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FIJ TEST

TEST TIME:40 Min

1)
1) You don't have to be a biologist or an anthropologist to see how closely the great apesgorillas, chimpanzees, orangutas - resemble us.
2) Even children often remark that their bodies are pretty much the same as ours, apart from some
exaggerated proportions and extra body hair.
3) Their faces are quit expressive, showing a range of emotions that are familiar.
4) That why we delight in seeing chimps wearing tuxedo, playing the drums or riding bicycles
a)FIJI b) JFIF c) IFJI d) FIFJ e) JFFJ
2)
1) To date Shiva has represented India thrice in Luge, an extreme ice-sport, at the winter
Olympics.
2) Ranked 25th in world, Shiva, the youngest Luge Olympian in the whole world, may well be
called the fastest Indian on ice.
3) The thrill in this sport is in now you keep your cool in extreme conditions.
4) Considering that he never had a full time coach, his world ranking appears no less than a feat.
a)FJFI b) FIJJ c) JIJI d) FJIJ e) FFJJ
3)
1) Introducing organized sport programmes for youngsters in the only hope for Indian golf.
2) The general public is beginning to recognize the international standing of the Indian golf
players who earn more money than the Indian cricketing icons.
3) In this age when kids are electronically inclined and digitally divided, the high tech gizmo's is
also an attraction for kids to his a ball and then check the digital read outs.
4) News of corporates investing in the games at the junior level is required no only in golf but
also in all other sports.
a) JIIJ b) JFIJ c) IFIJ d) FFJJ e) JFJJ
4)
1. Europe's economies are in the doldrums, and no one seems to know how to revive them.
2. Two noisy arguments now raging clearly show that an alarming number of Europeans are in
denial about the economic facts of life.
3. A clear majority of voters and national governments are set on limiting these freedoms.
4. The freedom of movement of people is enshrined in the almost 50-year-old treaty of Rome
Options are:
1. IJJI
2. JIJF
3. JJIF
4. JJJF
5. IJIF
5)

1. Time and tide wait for no man.


2. Science has created more problems than it has solved.
3. Familiarity breeds awareness.
4. If the breadwinner is a drug addict, imagine the sorry plight of the family.
a) JFII b)FFIJ c) IFJI d) JIII
6)
1. We may suffer but we should not inflict suffering on others.
2. He was elected the president of the Indian national congress.
3. ultimately Man will deve lop into a superman,if this rate of progress is constant.
4. Science is the answer to all world problems.
a) JIJF b) JFIF c) JIJJ d) JFIJ
7)
1. Malaria,caused by unsanitary conditions killed a hundred slum dwellers..
2. The progress of our nation depends on our national character.
3. National prestige will have to be maintained.
4. As the nation progresses, it will have more more admirers.
a) IFJI b) IJJI c) FFJI d) FJJI
8)
1)in the celluar industry,system capacity is a great issue.
2)As demand for cellular service grows,system operators try to find ways to increase system
capacity
3)one of the easier ways currently adopted to increase capacity is the conventional microcell
approach
4)however ,control of interference among cells is difficult in the microcell approach.
5)prolonged delays in handoff sometimes occur when the microcell approach is adopted
A)FFFFF
B)JIFFF
C)JIJFF
D)JIJFJ
E)FIFFF
9)
1. If necessity is the mother of invention, scarcity may be the mother of its cousin, innovation.
2. As long as staff produces goods on time, managers can stop watching over them while they
work.
3. An average global temperature rise of 4C would wipe out hundreds of species, bring extreme
food and water shortage in vulnerable countries and cause catastrophic floods.
4. Every deal is a new agreement between parties, and such alliances have the potential to become
opportunities for permanent, long-term partnerships.
Options are:

1.
2.
3.
4.

JJII
JJFF
IJII
JFFI

10)
1 What was more scary was the ministers revelation that terrorist were planning to occupy some
uninhabited islands and use them as bases for launching operations on the Indian coasts.
2.The minister, we were told, was also of the view that the recent Indo-US nuclear agreement,
too, has made out atomic power plants highly vulnerable to attack.
3.What foments terror is military religiosity and not legitimate grievances.
4.And the increasing terror-graph shows that soft approach will only make matters worse in the
coming day.
1) IFJJ 2)IFFI 3)JFJI 4)JIJI 5)IFJI
11)
1. Inequitable distribution of all kinds of resources is certainly one of the strongest and most
sinister sources of conflict.
2. Even without war, we know that conflicts continue to trouble us they only change in
character.
3. Extensive disarmament is the only insurance for our future; imagine the amount of
resources that can be released and redeployed.
4. The economies of the industrialized western world derive 20% of their income from the
sale of all kinds of arms.
(1) IJJI (2) JIJF (3) IIJF (4) JIIF (5) IJIF
12)
1. Angry at missing out on the unpredicted commodity boom, Tanzaniais preparing to
renegotiate gold mining concessions.
2. The findings of this study indicate that maybe established guidelines and procedures are
not being followed with regard to the development,administration and management of
distance education programs.
3. The country's annual report suggested that many of the employees might be relieved of
their duties soon.
4. Internationalization and integration on the campus is about inculcating the notion of
equality,diversity, integration and social cohesion within the learning culture.
Options are:
1. IFIF
2. FFIJ
3. IIFF

4. FIIF
13)
1. Much like a person might wish for double sixes in rolling dice, recognizing that the
outcome rests contingently on natural probabilities, God wills that all humans attain
perfection, knowing the ultimate result is contingent upon the vagaries of personal free
choice.
2. If the good and loving God wills that all humans reach happiness or perfection and if
humans have the ability to freely choose evil means, cannot humans thwart god's will?
3. He introduces a distinction between two ways in which God wills events to occur by
pointing that God wills some events to occur necessarily, and other events contingently.
4. Both god and the individual contribute to every human act: God establishes the end and
the human selects the means.
Options are:
1.
2.
3.
4.

IFJI
JIII
IIJF
JIJI

14
1. There are no separate words in Aristotle's vocabulary for "to be" and "to exist"; the
question could as well be put by asking: what does a thing's existence consist in?
2. There are two tasks he allots to this discipline: the investigation of beings in general, and
the investigation of a particular being or a set of beings, namely god or the gods.
3. The term metaphysics does not go back to Aristotle: it seems merely to be a title in early
editions of his works namely "Appendix to the Physics".
4. Aristotle argues that a thing's existence carries with it obedience to the laws of noncontradiction and excluded middle; the argument is mostly negative, opposing those who
would reject the laws of logic.
Options are:
1.
2.
3.
4.

JFJI
FFFJ
IIFJ
FIFJ

15)
A. Software and technology innovation can help strengthen healthcare, protect envirnoment,
improve education and extend social and economic opportunities.
B. If computers and the Internet continue changing our world at the pace they have done so far,
their ultimate impact will be far greater than anything we can imagine.
C. At this rate, student teachers will probably have the skills and knowledge to incorporate

technology into their classrooms in meaningful ways after they graduate.


D. Information and communications technology is opening up enormous opportnities for people
to participate in the global economy so that the prospects of a highly educated young person have
the potential to match those of a person in Europe or the United States.
1) FIJI
2) FIIF
3) FJJI
4) FIJF
5) FIII
16)
A. Across Latin America and Central Asia, governments like Bolivia, Venezuela and
Kazakhastan have reasserted state control over their oil and gas resources.
B. Many national companies have swallowed small-time companies in the name of development.
C. State-owned oil companies around the world now control nearly five time the reserves of their
private rivals.
D. Corporate behemoths such as ExxonMobil and Shell may be among the largest private
corporations in the world, but their underhand approach is known to few.
1) FIFJ
2) FJFI
3) FFJJ
4) FJFJ
5) FJJJ
17)
1. The rapid growth of the telecommunication industry has drawn many engineers from the
military industry to this field.
2. Many new engineers who are close to graduating are also keen to get into the field of
telecommunication.
3. Engineers already in telecommunications and working on small specialized areas would
like to broaden their knowledge.
4. Fresh engineers need to lean more about telecommunications as soon as possible.
5. The wireless information superhighway may be our future goal, yet we still have a long
way to go.
(A) FIFJJ (B) FIIJJ (C) FFFJJ (D) FFIJJ (E) IFFJI
18)
1. There are not many philosophical questions to ask; we have already asked most of them.
2. History presents us with many different answers to each philosophical question, making
it easier to ask questions than to answer them.
3. Each individual has to discover his own answers to philosophical questions.
4. Questions such as 'does God exist?' or 'is there life after death?' are not answered in any
encyclopedia.
5. Reading what other people have believed can help formulate our own view of life.

(A) JJJFI (B) FJJFI (C) JIJFI (D) FFJFI (E) FJJFF

19)
The following FIJ I find it interesting and good to discuss hence posting the question....
1. As the custodian of a revered national sport, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI)
has a poor record.
2. India's domestic competitions are ignored.
3. There are few facilities for the millions of cricket-mad poor.
4. This week, the national teamrepresenting a billion-plus Indianssuffered a series defeat to
Australia (population: 20m).
5. But when it comes to making money, the BCCI, which claims a monopoly on cricket in Ind ia,
does much better.
a)JIFII
b)IJFIJ
c)JIIFI
d)JIFFI
20)
1. Much like a person might wish for double sixes in rolling dice, recognizing that the
outcome rests contingently on natural probabilities, God wills that all humans attain
perfection, knowing the ultimate result is contingent upon the vagaries of personal free
choice.
2. If the good and loving God wills that all humans reach happiness or perfection and if
humans have the ability to freely choose evil means, cannot humans thwart god's will?
3. He introduces a distinction between two ways in which God wills events to occur by
pointing that God wills some events to occur necessarily, and other events contingently.
4. Both god and the individual contribute to every human act: God establishes the end and
the human selects the means.
Options are:
1.
2.
3.
4.

IFJI
JIII
IIJF
JIJI

21)
1. There are no separate words in Aristotle's vocabulary for "to be" and "to exist"; the
question could as well be put by asking: what does a thing's existence consist in?
2. There are two tasks he allots to this discipline: the investigation of beings in general, and
the investigation of a particular being or a set of beings, namely god or the gods.
3. The term metaphysics does not go back to Aristotle: it seems merely to be a title in early
editions of his works namely "Appendix to the Physics".

4. Aristotle argues that a thing's existence carries with it obedience to the laws of noncontradiction and excluded middle; the argument is mostly negative, opposing those who
would reject the laws of logic.
Options are:
1.
2.
3.
4.

JFJI
FFFJ
IIFJ
FIFJ

22)
1. The common aim of theistic Vedantins was to discredit the Advaita doctrine of an
absolute reality, Brahman, which is totally without quality and difference, and of which
material things and selves are but the illusory appearances.
2. The Advaita doctrine is the work of men destitute of the qualities which cause individuals
to be chosen by the Supreme Person, purveyors of hollow and vicious arguments.
3. Ramanuja and Madhva assumed the priority of perceptual knowledge and did not deny
that scripture, where its meaning is plain, trumps all other claims, including those
founded on perception.
4. Since this experience is, undeniably, of distinct objects and selves, the presumption is
already against an interpretation of the texts which treat such experience as illusory.
1.
2.
3.
4.

FFIJ
IFII
FFJI
JFJI

23)
1. Eudemonia consists, rather, in living well or doing well, in certain deliberative activities,
and not in any psychological state which results from these.
2. Aristotle especially appeals to those who argue that the proper moral ambition is neither,
at one extreme, to cultivate a pure inner self nor, at another, to promote the universal god
of man, but to live responsibly among one's fellows in whose practices and traditions one
shares.
3. Eudemonia is the supreme good as it is the one thing individuals want for its own sake,
and which explains their seeking of other goods, like health and money.
4. The idea that the good life is one of deliberative activities done with the aim of
performing them well or excellently is not a vacuous one.
1.
2.
3.
4.
24)

JFJI
IFJI
FFJI
IFFJ

1. It is understood that institutional acknowledgment _ in the form of truth, commissions,


reparations and justice like trials of perpetrators can begin partially to restore the
symbolic order that is another casualty of the work of violence.
2. The power of chosen traumas derives in large part from the fact that they remain
unmoored, thus cutting off possible forms of social and cultural healing that can rebuild
trust in social institutions.
3. In some other cases, however, collective trauma can produce far from troubling responses
as some traumatized persons and groups turn to hatred and violence as ways of coping
with traumatic wounds.
4. In institutional acknowledgment most often initiatives taken on the level of the nationstate may coincide with more local actions designed to reduce the trauma of massive
social disruption, through healing rituals and other collective symbolic activities designed
to aid recovery and rebuild social trust.
1.
2.
3.
4.

JFJI
IJFI
JIIF
FIFJ

25)
1. Storing pulse grains afer their harvest has always been a problem for farmers , as the stored
grains are often found to be infested with pulse beetles.
2. Small and marginal farmers who grow pulses are unable to store their produce and are forced
to sell the grains for a lower price.
3. Infestation of pulses commences in the field itself even before the crop is harvested.
4. Freshly threshed pulse grains should be dried in the sun for 3-5 days which will effectively kill
all the life stages of bruchids.

a. IFFI b. FJFI c. FJFJ d. JIFJ e. FIFJ

ANSWERS
1. e)JFFJ
2. e)FFJJ.
3. b) JFIJ
4. 2. JIJF
5. a) JFII
6. .d)JFIJ
7. a) IFJI
8. A)FFFFF
9. 1) JJII
10. 3 (JFJI)
11. 2 JIJF
12. 4 FIIF
13. 3 IIFF
14. 2 JIII
15. 5 FIII
16. 4 FJFJ
17. (D) FFIJJ
18. (C) JIJFI
19. C)JIIFI
20. 3 IIJF
21. 2 JIJI
22. 4 JFJI
23. 4 IFFJ
24. 3 JIIF
25. a. IFFI

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