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SECTION I
English Comprehension(50 questions)
Directions for Question Nos. 1 to 15: Read the
following passage-1 and answer the questions given at
the end of the passage. The answers should be based
either on the author's views or inferences drawn from
the given passage.
Passage 1
The fairness exercise, thus structured, is aimed at
identifying appropriate principles that would
determine the choice of just institutions needed for the
basic structure of a society. Rawls identifies some very
specific principles of justice (to be discussed presently),
and makes the strong claim that these principles would
be the unanimous choice that would emerge from the
political conception of justice as fairness. He argues
that since these principles would be chosen by all in the
original position, with its primordial equality, they
constitute the appropriate political conception of
justice, and that people growing up in a well-ordered
society governed by these principles would have good
reason to affirm a sense of justice based on them
(irrespective of each persons particular conception of a
good life and personal comprehensive priorities). So
the unanimous choice of these principles of justice does
quite a bit of work in the Rawlsian system, which
includes the choice of institutions for the basic
structure of the society, as well as the determination of
a political conception of justice, which Rawls presumes
will correspondingly influence individual behaviours in
conformity with that shared conception.
The choice of basic principles of justice is the first act in
Rawlss multi-staged unfolding of social justice. This
first stage leads to the next, constitutional, stage in
which actual institutions are selected in line with the
chosen principle of justice, taking note of the conditions
of each particular society. The working of these
institutions, in turn, leads to further social decisions at
later stages in the Rawlsian system, for example
through appropriate legislation (in what Rawls calls
the legislative stage). The imagined sequence moves
forward step by step on firmly specified lines, with an
elaborately characterized unfolding of completely just
societal arrangements.
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1. According to Rawls,
(1) Principles of justice are the unanimous choice
of a just society
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you see only the whites of their eyes peering out into
the cold.
The sky is grey, the air is grey, and the dull, cold
greyness seeps into the ground, the stones and the
buildings. The only colours are the red and yellow silk
flags flying over the new Muslim graves in Nizamuddin.
The trees in the gardens stand shrouded in a thin wrap
of mist. In Old Delhi, the goats fattening for slaughter
huddle together under sackcloth coats; some are given
old cardigans to wear, with their front legs fitted
through the sleeves. Winter smoke winds slowly out of
the chimneys; bonfires crackle outside the jhuggi
clusters. As you look through the windowpanes you can
see winter lying curled like a cobra across the land.
Olivia now spent her mornings in the warmth of our
flat; it was too cold and misty to paint until the sun had
reached its zenith at midday. If she ventured out she
would return early, before a sudden dusk brought to a
close the brief winter afternoon. Brisk evenings were
followed by cold nights. We muffled ourselves in our
new shawls we had not considered packing jerseys or
overcoats when we set off to India and sat warming
ourselves, in front of the heaters. My reading was
mostly historical. I had become fascinated with that
period of Delhis history known as the Twilight. It was
an epoch whose dark melancholy perfectly reflected
the cold, misty scenes outside our own windows.
The Twilight is bounded by two of the greatest
disasters in Delhis history: the Persian massacres of
1739 and the equally vicious hangings and killings
which followed the British recapture of Delhi after the
1857 Indian Mutiny. The first massacre took place in
the wake of an unexpected invasion of India by the
Persian ruler, Nadir Shah. At Karnal in the Punjab the
newly-crowned Shah defeated the Mughal army and
advanced rapidly on Delhi. He encamped at the
Shalimar Gardens, five miles north of the city. Having
been invited into Delhi by the nervous populace, Nadir
Shah ordered the massacre after a group of Delhiwallahs attacked and killed 900 of his soldiers in a
bazaar brawl. At the end of a single days slaughter 1,
50,000 of the citys citizens lay dead.
Nadir Shahs massacre exacerbated the decline of the
Mughal Empire which had been steadily contracting
since the death of Aurangzeb, the last Great Mogul, in
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Olivia is a painter
Olivia is the authors neighbour
Olivia is a historian
Olivia is the author of the passage
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it. Lets imagine a group with a Google iPod one day and
you can tell it to search by voice that would take care
of people who cant use a computer- and then [Google
access] just becomes about the rate at which we can get
cheap devices in to peoples hands.
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(2) Sex
(4) All of the above
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Avoid risks
Adopt sophisticated technology
Do not adapt or innovate
None of the above
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Innovativeness'
(2) 'Pioneering - Innovativeness' of the past has
no significant influence on present norms and
managerial functions
(3) The Pioneering Innovativeness of the past
has very little impact on present norms and
managerial functions
(4) None of the above
43. Which of the following is NOT a correct statement?
(1) The policy of recruiting creative managers at
junior levels has direct impact on the current
levels
of
Pioneering
Innovative
management
(2) Deliberate efforts to develop innovative
business strategies has direct impact on
Pioneering Innovative management
(3) Steps to inculcate innovative operating
models has direct impact on Pioneering
Innovative management
(4) Past Pioneering Innovative management
had influence on present business strategies
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SECTION II
Verbal Ability (50 questions)
Question Nos. 51 to 57 consist of a number of
sentences which, when properly sequenced, form a
coherent paragraph. Each sentence is labelled with
a letter. Choose the most logical order of sentences
from among the four choices lettered (1) through
(4).
54.
A. The
investigation
was
confined
to
manufacturing firms in the area
B. Those concerned with mining and quarrying,
construction, transport, and trade and
commerce, were excluded
C. The number of workers employed by the firms
in the area ranged from a dozen to
approximately 35,000
D. A long search produced a comprehensive list of
203 manufacturing firms.
51.
A. The men jumped up and rushed to the river
B. They poured it on the glowing bed of charcoal
C. The water gurgled out and the dying embers
hissed and sent up little curls of vapour
D. They quickly came back with pitchers laden
with water.
(1) DABC
(2) ADCB
(3) CBAD
(4) BADC
(1)ABDC
(3) ABCD
(4) BACD
(1) ADCB
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(3) BCAD
(3) DBCA
(4) CDBA
(2) BCDA
56.
53.
(1) CDAB
(4) CBDA
(3) DCBA
55.
52.
(1) DCBA
(2) BCDA
(1) CDAB
(4) DBAC
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(2) DCAB
(2) CADB
(4) ACDB
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(2) DACB
(3) DBAC
(4) BCDA
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
he was crying
discouraged the rest from having fun
he wet the blanket
he had covered himself with a wet blanket
injured retract
sullied publicize
damaged disseminate
tarnished cover up
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(2) structure
(4) remand
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fiction enlightened
didactic distracted
voluminous absorbed
philosophical entertained
(1) explicitly
(3) assiduously
(1) volatile
(3) insipid
(2) resilient
(4) acerbic
comprehensive - abstract
theoretical - challenging
fraudulent - deceptive
erroneous - impartial
(2) perfunctorily
(4) honestly
(2) auspicious
(4) accomplished
(2) suspicion
(4) recklessness
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(2) restrained
(4) lessened
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SECTION-III
Quantitative Ability (50 questions)
101. The sum of all the roots of 4x3 8x2 63x 9 = 0 is:
(1) 8
(2) 2
(3) 8
(4) 2
(2) 1836
(3) 1812
(2) 465
(3) 600
(1) 5 and 9
(3) 5 and 4
(4) 1825
(2) 7
[
(4) 640
(1) 16
(3) 10
] [
(1) 7: 23 and 7: 53
(3) 7: 22 and 7: 53
105.
( )
(2) x = 2
(4) x = 2, x = 1
( )
(2) 0.81
(3) 2.43
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( )
( )
( )
( )
(4) 0.8
( )
( )
(4) 4
(3) x = 2/3
(3) 8
(2) 7: 20 and 7: 50
(4) 7: 23 and 7: 52
(1) x = 1
(2) 12
(4) 12
is 8 or 38
cannot be determined from the given data
is 20 or 26
is 14 or 32
(1) 5
(2) 10
( )
(4) 20
(2) 20
(3) 30
(4) 32
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( )
( )
( )
(2)104
(3) 44
(4) 38
( )
( )
( )
(1) y2 + 14y 7 = 0
(3) y2 + 10y 7= 0
(2) y2 + 8y + 1 = 0
(4) y2 + y 12 = 0
( )
( )
9
the product of the digits
the sum of the digits
the difference of the digits
( )
( )
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( )
(3) 2r2
(4) 2r3
( )
(
( )
( )
(1) r2
( )
( )
(1) 725
)(
(2) 6
(3) 3125
(4) 5
(2) 8 kph
(3) 12 kph
(4) 16 kph
( )
( )
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(3) x = 5y
( )
(2) 43
(3) 29
(1) 4 : 1
(2) 2 : 1
(3) 1 : 4
(4) 1 : 2
( )
(2) 12
( )
(3) 36
( )
(4) 36
( )
( )
( )
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( )
( )
( )
( )
)
( )
( )
( )
( )
(2) 28
(3) 56
(4) 8
(2) 419
(3) 1259
(4) 2519
(2) 2 : 3
(3) 2 : 5
(4) 3 : 4
( )
( )
(4) 3x + y = 10
(2) 3xy = 10
(2) (2, 1)
(4) (1, 4)
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(2) 100
(3) 125
(4) 80
( )
( )
( )
( )
(2) 2 : 1
(3) 1 : 4
( )
( )
( )
( )
(2) (x + 2) f(x)
( ) (
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
) (
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( )
( )
( )
( )
(4) 4 : 1
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(2) 3
(3) 6
(4) 12
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SECTION-IV
Analytical Ability (50 questions)
Information for Question Nos. 151 to 156: In a Public
Sector Undertaking Township, there are five executives
Ambrish, Amit, Rohit, Manu and Tarun. Two of them play
Cricket while the other three play different games viz.
Football, Tennis and Chess. One Cricket player and a
Chess player stay in the third flat, whereas the other
three stay in different flats, i.e. 2nd, 4th and 5th. Two of
these five players are mechanical engineers while the
other three are quality inspector, design engineer and
power engineer respectively. The chess player is the
oldest in age while one of the cricket players, who plays
at the national level, is the youngest in age. The age of the
other cricket player, who plays at the regional level, lies
between the football player and the chess player. Manu is
a regional level player and stays in the 3rd flat while
Tarun is a quality inspector and stays in the 5th flat. The
football player is a design engineer and stays in the 2nd
flat. Amit is a power engineer and plays Chess while
Ambrish is the mechanical engineer and plays Cricket at
the national level.
(2) Amit
(4) Manu
(1) X
(2) Football
(4) Tennis
(2) Amit
(4) Manu
(1) R
(2) Q
(3) T
(4) R
(2) Q
(3) T
(4) X
(1) Track 4
(4) Q
(3) X
(2) P
(3) Track 2 or 4
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(2) Track 2
(4) None of the above
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(2) Track 2
(4) None of the above
(1) Nephew
(3) Grandson
(1) Nephew
(3) Brother-in-law
(1) unconcerned
(3) honesty
(2) modesty
(4) silence
165. C L V A I G N I A L T :
(1) fascinating
(3) resolute
(2) fanaticism
(4) indolence
(2) 9
(3) 27
(2) VTFHC
(4) None of the above
(2) Brother
(4) Nephew-in-law
(2) submissive
(4) indifferent
164. N E M I U E C P D:
163. E E L I L S U O B R :
(1) gentle
(3) offensive
(2) Grandnephew
(4) Great Grandson
(3) YTOHV
(4) None of the above
(2) NIPKA
(4) None of the above
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(3) WQOOX
(4) None of the above
7166
7531
9956
12234
17978
17275
5000
16548
10000
15261
20000
23273
30000
15000
2008-09
1075
5007-08
1004
2006-07
924
NETWORTH
VALUE ADDED
4500
4214
4000
3500
3000
2662
2500
2000
2237
1602
1747
1500
1000
500
0
2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10
1000
BORROWINGS
742
2005-06
4218
2671
2243
13858
35000
25000
2090
2009-10
1754
1614
2000
Profit
3000
4000
5000
Netsales
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(2) CORRECT
(4) None of the above
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(2) D
(3) C
(2) Only R2
(4) Both R1 and R2
(2) R1 and R2
(4) R3 and R4
(2) French
(4) None of the above
(2) Only R2
(4) None of the above
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(2) HIS/HELL
(4) None of the above
(2) SHAN
(4) None of the above
(3) 2, 5 and 8
(4) None of the above
195. The Indian Executives who do not travel by
Economy Class are represented by the space
numbered:
(1) 7
(3) 2
(2) 3
(2) 6 and 2
(4) None of the above
(2) 6
(4) None of the above
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(2) 47
(3) 37
(4) 39
(2) 6 and 7
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(2) 63
(3) 33
(4) 68
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ANSWER KEY
Q.
Ans.
Q.
Ans.
Q.
Ans.
Q.
Ans.
Q.
Ans.
Q.
Ans.
Q.
Ans.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
3
3
4
1
1
4
3
3
1
1
3
2
2
3
1
1
1
2
4
1
3
1
4
1
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
1
4
2
4
1
1
4
1
2
1
3
3
4
1
1
2
3
2
1
4
2
2
2
1
3
3
4
2
2
3
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
1
2
1
1
2
1
4
3
4
3
3
3
2
3
1
3
2
3
1
2
1
2
2
1
4
2
3
1
1
4
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
2
3
2
3
1
1
2
3
4
1
2
1
3
1
1
3
2
2
2
4
1
3
2
3
4
1
2
1
2
1
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
36
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
4
3
2
1
4
2
2
1
3
3
4
3
4
2
4
4
4
3
1
4
1
1
1
4
1
4
3
4
2
2
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
1
4
3
4
3
1
1
4
3
3
4
1
2
2
3
2
3
2
4
3
1
3
3
4
1
3
1
2
4
3
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
1
3
4
2
4
4
2
4
2
4
4
1
2
1
4
3
4
1
3
2
4
3
1
4
2
2B
SOLUTIONS
FMS Dec 2010
Detailed Solutions:
9.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
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Hence, option 2.
102. Let the year of the mans birth be y.
Then, y + x = x2
y = x(x 1)
Now looking at the options we find that only 1806 can be
written in the form x(x 1), where x = 43.
Hence, option 1.
103. Let the train travel at s km/hr.
In 1 hour it travels s km.
Let the remaining distance be x km. Then,
s = 60
Total distance = 60 10 = 600 km.
Hence, option 3.
104. At 7O clock the angle between the hour and minute hand
= 210 (in clockwise direction)
Relative speed of minute hand & hour hand = 5.5
degrees/minute.
The angle between the two hands is 84 in two cases
(i) The minute hand travels a distance of 210 84 = 126
(ii) The minute hand gains 84 over the hour hand i.e. it
travels 210 + 84 = 294
Hence, option 1.
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Hence, option 1.
Hence, option 3.
113.
35
10 2
x=
= 2.43
Hence, option 3.
107. Let there be x marbles originally.
x2 + 20x 300 = 0
(x + 30) (x 10) =0
x = 10
Hence, option 2.
114. Let the three numbers be a, b and c.
Also, a + b + c = 98
b = 30
Hence, option 3.
115. Let h be the original height of the candles. The first
candle burns by an amount equal to h/4 every hour and
the second candle burns by an amount equal to h/3
every hour.
= a2 a2 = a4
Hence, option 4.
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Hence, option 4.
116.
Hence, option 1.
121. The sum of roots of the equation 4x2 + 5 8x = 0
(20)10 = (110)4
Hence, option 1.
117. As the two met in the centre of the pool, their speeds
must be equal and both of them cover a distance equal to
half the length of the pool in 1.5 minutes.
Hence, option 4.
122. 2x2 + 6x + 5y + 1 = 0
2x(x + 3) + 5y + 1 = 0
Also, 2x + y + 3 = 0
2x = (y + 3)
(i)
(ii)
(y + 3) (y + 3) + 10y + 2 = 0
(3 + y) (3 y) + 10y + 2 = 0
(9 y2) + 10y + 2 = 0
y2 + 10y 7 = 0
Hence, option 3.
118. x : y : z :: 2 : 3 : 5
x + y + z = 100
123. Let t = 5, u = 3
Then we are looking for the number 531.
531 = 5 100 + 3 10 + 1
= 100t + 10u + 1
Hence, option 2.
y = 30 and x = 20
But y = ax 10
30 = 20a 10
a=2
Hence, option 1.
119. Let 10x + y be the number.
= (10x + y)2 (10y + x)2
= 99(x2 y2)
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Hence, option 2.
Hence, option 1.
128. Let there be y girls after 15 girls leave and let x be the
number of boys.
2y = x
Now after 45 boys left, there were 5 girls for each boy.
y = 5(x 45)
y = 5x (5 45)
2y = 10x (2 5 45)
x = 10x (10 45)
x = 50
y = 25
Hence, numbers of girls at the beginning = 25 + 15 = 40
Hence, option 1.
129. Let n1 (i.e. 4) be the number of pairs of black socks and n2
be the number of pairs of blue socks.
Let x be cost price per pair of blue socks.
Cost price of each pair of black socks = 2xs
Now if number of blue socks and black socks get
interchanged then bill increases by 50%.
Hence, option 4.
4n1x = n2x
126.
Hence, option 3.
130. Water carried by pipe cross sectional area.
Water carried by pipe with 6 inches = k (6/2)2 = 9k and
water carried by pipe with 1 inch diameter = k (1/2)2
= k/4
Now Vb = Va + 4
Hence, option 3
2Va + 8 = 3V
Va = 8
Hence, option 2.
127. Let the second machine address 500 envelopes in x
minutes.
Now, both machines address 500 envelopes in 2 minutes.
Let, making of 500 envelopes count to completing one
unit of work.
as S = S1 + S2
Now S1 = GP with first term = 1/7 and common ratio
= 1/72
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S = S1 + S2
Hence, option 4.
132.
Hence, option 4.
Hence, option 3.
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n(n 1) = 56
n2 n 56 = 0
Solving this we get,
n = 8 or n = 7
Since n cannot be negative.
n=8
Hence, option 4.
137. Since the required number leaves a remainders which is
one less than the divisor, we can say that the number is
one less than the LCM of 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9.
Now, LCM (2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10) = 2 3 2 5 7 2
3 = 2520
Desired number = 2520 1 = 2519
Hence, option 4.
Hence, option 4.
138.
Hence, option 1.
Let ABCD be square inscribed in a semicircle with radius
r.
Let a1 be the length of side of square ABCD
(a1/2)2 + a12 = r2
2a + 9d = 4a + 8d
Hence, option 1.
Now,
length
of
side
of
square
inscribed
143. Let the speed of the faster and slower cyclist be a and b
respectively.
By given conditions,
Hence, option 3.
ar rb = at + tb
Hence, option 1.
y + 6 = 3x
Only option 1 satisfies the above equation.
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148. 2x 3 > 7 x
3x > 10
Hence, option 4.
Hence, option 4.
145. For a quadratic equation ax2 + bx + c = 0
3m = 4n
As the first student makes a mistake only in the constant
term, his sum of roots is correct.
Sum of roots of the equation = 8 + 2 = 10
As the second student makes a mistake only in the
coefficient of x, his product of roots is correct.
Product of roots of the equation = (9) (1) = 9
the quadratic equation is,
x2 (sum of roots)x + (product of roots) = 0
x2 10x + 9 = 0
Hence, option 1.
146. Let length and breadth of rectangle be l and b
respectively.
(i)
14r = 9t
(ii)
Multiplying (i) and (ii), we get
14 3mr = 9 4nt
7mr = 6nt
Hence, option 2.
150. Let A, B and C do the work in a, b and c days respectively.
By given conditions,
Hence, option 4.
147. x y3
x = ky3
PP-02
2B.11
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Chess
Occupation
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Amit
Rohit
Manu
Tarun
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Cricket(R)
Quality Inspector
Sport
Cricket(N)
Chess
Football
Cricket(R)
Tennis
Occupation
Mechanical Engineer
Power Engineer
Design Engineer
Mechanical Engineer
Quality Inspector
PP-02
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PP-02
175. Statement I:
Consider the Net worth to borrowing ratio for each year.
In 200506 and 2006-07 it is greater than 2.
In 200708 and 2009-10 it is greater than 1.5.
Only in 2008-09 it is less than 1.5
Statement I is correct.
Statement II:
Consider the Net worth to profit ratio for each year. The
year with the lowest value of this ratio will be the year
with the highest ratio of profit to Net worth. In each of
the years from 2005-06 to 2008-09, the ratio of Net
worth to profit is greater than 15. In 2009-10 alone it
falls below 15.
2B.13
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179. Statement I:
From the solution to question 176, we can see that there
is an inconsistency in the trend of the ratio of Net Sales
to Profit in the year 2006-07.
Statement I is incorrect.
Statement II:
We can see that the ratio of Networth to profit is the
highest in 2005-06 (>20) and lowest in 2009-10 (< 15)
We only need to see if this ratio decreases over the years
2006-07, 2007-08 and 2008-09.
The values of the ratio of Networth to Profit in 2006-07,
2007-08 and 2008-09 are approximately 18, 17.2 and
16.72 respectively.
Thus the ratio of profit to Networth has been
consistently improving over the period under review.
Statement II is incorrect.
Hence, option 4.
180. Statement I:
Consider 2005-06
177. Statement I:
The value added in 2009-10 is more than 1.5 times that
in 2008-09. In no other year is this ratio so high. So
clearly, the percentage value added growth over the
previous year has been the highest in the year 2009-10.
Statement I is correct.
Statement II:
In the year 2005-06 the ratio of Net worth to profit is
greater than 20. In no other year is it so high. So the ratio
of profit to Net worth has been the lowest in the year
2005 06.
Statement II is incorrect.
Hence, option 1.
In 2009-10,
23273 15 = 349095 < 421800
The ratio is greater than 15.
Statement I is correct.
Statement II:
178. Statement I:
From the solution to the third question of this set, we can
see that percentage value added growth over the
previous year has been the highest in the year 2009 10.
Statement I is incorrect.
Statement II:
The value added is greater than 1.1 times the previous
year in all years except in 2006-07. Hence, the
percentage value added growth over the previous year
has been the lowest in the year 2006-07.
Statement II is correct.
Hence option 2.
PP-02
2B.14
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R1
R2
R3
R4
R5
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O
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V
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11
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9
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6
5
4
3
2
1
1
2
3
4
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9
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13
2B.15
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x = 15
Similarly we get the number of eggs that the author had
before he sold eggs to Deepak to be 31 and the number
of eggs that he had before he sold eggs to Anurag as 63.
Hence, he started with 63 eggs.
Hence, option 2.
PP-02
2B.16
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