Arrange P, Q, R, S to make a correct sentence. |
In a clear reference to Pakistan |
P: who sponsor and support terrorism |
Q: that "one single nation" in South Asia was spreading terror in the region, |
R: but without naming it. Prime Minister Narendra Modi told G20 leaders |
S: and said that the international community should isolate those instead of rewarding them. |
Given below is a report with four blanks. Fill those blanks with the options provided in P, Q, R, S, in correct order, to make it meaningfully complete. |
China is willing to work with _______ (1) ____ |
President Xi Jinping told Prime Minister Narendra |
Modi as the two leaders held talks amid differences over a raft of issues. The two leaders met before they attended the BRICS leaders meeting held ahead of the G20 summit. Xi's comments came in______ (II) ____China stalling India's membership at the elite Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) and the USD 46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor being built through Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK).The two leaders had last met on the sidelines of ______ (III) ______in June in Tashkent. Officials on both sides attach importance to the meeting in view of growing differences between the two Asian giants on bilaterally sensitive issues like listing of Pakistan-based terrorist group Jaish-e-Muhammad leader Masood Azhar. China, too, has been concerned over ______ |
(IV)______that will give the militaries of the two countries access to each other's facilities for sup- plies and repairs. |
P: the backdrop of a raft of differences between the two countries including listing of Pakistan based terrorist organisations in the UN, |
Q: close India-US ties, especially in defence, as the two countries signed the Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) |
R: the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Summit |
S: India to maintain their hard-won sound ties and further boost bilateral cooperation, |
Improve the sentence given below by changing its underlined portion. |
Do you remember to meet her at my house last year? |
Identify the type of clause for the underlined part of the sentence given below. |
As the teacher entered into the classroom students rose to their feet. |
Give an appropriate filler. |
The partners swore______. |
Given below is a movie review in jumbled parts. |
Arrange those parts between A and B to give the correct sequence of the review. |
A: 'The Player-Avi Singh' is a terrifically entertaining sports saga, but is it a biopic, a "biographical picture"? |
P: Like many films about the famous. The Player-Avi Singh is a paradox. Without the cricketer's name, you would not have a "biopic". You'd just have the rags-to-riches story of some cricketer from a non descriptive town of India. |
A bookstore would file the novelisation of the screenplay under "Fiction: Underdog". And yet, even with the player's name attached to the film, we get only the rousing high points of his career. There's not a whiff of even the most minor of infractions ? say, maintaining a slow over rate. |
Q: We don't make good biopics in our country. For, we have to be very, very careful when it comes to what could be construed as defamation. A filmmaker wants a hit, not a lawsuit. |
R: This isn't to say that a biopic has to be com- prehensive, giving us Avi's first walk, or the first words as he began to talk. But is it too much to expect that we get at least a sense of the man Avi was when he was not thinking about or playing cricket? |
S: Why not hint at this fact found on Wikipedia ? that his idols, as a child, were Amitabh Bachchan and Lata Mangeshkar. Also from |
Wikipedia: "But he also had a mischievous side to his personality. Once, while staying at the company quarters, Avi and a couple of his friends covered themselves in white bed-sheets and walked around in the complex late in the night. The night guards were fooled into believing that there were ghosts moving around in the complex." Could a few fours and sixes not have been sacrificed to give us this Avi? |
B: Maybe biopics work best when they are about people we don't know very well. Maybe that is why our better biopics ? Shahid, Paan Singh Tomar ? are about people who lived far away from the limelight. Everything, thus, is a discovery. Every fact, an untold story. |
Change the given sentence into an affirmative one without changing its meaning. |
I was not sure that it was you. |
Give a short answer in disagreement to the given question. |
Do I need to use a pen to answer this question paper? |
Direction: Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow. |
In 1979, when Mother Teresa accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, she cancelled a celebratory banquet for 135 people and had the $7,000 it would have cost sent to her mission in Calcutta. The money would feed 400 people there for a full year. This was not unexpected coming from a nun who accepted the prize "in the name of the hungry, naked, homeless, blind, lepers and all those who feel unwanted, unloved, uncared for throughout society". When Pope Francis canonised her on September 4th he honoured a soldier of his flock, whose life exemplified the stated credo of his papacy: "Dedication to the poorest of the poor". |
Today, Missionaries of Charity, Mother Teresa's order, has nearly 6,000 members and runs orphanages, hospices, homes for pregnant women and the mentally ill and other services in 139 countries. It would be misguided, however, to reduce the significance of Mother Teresa to her religious inspiration. The diminutive nun was a nurse and caregiver to the destitute and dying in the teeming streets of Calcutta where she found her calling after leaving the landscaped confines of the city's Loreto Convent in 1948. For those she and her Missionaries of |
Charity cared for. Mother Teresa's theological concerns did not matter. She gave them dignity in the face of disease and death. For many she was a humanitarian icon. |
Author Sandip Roy writes, "We looked away when the beggar without hands knocked on the car window with his stumps wrapped in grubby bandages. But Mother |
Teresa did not just look that beggar in the eye She embraced him." |
Mother Teresa had her critics, who accused her of making spiritual capital of poverty and peoples' miseries. Her answer was simple: She was looking after people whom nobody cared for. It's a response that should disturb our collective conscience and raise questions about matters that the state ? and society at large ? seem to have ignored. Today, India is far more prosperous compared to the times when Mother began her work. But disease and morbidity still stalk the poor and people die uncared for in the streets of our cities. Less than 10 days before Mother Teresa's canonisation, the media carried photographs of a man in Orissa who was forced to carry his dead wife on his shoulder for more than 12 km because he had no money to pay for an ambulance. Mother Teresa's canonisation was attended by leaders from India. |
It is unlikely, however, that they would have made any connection between the event in Vatican City and the woman denied dignity in death some 7,500 km away. |
Direction: Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow. |
In 1979, when Mother Teresa accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, she cancelled a celebratory banquet for 135 people and had the $7,000 it would have cost sent to her mission in Calcutta. The money would feed 400 people there for a full year. This was not unexpected coming from a nun who accepted the prize "in the name of the hungry, naked, homeless, blind, lepers and all those who feel unwanted, unloved, uncared for throughout society". When Pope Francis canonised her on September 4th he honoured a soldier of his flock, whose life exemplified the stated credo of his papacy: "Dedication to the poorest of the poor". |
Today, Missionaries of Charity, Mother Teresa's order, has nearly 6,000 members and runs orphanages, hospices, homes for pregnant women and the mentally ill and other services in 139 countries. It would be misguided, however, to reduce the significance of Mother Teresa to her religious inspiration. The diminutive nun was a nurse and caregiver to the destitute and dying in the teeming streets of Calcutta where she found her calling after leaving the landscaped confines of the city's Loreto Convent in 1948. For those she and her Missionaries of |
Charity cared for. Mother Teresa's theological concerns did not matter. She gave them dignity in the face of disease and death. For many she was a humanitarian icon. |
Author Sandip Roy writes, "We looked away when the beggar without hands knocked on the car window with his stumps wrapped in grubby bandages. But Mother |
Teresa did not just look that beggar in the eye She embraced him." |
Mother Teresa had her critics, who accused her of making spiritual capital of poverty and peoples' miseries. Her answer was simple: She was looking after people whom nobody cared for. It's a response that should disturb our collective conscience and raise questions about matters that the state ? and society at large ? seem to have ignored. Today, India is far more prosperous compared to the times when Mother began her work. But disease and morbidity still stalk the poor and people die uncared for in the streets of our cities. Less than 10 days before Mother Teresa's canonisation, the media carried photographs of a man in Orissa who was forced to carry his dead wife on his shoulder for more than 12 km because he had no money to pay for an ambulance. Mother Teresa's canonisation was attended by leaders from India. |
It is unlikely, however, that they would have made any connection between the event in Vatican City and the woman denied dignity in death some 7,500 km away. |
Direction: Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow. |
In 1979, when Mother Teresa accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, she cancelled a celebratory banquet for 135 people and had the $7,000 it would have cost sent to her mission in Calcutta. The money would feed 400 people there for a full year. This was not unexpected coming from a nun who accepted the prize "in the name of the hungry, naked, homeless, blind, lepers and all those who feel unwanted, unloved, uncared for throughout society". When Pope Francis canonised her on September 4th he honoured a soldier of his flock, whose life exemplified the stated credo of his papacy: "Dedication to the poorest of the poor". |
Today, Missionaries of Charity, Mother Teresa's order, has nearly 6,000 members and runs orphanages, hospices, homes for pregnant women and the mentally ill and other services in 139 countries. It would be misguided, however, to reduce the significance of Mother Teresa to her religious inspiration. The diminutive nun was a nurse and caregiver to the destitute and dying in the teeming streets of Calcutta where she found her calling after leaving the landscaped confines of the city's Loreto Convent in 1948. For those she and her Missionaries of |
Charity cared for. Mother Teresa's theological concerns did not matter. She gave them dignity in the face of disease and death. For many she was a humanitarian icon. |
Author Sandip Roy writes, "We looked away when the beggar without hands knocked on the car window with his stumps wrapped in grubby bandages. But Mother |
Teresa did not just look that beggar in the eye She embraced him." |
Mother Teresa had her critics, who accused her of making spiritual capital of poverty and peoples' miseries. Her answer was simple: She was looking after people whom nobody cared for. It's a response that should disturb our collective conscience and raise questions about matters that the state ? and society at large ? seem to have ignored. Today, India is far more prosperous compared to the times when Mother began her work. But disease and morbidity still stalk the poor and people die uncared for in the streets of our cities. Less than 10 days before Mother Teresa's canonisation, the media carried photographs of a man in Orissa who was forced to carry his dead wife on his shoulder for more than 12 km because he had no money to pay for an ambulance. Mother Teresa's canonisation was attended by leaders from India. |
It is unlikely, however, that they would have made any connection between the event in Vatican City and the woman denied dignity in death some 7,500 km away. |
Direction: Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow. |
In 1979, when Mother Teresa accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, she cancelled a celebratory banquet for 135 people and had the $7,000 it would have cost sent to her mission in Calcutta. The money would feed 400 people there for a full year. This was not unexpected coming from a nun who accepted the prize "in the name of the hungry, naked, homeless, blind, lepers and all those who feel unwanted, unloved, uncared for throughout society". When Pope Francis canonised her on September 4th he honoured a soldier of his flock, whose life exemplified the stated credo of his papacy: "Dedication to the poorest of the poor". |
Today, Missionaries of Charity, Mother Teresa's order, has nearly 6,000 members and runs orphanages, hospices, homes for pregnant women and the mentally ill and other services in 139 countries. It would be misguided, however, to reduce the significance of Mother Teresa to her religious inspiration. The diminutive nun was a nurse and caregiver to the destitute and dying in the teeming streets of Calcutta where she found her calling after leaving the landscaped confines of the city's Loreto Convent in 1948. For those she and her Missionaries of |
Charity cared for. Mother Teresa's theological concerns did not matter. She gave them dignity in the face of disease and death. For many she was a humanitarian icon. |
Author Sandip Roy writes, "We looked away when the beggar without hands knocked on the car window with his stumps wrapped in grubby bandages. But Mother |
Teresa did not just look that beggar in the eye She embraced him." |
Mother Teresa had her critics, who accused her of making spiritual capital of poverty and peoples' miseries. Her answer was simple: She was looking after people whom nobody cared for. It's a response that should disturb our collective conscience and raise questions about matters that the state ? and society at large ? seem to have ignored. Today, India is far more prosperous compared to the times when Mother began her work. But disease and morbidity still stalk the poor and people die uncared for in the streets of our cities. Less than 10 days before Mother Teresa's canonisation, the media carried photographs of a man in Orissa who was forced to carry his dead wife on his shoulder for more than 12 km because he had no money to pay for an ambulance. Mother Teresa's canonisation was attended by leaders from India. |
It is unlikely, however, that they would have made any connection between the event in Vatican City and the woman denied dignity in death some 7,500 km away. |
Direction: Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow. |
In 1979, when Mother Teresa accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, she cancelled a celebratory banquet for 135 people and had the $7,000 it would have cost sent to her mission in Calcutta. The money would feed 400 people there for a full year. This was not unexpected coming from a nun who accepted the prize "in the name of the hungry, naked, homeless, blind, lepers and all those who feel unwanted, unloved, uncared for throughout society". When Pope Francis canonised her on September 4th he honoured a soldier of his flock, whose life exemplified the stated credo of his papacy: "Dedication to the poorest of the poor". |
Today, Missionaries of Charity, Mother Teresa's order, has nearly 6,000 members and runs orphanages, hospices, homes for pregnant women and the mentally ill and other services in 139 countries. It would be misguided, however, to reduce the significance of Mother Teresa to her religious inspiration. The diminutive nun was a nurse and caregiver to the destitute and dying in the teeming streets of Calcutta where she found her calling after leaving the landscaped confines of the city's Loreto Convent in 1948. For those she and her Missionaries of |
Charity cared for. Mother Teresa's theological concerns did not matter. She gave them dignity in the face of disease and death. For many she was a humanitarian icon. |
Author Sandip Roy writes, "We looked away when the beggar without hands knocked on the car window with his stumps wrapped in grubby bandages. But Mother |
Teresa did not just look that beggar in the eye She embraced him." |
Mother Teresa had her critics, who accused her of making spiritual capital of poverty and peoples' miseries. Her answer was simple: She was looking after people whom nobody cared for. It's a response that should disturb our collective conscience and raise questions about matters that the state ? and society at large ? seem to have ignored. Today, India is far more prosperous compared to the times when Mother began her work. But disease and morbidity still stalk the poor and people die uncared for in the streets of our cities. Less than 10 days before Mother Teresa's canonisation, the media carried photographs of a man in Orissa who was forced to carry his dead wife on his shoulder for more than 12 km because he had no money to pay for an ambulance. Mother Teresa's canonisation was attended by leaders from India. |
It is unlikely, however, that they would have made any connection between the event in Vatican City and the woman denied dignity in death some 7,500 km away. |
Direction: Give the synonyms for the words underlined in the sentences below. |
Direction: Give the synonyms for the words underlined in the sentences below. |
Direction: Give the meaning of the phrases/idioms used in the sentences below. |
Direction: Give the meaning of the phrases/idioms used in the sentences below. |
Judge the right word to fill in the blank. |
Freedom is not a ____ but our birth right, |
Give the usage of the words underlined in the given sentence. |
I have done well on the whole. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks with appropriate prepositions. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks with appropriate prepositions. |
Direction: Give the antonyms for the words underlined in the following sentences. |
Direction: Give the antonyms for the words underlined in the following sentences. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks as per subject-verb agreement. |
Direction: Fill in the blanks as per subject-verb agreement. |
In which of the following sentences the use of homonyms is correct? |
I: A glass of wine is a perfect compliment to a scrumptious seafood meal. |
II: Do not complement people unnecessarily in parties, they might take it badly. |
Given question is on situation-reaction test. Read the question carefully and pick your option. |
You are sitting in a park. Suddenly you notice that a person arrives in a motorcycle. He stands his motorcycle near the gate of the park and impatiently waits for someone. After a few minutes a car arrives there. The person hurriedly enters into the car which speeds away with the man within no time. What should you do? |
Given below are three statements followed by four conclusions. Read the statements carefully and decide which of the given conclusion/s logically follow/s from the given statements. |
Statements: |
I. All pins are staplers. |
II. Some staplers are sharpeners. |
III. Some sharpeners are stands. |
Conclusions: |
I. Some staplers are stands. |
II. Some sharpeners are pins. |
III. Some pins are stands. |
IV. Some stands are sharpeners. |
Identify the figure of speech. |
No one can make you feel inferior without your consent. |
Given below are two sentences on a particular theme with a gap in between. Find out the sentence from the given options that can fill up the gap between the given two sentences in order to make the theme complete. |
In cultivating team spirit, one should not forget the importance of discipline. |
It is the duty of all the members of the team to observe discipline in its proper perspective. |
(i) A proper team spirit can seldom be based on discipline. |
(ii) It is a well known fact that team spirit and discipline can never go hand in hand. |
(iii) Discipline in its right perspective would mean sacrificing 'self to some extent.' |
Direction: Read the given information carefully and answer the questions that follow: |
A, B/ C, D, E and F are the six members of a family. They are lawyer, doctor, teacher, salesman, engineer and accountant, but not exactly on the said order. |
(i) There are two married couples in the family. |
(ii) D is the salesman married to the lady teacher. |
(iii) The doctor is married to the lawyer. |
(iv) F the accountant is the son of B and brother of E. |
(v) C the lawyer is the daughter in law of A. |
(vi) E is the unmarried engineer. |
(vii) A is the grandmother of F. |
Direction: Read the given information carefully and answer the questions that follow: |
A, B/ C, D, E and F are the six members of a family. They are lawyer, doctor, teacher, salesman, engineer and accountant, but not exactly on the said order. |
(i) There are two married couples in the family. |
(ii) D is the salesman married to the lady teacher. |
(iii) The doctor is married to the lawyer. |
(iv) F the accountant is the son of B and brother of E. |
(v) C the lawyer is the daughter in law of A. |
(vi) E is the unmarried engineer. |
(vii) A is the grandmother of F. |
You need to login to perform this action.
You will be redirected in
3 sec