Monday, March 30, 2009

Mathematical Aptitude Test

1. A recipe serves 4 people and calls for 1.5 cups of milk. If you want to serve 6 people, how much milk do you need?

a) 7/3 cups b) cups c) 2.25 cups d) 2.75 cups

2. Tony's car used 19.5 liters of gasoline on a 318 kilometers trip. How many kilometers per liter did the car get?

a) 6.2 km/h b) 13.6 km/h c) 16.3 km/h d) 14.8 km/h

3. Find the best price of a brand from following

Brand 1: 36 grams for 10.8 Rs

Brand 2 : 42 grams for 13.44 Rs.

a) Brand 2 b) Brand 1

c) Both are equal values

d) Not enough information provided

4. Anil gets 13776 Rs per week at a shop when he works for 28 hours. What is his per hour rate ?

a) 482 b) 490 c) 491 d) 492

5. If @ is defined for all positive numbers a and b by a @ b = 2ab - b2, then 5 @ 2 =

a) 8 b) 12 c) 16 d) 20

6. What is the total amount of your purchases if you bought 5 shirts at m and 2 more shirts at 50% off.

a) 5m b) 6m c) 7.5m d) 10m

7. Which of the following proportions is correct if 12 = pq ?

a) 2:p = 6:q b) 4:p = 3:q c) 6:p = 2:q d) 4:q = p:3

8. A car travels across Ahmedabad m miles at the rate of t miles per hour. How many hours does the trip take?

a) m / t b) t / m. c) m – t d) t – m

9. What is the value of (x + y)(x + y) if xy = -3 and x2 + y2 = 10?

a) 1 b) 2 c) 3 d) 4

10. Telephone calls cost 0.20 Rs. per minute for the first 15 minutes and 0.10 Rs. per minute thereafter. Which of the following represents the amount of money needed (in rupee) to talk x minutes (x greater than 15)?

a) $3.00 + $0.10x

b) $3.00 + $0.10(x-15)

c) $3.00 + $0.10(15-x)

d) $3.00 + $0.15x

11. Which of the following numbers is divisible by 3 and 5, but not by 2?

a) 975 b) 955 c) 990 d) 995

12. A special lottery is to be held to select the student who will live in the only deluxe room in a dormitory. There are 100 seniors, 150 juniors, and 200 sophomores who applied. Each senior's name is placed in the lottery 3 times; each junior's name, 2 times; and each sophomore's name, 1 time. What is the probability that a senior's name will be chosen?

a) 1/8 b) 2/9 c) 2/7 d) 3/8

13. If k is divisible by 2, 3, and 15, which of the following is also divisible by these numbers?

a) k+5 b) k+20 c) k+30 d) k+45

14. A rectangular rug has an area of 84 square feet and a length of 14 feet. What is its width?

a) 70 feet b) 6 feet c) 28 feet d) 176 feet

15. 12 people enter a room. Two more than two-thirds of these people then leave. How many people remain in the room?

a) 2 b) 1 c) 3 d) 4

You can reach to the author at alpesh.bhalala@gmail.com for your queries or suggestions

Answers

1. c

2. c

3. b

4. d

5. c

6. b

7. d

8. a

9. d

10. b

11. a

12. d

13. c

14. b

15. a

{2006/10/11}

NASA Quiz

1. Which space shuttle recently visited International Space Station and it returned back successfully, and was sent by NASA?

a. Discovery

b. Atlantis

c. Aryabhatta

d. None of these

2. NASA was created by an act of which US President?

a. Dwight Eisenhower

b. Harry Potter

c. John F. Kennedy

d. Lyndon B. Johnson

3. When was the Presidential Act that created NASA signed?

a. October 2, 1954

b. August 12, 1958

c. October 14, 1958

d. July 29, 1958

4. NASA was created in response to one of these events. Which?

a. The launch of Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space

b. The launch of Sputnik, the first Soviet satellite

c. The Soviet announcement of plans to send men to the Moon

d. The creation of the Soviet Space Agency

5. The motto of the NASA Discovery Program is:

a. Faster, Better, Cheaper

b. To the moon and beyond

c. Exploration of our world

d. None of the above

6. Many German scientists were highly influential in the early successes of the American Space Program after surrender to American troops at the end of World War II. What was this military recruitment of German scientists called?

a. Operation Paperclip

b. Operation Brain Bunker

c. Operation Rocket Men

d. Operation Pin Pusher

7. This German scientist, the inventor of the V2 rocket, surrendered to American Troops at the end of WWII and was highly influential in the early days of the American space program. Who was it?

a. Guenter Wendt

b. Robert Oppenheimer

c. Werner von Braun

d. Albert Einstein

8. Who was the first NASA administrator?

a. James Webb

b. T. Keith Glennan

c. Hugh Dryden

d. Robert Goddard

9. Who created the concept of, and founded the Mission Control Center?

a. Christopher Columbus Kraft

b. Lyndon Johnson

c. Gene Kranz

d. John Houston

10. The original seven Astronauts, the Mercury 7, were chosen on April 9, 1959. How many were there in the Astronaut Corps three years later, April 9, 1962?

a. 24 b. 16

c. 7 d. 14

11. What was the Presidential Act that created NASA called?

a. The Space Race Act

b. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration Act

c. The Man in Space Act

d. The National Aeronautics and Space Act

12. What day is generally considered the "birthday" of NASA?

a. June 9, 1958

b. November 13, 1950

c. October 14, 1947

d. October 1, 1958

Answers

1. b

2. a

3. d

4. b

5. a

6. a

7. c

8. b

9. a

10. c

11. d

12. d

{2006/10/04}

English Grammer Test

1. San Jose is the second ___ city in California, after Los Angeles.
a.larger b.large c. largest

2. George Lucas has ___ a digital movie studio in Marin County north of San Francisco called "Skywalker Ranch."

a. building b. built c. build

3. The Golden Gate inlet into San Francisco Bay is so narrow and covered with fog, European explorers sailed past it for many years without ___ the bay.

a. discovering b. discovered c. discover

4. Two species of giant Sequoia redwood trees are ___ in California; one in the Sierra Nevada mountains and one along the Pacific coast.

a. find b. finding c. found

5. Yosemite National Park is so popular, the Park Service is planning to require that visitors take an electric bus instead of ___ own cars into the valley to reduce smog and congestion.

a. there b. their c. they're

6. The towns of Santa Cruz and Huntington Beach have been ___ for many years over which is the real "Surf City USA."

a. argued b. arguing c. argue

7. The neoprene wet suit was ___ by a resident of Santa Cruz because the water there is cold but the surfing is good.

a. invented b. invent c. inventing

8. Chinese immigrants were ___ to build the Southern Pacific railroad across the Sierra Nevada mountains because the European workers were undisciplined.

a. hire b. hiring c. hired

9. The San Gabriel mountains east of Los Angeles are the ___ growing mountain range in the world, rising about five centimeters a year.

a. fastest b. faster c. fast

10. Forest ___ and earthquakes are as natural to California as tornadoes and snowstorms are to the Midwestern United States.

a. fire b. fires c. fired

11. The tectonic plate Los Angeles sits on is ___ north towards San Francisco at the rate of two centimeters a year.

a. move b. moving c. mover

12. Eighty percent of the venture capital available in the United States for ___ startup companies comes from investors in the Silicon Valley town of Menlo Park.

a. financing b. finance c. financed

13. Los Angeles ___ a system of aqueducts to bring snowmelt from the mountains of northern California for its water supply.

a. uses b. using c. used

14. Silicon Valley ___ near San Francisco. Silicone Valley is near Hollywood.

a. is b. was c. can

15. Kenny Roberts has his own private road-racing track ___ his back yard near Carmel, California, home of the Laguna Seca raceway.

a. on b. in c. into

16. The Monterey Aquarium has a 1 million gallon aquarium tank, thanks to a Japanese company that ___ the world's largest and thickest window pane.

a. building b. builder c. built

17. If California were a country, its economy would be the eighth ___ in the world.

a. large b. largest c. larger

18. In over 500 suicides at the Golden Gate Bridge since it opened, nobody has ever ___ facing west, towards the Pacific Ocean. Everybody jumps facing the city of San Francisco.

a.jump b. jumped c. jumping

19. The city of Los Angeles is ___ billions of dollars to re-build a mass-transit subway and train system that General Motors dismantled earlier this century.

a. spent b. spending c. spend

20. The artichoke, which is ___ in great abundance near Monterey, is a member of the thistle family.

a. grew b. grown c. grew

21. Every time it is on the ballot, a plan to split California into two or more states gains a ___ percentage of the vote.

a. higher b. highest c. high

22. Much of the gold ___ in California during the Gold Rush of the 1850s financed the Union Army in the Civil War.

a. mine b. mined c. mining

Answers:

1. C

2. b

3. a

4. c

5. b

6. b

7. a

8. c

9. a

10. b

11. b

12. a

13. a

14. a

15. b

16. c

17. b

18. b

19. b

20. b

21. a

22. b


{2006/09/27}

USA Quiz

1. United States is a?

a. Continent

b. Country

c. Territory

d. Big island

2. What is the population of the United States?

a. 100 million people

b. 250 million people

c. 400 million people

d. 500 millions people

3. Blue Hen Chicken is associated with which state of United States?

a. Delaware

b. Iowa

c. Texas

d. Mississippi

4. The longest mountain range in North America is the:

a. Appalachian Mountains

b. Sierra Nevadas

c. Cascades

d. Rocky Mountains

5. Most of the United States lies in:

a. mid-latitude climate regions

b. tropical climate regions

c. high latitude climate regions

d. a dry climate region

6. In the South, the state that has major tourist and citrus industries is:

a. Mississippi

b. Florida

c. Virginia

d. Louisiana

7. Where is the United States?

a. Northern hemisphere

b. Southern hemisphere

c. Eastern hemisphere

d. Just east of Hawaii

8. Name two countries that border on the United States?

a. Canada and New Mexico

b. Cuba and Puerto Rica

c. Mexico and Canada

d. Mexico and Yukon

9. The United States was founded in?

a. 1987

b. 1483

c. I didn't know it was ever lost

d. 1787

10. The United States is on which continent?

a. South America b. Paelantic Plate

c. North America d. America

11. Which ocean is on the west coast of the United States?

a. The Atlantic Ocean

b. The Pacific Ocean

c. The Gulf Ocean

d. The Deep Blue Sea

12. The capital of the United States is located in...

a. Washington State

b. Winnipeg, Manitoba

c. Cleveland, Ohio

d. Washington, DC

13. How large is the United States?

a. 3.14 hectacres

b. The largest country in the world

c. 3,615,211 square miles

d. 3,600 miles

14. The United States has how many states?

a. 48

b. 50

c. 52

d. Solid, liquid and gas

15. A large body of water bordering the southern United States is:

a. the Gulf of Mexico

b. the Pacific Ocean

c. the Great Lakes

d. the Great Salt Lake

16. The wettest state in the United States is:

a. Hawaii

b. Mississippi

c. Oregon

d. Washington

17. What was the first state to abolish capital punishment?

a. New York

b. Rhode Island

c. Michigan

d. Vermont

18. Geographers divide the United States into five economic regions based on:

a. the free enterprise system

b. economic activity

c. natural resources

d. overseas trade

19. The first official U.S. flag had:

a. Thirteen stars and thirteen stripes

b. Thirteen stripes and the words "Don't Tread on Me"

c. A British Union Jack in the upper left corner

d. 55 stars

20. What statement about the capital city of the "Last Frontier" state is false?

a. It is the least populated of all state capitals (2000 census)

b. You can only get there by plane or boat. You cannot drive there

c. It takes its name from the last name of an illiterate miner named Joe Juneau

d. It is located further south than Stockholm, Sweden

Answers

1. b

2. b

3. a

4. d

5. a

6. b

7. a

8. c

9. d

10. c

11. b

12. d

13. c

14. b

15. a

16. a

17. c

18. b

19. a

20. b

{2006/09/20}

Space Shuttle Quiz

1. Who is said to be the "Father of the Indian Space Program"?

a. Prof Satish Dhawan

b. Dr. A P J Abdul Kalam

c. Dr. Vikram A Sarabhai

d. Dr. K Kasturirangan

2. What company owned the primary contract to build the space shuttle?

a. Grumman

b. Boeing

c. Fairchild Republic

d. Rockwell International

3. What does SSTO stand for?

a. Space Shuttle Transport Orbit

b. Single Stage to Orbit

c. Space Shuttle Transit Orbit

d. Space Shuttle Transport Organization

4. What United States president signed an order that officially began the space shuttle project?

a. John Kennedy

b. Richard Nixon

c. Bill Clinton

d. Jimmy Carter

5. Which space shuttle exploded in 1986?

a. Discovery

b. Enterprise

c. Challenger

d. Atlantis

6. What was the name of the first spacecraft to orbit Jupiter?

a. Voyager 1 b. Pioneer 10

c. Pioneer 11 d. Galileo

7. What was the first shuttle to be launched following the Challenger disaster?

a. Atlantis b. Discovery

c. Endeavour d. Challenger

8. What year was the first space shuttle mission launched?

a. 1977

b. 1979

c. 1981

d. 1975

9. Who was the backup crew for Rakesh Sharma, the first Indian in space?

a. Ravish Malhotra

b. Ravi Kumar

c. Ravish Sharma

d. Madhavan Nair

10. During the Shuttles' 20 year history, it has completed many successful satellite deployments. This satellite Probe, Magellan, was launched from Columbia in 1989. What planet was it sent to explore?

a. Venus

b. Mars

c. Mercury

d. Saturn

11. What shuttle was used to repair the Hubble Space Telescope in 1993?

a. Challenger

b. Discovery

c. Endeavour

d. Atlantis

12. On which spacecraft did Rakesh Sharma make his historic trip to Space?

a. Salyut 7

b. Soyuz-T

c. Apollo 11

d. Progess 1

13. How many successful U.S. shuttle missions had taken place before Challenger disintegrated into a ball of fire in 1986?

a. 9

b. 24

c. 99

d. 100

14. What is the group responsible for the well-being of the ship and crew while in flight?

a. Mission Directors.

b. The group responsible for the well-being of the ship and crew.

c. Mission Control.

d. The government.

15. What was the first shuttle to dock with Russia's Mir space station?

a. Atlantis

b. Discovery

c. Endeavour

d. Challenger

16. What is the payload bay?

a. A special compartment that carries satellites or other scientific equipment.

b. A section where the astronauts receive their pay each week on the shuttle.

c. A hole in which technicians load in all the supplies needed for the outer-space trip.

d. A small room in the mid-deck of the shuttle similar to a lounge room.

Answers

1. c

2. d

3. b

4. b

5. c

6. d

7. b

8. c

9. a

10. a

11. c

12. b

13. b

14. c

15. a

16. a

{2006/09/13}

Internet Safety Quiz

For today we have two paragraphs given below. There are some blanks in between these paragraphs. You need to apply your General Knowledge and English skill to feel those blanks from given four options for each of the blanks.

Twenty (1)____________(hours, weeks ,years, days) ago, kids in school had never even heard of the internet. Now, I’ll bet you can’t find a single person in your school who hasn’t at least heard of it. In fact, many of us use it on a regular basis and even have access to it from our homes! The ‘net’ in (2)____________(net practice, netting, internet, network) really stands for network. A (3) __________ (internet, computer, cable, network) is two or more computers connected together so that information can be (4) _________( shared , created, lost, hidden ), or sent from one computer to another. The internet is a vast resource for all types of information. You may enjoy using it to do research for a school project, downloading your favorite songs or communicating with friends and family. Information is accessed through web pages that companies, organizations and individuals create and post. It’s kind of like a giant bulletin board that the whole world uses!

Just because you read something on a piece of paper someone sticks on a bulletin board doesn’t mean it’s good information, or even correct, for that matter. So you have to be sure that whoever posted the (5) ___________ (information, bulletin board, news, internet ) knows what they’re talking about, especially if you’re doing (6) __________ (research ,lunch, recess, sports )! But what if you’re just emailing people? You still have to be very careful. If you’ve never met the person that you’re communicating with online, you could be on dangerous ground! You should never give out any personal information to someone you don’t know, not even your name! And just like you can’t (7) __________ (find, believe, go, come) the information on every (8) ___________ (shop, mall, shopping center, website) out there, you can’t rely on what strangers you ‘meet’ on the internet tell you either. Just like you could make up things about yourself to tell someone, someone else could do the same to you! But since anyone can put anything on the (9) ____________ (floor, newspaper, magazine, internet), you also have to be (10) __________ (careless, incautious, careful, happy) and use your best judgment and a little common sense.

Invention of Microscope

It happened over 300 years (11) _______ (after, ago, before, since) in Holland. Anton van Leeuwenhoek (AN-tun van LAY-vun-hook) had a new microscope that he had (12) __________ (lost, made, did, delivered). One day he (13)_________ (looked ,broke, went, fell ) through it at a drop of lake water. What he saw surprised him.

The water was alive with what Leeuwenhoek called "wee beasties." The microscope made tiny organisms look 200 times (14) __________ (darker, farther, larger, smaller) than life size. Leeuwenhoek was one of the first scientists to see living things that were that (15) _______ (life, bigger, darker, small). His work was a giant (16) _________ (tower, turtle, step, gorilla) for science.

Today, microscopes are much stronger. An electron microscope can make tiny organisms look 200,000 times (17) ___________ (life, over, small, under) size. A few electron microscopes can see individual atoms. Pictures can be made to show the objects or organisms much bigger. The pictures add greatly to what we know about tiny objects and (18) (microscopes, electrons, organisms, gravity). Microscopes have come a long way in 300 years!

Friends, you can send your queries, opinion or view on this column at Alpesh.Bhalala@gmail.com.

Answers

1. years

2. internet

3. network

4. shared

5. information

6. research

7. believe

8. website

9. internet

10. careful

11. ago

12. made

13. looked

14. larger

15. small

16. step

17. life

18. organisms

{2006/09/06}

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Business Quiz

1) This company was called Lutsuko and later changed its name to something that literally means 'to lose money'. Which one?

a. L' Oreal

b. Sony

c. Matsushita

d. Honda

2) Though he was the heir to his family’s rice wine brewing business, he decided to pursue his interest in consumer electronics and was the co-founder of the Tokyo Tshushin Kyogu company. His company’s first product was a specialized rice cooker, later followed by tape recorders and transistor radios. In 1958, he pushed for changing the company name ‘Tokyo Tshushin Kyogu’ to a shorter name that could be easily recognizable the world over.

a. Eiji Toyoda

b. Akiro Kurusawa

c. Taichi Ohno

d. Akio Morita

3) His first book, "The End of the Economic Man" was published in 1939. He spent over 18 months interviewing senior management at General Motors which resulted in the publication of his bestselling book, "The Concept of the Corporation" in 1946. In 1994, he was appointed as Godkin Lecturer at Harvard University.

a. Peter Drucker

b. F.W. Taylor

c. Michael Porter

d. Philip Crosby

4) Which car in Spanish means 'Charming'?

a. Matiz

b. Santro

c. Ikon

d. Corsa

5) At school, he used to write computer programs for the school library to print out catalogue cards. He co-founded a software company called Ink Development Corporation, which was later renamed as eShop. This company was bought by Microsoft in 1996. He set up an online auction website as a hobby, having got the idea during a conversation with his fiancée, who was an avid collector of Pez Dispensers.

a. Scott McNealy

b. Pierre Omidyar

c. Jay Walker

d. Sergey Brin

6) Which international brand had an ad campaign - 'Tomorrow is mine' and had signed Rahul Dravid for the campaign?

a. Reebok

b. Nike

c. Pepsi

d. Puma

7) This organisation has 1356 members and has the ad-line "the world put stock on us". Which organisation?

a. NASDAQ

b. LSE

c. NYSE

d. BSE

8) In 1976, she took a job with WJZ-TV as news co-anchor. She was nominated for an Oscar for best supporting actress in the film ‘The Color Purple’. In 1988, she formed Harpo Productions which acquired the rights to her talk show from Capital Cities/ABC.

a. Whoopi Goldberg

b. Oprah Winfrey

c. Anita Roddick

d. Janet Jackson

9) Of whom did Shahrukh Khan once say that 'our figures are similar'?

a. Pierce Brosnan

b. Roger Moore

c. Sean Connery

d. Cindy Crawford

10) Who designs jewellery for the

company called Artex?

a. Sonia Gandhi

b. Priyanka Gandhi

c. Menaka Gandhi

d. Uma Bharthi

11) What is a coin with a minting error called ?

a. FIDO

b. DIDO

c. LIDO

d. NIDO

12) What is the name of the new FM channel introduced by India Today?

a. Road

b. Run

c. Red

d. Fun

13) What is 'Agfa' the trade mark for?

a. Cars

b. Tyres

c. Photo Goods

d. Agriculture Goods

14) Which international airline uses the slogan "Smooth As Silk" in its advertisements?

a. Cathay Pacific

b. Singapore Airlines

c. Qantas

d. Thai Airways

15) He tried a variety of jobs before settling on being a milkshake-mixer salesman.

a. Col. H. Sanders

b. Mac McDonald

c. Ray Kroc

d. Tom Monaghan

16) At the age of 13, he formed the Lakeside Programmers Group with some school friends.

a. Larry Ellison

b. Steve Jobs

c. Ken Olsen

d. Bill Gates

17) In 1974, he took a job with Atari. In 1985, he was removed from the computer company he had co-founded. He returned to the company in 1998 and successfully turned it around with focus on digital music players and online music store.

a. Larry Ellison

b. Steve Jobs

c. Ken Olsen

d. Bill Gates

18) The name of the company he established, when he was only 17 years old, is made up of the first letters of his name, the first letter of the name of the farm he grew up on, and the first letter of the name of his home village.

a. Terrence Conran

b. Elton Mayo

c. Ingvar Kamprad

d. Ralph Lauren

19) At age of 27, he borrowed US$ 20,000 from his father-in-law and bought his first store in Newport, Arkansas. He got a pilot license in 1953 and used to fly from one store to another to oversee the operations of his growing chain of retail stores. In 1991, his company became the largest retailer in the US.

a. Ben Franklin

b. J C Penney

c. Richard Warren Sears

d. Sam Walton

20) At 16, he went to work as an engineer for James Flower & Co. in Detroit. His first prototype automobile called the ‘Quadricycle’ was built in his garden shed. He is widely credited to have revolutionized the automobile manufacturing industry with introduction of the mass-production assembly line system.

a. Alfred Sloan

b. Walter Chrysler

c. Henry Ford

d. Lee Iacocca

Answers

1. b

2. d

3. a

4. a

5. b

6. a

7. c

8. b

9. d

10. b

11. a

12. c

13. c

14. d

15. c

16. d

17. b

18. c

19. d

20. c

{2006/08/30}

Monday, March 23, 2009

General Knowledge Quiz

General Knowledge Quiz

1. The 1982 football world cup was held in

a. France b. Brazil

c. Spain d. England

2. Who is the prime minister of Bangladesh?

a. Banzir Bhtto

b. Khaleda Zia

c. Morshad Khan

d. Ahammad Ali Zia

3. Who among the following is an election commissioner in India?

a. S N Chattergee

b. S Y Quraishi

c. R S Gandhi

d. M K Sharma

4. SLAX is a / an

a. Hardware Company

b. Software Company

c. Telecom Device

d. Linux OS

5. Father of English literature

a. William Shakespeare

b. T.S. Eliot

c. Geoffrey Chaucer

d. William Blake

6. C.V. Raman was awarded Nobel Prize in the year

a. 1932

b. 1930

c. 1926

d. 1940

7. Which of the following is the world’s heaviest snake?

a. King Cobra

b. Anaconda

c. Coral snake

d. Python

8. Who is the national leader who allied with Germany to attain freedom for India?

a. Jawaharlal Nehru

b. Subhash Chandra Bose

c. Sardar Vallabhai Patel

d. Mahatma Gandhi

9. Yehudi Menuhin is associated with which of the following?

a. Air Craft

b. Violin

c. Tabla

d. Gitar

10. Bible is for a Christian as Zend Avestha is for a …….?

a. Muslim

b. Hindu

c. Zoroastrian

d. Jew

11. Ramoji Film city is located at

a. Mumbai

b. Hydrabad

c. Bangalore

d. Pune

12. The river Tsang po in china, when enters India is called

a. Brahmaputra

b. Ganga

c. Godawari

d. Yamuna

13. A java applet that runs on a mobile phone is called a

a. Applet

b. Java Script

c. Java Encoder

d. MIDlet

14. The worlds highest (maximum altitude) railway station is located at

a. California

b. Russia

c. Tibet

d. Nepal

15. The maximum load capacity of GSLV rocket is

a. 1200 Kg

b. 2000 Kg

c. 4000 Kg

d. 6000 Kg

16. The last emperor of the Mughal Dynasty

a. Bahadurshah Zafar

b. Shah Jahaan

c. Aurangazeb

d. Akbar

17. Red data book is a publication that contains details of

a. Animals facing threat of extinction

b. Aggressive animals

c. Predators

d. Red color animals

18. Largest gland in the human body

a. Pancreas b. Pituitary

c. Liver d. Thyroid

19. Raja Ravivarma is associated with

a. Press b. Painting

c. Music d. Sports

20. The Southern most tip of the Republic of India

a. Cape of good hope

b. Chennai

c. Kanyakumari

d. Indira Point

Answers

1. c

2. b

3. b

4. d

5. c

6. b

7. d

8. b

9. b

10. c

11. b

12. a

13. d

14. c

15. b

16. a

17. a

18. c

19. b

20. d


{2006/08/23}

Verbal Reasoning Test

For the ALL questions given below please follow these instructions.

Select your answer as

A - If the given Statement is CORRECT, or would be a reasonable conclusion to draw from the passage.

B - If the given Statement is INCORRECT, or would be a reasonable conclusion to draw from the passage.

C - INSUFFICIENT INFORMATION provided in the passage to answer either of the above with any certainty

(A) cardiovascular disease is so prevalent that virtually all businesses are likely to have employees who suffer from, or may develop, this condition. Research shows that between 50-80% of all people who suffer a heart attack are able to return to work. However, this may not be possible if they have previously been involved in heavy physical work. In such cases, it may be possible to move the employee to lighter duties, with appropriate retraining where necessary. Similarly, high-pressure, stressful work, even where it does not involve physical activity, should also be avoided. Human Resources managers should be aware of the implications of job roles for employees with a cardiac condition.

1. Physical or stressful work may bring on a heart attack.

2. The majority of people who have suffered a heart attack can later return to work.

3. Heart disease may affect employees in any type of business.

4. Heart disease can affect people of any age.

(B) So much of the literature of the western world, including a large part of its greatest literature, was either written for actual speaking or in a mode of speech, that we are likely to deform it if we apply our comparatively recent norm of writing for silent reading. It is only that so much of this work is drama or oratory (the latter including the modern forms of sermons, lectures and addresses which as late as the nineteenth century play a most important part). It is also that through classical and mediaeval times, and in many cases beyond these, most reading was either aloud or silently articulated as if speaking - a habit we now recognize mainly in the slow. Most classical histories were indeed quite close to oratory and public speech, rather than silent reading of an artifacts, was the central condition of linguistic composition.

5. Until the nineteenth century, most people could only read with difficulty

6. In ancient times, literature was intended to be read aloud

7. Classical histories were passed on orally and never written down

8. Only people with literacy problems now read aloud

(C) Millions of lives around the world could be saved, and the quality of life of hundreds of millions markedly improved - very inexpensively - by eradicating three vitamin and mineral deficiencies in people's diets. The three vitamins and minerals are vitamin A, iodine and iron - so- called micronutrients. More than 2 billion people are at risk from micronutrient deficiencies and more than 1 billion people are actually ill or disabled by them, causing mental retardation, learning disabilities, low work capacity and blindness. It costs little to correct these deficiencies through fortification of food and water supplies. In a country of 50 million people, this would cost about $25 million a year. That $25 million would yield a forty fold return on investment.

9. Most illensses in developing countries are caused by vitamin and mineral deficiencies

10. Micronutrients provide inadequate nourishment to maintain a healthy life

11. Vitamin A, iodine and iron are the only micronutrients that people need in their diet

12. Correcting micronutrient deficiencies would cost about $2 per person per year

(D) The clinical guidelines in asthma have now moved towards anti-inflammatory therapy - and away from regular bronchodilator therapy - for all but the mildest asthmatics. This is now being reflected in prescribing patterns. In the U.S., combined prescription volumes of the major bronchodilators peaked in 1991 (having risen slowly in the preceding years), though they still account for around half of the 65 million asthma prescriptions there. During the same period, prescriptions for inhaled steroids have doubled, but still account for less than 10% of asthma prescriptions in the U.S.

13. Only mild cases of asthma can be helped by anti-inflammatory therapy

14. Use of bronchodilators has been increasing since 1991

15. Doctors are reluctant to treat asthma with inhaled steroids for fear of potential side-effects

16. Bronchodilators are the single most prescribed treatment for asthma

(E) Relations between Sweden and the European Community had always been restricted in scope by Sweden's traditional neutrality and for many years any suggestion of Community membership was out of the question. But the upheavals in Eastern Europe in the early 1990s gradually led to the conclusion that membership of the EC was no longer incompatible with its neutral stance. People came to the conclusion that Sweden has already taken over a large part of the Community rules and began to weight up the pros and cons of membership along the lines sought by Austria.

17. Political changes in Eastern Europe led to a change in relations between Sweden and the European Community

18. The European Community rejected Sweden's application for membership because of its neutrality

19. After abandoning its policy of neutrality, Sweden applied to join the European Community

20. Sweden applied for membership of the European Community after other neutral countries had joined.

(F) Buddhism was introduced to Japan from India via China and Korea around the middle of the sixth century. After gaining imperial patronage, Buddhism was propagated by the authorities throughout the country. In the early ninth century, Buddhism in Japan entered a new era in which it catered mainly to the court nobility. In the Kamakura period (1192-1338), an age of great political unrest and social confusion, there emerged many new sects of Buddhism offering hope of salvation to warriors and peasants alike. Buddhism not only flourished as a religion but also did much to enrich the country's arts and learning.

21. Buddhism was adopted by the court nobility at the urging of the emperor

22. The introduction of Buddhism to Japan led to great political unrest and social confusion

23. Buddhism replaced the Shinto religion which had previously been followed in Japan

24. Japanese arts and culture were greatly enriched by the introduction of Buddhism

(G) In Japan, companies generally expect their employees to put in long hours of overtime. But it is difficult for women, who also have household chores to do and children to take care of, to work at the same pace as men, who are not burdened with such responsibilities. Many women invitably opt for part-time jobs, which enable them to combine work and domestic duties. At present, 23% of all female salaried workers are part-timers and the ratio has been on the rise in recent years. Part-time work places women at a disadvantage. The wages of part-time workers are considerably lower than those of full-time employees, and part-time work tends to involve menial labour. Moreover, because slary and promotion in Japanese companies are often based on seniority, it is extremely difficult for women either re-entering the labour force or switching from part-time to full-time work to climb the ladder.

25. Japanese men do not share household chores and childcare with their wives.

26. A quarter of all part-time workers in Japan are female.

27. Part-time workers hold a low status in Japanese companies.

28. Women in Japan are unwilling to work overtime.

Answers -

1. B

2. A

3. A

4. C

5. C

6. A

7. B

8. A

9. C

10. B

11. C

12. B

13. B

14. C

15. C

16. A

17. A

18. B

19. B

20. C

21. B

22. B

23. C

24. C

25. A

26. B

27. A

28. C


{2006/04/26}

Einstein Quiz

1. When was Albert Einstein born ?

a. January 10, 1901

b. March 14, 1879

c. January 15, 1889

d. January 10, 1880

2. Where was Einstein Born ?

a. Ulm, Germany b.California, USA

c. Jerusalem, Israel d. New York, USA

3, Einstein's School- leaving certiticatee was :

a. the worst in his class

b. He never attended School

c. the best in his class

d. No record found

4. Before Einstein studied physics he had intended to be :

a. a sportsman b. an electrical engineer

c. an artist d. a pianist

5. Two family members encouraged Albert Einstein's interest in Science by providing books on Science, mathematics and philosophy. Who were they ?

a. his grandparent

b. his older cousins

c. his parent

d. his two uncle

6. What hobbies did Albert Einstein enjoy ?

a. Cycling b. painting

c. Playing Violin d. Playing Piano

7. Which of the following is a quote by Einstein ?

a. Now my own suspicion is that the universe is not only queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we can suppose.

b. The Simplicities of natural laws arise through the complexities of the language we use for their experession,

c. Our imaginations is stretched to the utmost to imagine things which are not really there, but just to comprehend those things which are there.

d. The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious.it is the source of all true art and Science.

e. The Miracle the appropriateness of the laws of physics is a wonderful gift which we neither understand nor deserve.

Answers -

1. B

2. A

3. C

4. B

5. D

6. C

7. D

{2006/05/03}

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Mathematical Aptitude Test

Mathematics Test

1. The L.C.M. (Lowest (or Least) Common Multiple) of two numbers is 45 times to their H.C.F (Highest Common Factor). If one of the numbers is 125 and sum of L.C.M. and H.C.F. is 1150, the other number is:

a) 215 b) 220

c) 225 d) 235

2. Six bells commence tolling together and toll at intervals 2,4,6,8,10 and 12 seconds respectively. In 30 minutes how many times they toll together.

a) 4 b) 10

c) 15 d) 16

3. The value of (0.625 * 0.0729 * 28.9)/(0.0017 * 0.025 * 8.1) is

a) 0.3825 b) 3.825

c) 38.25 d) 3825

4. The number of coins 1.5 cm in diameter and 0.2cm thick to be melted to form a right circular cylinder of height 10 cm and diameter 4.5 cm is:

a) 380 b) 450

c) 472 d) 540

5. The size of a wooden block is 5 * 10 * 20 cm3. How many whole such blocks you will take to construct a solid wooden cube of minimum size?

a) 6 b) 8

c) 12 d) 16

6. Find the odd man out - 1050, 510, 242, 106, 46, 16, 3

a) 510 b) 242

c) 106 d) 46

7. If x and y are the two digits f the number 653xy such that this number is divisible by 80, then x+y is equal to:

a) 2 b) 3

c) 4 d) 6

8. If 1.5x=0.04y then the value of (y-x)/(y+x) is

a) 730/77 b) 73/77

c) 7.3/77 d) None

9. The average age of a class is 15.8 years. The average age of boys in the class is 16.4 years while that of girls is 15.4 years. What is the ratio of boys to girls in the class?

a) 1:2 b) 3:4

c) 3:5 d) None of these

10. If one-seventh of a number exceeds its eleventh part by 100 then the number is…

a) 770

b) 1100

c) 1825

d) 1925

11. The ratio of Darsh's age to her mother's age is 3:8. The difference of their ages is 35 years. The ratio of their ages after 4 years will be:

a) 7:12 b) 5:12

c) 38:43 d) 42:47

12. Gold is 19 times as heavy as water and copper is 9 times as heavy as water. In what ratio should these be mixed to get an alloy 15 times as heavy as water?

a) 1:1 b) 2:3

c) 1:2 d) 3:2

Answer

1. c Let L.C.M. be l and H.C.F. be h. Then l = 45h

l + h =1150

This gives h =25 and l = 1125

Thus the second number = (25 * 1125)/125 = 225

2. d Solution: L.C.M. of 2,4,6,8,10,12 = 120

So they toll together after every 120 seconds i.e. 2 minutes. So in 30 minutes they toll together 30/2 + 1 = 16 times

3. d Solution: The sum of decimal places in numerator and denominator being the same, decimal point can be removed

(625*729*289) / (17*25*81) = 3825

4. b Solution: Volume of 1 coin = 22/7 *(1.5)/2*(1.5)/2 * 0.2 = 99/280 cm3

Volume of large cylinder = 22/7 *(4.5)/2*(4.5)/2 * 10 = (99*45)/28cm3

Number of coins = (99*45)/28 * 280/99 = 450

5. b Solution: Size of each cube = 5 cm

So number of blocks = (5 * 10 * 20)/(5*5*5) = 8

6. c Solution:

2nd term = (Ist term - 30) / 2 = (1050-30)/2 = 510

3rd term = (2nd term - 26) / 2 = (510-26)/2 = 242

4th term = (3rd term - 22) / 2 = (242-22)/2 = 110

So 106 is the answer.

7. a Solution:

Since 653xy is divisible by 2 as well as by 5, so y = 0

Now 653x0 is divisible by 8 so 3x0 is also divisible by 8.

By hit and trial x=2 and x+y = 2

8. b Solution: x/y = 0.04/1.5 = 2/75

So (y-x)/(y+x) = (1 - x/y)/(1 + x/y) = (1 - 2/75)/ (1 + 2/75) = 73/77

9. d Solution:

Let the ratio be k:1.

Then k*16.4+1*15.4 + (k+1)*15.8 (16.4-15.8)k = 15.8 - 15.4 k=0.4/0.6 = 2/3 so required ratio = 2:3

10. d Solution:

Let the number be x. Then X/7 - x/11 =100 11x-7x = 7700 x=1925.

11. b Solution:

Let their ages be 3x and 8x

8x - 3x =35

x =7

Their present ages are 21 and 56 years.

Ratio of their ages after 4 years are 25:6 = 5:12

12. d Solution:

Let 1gm of gold be mixed with x gm of copper to give (1+x)gm of the alloy.

1G=19W, 1C = 9W and alloy = 15W 1gm gold + xgm Copper = (1+x)gm alloy 19W+9Wx = (1+x)*15W x = 4W/6W = 2/3

So ratio of gold and copper is 1:2/3 or 3:2

{2006/08/09}

Science Quiz

1. What is special about the number 1729?

1. It is Ramanujam number

2. It is Aryabhata number

3. It is Bhaskaracharya number

4. It is the number of prime numbers between 0 and 100000.

2. When a coin is tossed in a moving train, it still comes back to your hand. This is an illustration of?

1. Newton’s 2nd law

2. Conservation of angular momentum

3. Newton’s 3rd law

4. Newton’s 1st law.

3. Mach number is associated with the speed of?

1. light 2. airplane

3. cars 4. bikes

4. Which is the earliest treatise on Hindu medicine available?

1. Sushrutha Vaidya Shastra

2. Charaka Samhita

3. Dhanvantari Shastra

4. Patanjali Arogya Shastra

5. Planets revolve round the sun in elliptical orbits- this was first concluded by

1. Johans Kepler

2. Galileo Galili

3. Ptolemy

4. Leonardo Da Vinci

6. Quinine, an anti malarial drug, is obtained from

1. Mulberry 2. Cocoa

3. Cinchona 4. Eucalyptus

7. Bananas do not have seeds because

1. Their flowers have no ovules

2. They are usually undernourished plants

3. All Musaclae are seedless plants

4. Their fruits develop without fertilization

8. Ambulance approaching you seems to be increasing its frequency, while it seems to be decreasing its frequency when it is leaving you. This is because of

1. Doppler effect

2. Peltier effect

3. Balmer effect

4. Raman effect

9. Milk is an example of

1. Suspension 2. Emulsion

3. Gel 4. Solution

10. What is the main use of alkyl benzene sulphonate?

1. As medicine

2. As a monomer for plastic

3. As detergent

4. As deodorant

11. Which year did India conduct the nuclear tests Pokhran 2?

1. 1998 2. 1996

3. 1995 4. 2000

12. Name the renowned archeologist from Karnataka who discovered the city of Dwaraka in Gujarat

1. Dr. Raman

2. Dr. S. R. Rao

3. Dr. Das

4. Dr. Vikram Pai

13. When a high intensity light is bounced off a sample material, a fraction of the photons undergo a shift in color. What is this phenomena called?

1. Doppler effect

2. Peltier effect

3. Balmer effect

4. Raman effect

14. Apart from being a renowned painter, he has also written about laws of friction and airplane design- who is he?

1. Leonardo Da Vinci

2. Newton

3. Einstein

4. Dr. Bhabha

15. "If not instantaneous it is extremely rapid" – Which famous scientist made this comment about light?

1. Einstein 2. Marconi

3. Galileo 4. Newton

16. Which is the first indigenous civilian aircraft developed by NAL?

1. Vikrant 2. Agni

3. Trishul 4. Saras

17. Name the multinational company that was responsible for the Bhopal gas tragedy

1. Siemens 2. HCL

3. Union Carbide Corporation

4. Hindustan Lever

18. What are the nick names of the two nuclear bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki?

1. Little Boy and Fat Man

2. The American & The Britain

3. Tall Lady & The British Boy

4. US Lady & British Boy

19. All elementary particles are either Bosons or Fermions. Bosons are named after?

1. Markinsons

2. Buddha

3. Satyendra Nath Bose

4. Dr. Peterson

20. Vinegar has the following acid in it

1. Sulphuric Acid

2. Acetic acid

3. Arsenic Acid

4. Benzoic Acid

Answers

1. 1

The specialty of this number is: This is the smallest number that can be expressed as a sum of the cubes of 2 numbers in two different ways.

2. 4

3. 2

4. 2

5. 1

6. 3

7. 4

8. 1

9. 2

10. 3

11. 1

12. 2

13. 4

14. 1

15. 3

16. 4

17. 3

18. 1

19. 3

20. 2

{2006/07/26}