CAT 2019 Question Paper With Answers & Explanation
VRC
Question Numbers (1 to 5): The passage below is
accompanied by a set of five questions. Choose the
best answer to each question.
War, natural disasters and climate change are
destroying some of the world's most precious cultural
sites. Google is trying to help preserve these
archaeological wonders by allowing users access to
3D images of these treasures through its site.
But the project is raising questions about Google's
motivations and about who should own the digital
copyrights. Some critics call it a form of "digital
colonialism."
When it comes to archaeological treasures, the losses
have been mounting. ISIS blew up parts of the ancient
city of Palmyra in Syria and an earthquake hit Bagan,
an ancient city in Myanmar, damaging dozens of
temples, in 2016. In the past, all archaeologists and
historians had for restoration and research were photos,
drawings, remnants and intuition.
But that's changing. Before the earthquake at Bagan,
many of the temples on the site were scanned.…
[These] scans … are on Google's Arts & Culture site.
The digital renditions allow viewers to virtually wander
the halls of the temple, look up-close at paintings and
turn the building over, to look up at its chambers. . . .
[Google Arts & Culture] works with museums and other
nonprofits . . . to put high-quality images online.
The images of the temples in Bagan are part of a
collaboration with CyArk, a nonprofit that creates the
3D scanning of historic sites.… Google … says [it]
doesn't make money off this website, but it fits in with
Google's mission to make the world's information
available and useful.
Critics say the collaboration could be an attempt by a
large corporation to wrap itself in the sheen of culture.
Ethan Watrall, an archaeologist, professor at Michigan
State University and a member of the Society for
American Archaeology, says he's not comfortable with
the arrangement between CyArk and Google.… Watrall
says this project is just a way for Google to promote
Google. "They want to make this material accessible
so people will browse it and be filled with wonder by it,"
he says. "But at its core, it's all about advertisements
and driving traffic." Watrall says these images belong
on the site of a museum or educational institution, where
there is serious scholarship and a very different
mission. …
[There's] another issue for some archaeologists and art
historians. CyArk owns the copyrights of the scans —
not the countries where these sites are located. That
means the countries need CyArk's permission to use
these images for commercial purposes.
Erin Thompson, a professor of art crime at John Jay
College of Criminal Justice in New York City, says it's
the latest example of a Western nation appropriating a
foreign culture, a centuries-long battle. . . . CyArk says
it copyrights the scans so no one can use them in an
inappropriate way. The company says it works closely
with authorities during the process, even training local
people to help. But critics like Thompson are not
persuaded. . . . She would prefer the scans to be owned
by the countries and people where these sites are
located.
Q. 1 Of the following arguments, which one is LEAST
likely to be used by the companies that digitally scan
cultural sites?
Ethan Watrall believes that Google’s collaboration
with CyArk is all about advertisements and driving
traffic. Refer to the sentence, “But at its core, it’s
all about advertisements and driving traffic.”
Q. 3 In Dr. Thompson’s view, CyArk owning the copyright
of its digital scans of archaeological sites is akin to:
The answer can be found in the following sentences:
Erin Thompson, a professor of art crime at John
Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City,
says it’s the latest example of a Western nation
appropriating a foreign culture, a centuries-long
battle … CyArk says it copyrights the scans so
no one can use them in an inappropriate way …
where these sites are located.” The other options
are out of scope.
Q. 4 Which of the following, if true, would most strongly
invalidate Dr. Watrall’s objections?
Watrall believes that Google’s initiative is all about
advertisements and driving traffic. In other words,
profit motive is evident. However, if CyArk uploads
the images onto museum websites, Dr. Watrall’s
theory will be nullified. Uploading images onto
museum websites will ensure that profit motive is
absent. Hence, option 3 is the correct answer.
Q. 5 By “digital colonialism”, critics of the CyArk–Google
project are referring to the fact that:
Refer to the sentences in the initial section of the
passage: “But the project is raising questions about
Google’s motivations and about who should own
the digital copyrights. Some critics call it a form of
‘digital colonialism.’” The other options cannot be
said to be interpretations of ‘digital colonialism.’
Question Numbers (6 to 10): The passage below is
accompanied by a set of five questions. Choose the
best answer to each question.
Around the world, capital cities are disgorging
bureaucrats. In the post-colonial fervour of the 20th
century, coastal capitals picked by trade-focused
empires were spurned for “regionally neutral” new ones
. . . . But decamping wholesale is costly and unpopular;
governments these days prefer piecemeal dispersal. The
trend reflects how the world has changed. In past eras,
when information travelled at a snail’s pace, civil servants
had to cluster together. But now desk-workers can ping
emails and video-chat around the world. Travel for faceto-
face meetings may be unavoidable, but transport links,
too, have improved. . . .
Proponents of moving civil servants around promise
countless benefits. It disperses the risk that a terrorist
attack or natural disaster will cripple an entire
government. Wonks in the sticks will be inspired by
new ideas that walled-off capitals cannot conjure up.
Autonomous regulators perform best far from the
pressure and lobbying of the big city. Some even hail a
cure for ascendant cynicism and populism. The unloved
bureaucrats of faraway capitals will become as popular
as firefighters once they mix with regular folk.
Beyond these sunny visions, dispersing centralgovernment
functions usually has three specific aims:
to improve the lives of both civil servants and those living
in clogged capitals; to save money; and to redress
regional imbalances. The trouble is that these goals are
not always realised.
The first aim—improving living conditions—has a long
pedigree. After the second world war Britain moved
thousands of civil servants to “agreeable English country
towns” as London was rebuilt. But swapping the capital
for somewhere smaller is not always agreeable. Attrition
rates can exceed 80%. . . . The second reason to pack
bureaucrats off is to save money. Office space costs far
more in capitals. . . . Agencies that are moved elsewhere
can often recruit better workers on lower salaries than
in capitals, where well-paying multinationals mop up
talent.
The third reason to shift is to rebalance regional
inequality. . . . Norway treats federal jobs as a resource
every region deserves to enjoy, like profits from oil. Where
government jobs go, private ones follow. . . . Sometimes
the aim is to fulfil the potential of a country’s secondtier
cities. Unlike poor, remote places, bigger cities can
make the most of relocated government agencies, linking
them to local universities and businesses and supplying
a better-educated workforce. The decision in 1946 to
set up America’s Centres for Disease Control in Atlanta
rather than Washington, D.C., has transformed the city
into a hub for health-sector research and business.
The dilemma is obvious. Pick small, poor towns, and
areas of high unemployment get new jobs, but it is hard
to attract the most qualified workers; opt for larger cities
with infrastructure and better-qualified residents, and the
country’s most deprived areas see little benefit. . . .
Others contend that decentralisation begets corruption
by making government agencies less accountable. . . .
A study in America found that state-government
corruption is worse when the state capital is isolated—
journalists, who tend to live in the bigger cities, become
less watchful of those in power.
Q. 6 The “long pedigree” of the aim to shift civil servants
to improve their living standards implies that this
move:
The phrase ‘’a long pedigree’’ is found in the first
line of the 4th paragraph. The use of the phrase
“long pedigree” in the given context indicates that
the effort to move the civil servants from capitals to
other places is not a new thing. So, option 2 is the answer.
Q. 7 People who support decentralising central government
functions are LEAST likely to cite which of the
following reasons for their view?
Options 2, 3 and 4 are found in the given passage.
Option 2 – Refer to the 3rd sentence of the 2nd
paragraph, “Wonks in the sticks will be inspired
by new ideas that walled-off capitals cannot
conjure up.”
Option 3 – Refer to the 4th sentence the 2nd
paragraph, “Autonomous regulators perform best
far from the pressure and lobbying of the big city.”
Option 4 – Refer to the 1st sentence of the 3rd
paragraph and sentences 5 and 6 of the 4th
paragraph respectively, “…to save money…” and
“The second reason to pack bureaucrats off is to
save money. Office space costs far more in
capitals. . . . Agencies that are moved elsewhere
can often recruit better workers on lower salaries
than in capitals…”
Option 1 is not mentioned in the passage.
Therefore, it is the answer.
Q. 8 According to the passage, colonial powers located
their capitals:
Refer to the 2nd sentence of the 1st paragraph,
“…capitals picked by trade-focused empires…”
Here, the empires refer to the colonial powers and
it is clearly seen from the quoted line that these
colonial powers picked their capitals to promote
their trades.
Q. 9 The “dilemma” mentioned in the passage refers to:
Option 4 – Refer to the 6th paragraph, “The dilemma
is obvious. Pick small, poor towns, and areas of
high unemployment get new jobs, but it is hard to
attract the most qualified workers; opt for larger
cities with infrastructure and better-qualified
residents, and the country’s most deprived areas
see little benefit.” This part of the passage talks
about the dilemma. So, option 4 is the answer.
Q. 10 According to the author, relocating government
agencies has not always been a success for all of
the following reasons EXCEPT:
Options 1, 3 and 4 are found in the given passage.
Option 1 – Refer to the 2nd sentence of the 6th
paragraph, “Pick small, poor towns, and areas of
high unemployment get new jobs, but it is hard to
attract the most qualified workers…”
Option 3 - Refer to the 1st sentence of the 7th
paragraph “…decentralisation begets corruption by
making government agencies less accountable.”
Option 4 - Refer to the 3rd sentence of the 4th
paragraph, “But swapping the capital for somewhere
smaller is not always agreeable. Attrition rates can
exceed 80%.”
Option 2 is not mentioned in the given passage.
Thus, it is the answer.
Question Numbers (11 to 14): The passage below is
accompanied by a set of four questions. Choose the
best answer to each question.
For two years, I tracked down dozens of . . . Chinese in
Upper Egypt [who were] selling lingerie. In a deeply
conservative region, where Egyptian families rarely allow
women to work or own businesses, the Chinese
flourished because of their status as outsiders. They
didn’t gossip, and they kept their opinions to themselves.
In a New Yorker article entitled “Learning to Speak
Lingerie,” I described the Chinese use of Arabic as
another non-threatening characteristic. I wrote, “Unlike
Mandarin, Arabic is inflected for gender, and Chinese
dealers, who learn the language strictly by ear, often
pick up speech patterns from female customers. I’ve
come to think of it as the lingerie dialect, and there’s
something disarming about these Chinese men speaking
in the feminine voice.” . . .
When I wrote about the Chinese in the New Yorker,
most readers seemed to appreciate the unusual
perspective. But as I often find with topics that involve
the Middle East, some people had trouble getting past
the black-and-white quality of a byline. “This piece is so
orientalist I don’t know what to do,” Aisha Gani, a reporter
who worked at The Guardian, tweeted. Another colleague
at the British paper, Iman Amrani, agreed: “I wouldn’t
have minded an article on the subject written by an
Egyptian woman—probably would have had better
insight.” . . .
As an MOL (man of language), I also take issue with
this kind of essentialism. Empathy and understanding
are not inherited traits, and they are not strictly tied to
gender and race. An individual who wrestles with a difficult
language can learn to be more sympathetic to outsiders
and open to different experiences of the world. This
learning process—the embarrassments, the frustrations,
the gradual sense of understanding and connection—is
invariably transformative. In Upper Egypt, the Chinese
experience of struggling to learn Arabic and local culture
had made them much more thoughtful. In the same way,
I was interested in their lives not because of some kind
of voyeurism, but because I had also experienced Egypt
and Arabic as an outsider. And both the Chinese and
the Egyptians welcomed me because I spoke their
languages. My identity as a white male was far less
important than my ability to communicate.
And that easily lobbed word—“Orientalist”—hardly
captures the complexity of our interactions. What exactly
is the dynamic when a man from Missouri observes a
Zhejiang native selling lingerie to an Upper Egyptian
woman? . . . If all of us now stand beside the same river,
speaking in ways we all understand, who’s looking east
and who’s looking west? Which way is Oriental?
For all of our current interest in identity politics, there’s
no corresponding sense of identity linguistics. You are
what you speak—the words that run throughout your
mind are at least as fundamental to your selfhood as is
your ethnicity or your gender. And sometimes it’s healthy
to consider human characteristics that are not inborn,
rigid, and outwardly defined. After all, you can always
learn another language and change who you are.
Q. 11 According to the passage, which of the following is
not responsible for language’s ability to change us?
Option 1 is mentioned in the third paragraph. The
author mentions the words ‘wrestle’ and
‘frustrations’ (third last paragraph) that indicate the
ups and downs in the process of learning a
language. Options 3 and 4 are mentioned in the
last paragraph.
Q. 12 Which of the following can be inferred from the
author’s claim, “Which way is Oriental?”
Refer to the third last paragraph for the answer.
The author intends to say that familiarity with a
language can actually blur the cultural differences.
The other options are out of scope.
Q. 13 A French ethnographer decides to study the culture
of a Nigerian tribe. Which of the following is most
likely to be the view of the author of the passage?
The author regards himself as a man of language.
He speaks both Chinese and Arabic. Equipped with
these languages, he studies Chinese cultural
contact with the Egyptians. Therefore, option 2 is
very likely to be his view.
The fact that the author speaks Arabic but still
considers the Arabic as outsiders would clearly
make the author’s critics argue that language is
insufficient to bridge the cultural barriers. So, option
1 is the answer.
Question Numbers (15 to 19): The passage below is
accompanied by a set of five questions. Choose the
best answer to each question.
British colonial policy . . . went through two policy
phases, or at least there were two strategies between
which its policies actually oscillated, sometimes to its
great advantage. At first, the new colonial apparatus
exercised caution, and occupied India by a mix of
military power and subtle diplomacy, the high ground in
the middle of the circle of circles. This, however, pushed
them into contradictions. For, whatever their sense of
the strangeness of the country and the thinness of
colonial presence, the British colonial state represented
the great conquering discourse of Enlightenment
rationalism, entering India precisely at the moment of
its greatest unchecked arrogance. As inheritors and
representatives of this discourse, which carried everything
before it, this colonial state could hardly adopt for long
such a self-denying attitude. It had restructured
everything in Europe—the productive system, the
political regimes, the moral and cognitive orders—and
would do the same in India, particularly as some
empirically inclined theorists of that generation
considered the colonies a massive laboratory of utilitarian
or other theoretical experiments. Consequently, the
colonial state could not settle simply for eminence at
the cost of its marginality; it began to take initiatives to
introduce the logic of modernity into Indian society. But
this modernity did not enter a passive society.
Sometimes, its initiatives were resisted by pre-existing
structural forms. At times, there was a more direct form
of collective resistance. Therefore the map of continuity
and discontinuity that this state left behind at the time
of independence was rather complex and has to be
traced with care.
Most significantly, of course, initiatives for . . . modernity
came to assume an external character. The acceptance
of modernity came to be connected, ineradicably, with
subjection. This again points to two different problems,
one theoretical, the other political. Theoretically, because
modernity was externally introduced, it is explanatorily
unhelpful to apply the logical format of the ‘transition
process’ to this pattern of change. Such a logical format
would be wrong on two counts. First, however subtly, it
would imply that what was proposed to be built was
something like European capitalism. (And, in any case,
historians have forcefully argued that what it was to
replace was not like feudalism, with or without
modificatory adjectives.) But, more fundamentally, the
logical structure of endogenous change does not apply
here. Here transformation agendas attack as an external
force. This externality is not something that can be
casually mentioned and forgotten. It is inscribed on every
move, every object, every proposal, every legislative act,
each line of causality. It comes to be marked on the
epoch itself. This repetitive emphasis on externality
should not be seen as a nationalist initiative that is so
well rehearsed in Indian social science. . . .
Quite apart from the externality of the entire historical
proposal of modernity, some of its contents were
remarkable. . . . Economic reforms, or rather alterations
. . . did not foreshadow the construction of a classical
capitalist economy, with its necessary emphasis on
extractive and transport sectors. What happened was
the creation of a degenerate version of capitalism—what
early dependency theorists called the ‘development of
underdevelopment’.
Q. 15 All of the following statements, if true, could be seen
as supporting the arguments in the passage,
EXCEPT:
Options 1, 2 and 4 support the argument as they
are mentioned in the passage. Option 1 is
mentioned in the first paragraph. Option 2 is
mentioned in the second paragraph. Option 4 is
mentioned towards the end concluding part of the
passage where it says that modernity was an
external thing that was imposed on the Indian
society which eventually led to underdevelopment.
Option 3 is the correct answer because it was not
the modernity that caused the change in the colonial
policy but the other way round.
Q. 16 Which of the following observations is a valid
conclusion to draw from the author’s statement that
“the logical structure of endogenous change does
not apply here. Here transformation agendas attack
as an external force”?
‘Here’ in the given context refers to India. This is
supported by the parts of the passage which
precede it. ‘Endogenous change’ means internal
change and according to the quoted lines such
change is not something which happens in India.
Rather it is forced upon the Indians by the colonial
policies. So, option 3 is the answer. Options 1 and
4 do not specifically talk about India.
Q. 17 “Consequently, the colonial state could not settle
simply for eminence at the cost of its marginality; it
began to take initiatives to introduce the logic of
modernity into Indian society.” Which of the following
best captures the sense of this statement?
Option 2 is the answer. Options 1, 3 and 4 do not
make sense according to the given passage. The
only reason why modernity was introduced to
change the Indian society was to address the
marginalization that the colonial state felt as it was
already modern and the Indian society was not at
that time.
Q. 18 Which one of the following 5-word sequences best
captures the flow of the arguments in the passage?
The following sequence captures the flow of the
arguments in the given passage: 1st line of the 1st
paragraph, “British colonial policy…”, 3rd sentence
of the 1st paragraph, “…Enlightenment…”, 6th
sentence of the 1st paragraph, “…modernity…”, 2nd
sentence of the second paragraph, “…with
subjection.” and the last sentence of the last
paragraph. In other words, the colonial policy
included Enlightenment of the colonized people
and modernity was forced upon them only to
dominate them which eventually led to
underdevelopment and dependency. So, option 3
is the answer.
Q. 19 All of the following statements about British
colonialism can be inferred from the first paragraph,
EXCEPT that it:
Option 2 is directly mentioned in the given passage.
Refer to the sentences, “But this modernity did
not enter a passive society. Sometimes, its
initiatives were resisted by pre-existing structural
forms. At times, there was a more direct form of
collective resistance.”
Question Numbers (20 to 24): The passage below is
accompanied by a set of five questions. Choose the
best answer to each question.
The magic of squatter cities is that they are improved
steadily and gradually by their residents. To a planner’s
eye, these cities look chaotic. I trained as a biologist
and to my eye, they look organic. Squatter cities are
also unexpectedly green. They have maximum
density—1 million people per square mile in some areas
of Mumbai—and have minimum energy and material use.
People get around by foot, bicycle, rickshaw, or the
universal shared taxi.
Not everything is efficient in the slums, though. In the
Brazilian favelas where electricity is stolen and therefore
free, people leave their lights on all day. But in most
slums recycling is literally a way of life. The Dharavi
slum in Mumbai has 400 recycling units and 30,000
ragpickers. Six thousand tons of rubbish are sorted every
day. In 2007, the Economist reported that in Vietnam
and Mozambique, “Waves of gleaners sift the sweepings
of Hanoi’s streets, just as Mozambiquan children pick
over the rubbish of Maputo’s main tip. Every city in Asia
and Latin America has an industry based on gathering
up old cardboard boxes.” . . .
In his 1985 article, Calthorpe made a statement that
still jars with most people: “The city is the most
environmentally benign form of human settlement. Each
city dweller consumes less land, less energy, less
water, and produces less pollution than his counterpart
in settlements of lower densities.” “Green Manhattan”
was the inflammatory title of a 2004 New Yorker article
by David Owen. “By the most significant measures,” he
wrote, “New York is the greenest community in the
United States, and one of the greenest cities in the world
. . . The key to New York’s relative environmental
benignity is its extreme compactness. . . . Placing one
and a half million people on a twenty-three-square-mile
island sharply reduces their opportunities to be wasteful.”
He went on to note that this very compactness forces
people to live in the world’s most energy-efficient
apartment buildings. . . .
Urban density allows half of humanity to live on 2.8 per
cent of the land. . . . Consider just the infrastructure
efficiencies. According to a 2004 UN report: “The
concentration of population and enterprises in urban
areas greatly reduces the unit cost of piped water,
sewers, drains, roads, electricity, garbage collection,
transport, health care, and schools.” . . .
[T]he nationally subsidised city of Manaus in northern
Brazil “answers the question” of how to stop
deforestation: give people decent jobs. Then they can
afford houses, and gain security. One hundred thousand
people who would otherwise be deforesting the jungle
around Manaus are now prospering in town making such
things as mobile phones and televisions. . . .
Of course, fast-growing cities are far from an unmitigated
good. They concentrate crime, pollution, disease and
injustice as much as business, innovation, education
and entertainment. . . . But if they are overall a net good
for those who move there, it is because cities offer more
than just jobs. They are transformative: in the slums, as
well as the office towers and leafy suburbs, the progress
is from hick to metropolitan to cosmopolitan . . .
Q. 20 According to the passage, squatter cities are
environment-friendly for all of the following reasons
EXCEPT:
It is mentioned in the first paragraph that squatter
cities are also unexpectedly green and they have
minimum energy and material use as people get
around by foot, bicycle, rickshaw, or the universal
shared taxi. So, that makes the point that the
author is defending these cities are green. Thus,
option 1 would undermine his stand regarding the
greenness of cities.
Q. 22 In the context of the passage, the author refers to
Manaus in order to:
Refer to the 5th paragraph of the given passage.
The reason why the city of Manus is mentioned in
the passage is to emphasize the fact that
subsidised city like Manaus could stop
deforestation and this serves as an example that
urban areas can help in protecting the environment.
So, option 4 is the answer.
Q. 23 From the passage it can be inferred that cities are
good places to live in for all of the following reasons
EXCEPT that they:
Options 1 and 4 are mentioned in the last paragraph
and option 3 is mentioned in the fifth paragraph.
Option 2 cannot be inferred from the given passage.
Q. 24 We can infer that Calthorpe’s statement “still jars”
with most people because most people:
‘Jars’ in the phrase “still jars” is used as a verb; it
means ‘to bear unpleasant effect on’ or ‘annoy’.
Calthorpe’s statements: “The city is the most
environmentally benign form of human settlement.
Each city dweller consumes less land, less
energy, less water, and produces less pollution
than his counterpart in settlements of lower
densities.” still bear an unpleasant effect on the
people as his statements contradict what people
think about cities.
Q. 25 Five sentences related to a topic are given below in
a jumbled order. Four of them form a coherent and
unified paragraph. Identify the odd sentence that does
not go with the four. Key in the number of the option
that you choose.
(1) Socrates told us that ‘the unexamined life is not
worth living’ and that to ‘know thyself’ is the path
to true wisdom
(2) It suggests that you should adopt an ancient
rhetorical method favored by the likes of Julius
Caesar and known as ‘illeism’ – or speaking about
yourself in the third person.
(3) Research has shown that people who are prone
to rumination also often suffer from impaired
decision making under pressure and are at a
substantially increased risk of depression.
(4) Simple rumination – the process of churning your
concerns around in your head – is not the way to
achieve self-realization.
(5) The idea is that this small change in perspective
can clear your emotional fog, allowing you to see
past your biases.
Sentences 2 and 5 can be clubbed together.
Sentence 2 talks about speaking from the third
person’s point of view while sentence 5 mentions
a change in perspective. Sentences 3 and 4 can
be clubbed together as well because both explain
rumination. Therefore, sentence 1 is the odd
sentence.
Q. 26 The four sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3, 4) given below,
when properly sequenced would yield a coherent
paragraph. Decide on the proper sequence of the
order of the sentences and key in the sequence of
the four numbers as your answer.
(1) Such a belief in the harmony of nature requires a
purpose presumably imposed by the goodness
and wisdom of a deity.
(2) These parts, all fit together into an integrated,
well-ordered system that was created by design.
(3) Historically, the notion of a balance of nature is
part observational, part metaphysical, and not
scientific in any way.
(4) It is an example of an ancient belief system called
teleology, the notion that what we call nature has
a predetermined destiny associated with its
component parts.
Sentence 4 explains sentence 3. Hence, 3 and 4
can be defined as a mandatory pair. 2 and 1 also
form a mandatory pair because sentence 1 talks
about harmony of nature which is an explanation
of ‘integrated, well-ordered system’ mentioned in
sentence 2.
Q. 27 Five sentences related to a topic are given below.
Four of them can be put together to form a meaningful
and coherent short paragraph. Identify the odd one
out. Choose its number as your answer and key it
in.
(1) A particularly interesting example of inference
occurs in many single panel comics.
(2) It’s the creator’s participation and imagination that
makes the single-panel comic so engaging and
so rewarding.
(3) Often, the humor requires you to imagine what
happened in the instant immediately before or
immediately after the panel you’re being shown.
(4) To get the joke, you actually have to figure out
what some of these missing panels must be.
(5) It is as though the cartoonist devised a series of
panels to tell the story and has chosen to show
you only one – and typically not even the funniest.
Except sentence 2, the other sentences talk about
single panel comics and the characteristic feature
of being interesting, humorous, funny and
possessing an element of joke. Thus, all the
sentences, except sentence 2, can be clubbed
together.
Q. 28 The four sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3, 4) given below,
when properly sequenced would yield a coherent
paragraph. Decide on the proper sequence of the
order of the sentences and key in the sequence of
the four numbers as your answer.
(1) To the uninitiated listener, atonal music can sound
like chaotic, random noise.
(2) Atonality is a condition of music in which the
constructs of the music do not ‘live’ within the
confines of a particular key signature, scale, or
mode.
(3) After you realize the amount of knowledge, skill,
and technical expertise required to compose or
perform it, your tune may change, so to speak.
(4) However, atonality is one of the most important
movements in 20th century music.
Sentence 2 mentions atonality and it is further
explained in sentence 1. Sentence 4 follows and
sentence 3 mentions how to compose or perform
atonal music. Hence, sentence 3 closes the
paragraph effectively.
Q. 29 Five sentences related to a topic are given below.
Four of them can be put together to form a meaningful
and coherent short paragraph. Identify the odd one
out. Choose its number as your answer and key it
in.
(1) Ocean plastic is problematic for a number of
reasons, but primarily because marine animals
eat it.
(2) The largest numerical proportion of ocean plastic
falls in small size fractions.
(3) Aside from clogging up the digestive tracts of
marine life, plastic also tends to adsorb pollutants
from the water column.
(4) Plastic in the oceans is arguably one of the most
important and pervasive environmental problems
today.
(5) Eating plastic has a number of negative
consequences such as the retention of plastic
particles in the gut for longer periods than normal
food particles.
Except sentence 2, the other sentences talk about
the problem of plastic pollution and how marine
animals eat plastic. Sentence 2 doesn’t talk about
the consumption of plastic. Hence, it is the odd
sentence.
Q. 30 The four sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3, 4) given below,
when properly sequenced would yield a coherent
paragraph. Decide on the proper sequence of the
order of the sentences and key in the sequence of
the four numbers as your answer.
(1) Living things—animals and plants—typically
exhibit correlational structure.
(2) Adaptive behaviour depends on cognitive
economy, treating objects as equivalent.
(3) The information we receive from our senses, from
the world, typically has structure and order, and
is not arbitrary.
(4) To categorize an object means to consider it
equivalent to other things in that category, and
different—along some salient dimension—from
things that are not.
2 and 4 form a mandatory pair. In sentence 2, there
is the mention of ‘treating objects as equivalent.’
The same idea is explained further in sentence 4.
Sentence 3 talks about structure and order and
sentence 1 explains the word ‘structure’ further.’
Q. 31 The four sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3, 4) given below,
when properly sequenced would yield a coherent
paragraph. Decide on the proper sequence of the
order of the sentences and key in the sequence of
the four numbers as your answer.
(1) Conceptualisations of ‘women’s time’ as contrary
to clock-time and clock-time as synonymous with
economic rationalism are two of the deleterious
results of this representation.
(2) While dichotomies of ‘men’s time’, ‘women’s
time’, clock-time, and caring time can be
analytically useful, this article argues that
everyday caring practices incorporate a
multiplicity of times; and both men and women
can engage in these multiple-times
(3) When the everyday practices of working sole
fathers and working sole mothers are carefully
examined to explore conceptualisations of
gendered time, it is found that caring time is often
more focused on the clock than generally
theorised.
(4) Clock-time has been consistently represented
in feminist literature as a masculine artefact
representative of a ‘time is money’ perspective.
Sentence 1 talks about a certain representation
and this representation is given in sentence 4.
Hence, 4 and 1 form a mandatory pair. Sentence 3
talks about caring practices and time that is further
elaborated in sentence 2.
Q. 32 The passage given below is followed by four alternate
summaries. Choose the option that best captures
the essence of the passage.
Language is an autapomorphy found only in our
lineage, and not shared with other branches of our
group such as primates. We also have no definitive
evidence that any species other than Homo sapiens
ever had language. However, it must be noted
straightaway that ‘language’ is not a monolithic entity,
but rather a complex bundle of traits that must have
evolved over a significant time frame…. Moreover,
language crucially draws on aspects of cognition that
are long established in the primate lineage, such as
memory: the language faculty as a whole comprises
more than just the uniquely linguistic features.
The other options are narrow in scope. The passage
mentions memory and also, the gradual evolution
of languages. There is also the mention of aspects
or features of cognition that help a language to
develop. Hence, option 3 is the correct answer.
Q. 33 The passage given below is followed by four alternate
summaries. Choose the option that best captures
the essence of the passage.
Privacy-challenged office workers may find it hard to
believe, but open-plan offices and cubicles were
invented by architects and designers who thought
that to break down the social walls that divide people,
you had to break down the real walls, too. Modernist
architects saw walls and rooms as downright fascist.
The spaciousness and flexibility of an open plan would
liberate homeowners and office dwellers from the
confines of boxes. But companies took up their idea
less out of a democratic ideology than a desire to
pack in as many workers as they could. The typical
open-plan office of the first half of the 20th century
was a white-collar assembly line. Cubicles were
interior designers’ attempt to put some soul back in.
Option 1 is the most appropriate summary because
the mentions that open offices were originally
conceived to break social walls. Later, open offices
were preferred by employers because more
number of people could be accommodated. The
other options are narrow in scope.
Q. 34 The passage given below is followed by four alternate
summaries. Choose the option that best captures
the essence of the passage.
Social movement organizations often struggle to
mobilize supporters from allied movements in their
efforts to achieve critical mass. Organizations with
hybrid identities—those whose organizational
identities span the boundaries of two or more social
movements, issues, or identities—are vital to
mobilizing these constituencies. Studies of the post-
9/11 U.S. antiwar movement show that individuals
with past involvement in non-anti-war movements are
more likely to join hybrid organizations than are
individuals without involvement in non-anti-war
movements. In addition, they show that organizations
with hybrid identities occupy relatively more central
positions in inter-organizational contact networks
within the antiwar movement and thus recruit
significantly more participants in demonstrations than
do nonhybrid organizations.
Refer to the second sentence of the paragraph.
The second sentence forms the crux of the
passage. The other options are narrow in scope
and don’t encompass the entire passage.