State Bank of India PO Preliminary Exam-2016 Held on July 2016
Solved Paper
English Language
Directions-(Q. 1-10) Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions. Certain words/phrases are given in bold to help you locate them while answering some of the questions.
Until the 1960s boys spent longer and went further in school than girls, and were more likely to graduate from university. Now, across the rich world and in a growing number of poor countries, the balance has titled the other way. Policymakers once fretted about girls’ lack of confidence in science, but his is changing. Sweden has commissioned research into its ‘boy crisis’. Australia has devised a reading programme called ‘Boys, Blokes, Books and Bytes’. In just a couple of generations, one gender gap has closed, only for another to open up. The reversal is laid out in a report published on March 5th by the OECD a Paris-based rich-country think-tank. Boys’ dominance just about endures in maths : at age 15 they are, on average, the equivalent of thee months’ schooling ahead of girls. In science the results are fairly even. But in reading, where girls have been ahead for some time, ,a gulf has appeared. In all G4 countries and economies in the study, girls outperform boys. The average gap is equivalent to an extra year of schooling. The OECD deems literacy to be the most important skill that it assesses, since further learning depends on it. Sure enough, teenage boys are 50% more likely than girls to fail to achieve basic proficiency in any of maths, reading and science.
Youngesters in this group, with nothing to build on or shine at, are prone to drop out of school altogether. To see why boys and girls fare so differently in the classroom, first look at what they do outside it. The average 15-year old girl devotes five-and-a-half hours a week to homework, an hour more than the average boy, who spend more time playing video games and trawling the internet. Three-quarters of girls read for pleasure, compared with little than half of boys Reading rates are falling everywhere as screens draw eyes from pages, but boys are giving up faster. The OECD found that, among boys who do as much homework as the average girl, the gender gap in reading fell by nearly a quarter.
Once in the classroom, boys long to be out of it. They are twice as likely as girls to report that school is a ‘waste of time’, and more often turn up late. Just as a teacher used to struggle to persuade girls that science is not only for men, the OECD now urges parents and policymakers to steer bys away from a version of masculinity that ignores academic achievement. Boys’ disdain for school might have been less irrational when there were, plenty of jobs for un-educated men. But those days have long gone. It may be that a bit of swagger helps in maths, where confidence plays a part in boys’ lead (though it sometimes extends to delusion : 12% of boys told the OECD that they are familiar with the mathematical concept of ‘subjunctive sealing’, a red herring that fooled only 7% of girls.) But their lack of self-discipline drives teachers crazy. The OECD found that boys did much better in its anonymised tests than in teachers assessments. What is behind this discrimination ? One possibility is that teachers mark up students who are polite, eager and stay out of flights, all attributes that are more common among girls. In some countries, academic points can even be docked for bad behaviour.
1. Choose the word which is Opposite in meaning to the word Docked given in bold as used in the passage.
(A) Raised
(B) Stopped
(C) Widened
(D) Flown
(E) Wharf
2. According to the passage, what can be said about the school education today?
(A) Science education is deteriorating rapidly
(B) Online education can easily address its problems such as shortage of teaching staff
(C) It fosters rote learning instead of creative thinking
(D) The amount of homework for children is prohibitive
(E) Girls are doing better at school as compared to boys on some parameters
3. Choose the word/group of words which is most nearly the same in meaning as the word Draw given in bold as used in the passage.
(A) Sketch
(B) Tie
(C) Raffle
(D) Represent
(E) Divert
4. Which of the following is TRUE in the context of the passage?
(A) Boys perform better than girls on subjective teacher assessments
(B) Efforts to improve representation of girls in education have had success
(C) B and large teachers are female and they discriminate against boys
(D) Education in rich countries needs to be subsidized to reduced dropout numbers
(E) None of the given statements is true in the context of the passage
5. Choose the word/group of words which is most nearly the Same in meaning as the word Prone given in bold as used in the passage.
(A) Unconscious
(B) Flat
(C) Likely
(D) Lifeless
(E) Opinionated
6. Which of the following factors can have an impact on results of boys in school?
(1) Perceptions of teachers.
(2) Societal attitude towards educational achievement and boys.
(3) Overconfidence of male students.
(A) Only 1
(B) Only 2
(C) All 1, 2 and 3
(D) Only 1 and 3
(E) Only 1 and 2
7. What do the OECD statistics in the passage indicate?
(A) Schools dropout rates among boys are higher in developing countries than in rich ones
(B) Despite the perception that girls are doing better than boys in school, the same is not true
(C) Today boys are more at risk than girls in terms of educational achievement in developed countries
(D) Enrolment of girls in schools has doubled while that of boys has fallen
(E) By and large teenagers have very low educational achievement in rich countries
8. Choose the word which is Opposite in meaning to the word Delusion given in bold as used in the passage.
(A) Myth
(B) Superstition
(C) Precipitating
(D) Reality
(E) Familiarity
9. Which of the following best describes the author’s opinion about the ‘boy crisis’?
(A) It is not as much of a problem as it is made out to be
(B) Policymakers should address the issue of ‘uneducated’ boys as it will impact boys employment subsequently
(C) It can be addressed by implementing quotas at university level
(D) It is a rich country phenomenon and can be easily addressed through increased funding for schools
(E) None of the given options
10. Which of the following is an appropriate Title for the passage?
(A) Finding the Glass Ceiling
(B) Men Storming Up the Irony Tower
(C) Pay and Job Flexibility
(D) Attention! A New Gender Gap
(E) A Broken Safety Net
Directions-(Q. 11-15) Read this sentence to find out whether there is any grammatical error in it. The error, if any, will be in one part of the sentence. Mark the part with the error as your answer. If there is no error, mark ‘No error’ as your answer. (Ignore the errors of punctuation, if any).
11. The fare will be calculated (A)/ on the basis of (B)/ expected travel time distance (C)/ and traffic where applied. (D)/ No error (E)
12. Junior colleges sees (A)/ marginal violations in (B)/ minimum score cap for arts, (C)/ science and commerce streams. (D)/ No error (E)
13. The actor has (A)/ filed a case (B)/ against the director and (C)/ has sought a written apology. (D)/ No error (E)
14. The practice of big pharma companies (A)/ offering kickbacks to (B)/ prescribing physicians may not be (C)/ a breach of ethics. (D)/ No error (E)
15. The government has narrowed (A)/ its list of candidates (B)/ to become the next (C)/ governor on the RBI. (D)/ No error (E)
Directions-(Q. 16-20) Rearrange the given six sentences/group of sentences (1), (2), (3), (4), (5) and (6) in a proper sequence so as to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the given questions :
(1) Others were shown advertisements of more affordable stuff, such as smartphones
(2) This experience shows the complexities of advertising today, when it is so easy for dissatisfied customers to make their voices heard
(3) Moreover, some of those not shown the advertisement complained, referring to themselves as, or (putting it politely losers
(4) But its advertisement was shown only to those whose profiles suggested they were potential buyers of expensive cars
(5) Eventually, this bruised a few egos
(6) Earlier this year a carmaker advertised on WeChat, a popular messaging app in China with around 550 m monthly users
16. Which of the following should be the FIRST sentence after the rearrangement?
(A) 1
(B) 3
(C) 2
(D) 6
(E) 5
17. Which of the following should be the SECOND sentence after the rearrangement?
(A) 1
(B) 2
(C) 6
(D) 4
(E) 3
18. Which of the following should be the FOURTH sentence after the rearrangement?
(A) 1
(B) 5
(C) 3
(D) 6
(E) 4
19. Which of the following should be the SIXTH (last) sentence after the rearrangement?
(A) 2
(B) 4
(C) 1
(D) 3
(E) 5
20. Which of the following should be the FIFTH sentence after the rearrangement?
(A) 5
(B) 4
(C) 1
(D) 6
(E) 3
Directions-(Q. 21-25) The sentence has two blanks, each blank indicating that something has been omitted. Choose the set of words for the blanks which best fits the meaning of the sentence as a whole.
21. The Governor’s successor will find the economy in a much better …………. Than what it was in when the himself took ……. Three years ago.
(A) condition, holding
(B) turmoil, over
(C) shape, charge
(D) characters, reigns
(E) position, duty
22. The government’s ………. to consolidated public sector banks (PSBs) could create ……. In the current environment where stressed assets across banks are high.
(A) actions, exposed
(B) intend, uncertainty
(C) proposal, secure
(D) strategies, havoc
(E) plans, risks
23. The IT firm may be ………… out as clients shifts to cloud services ………. By rivals.
(A) venting, existing
(B) losing, offered
(C) close, provided
(D) locking, promising
(E) shutting, delivered
24. Inspite of ……… social performs are likely to …….. an ever larger part of marketers’ budget.
(A) pitfalls, receive
(B) hazards, getting
(C) negative, share
(D) drawbacks, obtained
(E) fallen, have
25. Litigation and hurdles in a potential sale to a Chinese partner have ………. the company to …….. the closing of one of its plants.
(A) raised, changing
(B) denying, choose
(C) forced, defer
(D) enable, modify
(E) compelled, defeat
Directions-(Q. 26-30) In the following passage, there are blanks, each of which has been numbered. Against each, five words are suggested, one of which fits the blank appropriately. Find out the appropriate word in each case.
There’s been some buzz lately around the not-so-new idea that emerging technology is destroying jobs and will …(26)… destroy the middle class. Fears about a shrinking job pool are …(27)… : our economy is still recovering from the recession, and jobs have not returned to prerecession levels. Meanwhile, technology is …(28)… some low-skilled jobs. Yet, changes to the job landscape, while they may require some adjustments, are not bad news for the middle class. …(29)… advances in innovation and technology promise to make life better for everyone, both professionally and …(30)…
26.
(A) not
(B) ultimately
(C) securely
(D) publicly
(E) demandingly
27.
(A) understandable
(B) weird
(C) unjust
(D) remanded
(E) wrong
28.
(A) dicing
(B) acquiring
(C) replacing
(D) lifting
(E) paying
29.
(A) But
(B) Instead
(C) Fact
(D) Since
(E) However
30.
(A) workplace
(B) shortly
(C) personally
(D) morosely
(E) environment
Quantitative Aptitude
1. C is 20% more efficient than A. A and B together can finish a piece of work in 16 days. B and C together can do it in 15 days. In how many days A alone can finish the same piece of work?
(A) 42
(B) 48
(C) 54
(D) 36
(E) 45
2. A started a business with an investment of Rs 16,000. After 6 months from the start of the business, B and C joined with Rs 12,000 and Rs 18,000 respectively and A invested an additional amount of Rs 4000. If the difference between A’s share and B’s share in the annual profit is Rs 6000, what was the annual profit received?
(A) Rs 17,600
(B) Rs 13,200
(C) Rs 14,300
(D) Rs 16,500
(E) Rs 11,000
3. Shiva gives 20% of her monthly salary to his mother, 50% of the remaining salary he invests in an insurance scheme and PPF in the respective ratio of 5 : 3 and the remaining he keeps in his bank account. If the sum of the amount he gives to his mother and that he invests in PPF is Rs 12,600, how much is Shiva’s monthly salary?
(A) Rs 36,000
(B) Rs 64,000
(C) Rs 42,000
(D) Rs 40,000
(E) Rs 50,400
4. The respective ratio of radii of two right circular cylinders (A and B) is 4 : 7. The respective ratio of the heights of cylinders A and B is 2 : 1. What is the respective ratio of volumes of cylinders A and B?
(A) 25 : 42
(B) 23 : 42
(C) 32 : 49
(D) 30 : 49
(E) 36 : 49
5. At present, Aanshi is five years younger to Binny. Binny’s age twenty-years hence will be equal to twice of Aanshi’s age five years ago. What will be Binny’s age eight year hence?
(A) 42 years
(B) 35 years
(C) 30 years
(D) 40 years
(E) 48 years
Directions-(Q. 6-10) In this equation two equations numbered I and II are given. You have to solve both the equations and mark the appropriate option.
6. (I) 9x2 – 37x + 30 = 0
(II) 3y2 – 19y + 30 = 0
(A) Relationship between X and Y cannot be established
(B) X < Y
(C) X > Y
(D) X ≤ Y
(E) X ≥ Y
7. (I) 2x2 – 17x + 36 = 0
(II) 5y2 – 33y + 40 = 0
(A) Relationship between X and Y cannot be established
(B) X < Y
(C) X > Y
(D) X ≤ Y
(E) X ≥ Y
8. (I) 12x2 – 23x + 11 = 0
(II) 21y2 – 20y + 4 = 0
(A) Relationship between X and Y cannot be established
(B) X < Y
(C) X > Y
(D) X ≤ Y
(E) X ≥ Y
9. (I) x2 + 12x + 35 = 0
(II) 7y2 + 32y + 16 = 0
(A) Relationship between X and Y cannot be established
(B) X < Y
(C) X > Y
(D) X ≤ Y
(E) X ≥ Y
10. (I) 25x2 + 20x + 3 = 0
(II) 4y2 + 11y + 6 = 0
(A) Relationship between X and Y cannot be established
(B) X < Y
(C) X > Y
(D) X ≤ Y
(E) X ≥ Y
11. A number is such that when it is multiplied by 6, it gives another number which is more than 168 as the original number itself is less than 168. What is 15% of the original number?
(A) 8.4
(B) 7.8
(C) 6.6
(D) 8.8
(E) 7.2
12. Dharma invested Rs P of 3 years in scheme A which offered 12% p.a. simple interest. She also invested Rs P + 400 in scheme B which offered 10% compound interest (compounded annually), for 2 years. If the amount received from scheme A was less than that received from scheme B, by Rs 304, what is the value of P?
(A) Rs 1400
(B) Rs 1000
(C) Rs 1500
(D) Rs 900
(E) Rs 1200
Directions-(Q. 13-17) Study the following table carefully and answer the question.
13. The number of students (both male and female) who are learning freestyle in schools C and D together is what per cent less than the number of students (both male and female) who are learning the same in schools A and B together?
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E)
14. What is the average number of students learning dance forms (other than freestyle) in schools B, C and D?
(A) 206
(B) 207
(C) 204
(D) 205
(E) 201
15. Out of the number of students (both male and female) learning freestyle in school B, 5/8 are 15 years or above. If out of the total students who are 15 years or above, 30% are females, what is the number of female students learning freestyle who are below 15 years?
(A) 35
(B) 42
(C) 32
(D) 46
(E) 40
16. What is the respective ratio between the total number of male students learning freestyle in schools A and C together and the total number of female students learning the same in the same schools together?
(A) 6 : 39
(B) 6 : 13
(C) 12 : 13
(D) 6 : 11
(E) 12 : 35
17. What is the difference between the number of male students studying freestyle in schools B and D together and the total number of female students studying the same in the same schools together?
(A) 22
(B) 18
(C) 26
(D) 16
(E) 12
18. Per cent profit earned when an article is sold for 558 is double the per cent profit earned when the same article is sold for Rs 504. If the marked price of the article is 30% above the cost price, what is the marked price of the article?
(A) Rs 585
(B) Rs 595
(C) Rs 624
(D) Rs 590
(E) Rs 546
Directions-What will come in place of question-mark (?) in the given number series?
19. 150 102 70 46 26 ?
(A) 7
(B) 13
(C) 8
(D) 2
(E) 12
20. 10 14 24 52 134 ?
(A) 351
(B) 302
(C) 368
(D) 341
(E) 378
21. 24 11 10 14 27 ?
(A) 67.5
(B) 60.5
(C) 66.5
(D) 61.5
(E) 62.25
22. 4500 900 90 6 ? 0.012
(A) 0.3
(B) 0.09
(C) 0.9
(D) 0.015
(E) 0.03
23. 8 7 12 33 128 ?
(A) 672
(B) 684
(C) 635
(D) 620
(E) 692
24. 3? × √170 = 183.998 ÷001 + 328.02
(A) 2
(B) 4
(C) 1
(D) 5
(E) 3
25. ?% of (230.02 ×89 – 559.85) = 960
(A) 20
(B) 80
(C) 50
(D) 70
(E) 75
26. 518.002 – 44.99 + 8.998 – 8.012 = ?
(A) 650
(B) 350
(C) 450
(D) 550
(E) 600
27. 358.98 ÷ 15.02 + 450.15 ÷ 8.992 + 56.02 = ?
(A) 230
(B) 200
(C) 180
(D) 150
(E) 130
28. 25% of 459 + 65.01 ÷02 = ?
(A) 109
(B) 128
(C) 234
(D) 80
(E) 186
Directions-Refer to the bar graph and answer the given question.
29. In 2005, out of total number of applications received for subjects A and B together, only 30% were accepted. What was the total number of applications accepted for subjects A and B together in 2005?
(A) 121
(B) 123
(C) 129
(D) 131
(E) 133
30. In 2004, 30% of applications received for subject A and 20% of applications received for subject B were from international students. What was the total number of International applicants for subjects A and B together in 2004?
(A) 91
(B) 97
(C) 89
(D) 93
(E) 87
31. If the respective ratio of total number of applications received for subjects A and B together in 2008 and 2009 is 3 : 4, what was the total number of applications received for subjects A and B together in 2009?
(A) 500
(B) 560
(C) 400
(D) 520
(E) 500
32. What is the average number of applications received for subject A in 2005, 2007 and 2008?
(A) 190
(B) 180
(C) 170
(D) 200
(E) 160
33. Number of applications received for subject B increase by what per cent from 2004 to 2006?
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E)
34. In a bag, there are 8 red balls and 7 green balls. Three balls are picked at random. What is the probability that two balls are red and one ball is green in colour?
(A) 28/65
(B) 22/65
(C) 37/65
(D) 3/13
(E) 1/13
35. A vessel contains 120 litres of mixture of milk and water in the respective ratio 11 : 4. Forty-five litres of this mixture was taken out and replaced with 5 litres of water. What is the percentage of water in the resultant mixture?
(A) 35
(B) 30
(C) 25
(D) 20
(E) 15
Reasoning
Directions-(Q. 1 to 3) Study the following information and answer the given question.
S is the mother of D. K is the brother of D. K is the only son of M. M is the son of U. U is the husband of T. T is the mother of Y.
1. If D is married to X, then how is X related to M?
(A) Son-in-law
(B) Daughter-in-law
(C) Son
(D) Niece
(E) Daughter
2. How is T related to K?
(A) Mother
(B) Aunt
(C) Granddaughter
(D) Grandmother
(E) Mother-in-law
3. How is S related to Y?
(A) Sister
(B) Cousin
(C) Mother-in-law
(D) Niece
(E) Sister-in-law
Directions-(Q. 4 to 8) In this question, relationship between different elements is shown in the statements. The statements are followed by conclusions. Study the conclusions based on the given statement and select the appropriate answer.
4. Statements :
R > S = T ≥ U; S ≥ A > V
Conclusions: (I) A < R
(II) V ≤ U
(A) Both conclusion I and II are true
(B) Only conclusion I is true
(C) Neither conclusion I nor II true
(D) Only conclusion II is true
(E) Either conclusion I or conclusion II is true
5. Statements:
B > E ≥ A ≥ T = H < I ≤ M
Conclusions : (I) H ≤ E
(II) B > T
(A) Both conclusion I and II are true
(B) Only conclusion I is true
(C) Neither conclusion I nor II is true
(D) Only conclusion II is true
(E) Either conclusion I or conclusion II is true
6. Statements:
S ∠M < I < T: R ≥ J > I
Conclusions : (I) R = S
(II) S < R
(A) Both conclusion I and II are true
(B) Only conclusion I is true
(C) Neither conclusion I nor II is true
(D) Only conclusion II is true
(E) Either conclusion I or conclusion II is true
7. Statements:
B > E ≥ A ≥ T = H < I ≤ M
Conclusions: (I) E < I
(II) M ≤ A
(A) Both conclusion I and II are true
(B) Only conclusion I is true
(C) Neither conclusion I nor II is true
(D) Only conclusion II is true
(E) Either conclusion I or conclusion II is true
8. Statements:
D ≤ O ≤ L > C ≥ E
Conclusions: (I) O < E
(II) L ≥ D
(A) Both conclusion I and II are true
(B) Only conclusion I is true
(C) Neither conclusion I nor II is true
(D) Only conclusion II is true
(E) Either conclusion I or conclusion II is true
Directions-(Q. 9 and 10) Read the following information and answer the given question:
Vansh starts walking from Point E and walks 25 m towards the north. He then takes a right turn and walks for 15 m. He makes a left turn and stops at Point M after walking for 20 m.
Point K is 30 m to the west of Point M. Point K is 45 m to the north of Point J. Point J is 10 m to the east of Point L.
9. How far and in which direction is Point E with respect to Point L?
(A) 30 m towards West
(B) 25 m towards East
(C) 20 m towards East
(D) 20 m towards West
(E) 25 m towards West
10. If neha is standing at Point D which is 20 m to the north to of Point L, in which direction will she have to walk in order to reach Point M?
(A) North-west
(B) East
(C) South-east
(D) North-east
(E) North
Directions-(Q. 11 to 13) Read the given information carefully and answer the question.
Each of the six sections, U, V, W, X, Y and Z of the same class has different number of students. Only Z has more number of students than X. V has more number of students than Y but less than U. W has more number of students than both the both Y and U. The section having the third highest number of students has 39 students. Y has 24 students.
11. If the number of students in sections W + Z is sixty-six more than the number of students in section Y, how many of students are there in section Z?
(A) 31
(B) 46
(C) 51
(D) 55
(E) 45
12. How many students does section V possibly have?
(A) 39
(B) 43
(C) 55
(D) 31
(E) 14
13. Which of the following is true regarding the number of students in section U?
(A) No other section has less students than U
(B) X has more number of students than U
(C) U possibly has 45 students
(D) U has more number of students than only three sections
(E) None of these
Directions-(Q 14 to 19) Study the following information and answer the question.
Seven people, namely, A, B, C, D, E, F and G have an appointment but not necessarily in the same order, on seven different months (of the same year) namely January, February, April, June, August, October and December. Each of them also likes a different activity namely Drawing, Singing, Painting, Boxing, Karate, Craft and Running but not necessarily in the same order.
The one who likes Craft has an appointment on one of the months before April. Only two people have an appointment between the one who likes craft and the one who likes painting. Only one person has an appointment between the one who likes painting and the one who likes running. The one who likes running has an appointment in a month which has 31 days. Only three people have an appointment between the one who likes running and E. G has an appointment on one of the months before E. G does not have an appointment in the month which has the least number of days. Only three people have a appointment between G and C. Only one person has an appointment between C and the one who likes Karate. The one who likes Karate has an appointment before C. The one who likes singing has an appointment immediately before B. B has an appointment in a month which has less than 31 days. Only one person has an appointment between A and F. A has an appointment before F. Only one person has an appointment between F and the who likes drawing.
14. Who amongst the following has an appointment before the one who has an appointment in December?
(A) B
(B) E
(C) C
(D) The one who likes Running
(E) The one who likes Boxing
15. In which of the following pairs, both the persons have an appointment in months which have less than 31 days?
(A) A, F
(B) F, D
(C) B, F
(D) E, D
(E) B, A
16. Which of the following combinations is correct?
(A) G-Singing
(B) A-Painting
(C) F-Running
(D) B-Karate
(E) D-Painting
17. As per the given arrangement Craft is related to April and Karate is related to June following a certain pattern, which of the following is Drawing related to following the same pattern?
(A) February
(B) October
(C) December
(D) August
(E) January
18. Who amongst the following likes Running?
(A) F
(B) D
(C) B
(D) A
(E) Other than those given as options
19. How many people have an appointment between the one who has an appointment in February and A?
(A) Three
(B) None
(C) More than three
(D) One
(E) Two
Directions-(Q. 20 to 24) Study the given information carefully to answer the given question.
Seven boxes-A, B, C, D, E, F and G are kept one above the other, but not necessarily in the same order. Each box contains different items-Shoes, Papers, Bands, Medicines, Ribbons, Creams and Phones, but not necessarily in the same order.
Only three boxes are kept between D and G. The Ribbon box is kept immediately above G. Only one box is kept between in Ribbon box and A. The Ribbon box is not the second from the bottom of the stack. Only one box is kept between E and A. E is kept above A. The Medicine box is kept immediately above E. Only three boxes are kept between the Medicine box and the Shoe box. The Paper box is immediately above the Phone box. G is not the Paper box. F is kept immediately below the Cream box. Only one box is kept between B and the Cream box.
20. Four of the following five are alike in a certain way and hence from a group. Which of the following does not belong to the group?
(A) G-Creams
(B) E-Bands
(C) C-Shoes
(D) D-Papers
(E) A-Bands
21. Which of the following boxes contains bands?
(A) D
(B) C
(C) G
(D) A
(E) Other than those given as options
22. What is the position of F in the given stack of boxes?
(A) Second from the top
(B) Third from the bottom
(C) First from the top
(D) Fifth from the bottom
(E) Fourth from the top
23. Which of the following boxes is kept immediately below G?
(A) A
(B) B
(C) C
(D) The Shoe box
(E) The Paper Box
24. How many boxes are kept between B and the Ribbon box?
(A) Two
(B) One
(C) None
(D) Three
(E) More than three
Directions-(Q. 25 to 29) Study the following information to answer the given question.
Eight friends, C, D, E, F, L, M, N and O are seated in a straight line, but not necessarily in the same order. Some of them are facing north while some face south.
Only three people sit to the right of M. E sits second to the left of M.
F sits third to the right of O. O is not an immediate neighbor of M. O does not sit at any of the extreme ends of the line.
Both the immediate neighbours of O face south.
D sits second to the right of N.
As many people sit between M and D as between M and L.
Immediate neighbours of F face opposite direction (i.e., if one person faces north then the other person faces south and vice-versa.)
L and F face direction opposite to C (i.e. If C faces north then both L and F face south and vice-versa.)
25. Which of the following is true, based on the given arrangement?
(A) D faces north
(B) Only three people face south
(C) L sits at one of the extreme ends of the line
(D) O and E face the same directions
(E) None of the given options is true
26. How many people sit to the left of O?
(A) Three
(B) More than four
(C) One
(D) Four
(E) Two
27. Who amongst the following faces north?
(A) E
(B) M
(C) F
(D) N
(E) D
28. Who amongst the following sits second to the left of L?
(A) O
(B) F
(C) D
(D) No one as less than two people sit to the left of L
(E) N
29. Who among the following represent the persons sitting at extreme ends of the line?
(A) D, N
(B) C, D
(C) L, N
(D) D, L
(E) C, N
Direction-(Q. 30-35) Study the following information and answer the given question.
Seven people, namely A, B, C, D, E, F and G teach seven different subjects namely, Mathematics, English, Chemistry, History, Accountancy, Physics and Biology. Each of them works in either of the three institutes viz., Paramount, Brilliant and Embibe atleast two of them in a institute.
(Note: None of the information given is necessarily in the same order.)
G teaches in Brilliant with the one who teaches Accountancy. The one who teaches Biology works in an institute with only the one who teaches Chemistry. B teaches English. B does not work with G. D works with F but not in Embibe. Neither D nor F teaches Accountancy. F does not teach Chemistry. C works with only the one who teaches Mathematics. E works with the one who teaches History.
30. Who amongst the following teaches Physics?
(A) F
(B) D
(C) C
(D) E
(E) G
31. Which of the following combinations represents the institute in which C works and the subject he teaches?
(A) Brilliant-Accountancy
(B) Embibe-Accountancy
(C) Paramount-Biology
(D) Brilliant-History
(E) Paramount-Chemistry
32. Which of the following subjects does a teach?
(A) Biology
(B) Chemistry
(C) Mathematics
(D) Accountancy
(E) History
33. Which of the following statements is true?
(A) D teaches Biology
(B) None of the given statements is true
(C) Only two people teach in brilliant
(D) Both E and G work in the same institute
(E) A teaches Mathematics
34. Which of the following combination represents the combination of people working in Paramount?
(A) D and the one who teaches English
(B) E, A
(C) G, C, E
(D) F and the one who teaches Chemistry
(E) A, B
35. Four of the following five are alike in a certain way based on the given arrangement and hence form a group. Which of the following does not belong to that group?
(A) BE
(B) GC
(C) EA
(D) FG
(E) AB
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