IIM CAT Question Paper Exam Year-2016
IIM CAT Question Paper Exam Year-2016
IIM CAT Question Paper Exam Year-2016
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Quantitative Ability
Q: 1. The total cost of 2 pencils, 5 erasers, and 7 sharpeners is Rs.30, while 3 pencils and 5 sharpeners cost Rs. 15 more than 6 erasers. By what amount
(in Rs.) does the cost of 39 erasers and 1 sharpener exceed the cost of 6 pencils?
(1) 20
(2) 30
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(4) Cannot be determined
Answer: (1)
Q: 2. If the roots of the equation (x + 1) (x + 9) + 8 = 0 are a and b, then the roots of the equation (x + a) (x + b) -8 = 0 are
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(1) 1 and 9
(2) -4 and -6
(3) 4 and 6
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(4) Cannot be determined
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Answer: (1)
(1) 1
(2) 61
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(3) 41
(4) 21
in
Answer: (1)
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Q: 4. Balram, the local shoe shop owner, sells four types of footwear – Slippers (S), Canvas Shoes (C), Leather Shoes (L) and Joggers (J). The following
information is known regarding the cost prices and selling prices of these four types of footwear:
(i) L sells for Rs. 500 less than J, which costs Rs. 300 more than S, Which, in turn, sells for Rs.200 more than L.
(ii) L costs Rs. 300 less than C, which sells for Rs. 100 more than S, which, in turn, costs Rs. less than C.
If it is known that Balram never sells any item at a loss, then which of the following is true regarding the profit percentages earned by Balram on the
items L, S, C and J represented by l, s, c and j
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
Answer: (3)
Q: 5 In the figure below, P, Q and R are points on a circle with centre O. The tangent to the circle at R intersects secant PQ at T. If ▭
▭QTR =25° , find ▭POQ.
(1) 110°
(2) 100°
(3)90°
(4)50°
Answer: (3)
Q: 6. A sequence of 4 digits, when considered as a number in base 10 is four times the number it represents in base 6. What is the sum of the digits of
the sequence?
(1) 7
(2) 6
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(3) 9
(4) 8
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Answer: (4)
Q: 7. Some friends planned to contribute equally to jointly buy a CD player. However, two of them decided to withdraw at the last minute. As a result,
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each of the others had to shell out one rupee more than what they had planned for. If the price (in Rs.) of the CD player is an integer between 1000
and 1100, find the number of friends who actually contributed?
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(1) 21
(2) 23
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(3) 44
(4) 46
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Answer: (3)
DIRECTIONS for questions 8 and 9: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.
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A robot is designed to move in a peculiar way and it can be set in motion by a microprocessor program. The program can be initiated by assigning a
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positive rational value to its variable n. The program directs the robot to move in the following way. As soon as the program is started, the robot starts
from the point O, moves 2n metres northward and changes its direction by n° to the right. It then moves 2n metres forward and again changes its
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direction by n° to the right and continues in this manner till it reaches the starting point O, or till it covers a total distance of 100 m, whichever
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Q: 8. I assigned a value for n and started the program. If the robot finally came back to O and stopped, what is the total distance that it has covered
(1) 180 m
(2) 360 m
(3) 720 m
Answer: (3)
Q: 9 For how many value of n in the intervals [1, 60] does the robot cover less than 1000 m, before it stops?
(1) 19
(2) 60
(3) 355
(4) Infinite
Answer: (3)
DIRECTIONS for questions 10 to 20: Answer the questions independently of each other.
Q: 10. If N = 888…up to 100 digits, what is the remainder when N is divided by 625?
(1) 128
(2) 138
(3) 338
(4) 388
Answer: (2)
Q: 11. If where [x] denotes the greatest integer less than or equal to x, then
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
Answer: (3)
Q: 12 In the figure below, BD = 8 cm and DC = 6 cm. AE : ED = 3 : 4. If AF =12 cm, find AC (in cm).
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Q 12 Find the AC in Cm
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(1) 28
(2) 38
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(3) 44
(4) 40
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Answer: (4)
Q: 13. A regular polygon has an even number of sides. If the product of the length of its side and the distance between two opposite sides is ¼ th of its
in
(1) 6
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(2) 8
(3) 20
(4) 16
Answer: (4)
Q: 14. There are three cities A, B and C, not on the same straight road. Two buses P and Q start simultaneously from A and B respectively towards C.
By the time Q reaches C, P is exactly halfway to C. Immediately after Q reaches C, it starts travelling towards A and it crosses P at a point 165 km from
A. The ratio of the speeds of P and Q is 3 : 5 Assume that the roads joining A to C, B to C and B to A are all straight roads. If B is twice as far from A as
it is from C and P would take to cover the distance from A to B, how much time would Q take to cover the distance from C to A?
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4) 4 hours
Answer: (1)
Q: 15. Two positive real numbers, a and b, are expressed as the sum of m positive real numbers and n positive real numbers respectively as follows:
If
Where [x] denotes the greatest integer less than or equal to x, what is the minimum possible value of m +n?
(1) 6
(2) 10
(3) 8
(4) 9
Answer: (4)
Q: 16. Consider two figures A and D that are defined in the co-ordinate plane. Each figure represents the graph the graph of a certain function, as
defined below:
A:
D: |y| = d
If the area enclosed by A and D is 0, which of the following is a possible value of (a,d)?
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(1) (2,1)
(2) (-2, 1)
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(3) (-2, 3)
(4) (2,3)
Answer: (2) ke
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Q: 17. A natural number n is such that 120 n≤240. If HCF of n and 240 is 1, how many values of n are possible?
(1) 24
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(2) 32
(3) 36
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(4) 40
Answer: (2)
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Q: 18. If
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(1) 24/90
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(2) 242/900
(3) 245/900
(4) 200/729
Answer: (4)
Q: 19 If the sum to infinity of the series 2 +(2-d) 2/3+ (2 + d) 4/9 + (2 + 3d) 8/27 + ……▭ is 5/2, what is the value of d?
(1) 7/12
(2) -7/12
(3) -5/12
(4) 5/12
Answer: (2)
Q: 20. The first n natural numbers, 1 to n, have to be arranged in a row from left to right. The n numbers are arranged such that there are an odd
number of numbers between any two even numbers as well as between any two odd numbers. If the number of ways in which this can be done is 72,
then find the value of n.
(1) 6
(2) 7
(3) 8
Answer: (1)
DIRECTIONS for questions 21 to 23: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.
After facing yet another World Cup debacle, the Board of Cricket Control in India (BCCI) is in search of a new coach for the team. It shortlisted five
persons – Anshuman, Buchanen, John, Whatmore and Chappel. Each of them is from a different country among Australia, India, Japan, Pakistan and
Canada, not necessarily in that order. At present, each of them is coaching the team of a different country among Australia, Bangladesh, china, Wales
and Bermuda, not necessarily in that order. The following details were also observed about their particulars:
(i) For any person, each of his three particulars – his name, the name of the country from which he is and the name of the country that he is coaching
at present, starts with a different letter.
(ii) Whatmore is coaching Australia and John is from neither Australia nor Pakistan.
(iii) Buchanen is not coaching China and the person who is coaching Bermuda is from Canada.
(iv) Anshuman is neither from Canada nor from Pakistan and also the person from Pakistan is coaching Bangladesh.
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Q: 21. Whatmore is from which country?
(1) India
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(2) Japan
(3) Canada
(1) Buchanen
(2) John
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(3) Whatmore
Answer: (1)
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(1) China
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(2) Wales
(3) Australia
Answer: (2)
DIRECTIONS for questions 24 to 27: Answer the questions on the basis os the information given below.
Mr. Suzuki, a car dealer, sold cars of only two brands, A and B, in the previous year. This year, he introduced a new brand, C. The number of cars of
cars of brand A and brand B sold in the previous year were in the ratio 3 :2, and the ratio of the number of cars sold in the previous year to that sold in
this year is 2 : 3 for brand A and 2 : 5 for brand B. Further, the number of cars of brand C sold this year forms 81 % of the total number of cars sold this
year.
Q: 24. Find the number of cars of brand C sold this year, given that a total of 24 cars of brand A were sold in the previous year.
(1) 324
(2) 648
(3) 162
(4) 243
Answer: (1)
Q: 25. What is the percentage increase in the total number of cars sold this year when compared to the total number of cars sold in the previous year?
(1) 400%
(2) 600%
(3) 900%
(4) 1000%
Answer: (3)
Q: 26. In the next year, Mr. Suzuki wants to increase the total sales by 80%, compared to the total sales this year, by keeping the sales of each of A, B
and C at the same level as that in this year and introducing a new brand D. By what percent will the number of cars of brand D (to be sold next year) be
more than the total number of cars sold last year?
(1) 400%
(2) 600%
(3) 900%
(4) 700%
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Answer: (4)
Q: 27. If total of 380 cars were sold this year, and the sales of C this year were nil, instead of 81% of total sales, then how many cars of brand A were
sold in the previous year?
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(1) 140
(2) 120
(3) 100
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(4) 160
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Answer: (2)
DIRECTIONS for questions 28 and 29: The question given below is followed by two statements, I and II. Study the information given in the two
statements and assess whether the statements are sufficient to answer the question and choose the appropriate option from among the choices given
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below:
Q: 28. Two of the three cricketers Pavan, Rajan and Tarun are selected to the national team. Each of these three persons scored a different number of
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centuries and a different number of runs. Further, among these three, Tarun scored the highest number of centuries. Who among Pavan, Rajan and
Tarun is not selected to the national team?
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I. the person with the higher number of runs between Tarun and Pavan, is the person who scored the lesser number of centuries between the two
persons selected.
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II. The person with the least number of runs between Rajan and Tarun, is the person who scored the higher number of centuries between the two
persons selected.
(1) The question can be answered by using one of the statements alone, but cannot be answered using the other statement alone.
(3) The question can be answered by using both statements together, but cannot be answered using either statement alone
(4) the question cannot be answered even by using both statements together.
Answer: (4)
(1) The question can be answered by using one of the statements alone, but cannot be answered using the other statement alone.
(3) the question can be answered by using both statements together, but cannot be answered using either statement alone.
(4) The question cannot be answered even by using both statements together.
Answer: (3)
DIRECTIONS for questions 30 and 31: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.
Each point in the graph below shows the sales and expenses of a company. Each company belongs to one of the three sectors among manufacturing,
automobiles, and software.
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Q 30and31 Image of Graph
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Q: 30. For how many of the companies, is the profit more than 40% of the sales (Profit = Sales - Expenses)?
(1) 4
(2) 5 ke
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(3) 6
(4) 7
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Answer: (3)
Q: 31. For how many software companies are the sales more than Rs.2500 crore but the expenses less than Rs. 2100 crore?
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(1) 2
(2) 3
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(3) 4
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(4) 6
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Answer: (2)
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DIRECTIONS for questions 32 to 35: answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.
A team must be selected from ten probable – A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I and J. Of these, A C, E and are forwards, B, G and H are point guards and D, F
and I are defenders.
The team must have at least one forward, one point guard and one defender.
7/19
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(1) 4
(2) 5
(3) 6
Answer: (4)
(1) 4
(2) 5
(3) 6
(4) 7
Answer: (3)
(1) A
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(2) H
(3) J
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(4) E
Answer: (2)
(2) 4
(3) 5
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Answer: (2)
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DIRECTIONS for question 36 and 37: The question given below is followed by two statements, I and II. Study the information given in the two
statements and assess whether the statements are sufficient to answer the question and choose the appropriate option from among the choices given
in
below:
Q: 36. What percentage of the questions were attempted by Ramya in the exam?
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II. The number of questions attempted by Ramya but not by Swathi is (5/8)th of the total number of questions attempted by Ramya.
(1) The Question can be answered by using one of the statements alone but not by the other.
(3) The question can be answered by using both the statement together, but cannot be answered by using either statement alone.
(4) The question cannot be answered even by using both the statements together
Answer: (3)
Q: 37. Each of Ankit and Bhanu belong to one of the tribes between truth tellers i.e., those who always speak the truth, and liars i.e., those who always
lie. Do both of them belong to the same tribe?
(1) The question can be answered by using one of the statements alone but not by the other.
(4) The question cannot be answered even by using both the statements together.
Answer: (4)
DIRECTIONS for questions 38 to 40: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.
Pie chart – 1 givens the percentage shares of all the five cement companies –A, B, C, D and E – in the total quantity of cement sold in country XYZ. Pie
Chart -2 givens the percentage shares of all the eleven states – P through Z – in the total quantity of cement sold in the country.
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Q 38 to 40 Image of Pie Chart 1and 2
The market share of any company in a state is the total quantity of cement sold by the company in that state as a percentage of the total quantity of
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cement sold in that state.
Q: 38. In any state, if no company had more than 50% market share, then in at least how many states did company A sell cement?
(1) 4
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(2) 5
(3) 6
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(4) 3
Answer: (2)
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Q: 39. If in all the states in which company E was present, it had a market share of at least 25%, in at most how many states did company E sell
cement?
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(1) 9
(2) 8
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(3) 7
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(4) 6
Answer: (3)
40. The number of companies which had sales in more than two states, is at least
(1) 1
(2) 2
(3) 3
(4) 4
Answer: (1)
DIRECTIONS for question 41: The following question has a set of five sequentially ordered statements. Each statement can be classified as one of the
following.
-Facts, which deal with pieces of information that one has heard, seen or read, and which are open to discovery or verification (the answer option
indicates such a statement with an ‘F’).
-Inferences, which are conclusions drawn about the unknown, on the basis of the known (the answer option indicates such a statement with an ‘I’).
-Judgments, which are opinions that imply approval or disapproval of persons, objects, situations and occurrences in the past, the present or the
future (the answer option indicates such a statement with a ‘J’).
Select the answer option that best describes the set of statements.
Q: 41. (A) The renewed corporate interest in power is welcome, given the huge investment backlog in the vexed sector and the routine revenue
leakages.
(B) Reportedly, industrial houses like Reliance Industries and the Aditya Birla Group are keen to foray into power equipment manufacture.
(C) In tandem, we need proactive policy to wipe out continuing losses of state power utilities, and regular disclosure of SEB finances.
(D) Of late, the tendency has been to clamp up on the huge annual losses of power utilizes – the latest Economic Survey like the previous one is mum
on losses, subsidies and plain theft of power; instead we have some pious intentions to gather ‘baseline data’ and use information technology
application for accounting and auditing power distribution.
(E) We do need to step up IT for meter reading, billing and collections, of course, but in parallel, what is essential indeed vital, is improved governance
in power delivery and follow through.
(1) JFIFJ
(2) IJFJJ
(3) FJJIF
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(4) JFJIJ
Answer: (4)
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DIRECTIONS for questions 42 and 43: In each question, four different ways of presenting an idea are given. Choose the one that conforms most
closely to Standard English usage
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Q: 42. (A) The inflexibility of the laws, which prevent them from being adapted for emergencies, may in certain cases render them
Pernicious and thereby cause the ruin of the state in a time of crisis.
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(B) The inflexibility of the laws, which prevents them from being adapted for emergencies may in certain cases render them
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(C) The inflexibility of the laws, which prevents them from being adapted for emergencies may in certain cases render them
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Pernicious, and thereby cause the ruin of the state in a time of crisis.
(D) The inflexibility of the laws, which prevents them from being adapted for emergencies may in certain cases render them
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Pernicious and thereby causing the ruin of the state in a time of crisis.
(1) A
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(2) B
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(3) C
(D) D
Answer: (3)
Q: 43. (A) Human talents vary considerably, within a fixed framework that is characteristic of the species, and that permits ample scope for creative
work, including the creative work of appreciating the achievements of others.
(B) Human talents vary considerably, within a fixed framework that is characteristic of the species, and which permits ample scope for creative work,
including the creative work of appreciating the achievements of others.
(C) Human talents vary considerably, within a fixed framework that is characteristic of the species, and that permits ample scope for creative work,
including the creative work of appreciating achievements of others.
(D) Human talents vary considerably, within a fixed framework that is characteristic of the species, and which permits ample scope for creative work,
including the creative work of appreciating achievements of others.
(1) A
(2) B
(3) C
(4) D
Answer: (1)
DIRECTIONS for questions 44: In the following question, there are five sentences/paragraphs. The sentence/paragraph labelled A is in its correct
place. The four that follow are labelled B, C, D and E, and need to be arranged in the logical order to form a coherent paragraph/ passage. From the
given options, choose the most appropriate option.
Q: 44. (A) The driving force of the ‘nuclear renaissance’ is a claim that nuclear power, once up and running, is a carbon- free energy source. The
assertion is that a functioning nuclear reactor creates no greenhouse gases and thus contributes nothing to global warming or chaotic weather.
(B) The frequently repeated notion that nuclear power is a carbon-free energy source is simply untrue.
(C) At every stage of the cycle greenhouse gases are released into the atmosphere from burning diesel, manufacturing steel and cement and, in the
circumpolar regions of the planet, by disturbance of the tundra, which releases large amounts of methane, a particularly potent greenhouse gas.
(D) That part is almost true, but the claim ignores the total environmental impact of nuclear energy, which includes a long and complicated chain of
events known in the industry as the ‘nuclear cycle’ which begins with finding, mining, milling and enriching uranium, then spans through plant
construction and power generation to the reprocessing and eventual storage of nuclear waste, all of which creates tons of .
(E) Even the claim that a functioning nuclear power facility is co2 – free challenged by the face that operating plant requires an external power source
to run, and that electricity is almost certain to come from a fossil-fuelled plant.
(1) DCEB
(2) EBCD
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(3) DEBC
(4) EDCB
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Answer: (1)
DIRECTIONS for questions 45 and 46: Each of the following questions has a paragraph from which the last sentence has been deleted. From the given
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options, choose the one that completes the paragraph in the most appropriate way.
Q: 45. Jawaharlal Nehru seemed an unlikely candidate to lead India towards its vision. Under the cotton Khadi he wore in deference to the dictates of
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Congress, he remained the quintessential English gentleman. In a land of mysteries, he was a cool rationalist. The mind that had exulted in the
discovery of science at Cambridge never ceased to be appalled by his fellow Indians who refused to stir from their homes on days proclaimed
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inauspicious by their favourite astrologers. He was a publicly declared agnostic in the most intensely spiritual area in the world, and he never ceased to
proclaim the horror the word ‘religion’ inspired in him. Nehru despised India’s priests, her sadhus, her chanting monks and pious ‘skerkhs’.
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(1) And yet, the India of those sadhus and the superstition-haunted masses had accepted Nehru.
(3) The Mahatma had made it clear that it was on his shoulders that he wished his mantle to fall.
(4) Nehru’s heart told him to follow the Mahatma and his heart, he would later admit, had beed right.
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Answer: (2)
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Q: 46 Birth rates have fallen dramatically – and voluntarily. Coercive birth control, including paying people not to have babies, was discredited and
abandoned decades ago. Nearly two – thirds of the couples in poor countries now use birth control, and not because some patriarchal westerner told
them to. In the 1970s, the government of Bangladesh offered people in the Matlals region low-cost contraceptive supplies and advice. Birth rates
promptly fell well below those of neighbouring regions. So Bangladesh extended the service nationally and its birth rate plummeted from six children
per woman to three.
(3) Governments want fewer children since their own life expectancy falls with rising numbers.
(4) Even when birth rates fall, there is a lag which means population keeps growing far decades until birth and death rates even out.
Answer: (2)
DIRECTIONS for questions 47 and 48: In each question, there are five sentences. Each sentence has pairs of words/phrases that are italicized and
highlighted. From the italicized and highlighted word(s)/phrase(s), select the most appropriate word(s)/phrase (s) to from correct sentences. Then,
from the options given, choose the best one.
Q: 47. (i) The municipal councilor (A) / counselor (B) promised to improve civic amenities in the suburbs.
(ii) Jean’s adopted (A) / adoptive (B) patents dote on her and cater to her every whim.
(iii) The venal (A) / venial (B) official was caught red – handed accepting bribe.
(iv)We have now shifted our residence farther (A) / further (B) away from the main city.
(1) AAABB
(2) BBABB
(3) ABBAB
(4) ABAAB
Answer: (4)
Q: 48. (i) While evacuating people from the flood ravaged areas precedence (A) / precedent (B) was given to women and children.
(ii) The best was to reach the summit is by trekking up the hill, alternately (A) / alternatively (B) you can go on horse back
(iii) His impeccable manners perfectly complimented (A) / complemented (B) his polished looks and fashionable attire.
(iv) There has been a noticeable (A) / notable (B) improvement in Tarun’s academic performance lately.
(v) You must be discreet (A) / discrete (B) about your plans
(1) AABAB
(2) ABBBB
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(3) BABAA
(4) ABBAA
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Answer: (4)
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DIRECTIONS for questions 49 and 50: In each of the following questions, the word at the top is used in four different ways, numbered 1 to 4. Choose
the option in which the usage of the word is INCORRECT or INAPPROPRIATE.
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Q: 49. PULL
(1) Pill aside the curtains and let in some fresh air.
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(2) I decided to pull away from the venture due to differences of opinion with my partners.
(3) Being a charismatic leader that he is, he can certainly pull the crowds.
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(4) The municipal corporation has decided to pull down all illegal
Answer: (2)
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Q: 50. SHADE
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(2) Abdul is a dubious character who is suspected of being involved in several shady deals.
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(3) The weary traveler rested for a while in the shade of a tree.
(4) The people in the strife torn region have been living in the shade of fear for several years.
Answer: (4)
DIRECTIONS for questions 51 to 54: Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow it.
Organic food is a two-billion pound industry grown fat on the back of celebrity endorsement and a well-heeled middle class seduced by claims that it is
good for health. Prince Charles is one of its most enthusiastic and pro-active promoters. Not content with simply consuming it, he has his own
lucrative line in overpriced organic products including biscuits which taste more like chalk.
But now questions are being raised about some of the basic assumptions that have contributed to the popularity of organic food and the phenomenal
growth of this sector in the past decade. People are asking: is organic food really worth the price which is often three times more than that of normal
food?
This follows new research by a group of British scientists who found that organic food offered no extra benefit over the ordinary cheaper foodstuff. In a
controversial report, experts from the
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine say there is no evidence that organic food is more nutritional or healthier than food produced using
fertilizers. For example, the expensive free-range chicken (sold as a "premium" product) has the same nutritional value as the factory-farmed chicken;
and similarly, there is no difference between organic and non-organic vegetables or dairy produce.
The research, based on data published over the past 50 years and said to be the most comprehensive review ever of the relative benefits of organic
food, strikes at the very heart of what has been portrayed by campaigners as its USP - that it is healthier than conventional food and therefore worth
paying a "bit "extra.
Dr. Alan Dangour, who led the study, was unambiguous in rejecting claims made for organic food. "Looking at all of the studies published in the last
50 years, we have concluded that there's no good evidence that consumption of organic food is beneficial to health based on the nutrient content," he
said.
The report, commissioned by the government's Food Standards Agency and published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, concluded that
"organically and conventionally produced crops and livestock products are broadly comparable in their nutrient content." A "small number of
differences" were noted but these were "unlikely to be of any public health relevance."
In a pointed reference to the hype over the supposed benefits of organic food, the FSA said the research was aimed at helping people make "informed
choices" about what they ate. In other words, it was concerned that the high-profile campaign for organic food, dressed up as an ethical issue, was
preventing people from making "informed choices" and they were being sold things on false premises.
"Ensuring people have accurate information is absolutely essential in allowing us all to more informed choices about the food we eat. This study does
not mean that people should not eat organic food. What it shows is that there is little, if any, nutritional difference between organic and conventionally
produced food and that there is no evidence of additional health benefits from eating organic food," said Gill Fine, FSA's Director of Consumer Choice
and Dietary Health
In the organic food circles, the report has caused fury with campaigners alleging that it is all part of a "cancerous conspiracy" to defame the organic
food movement. Newspapers have been full of angry letters denouncing the report as "selective," "misleading" and "limited."
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The Soil Association, which campaigns for "planet-friendly organic food and farming," is furious that the research crucially ignored the presence of
higher pesticide residues in conventional food. Some have defended organic food arguing that it is not about health alone but also involves wider
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environmental and social issues.
However, even those who agree that the report may be "flawed" in some respects believe that it is an important contribution to the debate on organic
food.
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"Yet the report - for all its alleged flaws - is an important one. For a start, it is certainly not the work of dogmatic and intractably hostile opponents of
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the causeD In fact, it raises key global issuesD After all, if organic food is no more beneficial in terms of nutrition than other, standard foodstuffs, why
should we pay excessive price to eat the stuff? Why devote more land to its production," asked Robin McKie, Science Editor of The Observer.
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There is also a view that the fad for organic food is a bit of a class thing - something to do with the idea that if something is expensive it is also good.
So, a Marks & Spencer cheese sandwich is supposed to taste better than a similar sandwich at Subway next door; everything at Harrods is out of this
world; and similarly you don't know what you are missing if organic food is not your preferred choice. There is said to be a whiff of snobbery about
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buying into an expensive lifestyle choice. Will science bring them down to earth?
Q: 51. All of the following are the author’s views on organic food EXCEPT
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(1) It is insipid
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Answer: (3)
Q: 52. Which of the following factors/aspects, related to organic food, has the result of the FSA study primarily called into question?
Answer: (2)
Q: 53. According to the passage, defenders of organic food are of the opinion that the FSA study
(2) Has been promoted by those who have vested interest in conventional food.
(4) Is not balanced and has not taken a comprehensive view of the issue
Answer: (4)
(3) Reports the findings of a research on organic food and checks the veracity of its claim
(4) Discusses the debate, which has followed the findings of a study on organic food.
Answer: (4)
DIRECTIONS for questions 55 to 57: Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow it.
Some artists go out in a blaze of glory. Pierre- Auguste Renoir went out in a blaze of kitsch. At least, that's the received opinion about the work of his
final decades: all those pillowy nudes, sunning their abundant selves in dappled glades; all those peachy girls, strumming guitars and idling in
bourgeois parlors; all that pink. In the long twilight of his career, the old man found his way to a kissable classicism that modern eyes can find awfully
hard to take.
All the same, the Renoir of this period - the three very productive decades before his death in 1919 at the age of 78 - fascinated some of the chief
figures of modernism. Picasso was on board; his thick -limbed 'neoclassical' women from the 1920 are indebted to Renoir. So was Matisse, who had
one eye on Renoir's Orientalist dress-up fantasies like the Concert, with its flattened space and overall patterning, when he produced his odalisques.
Given that so much of late Renoir seems saccharine and semi comical to us, is it still possible to see what made it modern to them?
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Yes and no. To understand the Renoir in the 20th Century you have to remember that before he became a semi classicist, he was a consummate
Impressionist. You need to picture him in 1874, 33 years old, painting side by side with Monet in Argenteuil, teasing out the new possibilities of
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sketchy brushwork to capture fleeting light as it fell across people and things in an indisputably modern world.
But in the decade that followed, Renoir became one of the movement's first apostates. Impressionism affected many people in the 19th century in
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much the way the internet does now. It both charmed and unnerved them. It brought to painting a novel immediacy, but it also gave back a world that
felt weightless and unstable. What we now call post - Impressionism was the inevitable by-product of that anxiety. Artists like Seurat and Gauguin
searched for an art that owed nothing to the stale models of academicism but possessed the substance and authority that Impressionism had let fall
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away.
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For Renoir, a turning point came during his honeymoon to Rome and Naples in 1881. Face to face with the firm outlines of Raphael and the
musculature of Michelangelo, he lost faith in his flickering sunbeams. He returned to France determined to find his way to lucid, distinct forms in an
art that reached for the eternal, not the momentary. By the later years of that decade, Renoir had lost his taste for the modern world anyway. As for
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modern women, in 1888 he could write, "I consider that women who are authors, lawyers and politicians are monsters". ("The woman who is an
artist," he added graciously, "is merely ridiculous.")
Ah, but the woman who is a goddess - or at least harks back to one - that is different matter. It would be Renoir's aim to reconfigure the female nude in
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a way that would convey the spirit of the classical world without classical trappings. Set in "timeless" outdoor settings, these women by their weight
and scale and serenity alone - along with their often recognizably classical poses - would point back to antiquity.
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For a time, Renoir worked with figures so strongly outlined that they could have been put down by Ingres with a jackhammer. By 1892, he had drifted
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back toward a fluctuating impressionist brushstroke. Firmly contoured or flickering, his softly scalped women are as full-bodied as Doric columns.
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This was one of the qualities that caught Picasso's eye, especially after his first trip to Italy, in 1917. He would assimilate Renoir along-side his own
sources in Iberian sculpture and elsewhere to come up with a frankly more powerful, even haunting, amalgam of the antique and the modern in
paintings like Woman in a White Hat.
Renoir was most valuable as a stepping - stone for artists making more potent use of the ideas he was developing. The heart of the problem is the
challenge. Renoir set for himself: to reconcile classical and Renaissance models with the 18th century French painters he loved. To synthesize the force
and clarity of classicism with the intimacy and charm of the Rococo is a nearly impossible trick. How do you cross the power of Phidias with the
delicacy of Fragonard? The answer: at your own risk - especially the risk of admitting into your work the weaknesses of the Rococo. It's fine line
between charming and insipid, and 18th century French painters crossed it all the time. So did Renoir.
Q: 55. All of the following are true in light of the passage EXCEPT.
Answer: (3)
Q: 56. We can infer from the passage that the word ‘odalisques’ means
(1) Pillars
(2) Landscapes
(3) Figures
(4) Women
Answer: (4)
Answer: (2)
DIRECTIONS for questions 58 to 60: Read the following passage and answer the questions the follow it.
Humans have a basic need to perceive themselves as part of a grand scheme, of a natural order that has a deeper significance and greater endurance
than the petty affairs of daily life. The incongruous mismatch between the futility of the human condition and the brooding majesty of the cosmos
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compels people to seek a transcendent meaning to underpin their fragile existence.
For thousands of years this broader context was provided by tribal mythology and storytelling. The transporting qualities of those narratives gave
human beings a crucial spiritual anchor. All cultures lay claim to haunting myths of other-worldliness: from the dreaming of the Australian Aborigines
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or the Chronicles of Narnia, from the Nirvana of Buddhism to the Christian Kingdom of Heaven. Over time, the humble campfire stories morphed into
the splendour and ritual of organized religion and the great works of drama and literature.
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Even in our secular age, where many societies have evolved to a post-religious phase, people still have unfulfilled spiritual yearnings. A project with
the scope and profundity of SETI (search for extraterrestrial intelligence) cannot be divorced from this wider cultural context, for it too offers us the
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compelling promise that this could happen any day soon. As writer David Brin has pointed out, 'contact with advanced alien civilizations may carry
much the same transcendental or hopeful significance as any more traditional notion of "salvation from above". I have argued that if we did make
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contact with an advanced extraterrestrial community, the entities with which we would be dealing would approach godlike status in our eyes.
Certainly they would be more godlike than humanlike; indeed, their powers would be greater than those attributed to most gods in human history.'
So is SETI itself in danger of becoming a latter day religion? Science fiction writer Michael Crichton thought so. He said: "Faith is defined as the firm
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belief in something for which there is no proof," he explained. "The belief that there are other life forms in the universe is a matter of faith. There is not
a single shred of evidence for any other life forms, and in forty years of searching, none has been discovered." Writer Margaret Wertheim has studied
how the concept of space and its inhabitants has evolved over several centuries. She traces the modern notion of aliens to Renaissance writers such as
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the Roman Catholic Cardinal Nichols of Cusa, who considered the status of man in the universe in relation to celestial beings such as angels.
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With the arrival of the scientific age, speculations about alien beings passed from theologians to science fiction writers, but the spiritual dimension
remained just below the surface. Occasionally it is made explicit, as in Olaf Stapledon's Star Maker, David Lindsay's A Voyage to Arcturus, or Steven
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Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind, which is strongly reminiscent of John Bunyan's A Pilgrim's Progress. These are iconic images that
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resonate deeply with the human psyche, and shadow the scientific quest to discover intelligent life beyond Earth
Q: 58. It can be inferred from the passage that, ‘Close Encounters of the Third Kind’
(2) Explores the spiritual unknown in the scientific quest to discover the extraterrestrial
(4) Speculates on intelligent life in outer space and reflects vivid spiritual overtones
Answer: (4)
Q: 59. Which of the following statements reflects or captures the author’s view on the search for extraterrestrial intelligence?
(3) Were the search to yield positive results, man would accord those creatures super god status
(4) The belief that there are aliens in the universe springs from enormous faith and the pursuit reflects man’s spiritual urge.
Answer: (3)
Answer: (2)
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