01 Mockcat 6 Questions

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    INSTRUCTIONS

    How to answer:

    1. This test has three sections which examine various abilities. These 3 sections have 60 questions in all with

    each section having 20 questions. You will be given two and half hours to complete the test. In distributing

    the time over the three sections, please bear in mind that you need to demonstrate your competence in all

    three sections.

    2. Directions for answering the questions are given before some of the questions wherever necessary. Readthese directions carefully and answer the questions by darkening the appropriate circles on the Answer

    Sheet. There is only one correct answer to each question.

    3. All questions carry 5 marks each. Each wrong answer will attract a penalty of one-fourth of the marks

    alloted to the question.

    4. Do your rough work only on the Test Booklet and NOT on the Answer Sheet.

    5. Follow the instructions of the invigilator. Candidates found violating the instructions will be disqualified.

    For more visit mba.careerlauncher.com

    Mock CAT - 6

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    SECTION I

    Number of Questions = 20

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 1 and 2: In each 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 they need to be

    arranged in the logical order to form a coherent paragraph/passage. From the given options, choose the most

    appropriate option.

    1. A. The economic slowdown has made it harder for many people to keep up their pace of saving for

    retirement.

    B. They live longer, for example, so they must pay for longer retirements.

    C. But women, especially, can find it difficult in tough times to invest enough to ensure a secure

    retirement.

    D. Their job histories are typically shorter, too, which translates into smaller accounts.

    E. After all, even under ideal circumstances, women face steeper obstacles than men in building a

    proper retirement nest egg.

    (1) CEBD (2) BCDE (3) EDCB (4) CEDB (5) DECB

    2. A. Barbie started as a toy, the kind of toy that got whisked off store shelves faster than Mattel, the

    dolls first maker and now, thanks to Barbie, the worlds largest toy manufacturer, could restock

    those shelves.

    B. Barbie never got pregnant or old; she stood her own in stores as the mute brassy standard not just of

    beauty but also of lifestyle.

    C. With their purchasing power they voted against their own shapes, colors, and cultural identity,

    Barbie found herself in the bizarre position of defining culture.

    D. Around the world, she became an icon aspired to by both mothers and their daughters; who identified

    desperately with the rich, blonde Barbie from that rich, blonde country.

    E. Barbies star rose with post-war U.S. hegemony that made everyone in the world want fast-food,

    appliances, Coca-Cola, and, if you were a woman, blond hair and impossibly long legs.

    (1) BCDE (2) DBCE (3) CDBE (4) EBDC (5) EDBC

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 3 and 4: In each question, there are three to five sentences. Each sentence has

    pair/s of words/phrases that are highlighted. From the highlighted words / phrase(s) select the most appropriate

    word(s) / phrases to form correct sentences. Then from the options given choose the right sequence

    3. One of the wealthiest and most respectable citizens of the borough [A] /burrow [B] had been missing

    for several days, which gave rise to suspicion offoul [A] /fowl [B] play.

    We congratulated him on his performance on [A] / at [B] the rehearsal.

    The reinforced islet [A] /eyelet [B] allows it to hang on a pegboard, a tool trailer or a basement wall.

    A rosy garland was the victors meed [A] /mead[B].

    (1) BBAAB (2) AABBB (3) BBBBA (4) AABBA (5) ABBAB

    4. When Lena sighed she exhaled a heavy perfume ofsashay [A] /sachet [B] powder.

    Very commonly a calender [A] /calendar [B] includes more than one type of cycle, or has both cyclic

    and acyclic elements.

    The claque [A] /clack [B] was quite vociferous in its [A] / its [B] support.

    Unaccustomed to sudden emergencies, her head began to swim, and her grip upon the bridal [A] /

    bridle [B] relaxed.

    (1) BBAAB (2) BBABA (3) BAAAB (4) ABABB (5) ABAAB

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    DIRECTIONS for Questions 5 to 7: In each question, there are five sentences or parts of sentences that form

    a paragraph. Identify the sentence(s) or part(s) of sentence(s) that is/are correct in terms of grammar and

    usage. Then, choose the most appropriate option.

    5. A. A Farewell to Arms is a very dramatic book.

    B. Many scholars, such as Ray B. West, Jr., have compared its five-book structure to the traditional

    English five-act play.

    C. There are similarities to be drawn among the structure of the novel and tragic drama.D. The first book, like the first act in a play, introduces the characters and the situation of the story, and

    in the second book the romantic plot is developed.

    E. Book III provides climactic turning point: Frederics desertion of his post in the army and his

    decision to return to Catherine.

    (1) D & E (2) B only (3) A & D only (4) B, C & D (5) A, B & D

    6. A. Development is a process whereby insignificant and imperceptible

    B. quantitative change lead to fundamental, qualitative changes.

    C. The latter occur not gradually, but rapidly and abruptly, in the form of a leap from one state to

    another.

    D. A simple example from the physical world might be the heating of water: a one-degree increase in

    temperature is a quantitative change,

    E. but on 100 degrees there is a qualitative change-water to steam.

    (1) E only (2) A & D (3) C only (4) A, C & D (5) B, C & D

    7. A. The next steps towards globalisation comes from an unexpected quarterglobal farmlands.

    B. Stung by growing food shortages, the Chinese government is encouraging

    C. its agricultural firms to buy or lease farmlands in Africa

    D. and South America to bolster food security back home. The new government policy comes in the

    wake of higher income levels that encourage

    E. spending away from staple rice diets and towards increasing consumption for meat.

    (1) C & E (2) A & C (3) B, C & D (4) A only (5) B & D

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 8 to 11: Given below is a passage consisting of four paragraphs. In each

    paragraph the closing part of the last sentence has been left out. In each of the following questions, from the

    given options, choose the one that completes the paragraph in the most appropriate way.

    8. In or around 1605, European literature changed. No one realised it at the time, but when Don Quixote

    set off to save the world, a new kind of writing was born. The old forms of storytelling-the epic, the

    romance, the oral tale-would from now on be pitted against a boisterous young rival. Before long it

    would be universally acknowledged that a reader ____________________________________ .(1) hoping to enjoy a good story must be in search of a novel.

    (2) remains a literary force to be reckoned with.

    (3) articulates a basic human desire-the desire to be many people, as many as it would take to assuage

    the burning desires that possess us.

    (4) is a similar combination of irony, seriousness and principled reticence.

    (5) could reveal the immense, mysterious power of the pointless.

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    9. The novelty of the novel is of course connected with the rise of printing, and the growth of a literate

    public with time and money to spare. Beyond that, the sheer scale of the form allows storylines to be

    extended and multiplied as never before, crossing and re-crossing each other with ample scope for

    coincidence, surprise and contingency, and hence for the depiction of characters with whom, as William

    Hazlitt put it, the reader can identify. But the most momentous way in which novels distinguish

    themselves from other kinds of storytelling is that they give a central role to a supernumerary character-

    the narratorwhose task is to transmit the story to us. All kinds of stories invite us to imagine the

    characters they portray, and involve ourselves in their fortunes and their follies; but to engage withnovels we need ____________________________________ .

    (1) perplexed citizens engaged in a collective search for freedom and happiness.

    (2) counting against any political aspiration that arises from nationality, identity or tribal loyalty.

    (3) a gradual awakening from the paranoid fictions that are flourishing.

    (4) to go one step further and imagine the people telling the story, or even identify with them.

    (5) to demonstrate the power of the imagination.

    10. The art of reading a novel involves a dash of experiment, conjecture, even risk. It requires readers to try

    out different narrative perspectives, styles, even personalities, and so to explore the inherent variousness

    of experience, and to recognise the vein of arbitrariness that runs through any possible version of

    events. Novels, in short, are implicitly pluralistic. In this respect they resemble essays, which, as it

    happens, came into existence at more or less the same time (Montaigne launched the form in 1580, withBacon following in 1597). Essays tend to be classier, more learned and more demandingthere is no

    essayistic equivalent of the popular noveland even when written in a perfectly casual style, they are

    likely to be strewn with half-concealed quotations or allusions to flatter or perhaps annoy the smarter

    class of reader. As exercises in hesitation, exploration and experimental self-multiplication, they are

    like novels, only more so. You might even say that the novel aspires to the condition of the essay, and

    ____________________________________ .

    (1) keeps returning to the question of the novel form.

    (2) teaches us that there is no perfect way of carving up the world or recounting its stories.

    (3) there is certainly no shortage of novelists who have aspired to be essayists too.

    (4) it has its intellectual origins in the prodigious work of a novelist.

    (5) is an aspect of the ever-developing human spirit.

    11. Think of Eliot or Henry James, Woolf, Forster or Orwell, or Mann, Sartre, De Beauvoir, Camus and

    Mary McCarthy. And as the four recently published books now lying open on my kitchen table

    demonstrate, the essay-writing novelist is still a literary force to be reckoned with. In his luminous new

    collection, The Curtain, Milan Kundera argues that the special virtue of the novel lies in its ability to

    part the magic curtain, woven of legends that hangs between us and the ordinary world. The curtain

    has been put there to cover up the trivia of our lives, the forgotten old boxes and bags where an

    enigma remains an enigma while ugliness flirts with beauty, and reason courts the absurd. These

    neglected spaces were redeemed for literature, according to Kundera, at the moment when Cervantes

    got his readers to imagine Don Quixote as he lay dying while his niece went on eating, the housekeeper

    went on drinking and Sancho Panza went on being of good cheer. By inventing a narrator through

    whose consciousness such dumb events could be worked up into an affecting scene, Cervantes

    created a form of literature that could do justice to modest sentiments; and so a new kind of beautyKundera calls it prosaic beautywas born. Henry Fielding took the technique further when he created

    a narrator who could charm his readers with benign loquacity, and Laurence Sterne completed the

    development by blithely allowing the story of Tristram Shandy ____________________________.

    (1) to rent the curtain that separates us from the prose of ordinary life.

    (2) to pass through a long night of lyrical self-absorption.

    (3) to emerge on the other side in a state of bewildered, uncertain enlightenment.

    (4) to specialize in moral wisdom.

    (5) to be ruined by the character trying to recount it.

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    DIRECTIONS for Questions 12 and 13: The passage given below is followed by a set of questions. Choose

    the most appropriate answer to each question.

    PASSAGE

    Objections to the principle of autonomy may be expected from two sides. Behaviorists will continue to prefer

    their conception of organic drive with its capacity for manifold conditioning by ever receding stimuli. Whereas

    purposivists will be unwilling to accept a pluralistic principle that seems to leave motives so largely at themercy of learning.

    The behaviorist is well satisfied with motivation in terms of organic drive and conditioning because he feels

    that he somehow has secure anchorage in physiological structure (The closer he approaches physiological

    structure the happier the behaviorist is.) But the truth of the matter is that the neural physiology of organic

    drive and conditioning is no better established, and no easier to imagine, than is the neural physiology of the

    type of complex autonomous units of motivation here described.

    Two behavioristic principles will be said to account adequately for the instances of functional autonomy

    previously cited, viz., the circular reflex and cross-conditioning. The former concept, acceptable enough

    when applied to infant behavior, merely says that the more activity a muscle engages in, the more activity of

    the same sort does it engender through a self-sustaining circuit. This is, to be sure, a clear instance of autonomy,

    albeit on a primitive level, oversimplified so far as adult conduct is concerned. The doctrine of cross-conditioning

    refers to subtle recession of stimuli, and to the intricate possibility of cross-connections in conditioning. For

    instance, such ubiquitous external stimuli as humidity, daylight, gravitation, may feed collaterally into open

    channels of activity, arousing mysteriously and unexpectedly a form of conduct to which they have

    unconsciously been conditioned. For example, the angler whose fishing expeditions have been accompanied

    by sun, wind, or a balmy June day, may feel a desire to go fishing whenever the barometer, the thermometer,

    or the calendar in his city home tells him that these conditions prevail. Innumerable such crossed stimuli are

    said to account for the arousal of earlier patterns of activity.

    Such a theory inherits, first of all, the well-known difficulties resident in the principle of conditioning whenever

    it is made the sole explanation of human behavior. Further, though the reflex circle and cross-conditioningmay in fact exist, they are really rather trivial principles. They leave the formation of interest and its occasional

    arousal almost entirely to chance factors of stimulation. They give no picture at all of the spontaneous and

    variable aspects of traits, interests, or sentiments. These dispositions are regarded as purely reactive in nature;

    the stimulus is all-important. The truth is that dispositions sort out stimuli congenial to them, and this activity

    does not in the least resemble the rigidity of reflex response.

    A variant on the doctrine of cross-conditioning is the principle of redintegration. This concept admits the

    existence of highly integrated dispositions of a neuropsychic order. These dispositions can be aroused as a

    whole by any stimulus previously associated with their [p.153] functioning. In this theory likewise, the disposition

    is regarded as a rather passive affair, waiting for reactivation by some portion of the original stimulus. Here

    again the variability of the disposition and its urge-like quality are not accounted for. The stimulus is thought

    merely to reinstate a complex determining tendency. Nothing is said about how the stimuli themselves are

    selected, why a motive once aroused becomes insistent, surmounting obstacles, skillfully subordinating

    conflicting impulses, and inhibiting irrelevant trains of thought.

    In certain respects the principle of autonomy stands midway between the behavioristic view and the

    thoroughgoing purposive psychology of the hormic order. It agrees with the former in emphasizing the

    acquisition of motives, in avoiding an a priori and unchanging set of original urges, and in recognizing

    (as limited principles) the operation of the circular response and cross-conditioning. It agrees with the hormic

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    psychologist, however, in finding that striving-fromwithin is a far more essential characteristic of motive

    than stimulationfromwithout. It agrees likewise in distrusting the emphasis upon stomach contractions and

    other excess and deficit stimuli as causes of mature behavior. Such segmental sources of energy even

    when conditioned cannot possibly account for the go of conduct. But functional autonomy does not rely as

    does hormic theory upon modified instinct, which after all is as archaic a principle as the conditioning of

    autonomic segmental tensions, but upon the capacity of human beings to replenish their energy through a

    plurality of constantly changing systems of a dynamic order

    12. Which of the following supports functional autonomy?

    (1) Subtle accumulation of stimuli.

    (2) Cross connections in Conditioning

    (3) Complex channels of activity.

    (4) Organic drive.

    (5) Learning.

    13. The author would agree with which of the following statements

    (1) The theory of organic drive and conditioning is closest to truth because of its basis in physiological

    structure.

    (2) The neural physiology of organic drive and conditioning has been very well established .

    (3) The neural physiology of the type of complex autonomous units of motivation is very easy to

    imagine.

    (4) The stimulus is not all important: Dispositions select out congenial stimuli.

    (5) None of the above.

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 14 to 17: Given below is a passage consisting of four paragraphs. In each of

    the following paragraphs unjumble the highlighted line in the passage and answer the questions that follow.

    14 . As capitalism has transformed throughout the ages, so too have its virtues. In the early stages of modernity,

    where bucks could be made only outside the stifling constraints of feudal society, the money-maker

    was a roamer and a chancer: he travelled in search of his fortune, swindling and pursuing madcap

    schemes. With the development of capitalist societies, money was better made at home. The idealmoney-maker was now a prudent bookkeeper, who wasted nothing and ploughed his profits back into

    the business, renouncing his own consumption and frowning on sensual pleasure. The model bookkeeper

    was the eighteenth-century American, Benjamin Franklin, (A) for his with of austere celebration

    recommendations productive virtues, and getting up early, saving ones pennies and not eating too

    much at lunch.

    If the sentence (A) is rearranged, the FIFTH word from the start is

    (1) of (2) for (3) recommendations

    (4) his (5) austere

    15. The capitalist bookkeepers theoretician was German sociologist Max Weber, whose 1910 book

    The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism argued that the key feature of capitalism was thatmaking money becomes a calling, an end in itself. The bourgeois (B) for the worked sake, denying of

    work himself the fruits of the pre-modern. His labour man would have been flummoxed by this, says

    Weber: what is the point of this, to sink into the grave weighed down with a great material load of

    money and goods?

    If the sentence (B) is rearranged, the SEVENTH word from the start is

    (1) of (2) the (3) labour (4) denying (5) worked

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    16. The protestant ethic didnt hold sway for long, though; even in Webers time, it was on the wane. With

    the growth of mass consumerism and radical politics in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries,

    the new generation damned the traditional bourgeois work ethic as stuffy and restrictive. Benjamin

    Franklins aphorisms (C) time is now ringing hollow money; a heavy heart the light purse means

    were by. While Franklins prime concern was to be useful, the French poet Charles Baudelaire judged

    that: To be a useful man has always appeared to me as something quite hideous.

    If the sentence (C) is rearranged, the FIFTH word from the start is

    (1) light (2) were (3) means (4) money (5) purse

    17. A new ethic was replacing Franklins religion of work, and this was analysed in Daniel Bells 1976

    book The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism. Bell identified a new countercultural ethic, based not

    on production but on consumption: the virtue was not public duty but the celebration of sensual

    enjoyment, the exploration and liberation of the self. Rather than saving every penny and denying

    oneself, there was now a revelling in abundance and in sensation. Not working to work, but enjoying to

    enjoy. In the 1920s, and then again in the 1960s, this countercultural wave rose up with particular

    force, shaking the work ethic to its foundations.

    (D) Capitalism is one of twenty-first century ethic of what is the question contemporary the, of the most

    pressing of our times. US political theorist Benjamin Barbers new book, Consumed, is an interesting

    contribution to this question.

    If the sentence (D) is rearranged, the NINTH word from the start is

    (1) what (2) is (3) century (4) ethic (5) contemporary

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 18 to 20: The passage given below is followed by a set of questions. Choose

    the most appropriate answer to each question.

    PASSAGE

    In his 1992 book A History of the Mind, Humphrey argued that consciousness is grounded in bodily sensation

    rather than thought, and proposed a speculative evolutionary account of the emergence of sentience. Seeing

    Red is a refinement and extension of those ideas. Put simply, we dont so much have sensations as do them.Sensation is on the production side of the mind rather than the reception side. When the spiky-haired

    cartoon character is looking at the red screen, he is doing red. He is redding. The evolutionary history of

    sensory enactments like redding (or hotting and so on) can be traced to the bodily reactions of primitive

    organisms responding to different environmental stimuli, noxious and nutritive. Imagine an amoebalike

    creature floating in the ancient seas. Like all other organisms, it has a structural boundary, which is the frontier

    between self and other. The animals survival depends on cross border exchanges of material, energy

    and information, and, as it moves around, some events at the border are going to be good for it and some

    bad. It must have the ability to respond appropriately-as Humphrey puts it, reacting to this stimulus with an

    ouch! To that with a whoopee! At first the responses are localised to the site of stimulation, but evolution

    endows more specialised sensory zones, this for chemicals, that for lightand a central control system, a

    proto-brain, which allows for co-ordinated responses to specific stimuli: Thus, when, say, salt arrives at itsskin, the animal detects it and makes a characteristic wriggle of activityit wriggles saltily. When red light

    falls on it, it makes a different kind of wriggleit wriggles redly. These are the prototypes of human sensation.

    With the march of evolutionary history, life gets more complex for the animal and it becomes advantageous

    for it to have an inner representation of events happening at the surface of its body. One way of accomplishing

    this is to plug into those systems already in place for identifying and reacting to stimulation. The animals

    representation of whats going on? (and what it feels about it) is achieved by monitoring what it is doing

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    about it. Thus to sense the presence of salt at a certain location the animal monitors its own command

    signals for wriggling saltily to sense the presence of red light, it monitors its signals for wriggling redly.

    Such self-monitoring by the subject is the prototype of feeling sensation.

    Evolution then takes the animal to another level at which it comes to care about the world just beyond its

    body, so that, for example, it becomes sensitive to the chemical and air pressure signals of the proximity of

    predator or prey. This requires quite another style of information processing. When the question is What is

    happening to me? the answer that is wanted is qualitative, present-tense, transient, and subjective. When thequestion is What is happening out there in the world? the answer that is wanted is quantitative, analytical,

    permanent, and objective. The old sensory channels continue to provide a body-centred picture of what the

    stimulation is doing to the animal, but a second system is set up to provide a more neutral, abstract, body

    independent representation of the outside world. This is the prototype of perception. At this stage the animal

    is still responding to stimulation with overt bodily activity, but eventually it achieves a degree of independence

    and is no longer bound by rigid stimulus-response rules. It still needs to know whats going on in the world,

    so the old sensory systems stay in service, and it still learns about what is happening to it by monitoring the

    command signals for its own responses. But now it can issue virtual commands, which dont result in overt

    action. In other words, it no longer wriggles. Rather than going all the way out to the surface of the body, the

    commands are short-circuited, reaching only to a point on the incoming sensory pathway. Over evolutionary

    time the target of the command retreats further from the periphery until the whole process becomes closed

    off from the outside world in an internal loop within the brain. Sensory activity has become privatised.

    18. Which is the thematic highlight of this passage?

    (1) That all perception is unconscious.

    (2) That selfhood and consciousness are entwined in-the-moment.

    (3) That sensation and perception are separable.

    (4) That the sensory systems underlie conscious awareness.

    (5) That the perceptual awareness underlies conscious awareness.

    19. Which of the following would have been true if the prototype of perception preceded sensation?

    (1) The goal of the authority would have moved away additionally from the fringe.

    (2) The body would not have been bound by a stiff stimulus-response system.(3) The being would have been taken to another level beyond its body.

    (4) The evolution of consciousness would have been ultimately doomed.

    (5) The reconciling of brain function and consciousness would have been faster.

    20. According to the passage, the term privatised refers to:

    (1) The target-command process getting perceptive and recognizing emotions.

    (2) The target-command process gaining evidence through varied actions.

    (3) The target-command process receiving recognition by the brain.

    (4) The target-command process getting entwined in the system.

    (5) The target-command process getting individualized.

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    SECTION II

    Number of Questions = 20

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 21 to 25: Answer the questions independent of each other.

    21. There are exactly three pairs of siblings among ten children namely Sam, Joe, Tim, Ron, Ken, May,

    Bob, Ian, Den and Emy such that no child is common in these pairs. Mr. Vaughan randomly selects

    four children and in each selection there is exactly one pair of siblings and the other two children do not

    have any sibling. Some of the selections done by him are listed in the table given below.

    I Sam Tim Den May

    II Ken Ron Joe Bob

    III Tim Ian Bob Emy

    IV May Bob Den SamSelections

    Which of the following can never be a selection done by Mr. Vaughan?

    (1) Den, Ken, Sam and May (2) Ian, Emy, May and Ron (3) Tim, Ken, Joe and Ron

    (4) Ron, Sam, Joe and May (5) Sam, Den, Ken and Bob

    22. Five thieves namely Amar, Bhuvan, Chirag, Dhruv and Elan have been assigned five codes namely A,

    B, C, D and E not necessarily in this particular order. Also, each thief has been assigned only one of the

    mentioned codes. For none of the thieves, the first alphabet of his name is same as his assigned code.

    The code assigned to both Amar and Chirag is neither B nor E. Further, the code assigned to both

    Dhruv and Elan is neither A nor C. If the code assigned to Amar is D, what is the code assigned to

    Bhuvan?

    (1) C (2) D (3) E (4) A (5) Cannot be determined

    23. A rugby team has 15 players such that each player is wearing only one Jersey. The Jerseys of these

    15 players are numbered 1 to 15 such that there is only one number on one Jersey. While playing a

    game on the rugby field, the players identify each other by their jersey numbers. For example, theplayer wearing the jersey number 7, is identified as Jersey 7. As per the teams strategy, Jersey x

    always passes the ball to Jersey y such that y is exactly three numbers ahead of x. For example,

    Jersey 1 always passes the ball to Jersey 4 whereas Jersey 15 always passes the ball to

    Jersey 3. Out of 1001 consecutive passes between his team members, at most how many times did

    Jersey 6 pass the ball?

    (1) 102 (2) 200 (3) 201 (4) 202 (5) Cannot be determined.

    24. The number assigned by Professor Chaurasia to each of the 26 alphabets namely A, B, C, ......, Y and Z

    is 1, 2, 3, ......, 25 and 26 respectively. He makes a selection of certain alphabets such that his selection

    includes all the vowels and all those alphabets which have been assigned a number that is prime. He

    forms a five-letter word using the alphabets from his selection. Which of the following is definitely not

    a word formed by him?(1) IGCAM (2) SCEKA (3) SUOEM (4) UQKAE (5) OGVUE

    25. 7 containers namely C1, C2, C3, C4, C5, C6 and C7 are filled with one out of the 7 liquids namely A,

    B, C, D, E, F and G not necessarily in this particular order. C2, C4 and C6 are filled with A, E and C

    respectively. C1 is neither filled with D nor G. C7 is neither filled with B nor D. If C1 is filled with F,

    which liquid is filled in C7?

    (1) A (2) G (3) C

    (4) Either (2) or (3) (5) Cannot be determined

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    DIRECTIONS for Questions 26 to 29: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.

    Five friends namely Salim, Sanjay, Sunil, Gaurav and Tarun played a game, which lasted for 6 weeks namely

    Week 1, Week 2, Week 3, Week 4, Week 5 and Week 6 in that order. In the game each of the friends selected

    exactly five players out of the ten players namely A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I and J at the beginning of week 1.

    Only at the end of each week the friends were allowed to substitute at most three players from their respective

    team. The players who substituted the existing players were out of the 10 mentioned players. The number of

    points earned by each friend is the sum total of the points earned by the players in his team during a particular

    week. The total number of points earned by each friend at the end of any week is the cumulative sum total ofthe points earned by him in all the weeks that have passed by

    Ranks 1 to 5 are awarded to the friends at the end of each week. Between any two friends a numerically lesser

    rank is given to the friend who has more number of points.

    TABLE 1 provides information about the number of points earned by the mentioned players in each of the six

    weeks.

    TABLE 2 provides information about the composition of the teams selected by the friends at the beginning of

    week 1.

    Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 Week 6

    A 60 100 25 150 40 125

    B 100 80 125 50 100 60

    C 15 25 200 125 25 80

    D 45 60 45 80 150 125

    E 125 80 20 140 20 60

    F 50 75 150 40 180 150

    G 10 120 200 60 25 50

    H 200 50 125 110 75 75

    I 175 25 85 90 145 150

    J 120 210 50 100 60 50

    Number of Points

    Players

    Table 1

    Salim Sanjay Sunil Gaurav Tarun

    B A E B J

    D C G C I

    E F H F D

    H G I I A

    J I A E E

    Teams

    Table 2

    Gaurav got minimum possible number of points in each of the weeks after week 1 sequentially.

    26. Find the number of points earned by Gaurav in week 5.

    (1) 170 (2) 230 (3) 215 (4) 210 (5) 245

    27. In how many weeks B, J and E were present together in the team selected by Gaurav?

    (1) 0 (2) 1 (3) 2 (4) 3 (5) 4

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    Additional Information for questions 28 and 29:

    Sanjay substituted exactly four players across all the six weeks. He did not substitute any player at the end of

    weeks 1 and 2. In the remaining weeks, the substitutions made by him were such that he earned maximum

    possible number of points.

    28. Find the number of points earned by Sanjay in week 5.

    (1) 650 (2) 615 (3) 570 (4) 605 (5) 590

    29. How many players were there in the team selected by Sanjay for exactly three weeks such that the three

    weeks are consecutive?

    (1) 0 (2) 2 (3) 1 (4) 4 (5) 3

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 30 to 32: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below

    The shopkeeper of a particular shop announces that the selling price of all the items sold from his shop will

    change only on the first day of each of the three months namely January, February and March. The selling

    price of an item in the month of January will change with respect to the marked price of that particular item

    and the selling price of an item in the months of February and March will change with respect to the selling

    price of that particular item in the previous month. The following table provides information about six of the

    items that are available for sale from his shop. Further, the table provides the maximum and the minimum

    possible selling price of each of the six items during each of the mentioned three months.

    ItemsMarked

    Price(in Rs.)January February March

    Minimum Selling

    Price in any

    month (in Rs.)

    Maximum selling

    price in any

    month (in Rs.)

    Shirt-1 300 10 5 10 275 335

    Shirt-2 400 5 10 8 345 450

    Trouser-1 500 8 12 10 425 575

    Trouser-2 550 5 10 10 450 600Shoe-1 900 15 10 10 750 1000

    Shoe-2 800 10 10 10 700 800

    % change in selling price every month

    30. What is the selling price(approximate) of Shirt-1 in the month of March?

    (1) Rs.312 (2) Rs.282 (3) Rs.318

    (4) Either (1) or (2) (5) Cannot be determined

    31. Rahim bought one of the mentioned Shirts and Trouser-1 in any of the three given months. What is the

    maximum possible amount (approx) Rahim paid for this purchase?

    (1) Rs.887 (2) Rs.897 (3) Rs.995 (4) Rs.987 (5) Rs.700

    32. What could be the minimum possible difference between the selling price of the two mentioned shoes

    at any point of time in the given three months?

    (1) Rs.44.55 (2) Rs.40.85 (3) Rs.37.75 (4) Rs.49.25 (5) Rs.53.75

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    DIRECTIONS for Questions 33 to 36: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.

    In a UN summit, one representative from each of the 15 countries are participating. The representatives at the

    summit speak seven different languages namely Hindi, English, Spanish, Portuguese, German, French and

    Arabic. Three representatives speak two languages each; two representatives speak three languages each; five

    representatives speak five languages each; one representative speaks one language and four representatives

    speak four languages each. The following bar graph provides information about the number of representatives

    that speak a particular language. The graph provides information about only three languages but does not

    specify them.

    9

    7

    10

    0

    2

    4

    6

    8

    10

    12

    Language 1 Language 2 Language 3N

    umberofRepresentatives

    33. If at least 5 representatives speak each language, then at most how many representatives speak a particular

    language?

    (1) 15 (2) 11 (3) 14 (4) 12 (5) 13

    34. If minimum possible number of representatives that speak a particular language is 7, then what is the

    number of languages that are spoken by 7 representatives each?

    (1) 4 (2) 3 (3) 5 (4) 1 (5) 2

    35. Which of the following cannot be TRUE?(1) German, French, Spanish and English are spoken by 9 representatives each.

    (2) English and Arabic are spoken by 15 and 11 representatives respectively.

    (3) One representative speaks Portuguese.

    (4) Hindi, English and Portuguese are spoken by 8 representatives each and 5 representatives speak

    Spanish.

    (5) None of the above.

    36. For at most how many languages, the number of representatives who speak it is greater than the number

    of representatives who speak Language 1?

    (1) 3 (2) 4 (3) 2 (4) 1 (5) 5

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    DIRECTIONS for Questions 37 to 40: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.

    There are three stationery shops namely Shop I, Shop II and Shop III that sell five different types of articles

    namely Pencils, Erasers, Pens, Sharpeners and Diaries. On a particular day only five children namely Aamna,

    Arjun, Alice, Anisha and Ajay bought articles from these three mentioned shops.Also, Ajay did not buy a

    eraser from shop II.

    Table 1 provides information about the number of articles of each type bought from each of the three shops.

    Table 2 provides information about the number of articles bought by each child from each of the three shops.

    Table 3 provides information about the number of articles of each type bought by each of the five children.

    Shop I Shop II Shop III Shop I Shop II Shop III

    Pencils 1 0 2 Aamna 1 3 2

    Erasers 2 2 1 Arjun 1 0 1

    Pens 2 1 3 Alice 3 3 0

    Sharpeners 1 1 0 Anisha 2 0 3

    Diaries 1 3 1 Ajay 0 1 1

    Table 2Table 1

    Pencils Erasers Pens Sharpeners DiariesAamna 2 1 0 1 2

    Arjun 0 0 1 0 1

    Alice 1 2 2 0 1

    Anisha 0 1 2 1 1

    Ajay 0 1 1 0 0

    Table 3

    37. For how many children is it possible to exactly determine which article they bought from which shop?

    (1) 1 (2) 2 (3) 3 (4) 4 (5) 5

    38. From which shop did Aamna bought the 2 pencils?

    (1) Both from Shop I (2) Both from Shop III(3) 1 each from Shop I and II (4) 1 each from Shop I and III (5) Cannot be determined

    Additional Information for questions 39 and 40:

    The following table provides information about the price (in Rupees) at which these mentioned articles are

    sold to the mentioned children by the respective shops.

    Pencils Erasers Pens Sharpeners Diaries

    Shop I 5 1 10 2 40

    Shop II 4 3 20 1 45

    Shop III 3 4 16 4 60

    39. Find the total amount spent by Alice on the articles she bought from these three mentioned shops.

    (1) Rs. 83 (2) Rs. 76 (3) Rs. 81 (4) Rs. 71 (5) Cannot be determined.

    40. Which child amongst the mentioned children spent the maximum amount on the articles bought by

    him/her from these three mentioned shops?

    (1) Aamna (2) Arjun (3) Alice (4) Anisha (5) Ajay

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    SECTION III

    Number of Questions = 20

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 41 and 42: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.

    Three persons Anil, Biswas and Chandra are standing at three different points on a circular track. At time

    t = 0 they start running simultaneously in the clock wise direction on the circular track with uniform speeds.At time t = T it was observed that Anil, Biswas and Chandra are at the points where Biswas, Chandra and Anil

    were at time t = 0. The time taken by Anil, Biswas and Chandra to complete one lap of the track is 4, 6 and

    12 minutes respectively.

    41. What is the minimum possible value of T(in seconds)?

    (1) 60 (2) 75 (3) 90 (4) 120 (5) 150

    42. If the length of the circular track is 240 metres, then what is the shortest distance(along the circular

    track) between Anil and Chandra at time t = 900 seconds?

    (1) 80 metres (2) 60 metres (3) 120 metres (4) 90 metres (5) 100 metres

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 43 to 45: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.

    Mr. Contractor hires some workers on daily wage basis. The hired workers are categorized under three different

    grades viz. Non-Skilled, Skilled and Supervisory. Following table gives the number of workers in each grade.

    Using three different formulae, as given in the table, he calculates the daily wage payable to the workers.

    ( )

    ( )

    ( ) ( )

    ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )

    Daily Wage of a WorkerTotal number ofGrade of the Worker

    in Rs .Workers

    Non - Skilled x w(x) max 75, 153 3x

    Skilled y w y max 120, 310 10y

    x ySupervisory max 1, w s 2w x w y10

    ==

    + = +

    Note:[x] denotes the greatest integer less than or equal to x.

    43. What is the minimum possible amount Mr. Contractor must pay to the supervisor(s) hired for a job that

    also requires 30 other workers not all of whom are Non-Skilled?

    (1) Rs.810 (2) Rs.1092 (3) Rs.960 (4) Rs.1080 (5) Rs.1908

    44. Excluding the number of supervisors, what is the minimum possible number of workers that can be

    hired by Mr. Contractor so that a Non-Skilled worker gets as much amount of money in his daily wage

    as a Skilled worker gets?(1) 45 (2) 30 (3) 27 (4) 17 (5) 13

    45. Yesterday, Mr. Contractor hired three supervisors and some other workers. At the end of the day, he

    paid exactly Rs.200 each to the Skilled workers. What is the maximum possible amount did

    Mr. Contractor spend to pay the daily wages of all the workers, including the Supervisors?

    (1) Rs.5236 (2) Rs.5200 (3) Rs.5350 (4) Rs.5300 (5) Cannot be determined

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    DIRECTIONS for Questions 46 and 47: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.

    The total number of students in three different sections namely I, II and III is AA, BB and CC respectively.

    The total number of students in the mentioned three sections is DD0. Assume that A, B and C are distinct

    natural numbers and D is a non zero digit. All the mentioned numbers are in the same base and the base is not

    greater than 9.

    46. How many distinct values of (A, B and C) are possible?

    (1) 10 (2) 12 (3) 14 (4) 8 (5) 6

    47. What is the maximum value of (A + B + C) ?

    (1) 12 (2) 14 (3) 16 (4) 18 (5) None of these

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 48 to 50: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.

    In the following figure, arc AB is a quadrant of the circle with center at point O and radius 4 units. Further,

    OC = OD, OC:OA = 3:4.

    O

    C D

    BA

    G

    48. What is the ratio of the length of AG to GD?

    (1) 2:1 (2) 4:3 (3) 5:3 (4) 3:1 (5) 3:2

    49. What is the area (in square units) of the AGC?

    (1)2

    3(2)

    7

    8(3)

    3

    2(4)

    6

    7(5)

    1

    2

    50. A circle C is drawn such that it touches the quadrant at the point E and the mid point of AB at F. What

    is the radius(in units) of the circle C?

    (1) 2 2 (2) 2 1 (3) 4 2 3 (4) 3 1 (5) None of these

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    DIRECTIONS for Questions 51 and 52: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.

    ABCD is (4 4) matrix. Each cell in the matrix has to be filled in with the one of the four numbers 1, 2, 3 and

    4 such that the cells in each row, each column and each of the four square matrix AEIH, EBFI, HIDG and

    IFCG are filled in with one of the four numbers 1, 2, 3 and 4.

    For example,

    1 2 3 4

    A B

    CD

    E

    F

    G

    H4 3 2 1

    2 4 1 3

    2413

    I

    51. If certain cells are filled in with numbers as shown in the figure given below, then the total number of

    ways in which all the cells of the given (4 4) matrix can be filled in with the four numbers is

    2 3

    A B

    CD

    E

    F

    G

    HI

    23

    (1) 2 (2) 4 (3) 8 (4) 16 (5) 32

    52. The total number of ways in which all the cells of the given (4 4) matrix can be filled in with the four

    numbers is

    (1) 576 (2) 768 (3) 168 (4) 384 (5) 192

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 53 and 54: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.

    A natural number N less than 1000 exists such that when the units digit of N is erased, the resulting number

    is the factor of N.

    53. What is the sum of all the possible value of N such that N is a two-digit number more than 35?

    (1) 942 (2) 968 (3) 934 (4) 994 (5) 912

    54. How many values of N are possible such that N is a three-digit number?(1) 100 (2) 101 (3) 90 (4) 91 (5) None of these

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    DIRECTIONS for Questions 55 and 56: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.

    A square ABDE and a regular pentagon BPQRC are drawn on the sides AB and BC respectively of an

    equilateral triangle ABC. The square and the pentagon lie completely outside the triangle ABC and the length

    of the side of the triangle ABC is 1 unit. Several isosceles triangles are drawn such that all the vertices of the

    triangle is among the points A, B, C, D, E, P, Q and R. Also, atleast one of the points A, B and C is a vertex of

    such an isosceles triangle.

    55. What is the area(in square units) of the AEC?

    (1)1

    2(2)

    1

    4(3)

    1

    2 2(4)

    2

    3(5)

    1

    2

    56. How many distinct such isosceles triangles can be drawn?

    (1) 16 (2) 17 (3) 18 (4) 19 (5) None of these

    DIRECTIONS for Questions 57 and 58: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.

    Given that f(1) = 1, f(2x) = 4f(x) + 6 and f(x + 2) = f(x) + 12x + 12 for all real values of x.

    57. What is the value of f(20)?

    (1) 502 (2) 1068 (3) 1198 (4) 4678 (5) None of these

    58. What is the value of f(22) f(5)?

    (1) 1247 (2) 681 (3) 1741 (4) 1547 (5) 1377

    59. The cost of 6 desks is equal to the aggregate cost of 6 chairs and 1 table. The aggregate cost of 6 desks

    and 3 tables is equal to the cost of 12 chairs. Which of the following statements is false?

    Assume that the cost of each chair is same and this holds true for the desks as well as the tables.

    (1) The cost of 5 tables is equal to the aggregate cost of 5 chairs and 2 desks.

    (2) The cost of 5 chairs is equal to the cost of 4 desks.

    (3) The cost of 2 desks is equal to the aggregate cost of 1 chair and 1 table.

    (4) The cost of 3 desks is equal to the aggregate cost of 2 chairs and 1 table.(5) The cost of 10 chairs is equal to the aggregate cost of 5 tables and 2 desks.

    60. There are n necklaces in a safe box (n > 1). Every necklace has the same number of diamonds. Each

    necklace has at least 2 diamonds. The total number of diamonds in these n necklaces is between

    500 and 600. If this data is sufficient to find the value of n, then what can be the value of n?

    (1) 22 (2) 23 (3) 27 (4) 29 (5) None of these

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