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  • Question 1
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    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage given below and answer the question that follows:
    When we see the ubiquity of the internet around us today, we find it hard to believe that it is barely 
    thirty years old. It was invented in the USA to allow various computers to communicate with each 
    other, an improvement upon the limited possibilities of the physical linking of computers prevalent 
    then. Begun in 1990. the World Wide Web (www) is among the principal services available on the 
    internet and has had a major impact on how we use this facility. with almost countless websites in 
    numerous languages, www has become the most popular content provider in the world, with a host 
    of search engines to facilitate navigation.
    In fact, it is not uncommon today to even measure progress in a region or country, using the yardstick 
    of internet access among the population. However, in this respect, India presents an interesting case 
    where the soaring number of users often mask the digital divide between the literate minority and the 
    large, illiterate masses.
    Nonetheless, while educationists now have bold plans to exploit the internet to the hilt towards the 
    spread of literacy in the country, the availability of hardware and IT skill are a stumbling block, 
    compounded but the huge number of computer-illiterate that defies all planning within a foreseeable 
    time frame.
    Yet, we can only marvel at the internet for all that it can accomplish at the click of a mouse.

    ...view full instructions

    According to the text, 'digital divided' means the difference between those with and without skills and access to ____

  • Question 2
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    Most major cities in developing countries are under enormous pressure to expand and grow. There are several reasons for this trend. First, having a house of one's own has become a top priority with the salaried class. Second, with an increase in disposable income, people are willing to buy properties not only for living but for investment as well. Third, there has been significant growth in young professionals buying houses of their own, adding to the demand. This, in turn, has spurred developers to keep coming up with newer and more attractive projects all year round.
    However, while buying and selling gathers momentum, there are several emerging problems that need attention. Planning should have been the top priority but this is seldom the case. Private developers buy whatever land they can manage outside city limits to build high rise flats.
    What results is a haphazard pattern of growth around cities, completely out of sync with the city itself. The lack of provisions for waste management is another concern and this is often the cause of epidemics brought on by lack sanitation. There is also a tendency to overbuild on a plot of land, possibly, to maximize profit, but this is sadly at the cost of aesthetics and green areas,so necessary for healthy living. Isn't this the reason why serious town planners refer to vacant swathes of green belts as a city's lungs?

    ...view full instructions

    Provide a suitable title to the text:

  • Question 3
    1 / -0

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage given below and answer the question that follows:
    When we see the ubiquity of the internet around us today, we find it hard to believe that it is barely 
    thirty years old. It was invented in the USA to allow various computers to communicate with each 
    other, an improvement upon the limited possibilities of the physical linking of computers prevalent 
    then. Begun in 1990. the World Wide Web (www) is among the principal services available on the 
    internet and has had a major impact on how we use this facility. with almost countless websites in 
    numerous languages, www has become the most popular content provider in the world, with a host 
    of search engines to facilitate navigation.
    In fact, it is not uncommon today to even measure progress in a region or country, using the yardstick 
    of internet access among the population. However, in this respect, India presents an interesting case 
    where the soaring number of users often mask the digital divide between the literate minority and the 
    large, illiterate masses.
    Nonetheless, while educationists now have bold plans to exploit the internet to the hilt towards the 
    spread of literacy in the country, the availability of hardware and IT skill are a stumbling block, 
    compounded but the huge number of computer-illiterate that defies all planning within a foreseeable 
    time frame.
    Yet, we can only marvel at the internet for all that it can accomplish at the click of a mouse.

    ...view full instructions

    As a benchmark for measuring progress, the internet is ____.

  • Question 4
    1 / -0

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage given below and answer the question that follows:
    When we see the ubiquity of the internet around us today, we find it hard to believe that it is barely 
    thirty years old. It was invented in the USA to allow various computers to communicate with each 
    other, an improvement upon the limited possibilities of the physical linking of computers prevalent 
    then. Begun in 1990. the World Wide Web (www) is among the principal services available on the 
    internet and has had a major impact on how we use this facility. with almost countless websites in 
    numerous languages, www has become the most popular content provider in the world, with a host 
    of search engines to facilitate navigation.
    In fact, it is not uncommon today to even measure progress in a region or country, using the yardstick 
    of internet access among the population. However, in this respect, India presents an interesting case 
    where the soaring number of users often mask the digital divide between the literate minority and the 
    large, illiterate masses.
    Nonetheless, while educationists now have bold plans to exploit the internet to the hilt towards the 
    spread of literacy in the country, the availability of hardware and IT skill are a stumbling block, 
    compounded but the huge number of computer-illiterate that defies all planning within a foreseeable 
    time frame.
    Yet, we can only marvel at the internet for all that it can accomplish at the click of a mouse.

    ...view full instructions

    The most appropriate title for the passage is '____'.

  • Question 5
    1 / -0

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage given below and answer the question that follows:
    When we see the ubiquity of the internet around us today, we find it hard to believe that it is barely 
    thirty years old. It was invented in the USA to allow various computers to communicate with each 
    other, an improvement upon the limited possibilities of the physical linking of computers prevalent 
    then. Begun in 1990. the World Wide Web (www) is among the principal services available on the 
    internet and has had a major impact on how we use this facility. with almost countless websites in 
    numerous languages, www has become the most popular content provider in the world, with a host 
    of search engines to facilitate navigation.
    In fact, it is not uncommon today to even measure progress in a region or country, using the yardstick 
    of internet access among the population. However, in this respect, India presents an interesting case 
    where the soaring number of users often mask the digital divide between the literate minority and the 
    large, illiterate masses.
    Nonetheless, while educationists now have bold plans to exploit the internet to the hilt towards the 
    spread of literacy in the country, the availability of hardware and IT skill are a stumbling block, 
    compounded but the huge number of computer-illiterate that defies all planning within a foreseeable 
    time frame.
    Yet, we can only marvel at the internet for all that it can accomplish at the click of a mouse.

    ...view full instructions

    The spread of literacy in India is made more difficult by the ____

  • Question 6
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    Directions For Questions

    [passage-header]Read the passage given below and answer the question that follows:[/passage-header]    "Most of my time is spent in my room, French plaiting other girls' hair," said Rachael Burford, centre player in the England women's rugby team. Burford and her braided friends then go out on the rugby pitch where, if you caught any of the recent World Cup matches, you will have noticed that the women are just as fearless as their male counterparts. "It has got to the point now when I feel a bit weird if I don't do someone's hair before a game," said Buford.
        Some of the girls look really tough with their hair plaited, so it's also a psychological thing; a victorious thing. Sadly, victory wasn't tied up in those braids: the team lost to New Zealand in the September 5th final, but many of the players looked fierce, like warrior women going into battle. "Plaits are the earliest of hairstyles because before haircutting and hairdressing, people obviously had long hair and plaits were the simplest way of keeping it out of the way," says fashion historian Caroline Cox. "For that reason," she says, "we associate plaits with both women and men, and particularly those who are involved in athletic pursuits, such as war. Think of Legolas in The Lord of the Rings, or the super strong Obelix in the Asterix cartoons." 
        For women, Boudicca or Valkyrie plaits seem to enhance their ferocity, says Cox. It was a practical hairstyle until we get to the 19th century when it begins to be associated with female children. Even now, plaits, on the whole, have the meaning of the youthful schoolgirl, not an image you will associate with England's nearly victorious rugby team.

    ...view full instructions

    According to the passage, which of these statements is true ?

  • Question 7
    1 / -0

    Directions For Questions

    [passage-header]Read the passage given below and answer the question that follows:[/passage-header]    "Most of my time is spent in my room, French plaiting other girls' hair," said Rachael Burford, centre player in the England women's rugby team. Burford and her braided friends then go out on the rugby pitch where, if you caught any of the recent World Cup matches, you will have noticed that the women are just as fearless as their male counterparts. "It has got to the point now when I feel a bit weird if I don't do someone's hair before a game," said Buford.
        Some of the girls look really tough with their hair plaited, so it's also a psychological thing; a victorious thing. Sadly, victory wasn't tied up in those braids: the team lost to New Zealand in the September 5th final, but many of the players looked fierce, like warrior women going into battle. "Plaits are the earliest of hairstyles because before haircutting and hairdressing, people obviously had long hair and plaits were the simplest way of keeping it out of the way," says fashion historian Caroline Cox. "For that reason," she says, "we associate plaits with both women and men, and particularly those who are involved in athletic pursuits, such as war. Think of Legolas in The Lord of the Rings, or the super strong Obelix in the Asterix cartoons." 
        For women, Boudicca or Valkyrie plaits seem to enhance their ferocity, says Cox. It was a practical hairstyle until we get to the 19th century when it begins to be associated with female children. Even now, plaits, on the whole, have the meaning of the youthful schoolgirl, not an image you will associate with England's nearly victorious rugby team.

    ...view full instructions

    During the World Cup, what did 'all her hair-plaited friends' do?

  • Question 8
    1 / -0

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage given below and answer the question that follows:
    Orang-utans require less food than humans, pound-for-pound, lead author Herman Pontzer said. When they do eat, orang-utans nibble mostly on ripe fruit, along with smaller portions of leaves and seed. Even in captivity, this diet doesn't diminish as orang-utans get up and go. They wake up early after a long night's sleep, explained Pontzer, an assistant professor of anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis. Then they spend the day socializing, exploring their indoor or outdoor enclosures. They also regularly engage in games with researchers. According to a study, published in the latest Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, these activities of the orang-utans, taken together, add up to the same level of exercise performed by humans in physically demanding agricultural lifestyles. In the wild, orang-utans live in the rainforests of Borneo and Sumatra where food availability is highly variable and unpredictable, Pontzer added. Like fresh fruit from the garden, the pickings are often feast or famine. But the trade-off, he added, is that low energy throughout means less energy is available to do things like grow and reproduce. So orang-utans grow slowly and reproduce slowly, which is evolutionarily risky because an orang-utan might die before it passes on its genes. Human mothers can have a child every two to four years, but orang-utans in the wild only reproduce every seven to eight years. Orang-utans are highly endangered, with many lost due to human activities such as logging, mining, and the illegal pet trade. Pontzer hopes 
    the study will highlight how much information we will lose about our closest relatives and our own evolutionary history if we let them go extinct.

    ...view full instructions

    Select the statement that is not true.

  • Question 9
    1 / -0

    Directions For Questions

    Read the following and answer the question that follows.


    Woodcraft, metal and clay products, textiles and jewellery are all displayed at the National Artisan Export exhibition. Here you can see the artisans at work and also buy products directly from them. Most of the artists have come from different parts of the country. However, the artists working on traditional pieces of jewellery are from South India.
    Gold is the metal that is used most to all but you will also see silver, copper and platinum as well. The artists not only use expensive stones like diamonds but they also use shells and glass.
    When an artist makes a piece of jewellery, they usually begin with the shape that they work from drawings. Then they have to select the colour and the material. Most of the artists get their idea from sculptures they see in temples and old monuments. Most of the artists make trial pieces before they get the design just right.
    Although the artists make rings, necklaces and earrings like all jewellers, at this Export exhibition you can mainly see bracelets and bangles in all colours and designs.     

    ...view full instructions

    Where are the artists from ?

  • Question 10
    1 / -0

    Directions For Questions

    Read the passage given below and answer the question that follows:
    Orang-utans require less food than humans, pound-for-pound, lead author Herman Pontzer said. When they do eat, orang-utans nibble mostly on ripe fruit, along with smaller portions of leaves and seed. Even in captivity, this diet doesn't diminish as orang-utans get up and go. They wake up early after a long night's sleep, explained Pontzer, an assistant professor of anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis. Then they spend the day socializing, exploring their indoor or outdoor enclosures. They also regularly engage in games with researchers. According to a study, published in the latest Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, these activities of the orang-utans, taken together, add up to the same level of exercise performed by humans in physically demanding agricultural lifestyles. In the wild, orang-utans live in the rainforests of Borneo and Sumatra where food availability is highly variable and unpredictable, Pontzer added. Like fresh fruit from the garden, the pickings are often feast or famine. But the trade-off, he added, is that low energy throughout means less energy is available to do things like grow and reproduce. So orang-utans grow slowly and reproduce slowly, which is evolutionarily risky because an orang-utan might die before it passes on its genes. Human mothers can have a child every two to four years, but orang-utans in the wild only reproduce every seven to eight years. Orang-utans are highly endangered, with many lost due to human activities such as logging, mining, and the illegal pet trade. Pontzer hopes 
    the study will highlight how much information we will lose about our closest relatives and our own evolutionary history if we let them go extinct.

    ...view full instructions

    Complete the sentence with the help of options given below and by referring to the passage.
    Orang-utans grow slowly and reproduce slowly because they _________.

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