Subject English | |||
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Find the similar relationship expressed in the pair in capital letters | |||
1451. FRIGHTENED : SCREAM | |||
(a) Cry : Hurt | |||
(b) Angry : Shout | |||
(c) Clear : Cloudy | |||
(d) Laugh : Hate | |||
(e) None of them | |||
Ans. b | |||
1452. STUDIO : ARTIST | |||
(a) Play : Dramatist | |||
(b) Blackboard : Professor | |||
(c) Quarry : Sculpture | |||
(d) Laboratory : Chemist | |||
(e) None of them | |||
Ans. d | |||
1453. HEAVY : WEIGHT | |||
(a) Warlike : Force | |||
(b) Bulky : Strength | |||
(c) Brief : Clarity | |||
(d) Ancient : Age | |||
(e) None of them | |||
Ans. d | |||
Each of the following sentence has blank space which word omitted. Choose the best combination of words which fits into the meaning and structure within the context of the sentence. | |||
1454. To save their lives, the sailors had to _____ the sinking ship. | |||
(a) stop | |||
(b) keep | |||
(c) fill up | |||
(d) abandon | |||
(e) None of them | |||
Ans. d | |||
1455. He advised me ____ smoking. | |||
(a) giving up | |||
(b) in giving up | |||
(c) from giving up full marks every time | |||
(d) to give up | |||
(e) None of them | |||
Ans. a | |||
1456. He said that he ____ be unable to come. | |||
(a) will | |||
(b) shall | |||
(c) should | |||
(d) would | |||
(e) None of them | |||
Ans. d | |||
1457. At least one of the students ___ full marks every time. | |||
(a) get | |||
(b) are getting | |||
(c) have got | |||
(d) gets | |||
(e) None of them | |||
Ans. d | |||
1458. She was ____ success and eager to create a name for herself. | |||
(a) sated by | |||
(b) impatient for | |||
(c) impassive to | |||
(d) complaining about | |||
(e) None of them | |||
Ans. b | |||
Read the following passage carefully and choose the best answer from the given alternative. Of the 197 square miles making up the surface of the globe, 71 percent is covered by inter-connecting bodies of water; the Pacific Ocean alone covers half the earth and averages about 14,000 feet in depth. The Continents - Eurasia, Africa, America, South America NOrth America, Australia and Antarctia - are the portion of the continental message above seal level. The submerged border of the continental message are the continental message are the continental shelves, beyond which lie the deep sea basins. The oceans attain their greatest depths not in their central parts,but in certain elongated furrows,or long narrow troughs,called deeps.The position of the deeps near the continental masses suggests that the deeps,like the highest mountains,are of recent origin,since otherwise they would have been filled with waste from the lands.This suggestion is strengthened by the fact that the deeps are frequently the sites of world-shaking earthquakes.For example,the tidal wave that in April 1946 caused widespread destruction along Pacific coasts resulted from a strong earthquake on the floor of the Aleutian Deep. The continents stand on an average 2870 feet-slightly more than half a mile-above sea level. The highest point on the globe, Mount Everest on the Himalayas, is 29,000 feet above the sea; and as the greatest known depth is over 35,000 feet, the maximum relief (that is, the difference in altitude between the lowest and highest points) exceeds 64,000 feet (more than 12 miles). The continental masses and the deep sea basins are relief features of the first order; the deeps, ridges and volcanic cones as well as the plains, plateau and mountains of the continents are relief features of the second order. The modeling of the landscape by weather, running water and other agents is apparent to the observant eye and causes thinking people to speculate on what must be the final result of the ceaseless wearing down of the lands Long before there was a science of geology, Shakespeare wrote, "the revolution of the times makes mountains level." | |||
1459. The peripheral furrows or deeps are found— | |||
(a) only in the pacific and Indian oceans | |||
(b) near earthquakes | |||
(c) near the shore | |||
(d) in the center of ocean | |||
(e) to be 14,000 feet in depth in the pacific | |||
Ans. e | |||
1460. The Passage indicates that the continental masses --- | |||
(a) Comprise 29 percent of the earth’s surface | |||
(b) consist of six continents | |||
(c) rise above sea level | |||
(d) are partially underwater | |||
(e) are relief features of the second order | |||
Ans. a | |||
1461. It can be inferred from the passage that the largest ocean is the----- | |||
(a) Atlantic | |||
(b) Pacific | |||
(c) Indian | |||
(d) Aleutian Deep | |||
(e) Arctic | |||
Ans. b | |||
1462. The "revolution of the times" as used in the final sentence means--- | |||
(a) the current rebellion | |||
(b) the passage of years | |||
(c) the science of geology | |||
(d) the action the ocean floor | |||
(e) the overthrew of natural forces | |||
Ans. b | |||
Each sentence below has one or two has one or two blanks, each blank indicating that something has been omitted. Beneath the sentence are five lettered words or sets of words. Choose the word or set of words. Choose the word or set of words for each blank that best fits the meaning of the sentence as a whole. | |||
1463. Although weeks remain for concessions to be made and new approached to be attempted, negotiations have reached such a state that management and union leaders are ____ that their differences can no longer be reconciled. | |||
(a) encouraged | |||
(b) bewildered | |||
(c) apprehensive | |||
(d) relived | |||
(e) skeptical | |||
Ans. e | |||
Read the following passage carefully and choose the best answer from the given alternative. Of the 197 square miles making up the surface of the globe, 71 percent is covered by inter-connecting bodies of water; the Pacific Ocean alone covers half the earth and averages about 14,000 feet in depth. The Continents - Eurasia, Africa, America, South America NOrth America, Australia and Antarctia - are the portion of the continental message above seal level. The submerged border of the continental message are the continental message are the continental shelves, beyond which lie the deep sea basins. The oceans attain their greatest depths not in their central parts,but in certain elongated furrows,or long narrow troughs,called deeps.The position of the deeps near the continental masses suggests that the deeps,like the highest mountains,are of recent origin,since otherwise they would have been filled with waste from the lands.This suggestion is strengthened by the fact that the deeps are frequently the sites of world-shaking earthquakes.For example,the tidal wave that in April 1946 caused widespread destruction along Pacific coasts resulted from a strong earthquake on the floor of the Aleutian Deep. The continents stand on an average 2870 feet-slightly more than half a mile-above sea level. The highest point on the globe, Mount Everest on the Himalayas, is 29,000 feet above the sea; and as the greatest known depth is over 35,000 feet, the maximum relief (that is, the difference in altitude between the lowest and highest points) exceeds 64,000 feet (more than 12 miles). The continental masses and the deep sea basins are relief features of the first order; the deeps, ridges and volcanic cones as well as the plains, plateau and mountains of the continents are relief features of the second order. The modeling of the landscape by weather, running water and other agents is apparent to the observant eye and causes thinking people to speculate on what must be the final result of the ceaseless wearing down of the lands Long before there was a science of geology, Shakespeare wrote, "the revolution of the times makes mountains level." | |||
1464. Not only the ___ are fooled by propaganda; we can all be misled if we not ____. | |||
(a) ignorant - cynical | |||
(b) gullible - wary | |||
(c) credulous - headstrong | |||
(d) illiterate — mature | |||
(e) fatuous — intelligent. | |||
Ans. b | |||
1465. When those whom he had injured accused him of being a ____, he restored curtly that he had never been a quack. | |||
(a) Libertine | |||
(b) sycophant | |||
(c) charlatan | |||
(d) plagiarist | |||
(e) reprobate | |||
Ans. c | |||
1466. No volume in the history of economic can conclude without the hope that the subject will be ___ politics to from again the largest discipline of political economy. | |||
(a) vindicated by | |||
(b) segregated from | |||
(c) reunited with | |||
(d) recapitulated by | |||
(e) dependent on | |||
Ans. c | |||
1467. While the disease is in ____ state , it is almost impossible to determine its existence by ___. | |||
(a) dormant - postulate | |||
(b) a critical - examination | |||
(c) an acute - analysis | |||
(d) a suspended - estimate | |||
(e) a latent - observation | |||
Ans. e | |||
Select the lettered pair of words, which are related in the same way as the capitalized words are related to each other. | |||
1468. DENTURE: TEETH | |||
(a) scarf : head | |||
(b) toupee : hair | |||
(c) fingernail : hand | |||
(d) eyebrow : eye | |||
(e) bandage: wound | |||
Ans. a | |||
1469. SCRIPT: PLAY | |||
(a) Player: fan | |||
(b) assignment: course | |||
(c) Score: symphony | |||
(d) collection: story | |||
(e) debate: candidate | |||
Ans. c | |||
1470. BUOYANT: SINK | |||
(a) frozen : melt | |||
(b) liquid : evaporate | |||
(c) solid : breakdown | |||
(d) gaseous: expand | |||
(e) insoluble : dissolve | |||
Ans. e | |||
1471. LOGIC: REASONING | |||
(a) ethics : behaviour | |||
(b) arrogance : leadership | |||
(c) sensitivity : morality | |||
(d) bravery : charisma | |||
(e) creativity : enthusiasm | |||
Ans. a | |||
1472. MIMICRY: CAMOUFLAGE | |||
(a) photosynthesis : pollination | |||
(b) territoriality : migration | |||
(c) hibernation : generation | |||
(d) mutation : variation | |||
(e) digestion : rumination | |||
Ans. d | |||
In each of the following sentence, some parts have been jumbled up. You are required to rearrange these parts, which labeled P, Q, R, S to produce the correct sentence. Select the correct sequence from the four answers given against each question. | |||
1473. According to an engineer (P) might hit the market next year (Q) a newly developed air-coolers (R) that employed in conventional room coolers (S) which is based on a principle radically different from | |||
(a) PQRS | |||
(b) QSRP | |||
(c) RSQP | |||
(d) SQRP | |||
Ans. b | |||
1474. This majestic mahogany table (P) belongs to an old price (Q) which has one leg missing (R) who is now impoverished (S) but not without some pride | |||
(a) PQSR | |||
(b) PRSQ | |||
(c) QPRS | |||
(d) QRSP | |||
Ans. c | |||
1475. The doctor’s offer (p) not only saved Julie (Q) but enabled her to blossom into a happy woman (R) from the jaws of death (S) of marriage | |||
(a) PQSR | |||
(b) PSQR | |||
(c) SPQR | |||
(d) SPQR | |||
Ans. c |