CAT 2017 Verbal Ability Preparation - PaGaLGuY

Sentence Completion: Just could'nt understand..!!


Genre fiction has a poor reputation. By placing writer x in genre y, the assumption is sometimes that he or she deals with matters tangential to personal experience and hence to the real aims of literature. But such an assumption would seem to be based on a double misapprehension. Direct personal experience does not exist as such; and there is no simple recounting in literature (or in life). Experience can only be talked about in relation to specific concerns, which normally imply some genre or another.



1) Indeed, a good working definition of literature is ‘anything that does not fit into a genre’.

2) In other words, a mistaken view holds literature to be genre-free and genre fiction to be literature-free.

3) Genre fiction encourages a focus on one aspect at the expense of others, while great literature tends to open out into the universal.

4) On the other hand, classic writers like George Orwell and H.G. Wells tend to be indelibly associated with particular genres, though their subject matter ranges far and wide.





 

In the following questions a paragraph consisting of five  sentences is given. The sentences are jumbled and numbered 1, 2, 3, 4  and 5. Rearrange the jumbled sentences in the correct order so as to form a coherent paragraph and indicate the correct sequence of numbers in the box provided below each question.

Question:

(1) Many of these societies or cultures have traditionally developed strategies for conserving and managing nature and natural resources.

(2) These include totemism  (in which one or more species of plants or animals are protected as  spiritual ancestors), restraint on hunting female animals, conserving  certain species for rituals, keeping aside patches of forests and waterbodies in the name of local deities and so on.

(3)  Indian society is a bewildering mosaic of different traditions and  cultures, ranging from hunting-gathering communities like the Jarawas of the Andaman and Nicobar islands, forest-dwelling agriculturalists like the Kanis of Kerala, traditional shifting cultivators like the tribes of north-eastern India, and of course a range of urbanites.

(4) These strategies were highly congruent to the traditional lifestyle of the respective societies.

(5) In many parts of India, local people even now follow several such traditional conservation practices.

 

In the following questions a paragraph consisting of five  sentences is given. The sentences are jumbled and numbered 1, 2, 3, 4  and 5. Rearrange the jumbled sentences in the correct order so as to form a coherent paragraph and indicate the correct sequence of numbers in the box provided below each question.

Question:

(1) Air pollution can be controlled by preventing the escape of toxic substances into the environment from industries, motor cars and spraying of pesticides.

(2) Respiratory problems like chronic bronchitis and lung cancer are associated with increased air pollution.

(3) Air is essential for life.

(4) The most common pollution of air in India is by dust and smoke.

(5) Hence pollution of air is detrimental to health. 

 

In the following questions a paragraph consisting of five  sentences is given. The sentences are jumbled and numbered 1, 2, 3, 4  and 5. Rearrange the jumbled sentences in the correct order so as to form a coherent paragraph and indicate the correct sequence of numbers in the box provided below each question.

Question:

(1) For this, they had to observe and understand nature.

(2) Human beings from prehistoric times, attempted to control nature for their own welfare.

(3) And this, in turn, led to improved techniques for satisfying their needs.

(4)  While this understanding led to useful applications, it also opened up  further questions and avenues of enquiry, enriching the stock of  knowledge.

(5) Science is a human endeavour.

PJ- partly correct , partly wrong:D



A. Is that true any longer?

B. In Max Planck’s family in Germany at the beginning of the twentieth century, the humanities were regarded as a superior form of knowledge (and the Plancks were not atypical).

C. Science is a cumulative story, because later results modify earlier ones, thereby increasing its authority.

D. A hundred years ago, writers such as Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Friedrich Nietzsche, Henri Bergson, and Thomas Mann could seriously hope to say something about the human condition that rivalled the scientific understanding then at hand, and the same may be said about

musicians and artists such as Richard Wagner, Johannes Brahms, Claude Monet, or Edouard Manet.

E. The arts and humanities have always reflected the society they are part of, but over the last one hundred years, they have spoken with less and less confidence.

F. That is part of the point of science, and as a result the arts and humanities have been to an extent overwhelmed and overtaken by the sciences in the twentieth century, in a way quite unlike anything that happened in the nineteenth century or before.

Sentence Correction


In the following question, there are sentences that form a paragraph. Identify the sentence(s) or part(s) of sentence(s) that is/are correct

in terms of grammar and usage (including spelling, punctuation and logical consistency). 


A. There is no shortage of images of the human body in Egyptian art. In some painted regal tombs, such as that of Rameses VI in the

Valley of the Kings near Luxor, there are literally thousands of bodily images covering ceilings and walls.

B. Descending into such a densely decorated space, its layered and patterned intricacy is immediately striking.

C. The multiple hieroglyphs emphasize that effect, but so too do the bodies. Many are linked in registers, repeated as if in procession.

D. But even when depicted in some particular gesture or action, these bodies are remarkably alike. Those that are unusual in size and

shape,

E. do not represent ordinary mortals, but rather the pharaoh and certain associated deities, which in Egyptian religion are often

zoomorphic (taking the form of animals).

 PJ


A. The situations in which violence occurs and the nature of that violence tends to be clearly defined at least in theory, as in the proverbial Irishman’s question: “Is this a private fight or can anyone join in?”


B. So the actual risk to outsiders, though no doubt higher than our societies, is calculable.


C. Probably the only uncontrolled applications of force are those of social superiors to social inferiors and even here there are probably some rules.


D. However binding the obligation to kill, members of feuding families engaged in mutual massacre will be genuinely appalled if by some mischance a bystander or outsider is killed. 

Bull CAT 12 - Q25Para Jumbles
1. Chemistry gave us medicine and more fresh food.

2. Psychology is still taking baby steps, designing empirical tests of unsurprising observations.

3. Physics gave us electricity, skyscrapers, and the Internet.

4. It may be too much to expect science to reliably save marriages, but how desperately we need the secret to stopping people from burning others alive.

5. Our fascination with the brain seems to come from a longing to make psychology more like a hard science and hence, we assume, more useful. 


Answer is 53124. My question is, is there any basis of 3 coming before or after 1? or its just random.. Its not clear in the solutions given by Hit Bulls Eye. 

 

Spot the error-  


The ship was an easy prey for pirates as her board railings were rather low, more than three meters above water.


Source-TIME

  Didnt get what the author is trying to say...!!!!

Is it a bit tough or I am lacking somewhere

@akashmohan   @summi_arora @akhilforCAT  


The epistemological version of what I am calling the reproach of abstraction derives mainly from Humean empiricism, with its psychological conception of abstract ideas as the product of ‘customary conjunctions’ of particular ideas, based on resemblances, annexed to ‘general names’. This is essentially a psychologistic updating of medieval nominalism. The practical-political version of the reproach is perhaps most commonly associated with the Lukácsian trajectory of Western Marxism, although it is also found in various sociologies of modernity, such as Simmel’s, and it appears in a more literary-philosophical form in the complexly entwined traditions of French Heideggerianism and French Nietzscheanism. It is epitomized in its Marxist variant by Moishe Postone’s concept of ‘abstract domination’, set out in Time, Labour, and Social Domination     

Abstract domination is ‘the domination of people by abstract, quasi-independent structures of social relations, mediated by commodity determined labour … the impersonal, nonconscious, nonmotivational, mediate form of necessity characteristic of capitalism.’ Abstract domination, in others words, is domination by abstractions. These two critical tendencies – epistemological and practical-political– often converge within Marxism, as in Derek Sayers’s The Violence of Abstraction . But their combination is by no means restricted to the Marxist tradition. Indeed, there is a paradoxical position, more or less explicit in a great deal of contemporary theory ; it is shared, for example, by deconstruction and Adorno’s version of critical theory, which holds that, not merely despite but precisely because of the necessity of abstraction to thought ,(the character of the necessity, that is), there is something both cognitively and politically inadequate about knowledge itself: not only existing knowledge, but all possible knowledges. For Feyerabend, for example, the history of Western thought could be told as ‘A Tale of Abstraction versus the Richness of Being’. Increasingly, it seems, from a variety of different standpoints, abstraction – understood here as conceptual abstraction – is accompanied by both a certain melancholy (loss of the real object) and a certain shame (complicity in the domination of the concept and hence repression of other, more vibrant, more creative aspects of existence).     


This can be seen, I think, in the growing reverence and enthusiasm for ‘singularities’ of various sorts: reverence in the spirit of the construal of alterity in the Levinas–Nancy tradition, that religious ‘dream of a purely heterological thought’ otherwise called ‘pure empiricism’; enthusiasm on the model of •i•ek’s embrace of Badiou’s ‘act as event’. It is also visible in the turn within literary studies away from ‘theory’, strictly construed, towards a historicist particularism, on the one hand, and a revival of interest in ‘aesthetics’ (in its nineteenthcentury disciplinary sense – quite different from Kant’s philosophical sense of aesthetic as critique), on the other. This movement has a correlate in studies in the visual arts, in which the Anglo-American reception of Deleuze has become entangled. Indeed, in this context, certain theoretical terminologies have themselves become primarily aesthetic means.  





Which of the following cannot be inferred from the passage ?

(a) The author’s view on the reproach of abstraction, stems from the tendency of generalising the ideas and concepts on the basis of existing ideas.

(b) The practical-political and the epistemological versions of the reproach of abstraction have converged on more than one occasion, including the Marxist tradition.

(c) The practical – political version of the reproach of abstraction is different from the epistemological version, as the former is associated with contemporary texts whereas the latter is associated with medieval texts.

(d) None of the above.




Which of the following is a suitable title for the passage ?

(a) The two versions of the reproach to abstraction.

(b) Opposition to abstraction and its domination.

(c) Domination by abstractions and its effects on an individual’s psyche and society.

(d) Contemporary trends resulting from the two versions of the reproach to abstraction.





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 ##jaago post ##

Idiom
KNEE-HIGH TO A GRASSHOPPER

Very slim

Very energetic

very young

minute object

 While nobody can deny that Facebook has altered the landscape of social interaction, particularly among young people, we are just now starting to see solid psychological research demonstrating both the positives and the negatives,” said Larry D. Rosen, PhD, professor of psychology at California State University, Dominguez Hills. In a plenary talk entitled, “Poke Me: How Social Networks Can Both Help and Harm Our Kids,” Rosen discussed potential adverse effects. 

Teens who use Facebook more often show more narcissistic tendencies while young adults who have a strong Facebook presence show more signs of other psychological disorders, including antisocial behaviors, mania and aggressive tendencies. Daily overuse of media and technology has a negative effect on the health of all children, preteens and teenagers by making them more prone to anxiety, depression, and other psychological disorders, as well as by making them more susceptible to future health problems. Facebook can be distracting and can negatively impact learning. 

Rosen said new research has also found positive influences linked to social networking. Young adults who spend more time on Facebook are better at showing “virtual empathy” to their online friends. Online social networking can help introverted adolescents learn how to socialize behind the safety of various screens, ranging from a two-inch smartphone to a 17-inch laptop. Social networking can provide tools for teaching in compelling ways that engage young students.

For parents, Rosen offered guidance. “If you feel that you have to use some sort of computer program to surreptitiously monitor your child's social networking, you are wasting your time. Your child will find a workaround in a matter of minutes,” he said. “You have to start talking about appropriate technology use early and often and build trust, so that when there is a problem, whether it is being bullied or seeing a disturbing image, your child will talk to you about it.”

He encouraged parents to assess their child’s activities on social networking sites, and discuss removing inappropriate content or connections to people who appear problematic. Parents also need to pay attention to the online trends and the latest technologies, websites and applications children are using, he said.

“Communication is the crux of parenting. You need to talk to your kids, or rather, listen to them,” Rosen said. “The ratio of parent listen to parent talk should be at least five-to-one. Talk one minute and listen for five.”

7.What does Rosen suggest about parents in the passage?


a)Parents do not trust their kids and are fond of advising them but are not keen in listening to them.


b)Some parents make an effort to keep a watch directly on their kids.


c)Parents are not smart enough to monitor their kids secretly.


d)Most parents do not realize the importance of communicating with their kids. 

Hi guys..can anyone tell me how to increase my reading skills. My accuracy is just fine but I am spending too much of time per question. Any suggestion, tips or method for improvement?? I am reading books, newspaper regularly still unable to work on time management skills.

 The most important consequence of technology is in forcing the division and sub-division of any task to its component parts. 

Is this sentence a fact or an inference?

#essence of the passage 

 Physically, inertia is a feeling that you just can’t move; mentally, it is a sluggish mind. Even if you try to be sensitive, if your mind is sluggish, you just don’t feel anything intensely. You may even see a tragedy enacted in front of your eyes and not be able to respond meaningfully. You may see one person exploiting another, one group persecuting another, and not be able to get angry. Your energy is frozen. You are not deliberately refusing to act; you just don’t have the capacity.

A. Inertia makes your body and mind sluggish. They become insensitive to tragedies, exploitation, and persecution because it freezes your energy and decapacitates it.

B. When you have inertia you don’t act although you see one person exploiting another or one group persecuting another. You don’t get angry because you are incapable.

C. Inertia is of two types — physical and mental. Physical inertia restricts bodily movements. Mental inertia prevents mental response to events enacted in front of your eyes.

D. Physical inertia stops your body from moving; mental inertia freezes your energy, and stops your mind from responding meaningfully to events ,even tragedies ,in front of you .

The failure of every former attempt to reach the Nile source did not astonish me, as the expeditions consisted of parties,which, when difficuties occur, generaly end in difference of opinion and in retreat; I therefor _____________to proceed alone, trusting in the guidance od Divine PRovidence and the good fortune that sometimes attends a _____________ of purpose.

  • sought, sturdiness
  • determined, tenaciry

0 voters

This question has a paragraph from which the last sentence has been deleted. From the given options, choose the sentence that completes the paragraph in the most appropriate way.



A team of researchers led by astronomer Ivan Ramirez of the University of Texas at Austin has identified the first 'sibling' of the sun. There is a chance, small, but not zero, that such solar sibling stars could host planets that harbour life. In their earliest days within their birth cluster, collisions could have knocked chunks off of planets, and these fragments could have travelled between solar systems, an perhaps even may have been responsible for bringing primitive life to Earth.


1) Though the solar sibling is not visible to the unaided eye, it can be seen with low-power binoculars, not far from the bright star Vega.

2) Interestingly, the first sibling of the sun is almost certainly born from the same cloud of gas and dust as our sun.

3) So it could be argued that solar siblings are the key candidates in the search for extraterrestrial life.

4) But several factors are needed to really pin down solar siblings, including chemical analysis and their paths around the Milky Way galaxy.

Is it so that a sentence to contain 'nevertheless' or 'however', a semicolan is required...??


Eg

Lady Jane Grey is mythologized so as an innocent girl sacrificed on the altar of her mother's ambition, however the truth is that her muchmaligned

mother is in fact also a victim.


The correct sentence should be---


1)Lady Jane Grey is mythologized as an innocent girl sacrificed on the altar of her mother's ambition, but the truth is that her muchmaligned

mother is in fact also a victim.



2)Lady Jane Grey is mythologizedas an innocent girl sacrificed at the altar of her mother's ambition, nevertheless the truth is that her muchmaligned

mother is in fact also a victim.



Why can't we choose he second one as correct option??

TITA PJ. Source SIMCAT 10


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