CAT 2022 Question Paper With Answers & Explanation
Section-1
Question Numbers (1 to 4): The passage below is
accompanied by a set of questions. Choose the best
answer to each question.
[Octopuses are] misfits in their own extended families
. . . They belong to the Mollusca class Cephalopoda.
But they don’t look like their cousins at all. Other
molluscs include sea snails, sea slugs, bivalves – most
are shelled invertebrates with a dorsal foot. Cephalopods
are all arms, and can be as tiny as 1 centimetre and as
large at 30 feet. Some of them have brains the size of a
walnut, which is large for an invertebrate….
It makes sense for these molluscs to have added
protection in the form of a higher cognition; they don’t
have a shell covering them, and pretty much everything
feeds on cephalopods, including humans. But how did
cephalopods manage to secure their own invisibility
cloak? Cephalopods fire from multiple cylinders to
achieve this in varying degrees from species to species.
There are four main catalysts – chromatophores,
iridophores, papillae and leucophores….
[Chromatophores] are organs on their bodies that
contain pigment sacs, which have red, yellow and brown
pigment granules. These sacs have a network of radial
muscles, meaning muscles arranged in a circle radiating
outwards. These are connected to the brain by a nerve.
When the cephalopod wants to change colour, the brain
carries an electrical impulse through the nerve to the
muscles that expand outwards, pulling open the sacs
to display the colours on the skin. Why these three
colours? Because these are the colours the light reflects
at the depths they live in (the rest is absorbed before it
reaches those depths)….
Well, what about other colours? Cue the iridophores.
Think of a second level of skin that has thin stacks of
cells. These can reflect light back at different
wavelengths. . . . It’s using the same properties that
we’ve seen in hologram stickers, or rainbows on puddles
of oil. You move your head and you see a different colour.
The sticker isn’t doing anything but reflecting light –
it’s your movement that’s changing the appearance of
the colour. This property of holograms, oil and other
such surfaces is called “iridescence”….
Papillae are sections of the skin that can be deformed
to make a texture bumpy. Even humans possess them
(goosebumps) but cannot use them in the manner that
cephalopods can. For instance, the use of these cells
is how an octopus can wrap itself over a rock and appear
jagged or how a squid or cuttlefish can imitate the look
of a coral reef by growing miniature towers on its skin.
It actually matches the texture of the substrate it
chooses.
Finally, the leucophores: According to a paper, published
in Nature, cuttlefish and octopuses possess an
additional type of reflector cell called a leucophore. They
are cells that scatter full spectrum light so that they
appear white in a similar way that a polar bear’s fur
appears white. Leucophores will also reflect any filtered
light shown on them . . . If the water appears blue at a
certain depth, the octopuses and cuttlefish can appear
blue; if the water appears green, they appear green,
and so on and so forth.
Q. 1 Which one of the following statements is not true
about the camouflaging ability of Cephalopods?
The argument that the number of chromatophores
in Cephalopods is half the number of iridophores
and leucophores.does not imply that the
Cephalopods are not capable of practicing
camouflage. Therefore, option 3 is the correct
answer.
Q. 3 Based on the passage, it can be inferred that
camouflaging techniques in an octopus are most
dissimilar to those in:
Cuttlefish, squid and polar bear have been
mentioned in the last twp paragraphs of the
passage. Snails have been termed dissimilar in
the first paragraph of the passage.
Q. 4 All of the following are reasons for octopuses being
“misfits” EXCEPT that they:
Options 2 and 3 can be inferred from the first
paragraph of the passage. Option 4 can be inferred
from the second paragraph.
Question Numbers (5 to 8): The passage below is
accompanied by a set of questions. Choose the best
answer to each question.
When we teach engineering problems now, we ask
students to come to a single “best” solution defined by
technical ideals like low cost, speed to build, and ability
to scale. This way of teaching primes students to believe
that their decision-making is purely objective, as it is
grounded in math and science. This is known as
technical-social dualism, the idea that the technical
and social dimensions of engineering problems are
readily separable and remain distinct throughout the
problem-definition and solution process.
Nontechnical parameters such as access to a
technology, cultural relevancy or potential harms are
deemed political and invalid in this way of learning. But
those technical ideals are at their core social and
political choices determined by a dominant culture
focused on economic growth for the most privileged
segments of society. By choosing to downplay public
welfare as a critical parameter for engineering design,
we risk creating a culture of disengagement from
societal concerns amongst engineers that is antithetical
to the ethical code of engineering.
In my field of medical devices, ignoring social
dimensions has real consequences…. Most FDAapproved
drugs are incorrectly dosed for people
assigned female at birth, leading to unexpected adverse
reactions. This is because they have been inadequately
represented in clinical trials.
Beyond physical failings, subjective beliefs treated as
facts by those in decision-making roles can encode
social inequities. For example, spirometers, routinely
used devices that measure lung capacity, still have
correction factors that automatically assume smaller
lung capacity in Black and Asian individuals. These
racially based adjustments are derived from research
done by eugenicists who thought these racial
differences were biologically determined and who
considered nonwhite people as inferior. These machines
ignore the influence of social and environmental factors
on lung capacity.
Many technologies for systemically marginalized people
have not been built because they were not deemed
important such as better early diagnostics and
treatment for diseases like endometriosis, a disease
that afflicts 10 percent of people with uteruses. And we
hardly question whether devices are built sustainably,
which has led to a crisis of medical waste and health
care accounting for 10 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions.
Social justice must be made core to the way engineers
are trained. Some universities are working on this….
Engineers taught this way will be prepared to think
critically about what problems we choose to solve, how
we do so responsibly and how we build teams that
challenge our ways of thinking.
Individual engineering professors are also working to
embed societal needs in their pedagogy. Darshan
Karwat at the University of Arizona developed activist
engineering to challenge engineers to acknowledge their
full moral and social responsibility through practical selfreflection.
Khalid Kadir at the University of California,
Berkeley, created the popular course Engineering,
Environment, and Society that teaches engineers how
to engage in place-based knowledge, an understanding
of the people, context and history, to design better
technical approaches in collaboration with communities.
When we design and build with equity and justice in
mind, we craft better solutions that respond to the
complexities of entrenched systemic problems.
Q. 5 All of the following are examples of the negative
outcomes of focusing on technical ideals in the
medical sphere EXCEPT the:
Option 4 distorts the implication of these lines of
the passage: ‘Most FDA-approved drugs are
incorrectly dosed for people assigned female at
birth, leading to unexpected adverse reactions.’
Therefore, option 4 is the correct answer.
Q. 6 We can infer that the author would approve of a more
evolved engineering pedagogy that includes all of
the following EXCEPT:
Refer to these lines of the passage: ‘Nontechnical
parameters such as access to a technology,
cultural relevancy or potential harms are deemed
political and invalid in this way of learning. But those
technical ideals are at their core social and political
choices determined by a dominant culture focused
on economic growth for the most privileged
segments of society. By choosing to downplay
public welfare as a critical parameter for engineering
design, we risk creating a culture of disengagement
from societal concerns amongst engineers that is
antithetical to the ethical code of engineering.’
Options 1, 2 and 3 can be inferred from these lines.
Option 4 contradicts the main idea of the first
paragraph.
Q. 7 In this passage, the author is making the claim that:
Option 1 can be inferred from the first paragraph of
the passage: ‘When we teach engineering …
and solution process.’ Option 2 does not present
the author’s main point as the passage does not
mentions any shift in the engineering pedagogy.
Option 3 contradicts the arguments of the passage.
So does option 4.
Q. 8 The author gives all of the following reasons for why
marginalised people are systematically discriminated
against in technology-related interventions EXCEPT:
All options except 3 relate to why marginalized
people are systematically discriminated against
in technology-related interventions: racially-based
adjustments are derived from research done by
eugenicists; subjective beliefs treated as facts
encodes social inequities and the supposed
technical ‘ideals’ are determined by a culture
focused on the privileged.
Question Numbers (9 to 12): The passage below is
accompanied by a set of questions. Choose the best
answer to each question.
Humans today make music. Think beyond all the
qualifications that might trail after this bald statement:
that only certain humans make music, that extensive
training is involved, that many societies distinguish
musical specialists from nonmusicians, that in today’s
societies most listen to music rather than making it,
and so forth. These qualifications, whatever their local
merit, are moot in the face of the overarching truth that
making music, considered from a cognitive and
psychological vantage, is the province of all those who
perceive and experience what is made. We are, almost
all of us, musicians — everyone who can entrain (not
necessarily dance) to a beat, who can recognize a
repeated tune (not necessarily sing it), who can
distinguish one instrument or one singing voice from
another. I will often use an antique word, recently revived,
to name this broader musical experience. Humans are
musicking creatures….
The set of capacities that enables musicking is a
principal marker of modern humanity. There is nothing
polemical in this assertion except a certain insistence,
which will figure often in what follows, that musicking
be included in our thinking about fundamental human
commonalities. Capacities involved in musicking are
many and take shape in complicated ways, arising from
innate dispositions . . . Most of these capacities overlap
with nonmusical ones, though a few may be distinct
and dedicated to musical perception and production. In
the area of overlap, linguistic capacities seem to be
particularly important, and humans are (in principle)
language-makers in addition to music-makers —
speaking creatures as well as musicking ones.
Humans are symbol-makers too, a feature tightly bound
up with language, not so tightly with music. The species
Cassirer dubbed Homo symbolicus cannot help but
tangle musicking in webs of symbolic thought and
expression, habitually making it a component of
behavioral complexes that form such expression. But
in fundamental features musicking is neither languagelike
nor symbol-like, and from these differences come
many clues to its ancient emergence.
If musicking is a primary, shared trait of modern
humans, then to describe its emergence must be to
detail the coalescing of that modernity. This took place,
archaeologists are clear, over a very long durée: at least
50,000 years or so, more likely something closer to
200,000, depending in part on what that coalescence
is taken to comprise. If we look back 20,000 years, a
small portion of this long period, we reach the lives of
humans whose musical capacities were probably little
different from our own. As we look farther back we reach
horizons where this similarity can no longer hold —
perhaps 40,000 years ago, perhaps 70,000, perhaps
100,000. But we never cross a line before which all the
cognitive capacities recruited in modern musicking
abruptly disappear. Unless we embrace the incredible
notion that music sprang forth in full-blown glory, its
emergence will have to be tracked in gradualist terms
across a long period.
This is one general feature of a history of music’s
emergence . . . The history was at once sociocultural
and biological . . . The capacities recruited in musicking
are many, so describing its emergence involves following
several or many separate strands.
Q. 9 Which one of the following statements, if true, would
weaken the author’s claim that humans are
musicking creatures?
Option 1 does not question the claim that humans
are mucking by nature. Option 3 strengthens the
claim that humans are musicking creatures. Option
4 states about how old musicking is. It, by no
means, weakens the claim humans are musicking
creatures. Option 2 questions the argument stated
through these lines:’ capacities involved in
musicking are many and take shape in complicated
ways, arising from innate dispositions…’ Therefore,
option 2 is the correct answer.
Q. 10 Which one of the following sets of terms best serves
as keywords to the passage?
Option 2 misses out musicking. Therefore, it loses
the main essence of the passage. Option 3 omits
linguistic capacities and narrows down to Casssirer,
which is not representative of any key arguments
of the passage. Option 4 omits ‘capacities’.
Therefore, option 1 serves as the keywords to the
passage.
Q. 11 “Think beyond all the qualifications that might trail
after this bald statement . . .” In the context of the
passage, what is the author trying to communicate
in this quoted extract?
“Think beyond all the qualifications that might trail
after this bald statement . . .” Through these lines
the author wants to state that despite multiple
qualifications that one might think about while
thinking about musicians, humans are necessarily
musicking. Therefore, option 2 is correct.
Q. 12 Based on the passage, which one of the following
statements is a valid argument about the emergence
of music/musicking?
Refer to these lines of the passage: ‘If we look
back 20,000 years, a small portion of this long
period, we reach the lives of humans whose
musical capacities were probably little
different from our own.’ Option 1 can be inferred
from these lines. Therefore, option 1 is the correct
answer.
Question Numbers (13 to 16): The passage below is
accompanied by a set of questions. Choose the best
answer to each question.
We begin with the emergence of the philosophy of the
social sciences as an arena of thought and as a set of
social institutions. The two characterisations overlap
but are not congruent. Academic disciplines are social
institutions. . . . My view is that institutions are all those
social entities that organise action: they link acting
individuals into social structures. There are various kinds
of institutions. Hegelians and Marxists emphasise
universal institutions such as the family, rituals,
governance, economy and the military. These are mostly
institutions that just grew. Perhaps in some imaginary
beginning of time they spontaneously appeared. In their
present incarnations, however, they are very much the
product of conscious attempts to mould and plan them.
We have family law, established and disestablished
churches, constitutions and laws, including those
governing the economy and the military. Institutions
deriving from statute, like joint-stock companies are
formal by contrast with informal ones such as
friendships. There are some institutions that come in
both informal and formal variants, as well as in mixed
ones. Consider the fact that the stock exchange and
the black market are both market institutions, one formal
one not. Consider further that there are many features
of the work of the stock exchange that rely on informal,
noncodifiable agreements, not least the language used
for communication. To be precise, mixtures are the norm
. . . From constitutions at the top to by-laws near the
bottom we are always adding to, or tinkering with, earlier
institutions, the grown and the designed are intertwined.
It is usual in social thought to treat culture and tradition
as different from, although alongside, institutions. The
view taken here is different. Culture and tradition are
sub-sets of institutions analytically isolated for
explanatory or expository purposes. Some social
scientists have taken all institutions, even purely local
ones, to be entities that satisfy basic human needs –
under local conditions . . . Others differed and declared
any structure of reciprocal roles and norms an institution.
Most of these differences are differences of emphasis
rather than disagreements. Let us straddle all these
versions and present institutions very generally . . . as
structures that serve to coordinate the actions of
individuals. . . . Institutions themselves then have no
aims or purpose other than those given to them by
actors or used by actors to explain them . . .
Language is the formative institution for social life and
for science . . . Both formal and informal language is
involved, naturally grown or designed. (Language is all
of these to varying degrees.) Languages are paradigms
of institutions or, from another perspective, nested sets
of institutions. Syntax, semantics, lexicon and
alphabet/character-set are all institutions within the
larger institutional framework of a written language.
Natural languages are typical examples of what
Ferguson called ‘the result of human action, but not
the execution of any human design’[;] reformed natural
languages and artificial languages introduce design into
their modifications or refinements of natural language.
Above all, languages are paradigms of institutional tools
that function to coordinate.
Q. 13 Consider the fact that the stock exchange and the
black market are both market institutions, one formal
one not.” Which one of the following statements best
explains this quote, in the context of the passage?
Refer to these lines of the passage: ‘here are some
institutions that come in both informal and
formal variants, as well as in mixed ones.
Consider the fact that the stock exchange and
the black market are both market institutions,
one formal one not.’ Clearly, through these lines,
the author wants to imply exactly what option 3
states.
Q. 14 Which of the following statements best represents
the essence of the passage?
Option 1 is too narrow in its scope.
Option 2 incorporates culture in the main idea which
is unfounded in the passage.
Option 4 captures solely the language aspect of
institutions. Thus, it is narrow in its scope.
Option 3 correctly states the main idea of the
passage.
Q. 15 All of the following inferences from the passage are
false, EXCEPT:
Natural languages are typical examples of what
Ferguson called ‘the result of human action, but
not the execution of any human design”. In other
words, there is no conscious human intent in this
stage of language development. So, option 2 can
be inferred to be true based on the passage.
Therefore, option 2 is the correct answer.
Q. 16 In the first paragraph of the passage, what are the
two “characterisations” that are seen as overlapping
but not congruent?
Refer to these lines: “We begin with the emergence
of the philosophy of the social sciences as an arena
of thought and as a set of social institutions. The
two characterisations overlap but are not
congruent.” The two characterisations seen here
as overlapping but not congruent are social
sciences as an arena of thought and social
sciences as a set of social institutions. Therefore,
option 4 is the correct answer.
Q. 17 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) From chemical pollutants in the environment to
the damming of rivers to invasive species
transported through global trade and travel, every
environmental issue is different and there is no
single tech solution that can solve this crisis.
(2) Discourse on the threat of environmental collapse
revolves around cutting down emissions, but
biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse are
caused by myriad and diverse reasons.
(3) This would require legislation that recognises the
rights of future generations and other species that
allows the judiciary to uphold a much higher
standard of environmental protection than
currently possible.
(4) Clearly, our environmental crisis requires large
political solutions, not minor technological ones,
so, instead of focusing on infinite growth, we could
consider a path of stable-state economies, while
preserving markets and healthy competition.
2 is the opening statement as it argues ecosystem
collapse is caused by myriad of factors. 1 further
strengthens the claim of 2. Thus, 21 is a meaningful
pair. 43 is a mandatory pair as 3 describes how
the solutions stated in 4 would be enforced. 4 states
the solution of the problem highlighted in 21.
Therefore, the correct sequence is 2143.
Q. 18 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: Most were first-time users of a tablet
and a digital app.
Paragraph: Aage Badhein’s USP lies in the
ethnographic research that constituted the
foundation of its development process.
Customizations based on learning directly from
potential users were critical to making this self-paced
app suitable for both a literate and non-literate
audience. ___(1)___ The user interface caters to a
Hindi-speaking audience who have minimal to no
experience with digital services and devices.
___(2)___ The content and functionality of the app
are suitable for a wide audience. This includes youth
preparing for an independent role in life or a student
ready to create a strong foundation of financial
management early in her life. ___(3)___ Household
members desirous of improving their family’s financial
strength to reach their aspirations can also benefit.
We piloted Aage Badhein in early 2021 with over
400 women from rural areas. ___(4)___ The digital
solution generated a large amount of interest in the
communities.
Refer to these statement of the given paragraph:
Household members desirous of improving their
family’s financial strength to reach their aspirations
can also benefit. We piloted Aage Badhein in early
2021 with over 400 women from rural areas.
‘Them’ in the sentence to be placed refers to the
400 women mentioned in the above mentioned
statements. Therefore, blank 4 would be replaced
with the given sentence.
Q. 19 The passage given below is followed by four alternate
summaries. Choose the option that best captures
the essence of the passage.
Several of the world’s earliest cities were organised
along egalitarian lines. In some regions, urban
populations governed themselves for centuries
without any indication of the temples and palaces
that would later emerge; in others, temples and
palaces never emerged at all, and there is simply
no evidence of a class of administrators or any other
sort of ruling stratum. It would seem that the mere
fact of urban life does not, necessarily, imply any
particular form of political organization, and never
did. Far from resigning us to inequality, the picture
that is now emerging of humanity’s past may open
our eyes to egalitarian possibilities we otherwise
would have never considered.
Option 3 contradicts the arguments of the passage.
Option 4 finds no reference in the passage.
Option 2:It takes on an extreme stance as the
given passage does not imply that all the ancient
cities were organized along egalitarian lines. Thus,
it is incorrect.
Option 1 correctly implies the essence of the
passage.
Q. 20 The passage given below is followed by four alternate
summaries. Choose the option that best captures
the essence of the passage.
There’s a common idea that museum artworks are
somehow timeless objects available to admire for
generations to come. But many are objects of decay.
Even the most venerable Old Master paintings don’t
escape: pigments discolour, varnishes crack,
canvases warp. This challenging fact of art-world life
is down to something that sounds more like a thread
from a morality tale: inherent vice. Damien Hirst’s
iconic shark floating in a tank – entitled The Physical
Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living
– is a work that put a spotlight on inherent vice.
When he made it in 1991, Hirst got himself in a
pickle by not using the right kind of pickle to preserve
the giant fish. The result was that the shark began
to decompose quite quickly – its preserving liquid
clouding, the skin wrinkling, and an unpleasant smell
wafting from the tank.
Options 2, 3 and 4 are incorrect for simple reason
that they ascribe some responsibilities to
museums that, by no means, has been implied in
the given passage.
Q. 21 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) Women may prioritize cooking because they feel
they alone are responsible for mediating a toxic
and unhealthy food system.
(2) Food is commonly framed through the lens of
individual choice: you can choose to eat healthily.
(3) This is particularly so in a neoliberal context where
the state has transferred the responsibility for
food onto individual consumers.
(4) The individualized framing of choice appeals to a
popular desire to experience agency, but draws
away from the structural obstacles that stratify
individual food choices.
2 is the opening sentence as it is a general
statement introducing the argument that is
centered around food. 2 states that food is framed
through the lens of individual choice; 4 begins with
‘the individualized framing of choice’ and explains
what this leads to. Therefore, 24 is a mandatory
pair. 3 further supports 4 by stating the case in
which the argument of 4 stands true. 3 and 1 make
a logical pair. Therefore, 2431 is the correct
sequence.
Q. 22 The passage given below is followed by four alternate
summaries. Choose the option that best captures
the essence of the passage.
Today, many of the debates about behavioural control
in the age of big data echo Cold War-era anxieties
about brainwashing, insidious manipulation and
repression in the ‘technological society’. In his book
Psychopolitics, Han warns of the sophisticated use
of targeted online content, enabling ‘influence to take
place on a pre-reflexive level’. On our current
trajectory, “freedom will prove to have been merely
an interlude.” The fear is that the digital age has not
liberated us but exposed us, by offering up our private
lives to machine-learning algorithms that can process
masses of personal and behavioural data. In a world
of influencers and digital entrepreneurs, it’s not easy
to imagine the resurgence of a culture engendered
through disconnect and disaffiliation, but concerns
over the threat of online targeting, polarisation and
big data have inspired recent polemics about the
need to rediscover solitude and disconnect.
Option 1: It misses out the argument implied by
the last two statements of the passage
Option 2: It is too narrow as it focys only on the
message implied by the first statement of the
passage.
Option 3: It does the same mistake as option 2.
Option 4: It captures all the key arguments of the
passage.
Q. 23 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 trajectory of cheerfulness through the self is
linked to the history of the word ‘cheer’ which
comes from an Old French meaning ‘face’.
(2) Translations of the Bible into vernacular
languages, expanded the noun ‘cheer’ into the
more abstract ‘cheerful-ness’, something that
circulates as an emotional and social quality
defining the self and a moral community.
(3) When you take on a cheerful expression, no
matter what the state of your soul, your
cheerfulness moves into the self: the interior of
the self is changed by the power of cheer.
(4) People in the medieval ‘Canterbury Tales’ have a
‘piteous’ or a ‘sober’ cheer; ‘cheer’ is an
expression and a body part, lying at the
intersection of emotions and physiognomy.
‘Cheerfulness travelling through the self’ in 1 refers
to the idea implied in 3. Therefore, 31 is a
mandatory pair. 4 provides further explains 1
through illustrations. 2, then, describes how ‘cheer’
gave rise to ‘cheerful’. Thus, 3142 is the correct
sequence.
Q. 24 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: This was years in the making but fasttracked
during the pandemic, when “people started
being more mindful about their food”, he explained. Paragraph: For millennia, ghee has been a
venerated staple of the subcontinental diet, but it
fell out of favour a few decades ago when saturated
fats were largely considered to be unhealthy.
___(1)___ But more recently, as the thinking around
saturated fats is shifting globally, Indians are finding
their own way back to this ingredient that is so
integral to their cuisine. ___(2)___ For Karmakar, a
renewed interest in ghee is emblematic of a returnto-
basics movement in India. ___(3)___ This
movement is also part of an overall trend towards
“slow food”. In keeping with the movement’s
philosophy, ghee can be produced locally (even at
home) and has inextricable cultural ties. ___(4)___
At a basic level, ghee is a type of clarified butter
believed to have originated in India as a way to
preserve butter from going rancid in the hot climate.
Refer to these lines of the passage: For Karmakar,
a renewed interest in ghee is emblematic of a returnto-
basics movement in India.
‘This’ in the given sentence refers back to the
‘return-to-basics movement’ mentioned in the
above mentioned line. Therefore, blank 3 will be
replaced by the sentence.