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English — Set 16

10 Questions with Answers & Explanations

Set 16 of 38

1

The theme of the passage is :

Context: Study the following passage and answer the given questions (5 - 9). Organisations are institutions in which members compete for status and power. They compete for resource of the organisation, for example finance to expand their own departments, for career advancement and for power to control the activities of others. In pursuit of these aims, grouped are formed and sectional interests emerge. As a result, policy-decisions may serve the ends of political and career systems rather than those of the concern. In this way, the goals of the organisation may be displaced in favour of sectional interests and individual ambition. These preoccupations sometimes prevent the emergence of organic systems. Many of the electronic firms in the study had recently created research and development departments employing highly qualified and well paid scientists and technicians. Their high pay and expert knowledge were sometimes seen as a threat to the established order of rank, power and privilege. Many senior managers had little knowledge of technicality and possibilities of new developments and electronics. Some felt that close cooperation with the experts in an organic system would reveal their ignorance and show their experience was now redundant.

Questions

A

groupism in organizations

B

individual ambitions in organizations

C

frustration of senior managers

D

emergence of sectional interests in organizations

Correct Answer

emergence of sectional interests in organizations

Explanation

The passage primarily discusses how members in an organization compete for power and resources, leading to the emergence of sectional interests that can displace organizational goals.

2

From the given alternatives, choose the one which best expresses the given sentence in Direct speech. Sentence: He exclaimed with joy that India had won the Sahara Cup.

Options

A

He said, "India has won the Sahara Cup"

B

He said, "India won the Sahara Cup"

C

He said, "How! India will win the Sahara Cup"

D

He said, "Hurrah! India has won the Sahara Cup"

Correct Answer

He said, "Hurrah! India has won the Sahara Cup"

Explanation

The reporting verb 'exclaimed with joy' indicates an interjection like 'Hurrah!' in direct speech. The past perfect 'had won' in indirect speech corresponds to present perfect 'has won' in direct speech.

3

The king ...... the rebel.

Options

A

excused

B

forgave

C

pardoned

D

none of these

Correct Answer

pardoned

Explanation

'Pardon' is the formal/legal term used for an official act of forgiving an offense or crime, especially when performed by a head of state like a king.

4

Physical courage is an expression of

Context: Question No. (4-8) based on the following passage: Courage is not only the basis of virtue; it is its expression. faith, hope, charity and all the rest don't become virtues until it takes courage to exercise them. There are roughly two types of courage. the first an emotional state which urges a man to risk injury or death, is physical courage. The second, more reasoning attitude which enables him to take coolly his career, happiness, his whole future or his judgement of what he thinks either right or worthwhile, is moral courage. I have known many men, who had marked physical courage, but lacked moral courage. Some of them were in high places, but they failed to be great in themselves because they lacked moral courage. On the other hand I have seen men who undoubtedly possessed moral courage but were very cautious about taking physical risks. But I have never met a man with moral courage who couldn't, when it was really necessary, face a situation boldly.

Questions

A

emotions

B

deliberation

C

uncertainty

D

defiance

Correct Answer

emotions

Explanation

The passage explicitly defines physical courage as 'an emotional state which urges a man to risk injury or death'.

5

People who ...... on horses usually lose in the end.

Options

A

gamble

B

play

C

risk

D

place

Correct Answer

gamble

Explanation

The correct verb for betting money on results like horse racing is 'gamble'.

6

A person not sure of the existence of god is called............

Options

A

Cynic

B

Agnostic

C

Atheist

D

Theist

Correct Answer

Agnostic

Explanation

An agnostic is a person who believes that nothing is known or can be known of the existence or nature of God.

7

Pick out the most effective word from the given words to fill in the blank to make the sentence meaningfully complete. On account of the dearth of grass on the arid plains the cattle became ......

Options

A

flippant

B

jubilant

C

agitated

D

emaciated

Correct Answer

emaciated

Explanation

'Emaciated' means abnormally thin or weak, especially because of illness or a lack of food. A 'dearth' (lack) of grass would cause cattle to become thin.

8

For those who live near Piccadilly circus, it is

Context: 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.

Questions

A

a very noisy place

B

crowded with people

C

an obstruction to traffic

D

an awkward structure

Correct Answer

an obstruction to traffic

Explanation

The text describes it as a 'maddening obstruction between one place and another' for people trying to move through the city.

9

I agree ............ your proposals but .............your friends on all issues.

Options

A

with, to

B

to, with

C

to. to

D

with , with

Correct Answer

to, with

Explanation

In English grammar, you 'agree to' a proposal or plan, and you 'agree with' a person or their opinion.

10

Moreover, a fact finding mission ...... by BSN to India in January this year strongly recommended that the French group should go it alone, and not hand over ...... to an Indian Partner.

Options

A

organised; papers

B

constituted, authority

C

sponsored, power

D

dispatched, control

Correct Answer

dispatched, control

Explanation

In the context of administrative operations, a mission is 'dispatched' and 'control' is something that can be handed over to a partner.

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