ? This does not have to be the fate of the radical resolutions that will undoubtedly be passed at Milan. Unlike creating a new world economic or information order, establishing a new health set-up is essentially a matter for individual countries to accomplish. No conflict of international interests is involved. But this advantage is, at least until it begins to take concrete shape, only theoretical. The million-dollar question is whether individual third-world governments are able and willing to muster the will, the resources, the administrative and other infrastructure to carry out what it is entirely within their power to attain and implements.
The dimensions of the problem are known and the solutions broadly agreed on. The present medical and health care system is urban-based, closely geared to drugs, hospitals and expensively trained apathetic doctors. The bulk of the population in poor countries, who live in rural areas, are left untouched by all this and must rely on traditional healers. The answer is to turn out medical/health personnel sufficiently but not expensively, trained to handle routine complaints and to get villagers to pay adequate attention to cleanliness, hygienic sanitation, garbage disposal and other elementary but crucial matters. More complicated ailments can be referred to properly equipped centres in district towns, cities and metropolises. Traditional healers, whom villagers trust, can be among these intermediate personnel. Some third-world countries, including India, have launched or are preparing elaborate schemed of this nature. But the experience is not quite happy. There is resistance from the medical establishment which sees them as little more than licensed quackery, but is not prepared either to offer condensed medical courses such as the former licentiate course available in this country and unwisely scrapped. There is the question of how much importance to give to indigenious system of medicine. And there is the difficult matter of striking the right balance between preventive health care and curative medical attention. These are complex issues and the Milan conference would perhaps be more fruitful, if it were to discuss such specific subjects.
Q. The contents of the passage indicate that the author is opposed to