1. Three bells rings at the intervals of 36 seconds, 40 seconds
and 48 seconds respectively. They start ringing together at a particular time.
When they will start ringing together again?
(1)After 6 minutes
(2) After 12 minutes
(3)After 18 minutes
(4) After 24 minutes
2. The sum of
one-half, one-third and one-fourth of a number exceeds the number by 12. The
number is(1)After 6 minutes
(2) After 12 minutes
(3)After 18 minutes
(4) After 24 minutes
(1)144
(2) 154
(3) 90
(4) 174
3. A farmer divides his herd of x cows among his 4 sons so that one son gets one half of the herd, the
second gets one-fourth, the third gets one-fifth and the fourth gets 7 cows. Then x is equal to
(1) 100
(2) 140
(3)180
(4) 160
4. If the list price of a book is reduced by Rs. 5, then a person can buy 5 more books for Rs. 300. The original cost of the book is
(1) Rs. 15
(2) Rs. 20
(3) Rs. 25
(4) Rs. 30
5. A man has only 20-paise and 25-paise coins in a bag. If he has 50 coins in all totaling to Rs.11.25, then the number of 20-paise coins is
(1) 28
(2) 27 1
(3)26
(4) 25
6. Jayant gets 3 marks for each right sum and loses 2 marks for each wrong sum. He attempts 30 sums and obtains 40 marks. The number of sums attempted correctly is
(1) 25
(2) 20
(3) 26
(4) 27
Complete the following number series:
7. 1, 1, 3, 9, 5, 25, 7, 49 _, 81
(1)7
(2) 9
(3) 8
(4) 10
8. 5, 11, 23, 41, 64, _
(1)89
(2) 95
(3) 101
(4) 105
Directions (9-11): Study the information given below to answer these questions.
Mark your answer as:
(i) If both A and R are correct but R does not explain A.
(ii) If both A and R are correct and R explains A.
(iii) If A is correct but R is wrong.
(iv) If A wrong but R is correct.
9. Assertion (A): A saltwater fish drinks sea water where a fresh water fish never drinks water.
Reason (R): A saltwater fish is hyper tonic to its environment while a freshwater fish is hypotonic to its environment.
10. Assertion (A): The territory of India is larger than the territories of the States taken together.
Reason (R): India is a Union of States.
11. Assertion (A): Alcohol rather than mercury is used in a thermometer to measure a temperature of 60o C.
Reason (R): Alcohol has a lower freezing point then mercury.
Directions (12-13): On the basis of given statements answer the following questions: All good athletes want
win and all athletes who want to win, eat a well-balanced diet. Therefore, all athletes who do not eat a well-balanced diet are bad athletes.
12. If assumptions of the argument above are true, then which of the following statements must be true?
1) No athlete who does not eat a well-balanced diet is a good athlete.
2) No bad athlete wants to win.
3) Every athlete who eats a well-balanced diet is a good athlete.
4) All athletes who want to win are good athletes.
13. Which of the following if true, would refute the assumptions of argument above?
1) Bob, the accountant, eats a well-balanced diet, but he is not a good athlete.
2) Ann wants to win, but she is not a good athlete.
3) All the players on the Burros baseball team eat a well-balanced diet.
4) Cindy, the basketball star, does not eat a well-balanced diet, but she is a good athlete.
Directions (Q.14-18): In the following questions, the first and the last parts of the sentence are numbered 1 and 6. The rest of the sentence is split into four parts named P, Q, R and S. These four parts are not given in their proper order. Read the parts, arrange them properly and find out which of the five combinations given below is appropriate, and mark it as your answer.
14.
1. The latest move
P. women is being opposed
Q. to reserve one-third of
R. tooth and nail by
S. the electoral seats for
6. some political parties.
1) SPQR
2) QSPR
3) SRPQ
4) PRQS
5) SPRQ
15.
1. One of the most pernicious
P. ancient scriptures is that
Q. of the system of caste hierarchy,
R. and reactionary feudal survivals
S. sanctified by some
6. exploitation and oppression.
1) PQRS
2) SRQP
3) PRQS
4) QSPR
5) RSPQ
16.
1. Experience as well as
P. tells us that any attempt
Q. at a forced equalisation of income
R. modern economic theory
S. and wealth destroys the incentives
6. that encourage efficiency.
1) RPQS
2) SPRQ
3) PSQR
4) QRPS
5) PQRS
17.
1. The chances of electoral success
P. for liberals would certainly improve
Q. under the banner of
R. a liberal party with its
S. if they could fight
6. own electoral symbol.
1) SQRP
2) RPSQ
3) PSQR
4) RQPS
5) QRSP
18.
1. The author has pointed an
P. of the community who
Q. accusing finger at the Muslim intelligentsia
R. maintain a stoic silence over the
S. and the dominant members
6. bizarre happenings in Kashmir .
1) QSPR
2) RPSQ
3) SQRP
4) PQRS
5) SRQP
Passage
Efforts are on to generate favourable public opinion for allowing
our government to sign the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). It appears the
government has been trying to sell to opposition parties and the public the
following point:
Our nuclear scientists are sure that with the Pokhran –II tests, conducted in May 1998, they have “enough data, expertise and skills to conduct sub-critical test and maintain our deterrence for the next 25 years or so,” and therefore, we can go ahead sign the CTBT. India does not need any further nuclear test for weaponisation and for acquiring a minimum deterrent. If we sign the CTBT now, there will be every possibility of the American Government supporting India to get a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council. There will be favourable world opinion and it will result in many advantages to India .
19. What do you make
out of the expression that the Pokhran – II tests are enough to maintain our
deterrence for the next 25 years or so?Our nuclear scientists are sure that with the Pokhran –II tests, conducted in May 1998, they have “enough data, expertise and skills to conduct sub-critical test and maintain our deterrence for the next 25 years or so,” and therefore, we can go ahead sign the CTBT. India does not need any further nuclear test for weaponisation and for acquiring a minimum deterrent. If we sign the CTBT now, there will be every possibility of the American Government supporting India to get a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council. There will be favourable world opinion and it will result in many advantages to India .
1)It will make our enemy cautions enough to attack us in the coming years.
2)We can confront our enemies with its help in the near future.
3)We will have a greater say in the international context by going nuclear.
4)It is enough to maintain our superiority in the region for the next two and a half decades or so.
5)None of these
20.Our government feels that if we sign the CTBT now, then America will certainly 1stand in the way of India to get a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council.
1)back India in getting a permanent seat in United Nations Security Council.
2)have no power to obstruct India ’s chance in getting a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council.
3)feel pressurized to not allow India acquire a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council.
4)None of these
21.The passage mainly presents the answer to which of the following questions?
1)What are the benefits of signing the CTBT?
2)What are the advantages of our Pokhran – II tests?
3)Why should we oblige the US ?
4)Where do we stand in the world today?
5)None of these
22.Give the synonym of the word expertise as given in bold in the passage.
1)equipment
2)materials
3)process
4)proficiency
5)technique
23.Give the antonym of the word favourble as given in bold in the passage.
1)hesitant
2)confusing
3)bewildering
4)fluctuating
5)hostile
Directions (24-25): In each of the number series given in these questions, the two terms have been put within brackets. Mark your answer as :
(1) If the first bracketed term is right and second is wrong.
(2) If both the bracketed terms are right.
(3) If the first bracketed term is wrong and the second is right.
(4) If both the bracketed terms are wrong.
24. 4, 6, 10, (12), 16, (14), 22
25. 3, 10, 29, (66), (127), 218
___________________________________________________________
(1) 25
(2) 20
(3) 26
(4) 27
2. Complete the following number series:
7. 1, 1, 3, 9, 5, 25, 7, 49 _, 81
(1)7
(2) 9
(3) 8
(4) 10
3. 8. 5, 11, 23, 41, 64, _
(1)89
(2) 95
(3) 101
(4) 105
Directions (4-6): Study the information given below to answer these questions.
Mark your answer as:
(i) If both A and R are correct but R does not explain A.
(ii) If both A and R are correct and R explains A.
(iii) If A is correct but R is wrong.
(iv) If A wrong but R is correct.
4. Assertion (A): A saltwater fish drinks sea water where a fresh water fish never drinks water.
Reason (R): A saltwater fish is hyper tonic to its environment while a freshwater fish is hypotonic to its environment.
5. Assertion (A): The territory of India is larger than the territories of the States taken together.
Reason (R): India is a Union of States.
6. Assertion (A): Alcohol rather than mercury is used in a thermometer to measure a temperature of 60o C.
Reason (R): Alcohol has a lower freezing point then mercury.
Directions (7-11): In the following questions, the first and the last parts of the sentence are numbered 1 and 6. The rest of the sentence is split into four parts named P, Q, R and S. These four parts are not given in their proper order. Read the parts, arrange them properly and find out which of the five combinations given below is appropriate, and mark it as your answer.
7.
1. The latest move
P. women is being opposed
Q. to reserve one-third of
R. tooth and nail by
S. the electoral seats for
6. some political parties.
1) SPQR
2) QSPR
3) SRPQ
4) PRQS
5) SPRQ
8.
1. One of the most pernicious
P. ancient scriptures is that
Q. of the system of caste hierarchy,
R. and reactionary feudal survivals
S. sanctified by some
6. exploitation and oppression.
1) PQRS
2) SRQP
3) PRQS
4) QSPR
5) RSPQ
9.
1. Experience as well as
P. tells us that any attempt
Q. at a forced equalisation of income
R. modern economic theory
S. and wealth destroys the incentives
6. that encourage efficiency.
1) RPQS
2) SPRQ
3) PSQR
4) QRPS
5) PQRS
10.
1. The chances of electoral success
P. for liberals would certainly improve
Q. under the banner of
R. a liberal party with its
S. if they could fight
6. own electoral symbol.
1) SQRP
2) RPSQ
3) PSQR
4) RQPS
5) QRSP
11.
1. The author has pointed an
P. of the community who
Q. accusing finger at the Muslim intelligentsia
R. maintain a stoic silence over the
S. and the dominant members
6. bizarre happenings in Kashmir.
1) QSPR
2) RPSQ
3) SQRP
4) PQRS
5) SRQP
12. Malnourishment of Indian children is mostly due to traditional taboos __________ with certain vital foods, and not due to their _____________.
1) containing, unavailability
2) embraced, locality
3) associated, scarcity
4) raised, nutrition
5) inserted, quality
12. During his mandate, the secretary-general will face the _________ challenge of ________ a global agreement on climate change.
1) grave, drawing
2) pressing, forging
3) massive, framing
4) umpteen, sentencing
5) detrimental, inking
13. The key for today's UN is not to _______ more goals, but to ________ those that have been set before.
1) bargain, offload
2) address, justify
3) superseded, avail
4) amen, respond
5) create, implement
14. The price of sugar increases by 20%, by what % should a housewife reduce the consumption of sugar so that expenditure on sugar can be same as before ?
(A) 15%
(B) 16.66%
(C) 12%
(D) 9%
15. A man spends half of his salary on household expenses, 1/4th for rent, 1/5th for travel expenses, the man deposits the rest in a bank. If his monthly deposits in the bank amount 50, what is his monthly salary ?
(A) Rs.500
(B) Rs.1500
(C) Rs.1000
(D) Rs. 900
16.What is the output of the program
void main()
{
int i,j,k,n=5;
clrscr();
for(i=5;i>0;i--)
{
j=1
k=n&j;
k==0?printf("0"):printf("1");
}
getch();
}
A. 00011
B. 11110
c. 11001
D. 11100
Ans: B. 11110
17.What is the output of the program
void main()
{
struct a
{
int i;
char *st1;
};
typedef struct a ST;
ST *str1;
str1=(ST*)malloc(100);
str1->i=100;
strcpy(str1->st1,"Welcome to Oracle");
printf(" %d%s\n",str1->i,str1->st1);
getch();
}
A. core dump
B. will not compile
c. 100,Welcome to Oracle
D. None of these
Ans: C
18.Find the approximate value of the following equation. 6.23% of 258.43 - ? + 3.11% of 127 = 13.87
1) 2
2) 4
3) 8
4) 6
5) 10
19. A train overtakes 2 persons walking at 3 km/hr and 5 km/hr respectively in the same direction and completely passes them in 8 seconds and 10 seconds respectively. Find the speed of the train.
1) 15 km/hr
2) 13 km/hr
3) 10 km/hr
4) 10 km/hr
5) None of these
20.The ratio between the radius and height of a cone is 3:4. What is the curved surface area of the cone?
1) 15p m2
2) 12p m2
3) 9p m2
4) Data inadequate
5) None of these
But I did not want to shoot the
elephant. I watched him beating his bunch of grass against his knees, with
the preoccupied grandmotherly air that elephants have. It
seemed to me that it would be murder to shoot him. I had never shot an elephant
and never wanted to. (Somehow it always seems worse to kill large animal.)
Besides, there was the beast's owner to be considered. But I had got to act
quickly. I turned to some experienced-looking Burmans who had been there when
we arrived, and asked them how the elephants had been behaving. They all said
the same thing; he took no notice of you if you left him alone, but he might
charge if you went too close to him.
I.
The author did not want to shoot the elephant because he
A.
was afraid of it
B.
did not have the experience of shooting big animals
C.
did not wish to kill animal which was not doing anybody any harm
D.
did not find the elephant to be ferocious
Ans-B
II.
The phrase 'Preoccupied grandmotherly air' signifies
A.
being totally unconcerned
B.
pretending to be very busy
C.
a very superior attitude
D.
calm, dignified and affectionate disposition
Ans-D
III.
From the passage it appears that the author was
A.
an inexperienced hunter
B. kind and considerate
C.
possessed with fear
D. a worried man
Ans-B
2. Read the passage carefully and answer
the questions given below
In the world today we make health and
end in itself. We have forgotten that health is really means to enable a person
to do his work and do it well. a lot of modern medicine and this includes many
patients as well as many physicians pays very little attention to health but
very much attention to those who imagine that they are ill. Our great concern
with health is shown by the medical columns in newspapers. the health articles
in popular magazines and the popularity of television programmes and all those
books on medicine. We talk about health all the time. Yet for the most part the
only result is more people with imaginary illness. The healthy man should not
be wasting time talking about health: he should be using health for work. The
work does the work that good health possible.
I. A healthy man should be concerned
with
A. his work which good health makes
possible
B. looking after his health
C. his health which makes work
possible
D. talking about health
Ans-A
II. The passage tells us
A. how medicine should be
manufactured
B. what healthy man should or should
not do
C. what television programmes should
be about
D. how best to imagine illness
Ans-B
III. Talking about the health all time
makes people
A. always suffer from imaginary
illness
B. sometimes suffer from imaginary
illness
C. rarely suffer from imaginary
illness
D. often suffer from imaginary
illness
Ans-D
IV. The passage suggests that
A. health is an end in itself
B. health is blessing
C. health is only means to an end
D. we should not talk about health
Ans-C
3. Read the passage carefully and answer
the questions given below
At this stage of civilisation, when
many nations are brought in to close and vital contact for good and evil, it is
essential, as never before, that their gross ignorance of one another should be
diminished, that they should begin to understand a little of one another's historical
experience and resulting mentality. It is the fault of the English to expect
the people of other countries to react as they do, to political and
international situations. Our genuine goodwill and good intentions are often
brought to nothing, because we expect other people to be like us. This would be
corrected if we knew the history, not necessarily in detail but in broad
outlines, of the social and political conditions which have given to each
nation its present character.
I. The need for a greater understanding
between nations
A. was always
there
B. is no longer there
C. is more today than ever
before
D. will always be there
Ans-C
II. The character of a nation is the
result of its
A.
mentality
B. cultural heritage
C. gross
ignorance
D. socio-political conditions
Ans-D
III. According to the author his
countrymen should
A. read the story of other nations
B. have a better understanding of
other nations
C. not react to other actions
D. have vital contacts with other
nations
Ans-B
IV. Englishmen like others to react to
political situations like
A.
us
B. themselves
C. others
D. each others
Ans-D
4. Read the passage carefully and answer
the questions given below
The strength of the electronics
industry in Japan is the Japanese ability to organise production and marketing
rather than their achievements in original research. The British are generally
recognised as a far more inventive collection of individuals, but never seem
able to exploit what they invent. There are many examples, from the TSR Z
hovercraft, high speed train and Sinclair scooter to the Triumph, BSA and
Norton Motorcycle which all prove this sad rule. The Japanese were able to
exploits their strengths in marketing and development many years ago, and their
success was at first either not understood in the West or was dismissed as
something which could have been produced only at their low price. They were
sold because they were cheap copies of other people's ideas churned out of a
workhouse which was dedicated to hard grind above all else.
I. It is evident from the passage that
the strength of a country's industry depends upon
A. original
research
B. international cooperation
C. dedicated workforce
D. electronic development
Ans-C
II. According to the passage,
prosperity in industry depends upon
A. productivity
B. inventiveness
C. marketing
ability
D. official patronage
Ans-C
III. The main theme of this passage is
A. electronic industry in Japan
B. industrial comparison between
Japan and Britain
C. the role of marketing efficiency
in industrial prosperity
D. the importance of original
research in industry
Ans-C
5. Read the passage carefully and answer
the questions given below
Piccadilly Circus was full of
loneliness.It seethes and echoes with it. To live near it. Looking down on it
is a discomforting exercise. You can't feel the pulse of London here, though
people expect to. To Londoners it is a maddening obstruction between one place
and another, and few voluntarily linger there. The only locals are those who
live off the lingerers; the lingerers are primarily sightseers, with a fair
sprinkling of people hoping to draw attention to themselves - both typically
from the provinces. They have come to see the heart of London and expect to see
spectacle, glamour and vice.
I. Piccadilly circus is
A. the name of a circus company
B. a lonely and resounding old
building
C. a centrally located area in London
D. a huge heap of ruins
Ans-C
II. The passage implies that
A. some Londoners love to spend their
time near the Piccadilly circus
B. Piccadilly circus is a hazardous
place
C. no Londoner wants to be in
Piccadilly circus
D. Piccadilly circus is place of vice
Ans-B
III. According to this passage, people
from outside London go to Piccadilly circus because it is
A. a historical
place
B. full of glamour
C. full of exciting people
D. the pulse of London
Ans-B
Computer hardware
1. How many devices can be used on a
single SCSI bus? Keep in mind that the SCSI host adapter counts as a device.
A.
1
B.
8
C.
20
D.
10
E.
All of the above
Ans-B
2. To install a second IDE drive into a
computer, you must:
A.
Set the master-slave jumper to slave on the second drive
B.
Use the IDE configuration software to set the new drive as slave
C.
Verify that you define the new drive as D: in the CMOS setup
D.
Verify that you attach the drive to the connector at the end of the ribbon
cable
E.
None of the above
Ans-A
3. In ROM BIOS, the acronym BIOS stands
for:
A.
Basic Intuitive Output Set
B.
Basic Input Organizational System
C.
Basic Input Output System
D.
Basic Industry Operating System
E.
None of the above
Ans-C
4. How many pins on a VGA?
A.
15.
B.
9
C.
25
D.
32
E.
None of the above
Ans-A
5. What is modified when changing the
system start-up boot sequence?
A.
BIOS/CMOS
B.
CONFIG.SYS
C.
autoexec.bat
D.
COMMAND.COM
E.
None of the above
Ans-A
6. Which is NOT typically a Field
Replaceable Unit?
A.
System ROM
B.
Power supply
C.
System chassis
D.
Video controller
E.
None of the above
Ans-C
7. What are the most likely conditions for
ESD?
A.
Cold and wet
B.
Cold and dry
C.
Hot and wet
D.
Hot and dry
E.
None of the above
Ans-B
8. Which type of cable is most likely in
use with rj-45 connectors?
A.
10base2
B.
10base5
C.
10baseT
D.
10baseFL
E.
None of the above
Ans-C
9. Which controller would support an
external CD-ROM drive?
A.
ESDI
B.
ARLL
C.
MFM
D.
SCSI
E.
None of the above
Ans-D
10. You should never put floppy drives,
hard drives, or even VCR tapes or cassette tapes on top of speakers (or near
any other source of magnetism) because of:
A.
RFI
B.
EMI
C.
EXE
D.
FYI
E.
IOU
Ans-B
11. RS-232 is a standard that applies to?
A.
Parallel port
B.
Serial port
C.
Game port
D.
All of the above
E.
None of the above
Ans-B
12. How would you allow device drivers and
TSR's to be loaded into Upper Memory Blocks ?
A.
DOS=High
B.
devicehigh=
C.
loadhigh=
D.
DOS=UMB
E.
None of the above
Ans-D
13. RTS stands for:
A.
ready to start
B.
ready to switch
C.
request to send
D.
request to scan
E.
ready to set
Ans-C
14. What can you use to ensure power is not
interrupted, resulting in corrupted data?
A.
UPS
B.
Proper grounding
C.
Surge protector
D.
Nuclear powered thermal protective underwear
E.
None of the above
Ans-A
15. MSD exe does not have information on:
A.
cache
B.
video
C.
operation system
D.
com ports
E.
None of the above
Ans-A
16. The standard IRQ for the floppy drive
is?
A.
9
B.
6
C.
10
D.
All of the above
E.
None of the above
17. Ans-B
To find out how much memory is available, you could type _____
A.
EMM
B.
MEM
C.
CHKDSK
D.
MEMMAKER
E.
None of the above
Ans-B
18. A PC with a 486DX2 processor runs
internally at SOMhz. What speed would its external logic be running?
A.
l0Mhz
B.
25Mhz
C.
50Mhz
D.
100 Mhz
E.
None of the above
Ans-B
19. Upper Memory blocks are located where?
A.
Conventional Memory
B.
Extended Memory
C.
Expanded memory
D.
Reserved Memory
E.
None of the above
Ans-D
20. Which of the following are SCSI issues?
A.
unique id settings
B.
limited cable length
C.
parity
D.
passive termination
E.
active termination
Ans-A
21. What is the name of the printed circuit
board?
22. How much data will a high density (HD)
floppy disk hold?
23. After trying to unload a TSR, you get
an error message saying that other TSRs were loaded after the one you tried to
remove. Which of the following commands could you use to see the current load order?
A.
MEM /P
B.
MEMMAKER
C.
MEM /C (A SYS:
D.
None of the above
Ans-C
24. IDE cables have how many pins?
A.
25
B. 50
C.
100 D.
40
E.
65
Ans-D
25. The DC voltage on most circuit boards
is:
A.
-12 volts
B.
0 volts
C.
+5 volts
D.
+12 volts
E.
None of the above
Ans-C
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