Self Studies

Verbal Ability ...

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  • Question 1
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:

    Chalk up yet another win for Einstein. A twist in the fabric of spacetime — predicted by the physicist’s theory of general relativity — is causing the orbit of one stellar corpse to teeter around another stellar corpse, researchers report. And the relativistic corkscrew is helping astronomers reconstruct the final days of these two long-dead stars. According to general relativity, any spinning mass drags spacetime around with it, like a hand mixer in molasses. One way to see this “frame dragging” is to keep a careful eye on anything circling the spinning object on a tilted orbit — the spacetime maelstrom will make the orbit wobble, or process.

    For the last 20 years, researchers have been using radio telescopes to track the motion of a pulsar, the dense remains of a massive star that went supernova, as it orbits a spinning white dwarf, the core of a lighter star that died less violently. The pulsar, dubbed PSR J1141-6545, emits a steady beat of radio waves as it spins, and by recording the arrival times of those pulses, researchers can tell when the pulsar is moving toward and away from Earth.

    Over those two decades, the orbit of the pulsar has been slowly precessing, astronomers report. The precession isn’t much — the orbit’s tilt drifts by just 0.0004 degrees per year. But it matches what researchers expect if the neighbouring white dwarf whips up spacetime as it spins. Vivek Venkatraman Krishnan, an astrophysicist at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, and colleagues report the results in the Jan. 31 Science.

    This finding isn’t the first time that researchers have observed frame dragging. Satellites in Earth’s orbit have captured the relatively puny effect around our planet. And astronomers also have observed fluctuations in the frequency of X-ray light coming from a black hole, where frame dragging should be quite intense, suggesting that gas may be precessing around it.

    The new observation “is much more direct than mine,” says Adam Ingram, an astrophysicist at the University of Oxford who studied the black hole. “I can only infer that something is precessing in black hole systems, whereas the precision radio observations presented here leave little room for ambiguity.” The pulsar precession helps researchers piece together the final moments in the lives of both stars.

    Relativistic wobbling occurs only if the orbit of the pulsar and the spin of the white dwarf are misaligned, something which is usually smoothed over by an exchange of mass between the dying stars. “This immediately tells us that the orbit was tilted due to the supernova explosion that produced the pulsar,” Venkatraman Krishnan says.  Normally, the supernova would go off, and then the progenitor of the white dwarf would dump gas on the pulsar after the explosion, aligning spin to orbit. But in this case, the opposite happened: The pulsar’s progenitor dumped gas on the white dwarf, and then the supernova occurred.

    ...view full instructions

    Einstein's theory of general relativity:

  • Question 2
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:

    Chalk up yet another win for Einstein. A twist in the fabric of spacetime — predicted by the physicist’s theory of general relativity — is causing the orbit of one stellar corpse to teeter around another stellar corpse, researchers report. And the relativistic corkscrew is helping astronomers reconstruct the final days of these two long-dead stars. According to general relativity, any spinning mass drags spacetime around with it, like a hand mixer in molasses. One way to see this “frame dragging” is to keep a careful eye on anything circling the spinning object on a tilted orbit — the spacetime maelstrom will make the orbit wobble, or process.

    For the last 20 years, researchers have been using radio telescopes to track the motion of a pulsar, the dense remains of a massive star that went supernova, as it orbits a spinning white dwarf, the core of a lighter star that died less violently. The pulsar, dubbed PSR J1141-6545, emits a steady beat of radio waves as it spins, and by recording the arrival times of those pulses, researchers can tell when the pulsar is moving toward and away from Earth.

    Over those two decades, the orbit of the pulsar has been slowly precessing, astronomers report. The precession isn’t much — the orbit’s tilt drifts by just 0.0004 degrees per year. But it matches what researchers expect if the neighbouring white dwarf whips up spacetime as it spins. Vivek Venkatraman Krishnan, an astrophysicist at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, and colleagues report the results in the Jan. 31 Science.

    This finding isn’t the first time that researchers have observed frame dragging. Satellites in Earth’s orbit have captured the relatively puny effect around our planet. And astronomers also have observed fluctuations in the frequency of X-ray light coming from a black hole, where frame dragging should be quite intense, suggesting that gas may be precessing around it.

    The new observation “is much more direct than mine,” says Adam Ingram, an astrophysicist at the University of Oxford who studied the black hole. “I can only infer that something is precessing in black hole systems, whereas the precision radio observations presented here leave little room for ambiguity.” The pulsar precession helps researchers piece together the final moments in the lives of both stars.

    Relativistic wobbling occurs only if the orbit of the pulsar and the spin of the white dwarf are misaligned, something which is usually smoothed over by an exchange of mass between the dying stars. “This immediately tells us that the orbit was tilted due to the supernova explosion that produced the pulsar,” Venkatraman Krishnan says.  Normally, the supernova would go off, and then the progenitor of the white dwarf would dump gas on the pulsar after the explosion, aligning spin to orbit. But in this case, the opposite happened: The pulsar’s progenitor dumped gas on the white dwarf, and then the supernova occurred.

    ...view full instructions

    The new experimental results are significant because: 

  • Question 3
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:

    Chalk up yet another win for Einstein. A twist in the fabric of spacetime — predicted by the physicist’s theory of general relativity — is causing the orbit of one stellar corpse to teeter around another stellar corpse, researchers report. And the relativistic corkscrew is helping astronomers reconstruct the final days of these two long-dead stars. According to general relativity, any spinning mass drags spacetime around with it, like a hand mixer in molasses. One way to see this “frame dragging” is to keep a careful eye on anything circling the spinning object on a tilted orbit — the spacetime maelstrom will make the orbit wobble, or process.

    For the last 20 years, researchers have been using radio telescopes to track the motion of a pulsar, the dense remains of a massive star that went supernova, as it orbits a spinning white dwarf, the core of a lighter star that died less violently. The pulsar, dubbed PSR J1141-6545, emits a steady beat of radio waves as it spins, and by recording the arrival times of those pulses, researchers can tell when the pulsar is moving toward and away from Earth.

    Over those two decades, the orbit of the pulsar has been slowly precessing, astronomers report. The precession isn’t much — the orbit’s tilt drifts by just 0.0004 degrees per year. But it matches what researchers expect if the neighbouring white dwarf whips up spacetime as it spins. Vivek Venkatraman Krishnan, an astrophysicist at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, and colleagues report the results in the Jan. 31 Science.

    This finding isn’t the first time that researchers have observed frame dragging. Satellites in Earth’s orbit have captured the relatively puny effect around our planet. And astronomers also have observed fluctuations in the frequency of X-ray light coming from a black hole, where frame dragging should be quite intense, suggesting that gas may be precessing around it.

    The new observation “is much more direct than mine,” says Adam Ingram, an astrophysicist at the University of Oxford who studied the black hole. “I can only infer that something is precessing in black hole systems, whereas the precision radio observations presented here leave little room for ambiguity.” The pulsar precession helps researchers piece together the final moments in the lives of both stars.

    Relativistic wobbling occurs only if the orbit of the pulsar and the spin of the white dwarf are misaligned, something which is usually smoothed over by an exchange of mass between the dying stars. “This immediately tells us that the orbit was tilted due to the supernova explosion that produced the pulsar,” Venkatraman Krishnan says.  Normally, the supernova would go off, and then the progenitor of the white dwarf would dump gas on the pulsar after the explosion, aligning spin to orbit. But in this case, the opposite happened: The pulsar’s progenitor dumped gas on the white dwarf, and then the supernova occurred.

    ...view full instructions

    What is necessary for relativistic wobbling?

  • Question 4
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:

    Chalk up yet another win for Einstein. A twist in the fabric of spacetime — predicted by the physicist’s theory of general relativity — is causing the orbit of one stellar corpse to teeter around another stellar corpse, researchers report. And the relativistic corkscrew is helping astronomers reconstruct the final days of these two long-dead stars. According to general relativity, any spinning mass drags spacetime around with it, like a hand mixer in molasses. One way to see this “frame dragging” is to keep a careful eye on anything circling the spinning object on a tilted orbit — the spacetime maelstrom will make the orbit wobble, or process.

    For the last 20 years, researchers have been using radio telescopes to track the motion of a pulsar, the dense remains of a massive star that went supernova, as it orbits a spinning white dwarf, the core of a lighter star that died less violently. The pulsar, dubbed PSR J1141-6545, emits a steady beat of radio waves as it spins, and by recording the arrival times of those pulses, researchers can tell when the pulsar is moving toward and away from Earth.

    Over those two decades, the orbit of the pulsar has been slowly precessing, astronomers report. The precession isn’t much — the orbit’s tilt drifts by just 0.0004 degrees per year. But it matches what researchers expect if the neighbouring white dwarf whips up spacetime as it spins. Vivek Venkatraman Krishnan, an astrophysicist at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, and colleagues report the results in the Jan. 31 Science.

    This finding isn’t the first time that researchers have observed frame dragging. Satellites in Earth’s orbit have captured the relatively puny effect around our planet. And astronomers also have observed fluctuations in the frequency of X-ray light coming from a black hole, where frame dragging should be quite intense, suggesting that gas may be precessing around it.

    The new observation “is much more direct than mine,” says Adam Ingram, an astrophysicist at the University of Oxford who studied the black hole. “I can only infer that something is precessing in black hole systems, whereas the precision radio observations presented here leave little room for ambiguity.” The pulsar precession helps researchers piece together the final moments in the lives of both stars.

    Relativistic wobbling occurs only if the orbit of the pulsar and the spin of the white dwarf are misaligned, something which is usually smoothed over by an exchange of mass between the dying stars. “This immediately tells us that the orbit was tilted due to the supernova explosion that produced the pulsar,” Venkatraman Krishnan says.  Normally, the supernova would go off, and then the progenitor of the white dwarf would dump gas on the pulsar after the explosion, aligning spin to orbit. But in this case, the opposite happened: The pulsar’s progenitor dumped gas on the white dwarf, and then the supernova occurred.

    ...view full instructions

    Which of the following is given as an example of precession in the passage?

  • Question 5
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the given passage and answer the questions that follow:

    What we mean by 'knowing', this question is not so easy as might be supposed. At first sight, we might imagine that knowledge could be defined as 'true belief'. When what we believe is true, it might be supposed that we had achieved a knowledge of what we believe. But this would not accord with how the word is commonly used. 

    To take a very trivial instance: If a man believes that the late Prime Minister's last name began with a B, he believes what is true, since the late Prime Minister was Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman. But if he believes that Mr Balfour was the late Prime Minister, he will still believe that the late Prime Minister's last name began with a B, yet this belief, though true, would not be thought to constitute knowledge.

    If a newspaper, by an intelligent anticipation, announces the result of a battle before any telegram giving the result has been received, it may by good fortune announce what afterwards turns out to be the right result, and it may produce belief in some of its less experienced readers. But in spite of the truth of their belief, they cannot be said to have knowledge. Thus it is clear that a true belief is not knowledge when it is deduced from a false belief.

    In like manner, a true belief cannot be called knowledge when it is deduced by a fallacious process of reasoning, even if the premises from which it is deduced are true. If I know that all Greeks are men and that Socrates was a man, and I infer that Socrates was a Greek, I cannot be said to know that Socrates was a Greek, because, although my premises and my conclusion are true, the conclusion does not follow from the premises.

    But are we to say that nothing is knowledge except what is validly deduced from true premises? Obviously, we cannot say this. Such a definition is at once too wide and too narrow. In the first place, it is too wide, because it is not enough that our premises should be true, they must also be known. The man who believes that Mr Balfour was the late Prime Minister may proceed to draw valid deductions from the true premise that the late Prime Minister's name began with a B, but he cannot be said to know the conclusions reached by these deductions. Thus we shall have to amend our definition by saying that knowledge is what is validly deduced from known premises. 

    This, however, is a circular definition: it assumes that we already know what is meant by 'known premises'. It can, therefore, at best, define one sort of knowledge, the sort we call derivative, as opposed to intuitive knowledge. We may say: 'Derivative knowledge is what is validly deduced from premises known intuitively'. In this statement, there is no formal defect, but it leaves the definition of intuitive knowledge still to seek.

    .....

    ...view full instructions

    Which of the following can be inferred from the line "If I know that all Greeks are men and that Socrates was a man, and I infer that Socrates was a Greek, I cannot be said to know that Socrates was a Greek," ?

  • Question 6
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the given passage and answer the questions that follow:

    What we mean by 'knowing', this question is not so easy as might be supposed. At first sight, we might imagine that knowledge could be defined as 'true belief'. When what we believe is true, it might be supposed that we had achieved a knowledge of what we believe. But this would not accord with how the word is commonly used. 

    To take a very trivial instance: If a man believes that the late Prime Minister's last name began with a B, he believes what is true, since the late Prime Minister was Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman. But if he believes that Mr Balfour was the late Prime Minister, he will still believe that the late Prime Minister's last name began with a B, yet this belief, though true, would not be thought to constitute knowledge.

    If a newspaper, by an intelligent anticipation, announces the result of a battle before any telegram giving the result has been received, it may by good fortune announce what afterwards turns out to be the right result, and it may produce belief in some of its less experienced readers. But in spite of the truth of their belief, they cannot be said to have knowledge. Thus it is clear that a true belief is not knowledge when it is deduced from a false belief.

    In like manner, a true belief cannot be called knowledge when it is deduced by a fallacious process of reasoning, even if the premises from which it is deduced are true. If I know that all Greeks are men and that Socrates was a man, and I infer that Socrates was a Greek, I cannot be said to know that Socrates was a Greek, because, although my premises and my conclusion are true, the conclusion does not follow from the premises.

    But are we to say that nothing is knowledge except what is validly deduced from true premises? Obviously, we cannot say this. Such a definition is at once too wide and too narrow. In the first place, it is too wide, because it is not enough that our premises should be true, they must also be known. The man who believes that Mr Balfour was the late Prime Minister may proceed to draw valid deductions from the true premise that the late Prime Minister's name began with a B, but he cannot be said to know the conclusions reached by these deductions. Thus we shall have to amend our definition by saying that knowledge is what is validly deduced from known premises. 

    This, however, is a circular definition: it assumes that we already know what is meant by 'known premises'. It can, therefore, at best, define one sort of knowledge, the sort we call derivative, as opposed to intuitive knowledge. We may say: 'Derivative knowledge is what is validly deduced from premises known intuitively'. In this statement, there is no formal defect, but it leaves the definition of intuitive knowledge still to seek.

    .....

    ...view full instructions

    According to the author, why is it incorrect to say, "knowledge is what is validly deduced from true premises"?

  • Question 7
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the given passage and answer the questions that follow:

    What we mean by 'knowing', this question is not so easy as might be supposed. At first sight, we might imagine that knowledge could be defined as 'true belief'. When what we believe is true, it might be supposed that we had achieved a knowledge of what we believe. But this would not accord with how the word is commonly used. 

    To take a very trivial instance: If a man believes that the late Prime Minister's last name began with a B, he believes what is true, since the late Prime Minister was Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman. But if he believes that Mr Balfour was the late Prime Minister, he will still believe that the late Prime Minister's last name began with a B, yet this belief, though true, would not be thought to constitute knowledge.

    If a newspaper, by an intelligent anticipation, announces the result of a battle before any telegram giving the result has been received, it may by good fortune announce what afterwards turns out to be the right result, and it may produce belief in some of its less experienced readers. But in spite of the truth of their belief, they cannot be said to have knowledge. Thus it is clear that a true belief is not knowledge when it is deduced from a false belief.

    In like manner, a true belief cannot be called knowledge when it is deduced by a fallacious process of reasoning, even if the premises from which it is deduced are true. If I know that all Greeks are men and that Socrates was a man, and I infer that Socrates was a Greek, I cannot be said to know that Socrates was a Greek, because, although my premises and my conclusion are true, the conclusion does not follow from the premises.

    But are we to say that nothing is knowledge except what is validly deduced from true premises? Obviously, we cannot say this. Such a definition is at once too wide and too narrow. In the first place, it is too wide, because it is not enough that our premises should be true, they must also be known. The man who believes that Mr Balfour was the late Prime Minister may proceed to draw valid deductions from the true premise that the late Prime Minister's name began with a B, but he cannot be said to know the conclusions reached by these deductions. Thus we shall have to amend our definition by saying that knowledge is what is validly deduced from known premises. 

    This, however, is a circular definition: it assumes that we already know what is meant by 'known premises'. It can, therefore, at best, define one sort of knowledge, the sort we call derivative, as opposed to intuitive knowledge. We may say: 'Derivative knowledge is what is validly deduced from premises known intuitively'. In this statement, there is no formal defect, but it leaves the definition of intuitive knowledge still to seek.

    .....

    ...view full instructions

    Why does the author call the definition of knowledge in the penultimate paragraph "a circular definition"?

  • Question 8
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the given passage and answer the questions that follow:

    What we mean by 'knowing', this question is not so easy as might be supposed. At first sight, we might imagine that knowledge could be defined as 'true belief'. When what we believe is true, it might be supposed that we had achieved a knowledge of what we believe. But this would not accord with how the word is commonly used. 

    To take a very trivial instance: If a man believes that the late Prime Minister's last name began with a B, he believes what is true, since the late Prime Minister was Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman. But if he believes that Mr Balfour was the late Prime Minister, he will still believe that the late Prime Minister's last name began with a B, yet this belief, though true, would not be thought to constitute knowledge.

    If a newspaper, by an intelligent anticipation, announces the result of a battle before any telegram giving the result has been received, it may by good fortune announce what afterwards turns out to be the right result, and it may produce belief in some of its less experienced readers. But in spite of the truth of their belief, they cannot be said to have knowledge. Thus it is clear that a true belief is not knowledge when it is deduced from a false belief.

    In like manner, a true belief cannot be called knowledge when it is deduced by a fallacious process of reasoning, even if the premises from which it is deduced are true. If I know that all Greeks are men and that Socrates was a man, and I infer that Socrates was a Greek, I cannot be said to know that Socrates was a Greek, because, although my premises and my conclusion are true, the conclusion does not follow from the premises.

    But are we to say that nothing is knowledge except what is validly deduced from true premises? Obviously, we cannot say this. Such a definition is at once too wide and too narrow. In the first place, it is too wide, because it is not enough that our premises should be true, they must also be known. The man who believes that Mr Balfour was the late Prime Minister may proceed to draw valid deductions from the true premise that the late Prime Minister's name began with a B, but he cannot be said to know the conclusions reached by these deductions. Thus we shall have to amend our definition by saying that knowledge is what is validly deduced from known premises. 

    This, however, is a circular definition: it assumes that we already know what is meant by 'known premises'. It can, therefore, at best, define one sort of knowledge, the sort we call derivative, as opposed to intuitive knowledge. We may say: 'Derivative knowledge is what is validly deduced from premises known intuitively'. In this statement, there is no formal defect, but it leaves the definition of intuitive knowledge still to seek.

    .....

    ...view full instructions

    What is the primary purpose of the passage?

  • Question 9
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:

    When a factory in Rwanda’s capital of Kigali debuted Africa’s first made-in-Africa mobile phones in October, their provenance wasn’t the only surprise: The devices also came loaded with higher-end features like fingerprint sensors for unlocking the screen that many rival phones used across the continent lack. It wasn’t just a push for African tech but also African quality.

    The factory, owned by Rwandan company Mara Group, was a significant milestone for Kigali, which has spent a generation emerging from the ashes of the nation’s genocide in 1994 by refashioning itself as a tech hub. Already, the city is home to several tech incubators, a Carnegie Mellon University engineering campus, and local startups that produce such items as drones and cashless payment systems. Another noteworthy initiative is the establishment of Rwanda university in the city of Butare, which hosts the Rwandan National Institute of Scientific Research.
    “It boils down to our turbulent past, being left with nothing, and using ashes as a construction tool for unity,” says Paula Ingabire, Rwanda’s tech minister.

    Hamstrung by poverty and the legacies of the slave trade and colonialism, Africa had, until recently, been mainly left behind by the global tech boom. But increasingly, it’s having success nurturing tech startups and attracting major foreign tech companies.
    In November 2019, Visa invested $200 million in Nigerian payments firm Interswitch at around the same time that OPay, a Norwegian-owned but Lagos-based mobile payment service, raised $120 million from high-profile investors including Sequoia Capital China and SoftBank Ventures Asia. Meanwhile, in May, Microsoft opened offices in Kenya and Nigeria for engineers working on artificial intelligence, machine learning, and mixed reality. A month earlier, Google opened an A.I. lab in Ghana.  In another sign of Africa’s growing tech buzz, Jack Dorsey, CEO of Twitter and payment-terminal maker Square, tweeted in November that he would spend up to six months in 2020 living on the continent. “Africa will define the future,” he said.

    Still, Africa’s growing tech scene remains small and, in many ways, limited by some very stark realities on the ground. Nearly 600 million Africans lack electricity, including as many as two-thirds of sub-Saharans, and 85% of the continent’s residents live on less than $5.50 a day. Such challenges are compounded by the inevitable operational problems that all startups face, regardless of their location. For example, Nigerian online retailer Jumia Technologies, which in April became Africa’s first tech company to hold an initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange, recently shuttered its e-commerce operations in Tanzania and Cameroon, along with its food delivery service in Rwanda. As of mid-December, its shares had plummeted nearly 87% from their peak.

    On the bright side, access to venture capital is growing. Investors poured $1.2 billion into African startups in 2018, more than triple the amount of two years earlier.  Of all the African countries pushing into tech, Rwanda stands out. A hilly nation of 12 million that’s similar in size to Maryland, its effort is centred on Kigali, named “world’s cleanest city” by the World Economic Forum. The drive has already attracted Co-Creation Hub, a design lab from Lagos; Norrsken, a coworking space and investment fund from Stockholm; and Carnegie Mellon University, which opened its campus for 300 graduate students in 2011 and upgraded to a new campus in November.

    ...view full instructions

    Which of the following can be best inferred from the passage?

  • Question 10
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:

    When a factory in Rwanda’s capital of Kigali debuted Africa’s first made-in-Africa mobile phones in October, their provenance wasn’t the only surprise: The devices also came loaded with higher-end features like fingerprint sensors for unlocking the screen that many rival phones used across the continent lack. It wasn’t just a push for African tech but also African quality.

    The factory, owned by Rwandan company Mara Group, was a significant milestone for Kigali, which has spent a generation emerging from the ashes of the nation’s genocide in 1994 by refashioning itself as a tech hub. Already, the city is home to several tech incubators, a Carnegie Mellon University engineering campus, and local startups that produce such items as drones and cashless payment systems. Another noteworthy initiative is the establishment of Rwanda university in the city of Butare, which hosts the Rwandan National Institute of Scientific Research.
    “It boils down to our turbulent past, being left with nothing, and using ashes as a construction tool for unity,” says Paula Ingabire, Rwanda’s tech minister.

    Hamstrung by poverty and the legacies of the slave trade and colonialism, Africa had, until recently, been mainly left behind by the global tech boom. But increasingly, it’s having success nurturing tech startups and attracting major foreign tech companies.
    In November 2019, Visa invested $200 million in Nigerian payments firm Interswitch at around the same time that OPay, a Norwegian-owned but Lagos-based mobile payment service, raised $120 million from high-profile investors including Sequoia Capital China and SoftBank Ventures Asia. Meanwhile, in May, Microsoft opened offices in Kenya and Nigeria for engineers working on artificial intelligence, machine learning, and mixed reality. A month earlier, Google opened an A.I. lab in Ghana.  In another sign of Africa’s growing tech buzz, Jack Dorsey, CEO of Twitter and payment-terminal maker Square, tweeted in November that he would spend up to six months in 2020 living on the continent. “Africa will define the future,” he said.

    Still, Africa’s growing tech scene remains small and, in many ways, limited by some very stark realities on the ground. Nearly 600 million Africans lack electricity, including as many as two-thirds of sub-Saharans, and 85% of the continent’s residents live on less than $5.50 a day. Such challenges are compounded by the inevitable operational problems that all startups face, regardless of their location. For example, Nigerian online retailer Jumia Technologies, which in April became Africa’s first tech company to hold an initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange, recently shuttered its e-commerce operations in Tanzania and Cameroon, along with its food delivery service in Rwanda. As of mid-December, its shares had plummeted nearly 87% from their peak.

    On the bright side, access to venture capital is growing. Investors poured $1.2 billion into African startups in 2018, more than triple the amount of two years earlier.  Of all the African countries pushing into tech, Rwanda stands out. A hilly nation of 12 million that’s similar in size to Maryland, its effort is centred on Kigali, named “world’s cleanest city” by the World Economic Forum. The drive has already attracted Co-Creation Hub, a design lab from Lagos; Norrsken, a coworking space and investment fund from Stockholm; and Carnegie Mellon University, which opened its campus for 300 graduate students in 2011 and upgraded to a new campus in November.

    ...view full instructions

    The words of Paula Ingabire imply that:

  • Question 11
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:

    When a factory in Rwanda’s capital of Kigali debuted Africa’s first made-in-Africa mobile phones in October, their provenance wasn’t the only surprise: The devices also came loaded with higher-end features like fingerprint sensors for unlocking the screen that many rival phones used across the continent lack. It wasn’t just a push for African tech but also African quality.

    The factory, owned by Rwandan company Mara Group, was a significant milestone for Kigali, which has spent a generation emerging from the ashes of the nation’s genocide in 1994 by refashioning itself as a tech hub. Already, the city is home to several tech incubators, a Carnegie Mellon University engineering campus, and local startups that produce such items as drones and cashless payment systems. Another noteworthy initiative is the establishment of Rwanda university in the city of Butare, which hosts the Rwandan National Institute of Scientific Research.
    “It boils down to our turbulent past, being left with nothing, and using ashes as a construction tool for unity,” says Paula Ingabire, Rwanda’s tech minister.

    Hamstrung by poverty and the legacies of the slave trade and colonialism, Africa had, until recently, been mainly left behind by the global tech boom. But increasingly, it’s having success nurturing tech startups and attracting major foreign tech companies.
    In November 2019, Visa invested $200 million in Nigerian payments firm Interswitch at around the same time that OPay, a Norwegian-owned but Lagos-based mobile payment service, raised $120 million from high-profile investors including Sequoia Capital China and SoftBank Ventures Asia. Meanwhile, in May, Microsoft opened offices in Kenya and Nigeria for engineers working on artificial intelligence, machine learning, and mixed reality. A month earlier, Google opened an A.I. lab in Ghana.  In another sign of Africa’s growing tech buzz, Jack Dorsey, CEO of Twitter and payment-terminal maker Square, tweeted in November that he would spend up to six months in 2020 living on the continent. “Africa will define the future,” he said.

    Still, Africa’s growing tech scene remains small and, in many ways, limited by some very stark realities on the ground. Nearly 600 million Africans lack electricity, including as many as two-thirds of sub-Saharans, and 85% of the continent’s residents live on less than $5.50 a day. Such challenges are compounded by the inevitable operational problems that all startups face, regardless of their location. For example, Nigerian online retailer Jumia Technologies, which in April became Africa’s first tech company to hold an initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange, recently shuttered its e-commerce operations in Tanzania and Cameroon, along with its food delivery service in Rwanda. As of mid-December, its shares had plummeted nearly 87% from their peak.

    On the bright side, access to venture capital is growing. Investors poured $1.2 billion into African startups in 2018, more than triple the amount of two years earlier.  Of all the African countries pushing into tech, Rwanda stands out. A hilly nation of 12 million that’s similar in size to Maryland, its effort is centred on Kigali, named “world’s cleanest city” by the World Economic Forum. The drive has already attracted Co-Creation Hub, a design lab from Lagos; Norrsken, a coworking space and investment fund from Stockholm; and Carnegie Mellon University, which opened its campus for 300 graduate students in 2011 and upgraded to a new campus in November.

    ...view full instructions

    Which of the following is true about Kigali?

  • Question 12
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:

    When a factory in Rwanda’s capital of Kigali debuted Africa’s first made-in-Africa mobile phones in October, their provenance wasn’t the only surprise: The devices also came loaded with higher-end features like fingerprint sensors for unlocking the screen that many rival phones used across the continent lack. It wasn’t just a push for African tech but also African quality.

    The factory, owned by Rwandan company Mara Group, was a significant milestone for Kigali, which has spent a generation emerging from the ashes of the nation’s genocide in 1994 by refashioning itself as a tech hub. Already, the city is home to several tech incubators, a Carnegie Mellon University engineering campus, and local startups that produce such items as drones and cashless payment systems. Another noteworthy initiative is the establishment of Rwanda university in the city of Butare, which hosts the Rwandan National Institute of Scientific Research.
    “It boils down to our turbulent past, being left with nothing, and using ashes as a construction tool for unity,” says Paula Ingabire, Rwanda’s tech minister.

    Hamstrung by poverty and the legacies of the slave trade and colonialism, Africa had, until recently, been mainly left behind by the global tech boom. But increasingly, it’s having success nurturing tech startups and attracting major foreign tech companies.
    In November 2019, Visa invested $200 million in Nigerian payments firm Interswitch at around the same time that OPay, a Norwegian-owned but Lagos-based mobile payment service, raised $120 million from high-profile investors including Sequoia Capital China and SoftBank Ventures Asia. Meanwhile, in May, Microsoft opened offices in Kenya and Nigeria for engineers working on artificial intelligence, machine learning, and mixed reality. A month earlier, Google opened an A.I. lab in Ghana.  In another sign of Africa’s growing tech buzz, Jack Dorsey, CEO of Twitter and payment-terminal maker Square, tweeted in November that he would spend up to six months in 2020 living on the continent. “Africa will define the future,” he said.

    Still, Africa’s growing tech scene remains small and, in many ways, limited by some very stark realities on the ground. Nearly 600 million Africans lack electricity, including as many as two-thirds of sub-Saharans, and 85% of the continent’s residents live on less than $5.50 a day. Such challenges are compounded by the inevitable operational problems that all startups face, regardless of their location. For example, Nigerian online retailer Jumia Technologies, which in April became Africa’s first tech company to hold an initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange, recently shuttered its e-commerce operations in Tanzania and Cameroon, along with its food delivery service in Rwanda. As of mid-December, its shares had plummeted nearly 87% from their peak.

    On the bright side, access to venture capital is growing. Investors poured $1.2 billion into African startups in 2018, more than triple the amount of two years earlier.  Of all the African countries pushing into tech, Rwanda stands out. A hilly nation of 12 million that’s similar in size to Maryland, its effort is centred on Kigali, named “world’s cleanest city” by the World Economic Forum. The drive has already attracted Co-Creation Hub, a design lab from Lagos; Norrsken, a coworking space and investment fund from Stockholm; and Carnegie Mellon University, which opened its campus for 300 graduate students in 2011 and upgraded to a new campus in November.

    ...view full instructions

    Based on the passage, which of the following is an issue a tech startup in Africa is more likely to encounter as compared to a similar startup elsewhere?

  • Question 13
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage and answer the questions that follow.

    The mid-century cultural critics Theodor Adorno and Daniel Boorstin had a paranoid view: they believed that the media imposed stars on a mindless public. Then in the 1980s and ’90s, the scholars Jackie Stacey and Henry Jenkins saw the public as in charge, making or breaking stars. In prosperous times, celebrity biographies tend to attribute stardom to talent, luck and hard work. In precarious times, we hear more about icons who self-destruct.

    All these views assign power to one and only one element in the equation: the media, the public or the stars. All of them are wrong - because all of them are right. No single group has the power to make or break a star. Three equally powerful groups collude and compete to define celebrities: media producers, members of the public and celebrities themselves. None has decisive power, and none is powerless.

    The three-way effort to create, define and undo celebrities is tireless. To become famous, the American rapper Cardi B had to do more than record catchy tunes. She had to promote them effectively to people who liked them. She had to be outrageous and self-revealing enough to garner a huge following on Instagram. She had to collaborate with a celebrity band, Maroon 5, and feud with the already-established star rapper Nicki Minaj.

    In January 2019, Cardi B won an online battle with Donald Trump when she posted an Instagram video calling his government shutdown ‘crazy’. The Twitter-mad president signalled his defeat with an uncharacteristic response: silence. A month later, Instagram trolls attacked Cardi B for not deserving her Grammy. She left the platform, only to return two days later. The story continues.

    Social media amplifies and speeds up interactions between audiences, media and stars, but YouTube and Twitter did not invent modern celebrity culture. That happened more than 150 years ago, thanks to the popular press, commercial photography, railways and steamships, and national postal systems.

    All of us, even those who ignore celebrities, are part of a story whose outcome we can influence but never fully predict. Celebrities are neither pawns nor gods. Every time Cardi B releases a new song, poses for a magazine cover or posts on social media, she can gain or lose status. Members of the public are neither passive consumers nor omnipotent creators. They argue among themselves, and each individual’s decision to engage or ignore celebrities helps to make or break stars. Journalists use celebrity coverage to get the public’s attention. Some criticise celebrities; others cater to them.

    The resulting pandemonium is celebrity culture - a drama that many help to script but that no one fully controls. If we knew for certain how the story ended, we might lose interest. If we had no role to play in the outcome, we might be less intrigued. The moral of this tale: celebrity culture is neither all good nor all bad. But if you don’t like celebrity culture, don’t blame the internet. Blame everyone.

    ...view full instructions

    Which of the following adds the most depth to the author’s argument?

  • Question 14
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage and answer the questions that follow.

    The mid-century cultural critics Theodor Adorno and Daniel Boorstin had a paranoid view: they believed that the media imposed stars on a mindless public. Then in the 1980s and ’90s, the scholars Jackie Stacey and Henry Jenkins saw the public as in charge, making or breaking stars. In prosperous times, celebrity biographies tend to attribute stardom to talent, luck and hard work. In precarious times, we hear more about icons who self-destruct.

    All these views assign power to one and only one element in the equation: the media, the public or the stars. All of them are wrong - because all of them are right. No single group has the power to make or break a star. Three equally powerful groups collude and compete to define celebrities: media producers, members of the public and celebrities themselves. None has decisive power, and none is powerless.

    The three-way effort to create, define and undo celebrities is tireless. To become famous, the American rapper Cardi B had to do more than record catchy tunes. She had to promote them effectively to people who liked them. She had to be outrageous and self-revealing enough to garner a huge following on Instagram. She had to collaborate with a celebrity band, Maroon 5, and feud with the already-established star rapper Nicki Minaj.

    In January 2019, Cardi B won an online battle with Donald Trump when she posted an Instagram video calling his government shutdown ‘crazy’. The Twitter-mad president signalled his defeat with an uncharacteristic response: silence. A month later, Instagram trolls attacked Cardi B for not deserving her Grammy. She left the platform, only to return two days later. The story continues.

    Social media amplifies and speeds up interactions between audiences, media and stars, but YouTube and Twitter did not invent modern celebrity culture. That happened more than 150 years ago, thanks to the popular press, commercial photography, railways and steamships, and national postal systems.

    All of us, even those who ignore celebrities, are part of a story whose outcome we can influence but never fully predict. Celebrities are neither pawns nor gods. Every time Cardi B releases a new song, poses for a magazine cover or posts on social media, she can gain or lose status. Members of the public are neither passive consumers nor omnipotent creators. They argue among themselves, and each individual’s decision to engage or ignore celebrities helps to make or break stars. Journalists use celebrity coverage to get the public’s attention. Some criticise celebrities; others cater to them.

    The resulting pandemonium is celebrity culture - a drama that many help to script but that no one fully controls. If we knew for certain how the story ended, we might lose interest. If we had no role to play in the outcome, we might be less intrigued. The moral of this tale: celebrity culture is neither all good nor all bad. But if you don’t like celebrity culture, don’t blame the internet. Blame everyone.

    ...view full instructions

    What does the author mean by the lines “But if you don’t like the celebrity culture, don’t blame the internet. Blame everyone.”?

  • Question 15
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage and answer the questions that follow.

    The mid-century cultural critics Theodor Adorno and Daniel Boorstin had a paranoid view: they believed that the media imposed stars on a mindless public. Then in the 1980s and ’90s, the scholars Jackie Stacey and Henry Jenkins saw the public as in charge, making or breaking stars. In prosperous times, celebrity biographies tend to attribute stardom to talent, luck and hard work. In precarious times, we hear more about icons who self-destruct.

    All these views assign power to one and only one element in the equation: the media, the public or the stars. All of them are wrong - because all of them are right. No single group has the power to make or break a star. Three equally powerful groups collude and compete to define celebrities: media producers, members of the public and celebrities themselves. None has decisive power, and none is powerless.

    The three-way effort to create, define and undo celebrities is tireless. To become famous, the American rapper Cardi B had to do more than record catchy tunes. She had to promote them effectively to people who liked them. She had to be outrageous and self-revealing enough to garner a huge following on Instagram. She had to collaborate with a celebrity band, Maroon 5, and feud with the already-established star rapper Nicki Minaj.

    In January 2019, Cardi B won an online battle with Donald Trump when she posted an Instagram video calling his government shutdown ‘crazy’. The Twitter-mad president signalled his defeat with an uncharacteristic response: silence. A month later, Instagram trolls attacked Cardi B for not deserving her Grammy. She left the platform, only to return two days later. The story continues.

    Social media amplifies and speeds up interactions between audiences, media and stars, but YouTube and Twitter did not invent modern celebrity culture. That happened more than 150 years ago, thanks to the popular press, commercial photography, railways and steamships, and national postal systems.

    All of us, even those who ignore celebrities, are part of a story whose outcome we can influence but never fully predict. Celebrities are neither pawns nor gods. Every time Cardi B releases a new song, poses for a magazine cover or posts on social media, she can gain or lose status. Members of the public are neither passive consumers nor omnipotent creators. They argue among themselves, and each individual’s decision to engage or ignore celebrities helps to make or break stars. Journalists use celebrity coverage to get the public’s attention. Some criticise celebrities; others cater to them.

    The resulting pandemonium is celebrity culture - a drama that many help to script but that no one fully controls. If we knew for certain how the story ended, we might lose interest. If we had no role to play in the outcome, we might be less intrigued. The moral of this tale: celebrity culture is neither all good nor all bad. But if you don’t like celebrity culture, don’t blame the internet. Blame everyone.

    ...view full instructions

    Why does the author call the view of mid-century cultural critics Theodor Adorno and Daniel Boorstin ‘paranoid’?

  • Question 16
    3 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage and answer the questions that follow.

    The mid-century cultural critics Theodor Adorno and Daniel Boorstin had a paranoid view: they believed that the media imposed stars on a mindless public. Then in the 1980s and ’90s, the scholars Jackie Stacey and Henry Jenkins saw the public as in charge, making or breaking stars. In prosperous times, celebrity biographies tend to attribute stardom to talent, luck and hard work. In precarious times, we hear more about icons who self-destruct.

    All these views assign power to one and only one element in the equation: the media, the public or the stars. All of them are wrong - because all of them are right. No single group has the power to make or break a star. Three equally powerful groups collude and compete to define celebrities: media producers, members of the public and celebrities themselves. None has decisive power, and none is powerless.

    The three-way effort to create, define and undo celebrities is tireless. To become famous, the American rapper Cardi B had to do more than record catchy tunes. She had to promote them effectively to people who liked them. She had to be outrageous and self-revealing enough to garner a huge following on Instagram. She had to collaborate with a celebrity band, Maroon 5, and feud with the already-established star rapper Nicki Minaj.

    In January 2019, Cardi B won an online battle with Donald Trump when she posted an Instagram video calling his government shutdown ‘crazy’. The Twitter-mad president signalled his defeat with an uncharacteristic response: silence. A month later, Instagram trolls attacked Cardi B for not deserving her Grammy. She left the platform, only to return two days later. The story continues.

    Social media amplifies and speeds up interactions between audiences, media and stars, but YouTube and Twitter did not invent modern celebrity culture. That happened more than 150 years ago, thanks to the popular press, commercial photography, railways and steamships, and national postal systems.

    All of us, even those who ignore celebrities, are part of a story whose outcome we can influence but never fully predict. Celebrities are neither pawns nor gods. Every time Cardi B releases a new song, poses for a magazine cover or posts on social media, she can gain or lose status. Members of the public are neither passive consumers nor omnipotent creators. They argue among themselves, and each individual’s decision to engage or ignore celebrities helps to make or break stars. Journalists use celebrity coverage to get the public’s attention. Some criticise celebrities; others cater to them.

    The resulting pandemonium is celebrity culture - a drama that many help to script but that no one fully controls. If we knew for certain how the story ended, we might lose interest. If we had no role to play in the outcome, we might be less intrigued. The moral of this tale: celebrity culture is neither all good nor all bad. But if you don’t like celebrity culture, don’t blame the internet. Blame everyone.

    ...view full instructions

    Why does the author cite the example of Cardi B?

  • Question 17
    3 / -1

    Read the following paragraph and select the option that best captures its essence:

    Have you ever felt like a forgery hanging in a gallery? As in, people see a certain value or achievement in you. They even stop on occasion to admire you with appreciating nods and pleasing comments. But any day now, you know, someone will come along, squint their knowing eyes in your direction, and lean in for a closer look. The jig will be up. You’ll be spotted as the fake you are. If that strikes a familiar chord, you may have experienced imposter syndrome. This mental hangup renders people unable to internalize their success. They don’t attribute it to their abilities, dedication, and hard work but fret that their accomplishments are merely the result of luck or failing upward. And they live in constant fear of an inevitable unmasking — an apprehension that leads to harmful habits for their work, well-being, and potential growth.

  • Question 18
    3 / -1

    The four sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3 and 4) below, Arrange the following four sentences into a coherent paragraph:

    1. There are many ways in which buildings can be designed and built to withstand earthquakes, so that they don’t collapse.

    2. The best way to prepare for an earthquake disaster is to build homes and infrastructure using earthquake-resilience techniques.

    3. In an area at risk of large earthquakes, a multistory building should be designed so that, when the ground starts to shake, its outer walls on either side sway in unison in the same direction as each other.

    4. That way, people are not killed during the earthquake and they still have their homes afterwards.

    1. Question 19
      3 / -1

      The four sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3 and 4) below, when properly sequenced, would yield a coherent paragraph. Decide on the proper sequencing of the order of the sentences and key in the sequence of the four numbers as your answer:

      1. Much of the hardware of mechanical music has now, as with so many other 21st-century innovations, become software.

      2. These programs don’t just package all of the accumulated sounds and features of earlier drum machines into their software.

      3. GarageBand and other digital audio workstations have handed the means of record production to anyone with a laptop.

      4. They now offer something more - an AI drummer that can listen to your tracks and compose an appropriate part to accompany them.

      1. Question 20
        3 / -1

        The passage given below is followed by four alternate summaries. Choose the option that best captures the essence of the passage.

        A common gambling misconception is the near-miss effect, when an outcome differs just a little from a winning one, which induces the gambler to believe that she was ‘so close’ that she should try again. But seldom do people remember that all games of chance - whether casino games such as roulette, craps, blackjack and slots, or lottery and bingo, or card games such as poker or bridge - rely on certain basic statistical and probabilistic models. Uncertainty is built into them, which is what makes games ‘fun’ to play and also explains their continued existence. Casino games would never run if ‘the house’ wasn’t confident that they’d always win in the end. The mathematics of the games, including their rules and payout schedules, assures the house will profit in aggregate, regardless of individual behaviour. 

      2. Question 21
        3 / -1

        The four sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3 and 4) below, when properly sequenced, would yield a coherent paragraph. Decide on the proper sequencing of the order of the sentences and key in the sequence of the four numbers as your answer:

        1.The biggest influence on the regional climate are the winds that blow over the country from west to east. These deposit huge volumes of rain on the west coast of the south island in particular.

        2.New Zealand is grappling with two consecutive extreme weather events—massive flooding followed by a cyclone—that have claimed at least 12 lives and left hundreds of thousands of people without power.

        3.In the wake of these disasters, climate change mitigation and adaptation are likely to be major issues in the country’s election on October 14 this year

        4.The high winds and waters of Cyclone Gabrielle have washed away coastal roads on the north island and left bridges splintered and broken.

      3. Question 22
        3 / -1

        There is a sentence that is missing in the paragraph below. Look at the paragraph and decide in which blank (option 1, 2, 3,or 4) the following sentence would best fit.

        Sentence: To reduce aerosol emissions would demand the more equitable distribution of electricity.

        Paragraph: Aerosol emissions are a major culprit - particulate matter from vehicle emissions, crop burning, and domestic cooking fires……(1)........The skies over India have the highest concentration of aerosols in the world. They appear as a giant stain on satellite images, spreading across the Indian Ocean. ……….(2)........Scientists have dubbed it the ‘brown cloud’. One recent study shows that remote aerosols, especially sulfates, affect monsoon rainfall over South Asia…….(3)..... Consider the dilemmas this raises. The ‘brown cloud’ is a function of energy poverty in South Asia rather than excess. It is, at least in part, the result of the incomplete combustion of the cheapest, most polluting fuels - the only fuels accessible to the 240 million people in India who live without access to electricity. ………(4)........ 

      4. Question 23
        3 / -1

        There is a sentence that is missing in the paragraph below. Look at the paragraph and decide in which blank (option 1, 2, 3, or 4) the following sentence would best fit.

        Sentence: These foundations are empirically more likely to lead to the adoption of a process for innovation, which is then more likely to generate an innovative idea.

        Passage: We think of innovation as a pyramid, which must rest on solid foundations of culture and individual mindset. Company - and even national - characteristics of openness, agility and ambidexterity provide a cultural context that promotes innovation. ____(1)____ Personal traits like curiosity, objectivity, flexibility, adaptability and grit all enhance innovativeness. People who embrace the right attitudes are not guaranteed to be successful in innovation, but people who show none of these characteristics are probably doomed to an uninnovative future. ____(2)____ At the next level of the innovation pyramid are processes, tools and methods that intentionally promote new opportunities. ____(3)____ These encourage new ideas, identify sources of authentic value, refine existing products and services, or develop new ones that can deliver value. Such processes and techniques transform ideation from a freak event into a serious game of probabilities. ____(4)____

      5. Question 24
        3 / -1

        The passage given below is followed by four alternate summaries. Choose the option that best captures the essence of the passage.

        Archaeological evidence has revealed that ancient Egyptians used cosmetics such as kohl and henna to enhance their beauty. During the Middle Ages, cosmetics were often associated with the devil and were heavily frowned upon by the church. However, cosmetics experienced a resurgence in popularity during the Renaissance period, with women using lead-based products to create a pale complexion and enhance their features. In the 20th century, cosmetics became more accessible to the masses with the development of mass production techniques and the rise of the advertising industry. Today, the cosmetics industry is a multi-billion dollar global business that includes makeup, skincare, haircare, and fragrance products. The industry is constantly evolving, with new trends, technologies, and ingredients emerging to meet consumers' changing needs and desires. Cosmetics remain a powerful tool for self-expression and personal care.

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