Para Jumbles I Year
Para Jumbles I Year
Para Jumbles I Year
VA – 13
Para Jumbled
Directions for questions 1 to 5: Each question has a set of four jumbled sentences which when properly arranged form
a coherent paragraph. Choose the most logical order of sentences from the given options: -
1.
A. With that, I swallowed the shampoo, and obtained the most realistic results almost on the spot.
B. The man shuffled away into the back regions to make up a prescription, and after a moment I got through on
the shop-telephone to the Consulate, intimating my location.
C. Then, while the pharmacist was wrapping up a six-ounce bottle of the mixture, I groaned and inquired
whether he could give me something for acute gastric cramp.
D. I intended to stage a sharp gastric attack, and entering an old-fashioned pharmacy, I asked for a popular
shampoo mixture, consisting of olive oil and flaked soap.
2.
A. If caught in the act, they were punished, not for the crime, but for allowing themselves to be caught,
another lash of the whip.
B. The bellicose Spartans sacrificed all the finer things in life for military expertise.
C. Those fortunate enough to survive babyhood were taken away from their mothers at the age of seven to
undergo rigorous military training.
D. This consisted mainly of beatings and deprivations of all kinds like going around barefoot in winter, and
worse, starvation so that they would be forced to steal food to survive.
E. Male children were examined at birth by the city council and those deemed too weak to become soldiers
were left to die of exposure.
4
A. As officials, their vision of a country shouldn’t run too far beyond that of the local people with whom they
have to deal.
B. Ambassadors have to choose their words.
C. To say what they feel they have to say, they appear to be denying or ignoring part of what they know.
D. So, with ambassadors as with other expatriates in black Africa, there appears at a first meeting a kind of
ambivalence.
E. They do a specialized job and it is necessary for them to live ceremonial lives.
5
A. To avoid this, the QWERTY layout put the keys most likely to be hit in rapid succession on opposite
sides.
This made the keyboard slow, the story goes, but that was the idea.
B. A different layout, which had been patented by August Dvorak in 1936, was shown to be much faster.
C. The QWERTY design (patented by Christopher Sholes in 1868 and sold to Remington in 1873) aimed to
solve a mechanical problem of early typewriters.
D. Yet the Dvorak layout has never been widely adopted, even though (with electric typewriters and the PCs)
the anti-jamming rational for QWERTY has been defunct for years.
E. When certain combinations of keys were struck quickly, the type bars often jammed.
A. Branded disposable diapers are available at many supermarkets and drug stores.
B. If one supermarket sets a higher price for a diaper, customers may buy that brand elsewhere.
C. By contrast, the demand for private-label products may be less price-sensitive since it is available only at a
corresponding supermarket chain.
D. So the demand for branded diapers at any particular store may be quite price sensitive.
E. For instance, only SavOn Drugs stores sell SavOn Drugs diapers.
F. Then stores should set a higher incremental margin percentage for private label diapers
(a) ABCDEF (b) ABCEDF (c) ADBCEF (d) AEDBCF
8
A. Similarly, turning to caste, even though being lower caste is undoubtedly a separate cause of disparity, its
impact is all the greater when the lower-caste families also happen to be poor.
B. Belonging to a privileged class can help a woman to overcome many barriers that obstruct women from less
thriving classes.
C. It is the interactive presence of these two kinds of deprivation – being low class and being female – that
massively impoverishes women from the less privileged classes.
D. A congruence of class deprivation and gender discrimination can blight the lives of poorer women very
severely.
E. Gender is certainly a contributor to societal inequality, but it does not act independently of class.
(a) EABDC (b) EBDCA (c) DAEBC (d) BECDA
9
A. Call it the third wave sweeping the Indian media.
B. Now they are starring in a new role, as suave dealmakers who are in a hurry to strike alliances and
agreements.
C. Look around and you will find a host of deals that have been inked or are ready to be finalized.
D. Then the media barons wrested back control from their editors, and turned marketing warriors with the
brand as their missile.
E. The first came with those magnificent men in their mahogany chambers who took on the world with their
mighty fountain pens.
(a) ACBED (b) CEBDA (c) CAEBD (d) AEDBC
10.
A. A transplant from my younger brother, Philip, effectively gave me a second life.
B. Feeling that whatever years I now had ahead of me were bonus, I initiated the exploration of the western
shore of Lake Turkana.
C. I was lucky.
D. Following our first tentative prospecting came remarkable finds, some of them technically stunning,
some emotionally thrilling.
E. The discoveries were worth waiting for, as I shall recount.
14.
A. The information we receive from our senses, from the world, typically has structure and order, and is not
arbitrary.
B. Living things—animals and plants—typically exhibit co relational structure.
C. To categorize an object means to consider it equivalent to other things in that category, and different—
along some salient dimension—from things that are not.
D. Adaptive behaviour depends on cognitive economy, treating objects as equivalent.
15.
A. Along with missing their education these children also face life threatening dangers by working in
hazardous chemical factories.
B. Child labour has been interfering with the education of millions of children across lndia.
C. However, there is a dire need to reinforce these laws strictly throughout the country.
D. Many laws have been framed in order to curb this evil.
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