English Practice Question and Answer
8 Q:Directions : In each of the following questions a grammatically correct and meaningful sentence is given with four words given in bold in each. Which of the following words should replace each other to form a meaningful and grammatically correct sentence. The meaning can be different from the one in question.
The government has (A) tampered with institutions by appointing its own people to positions of (B)authority, and by using the (C) Enforcement Directorate, Income Tax authorities, the Central Bureau of Investigation and the (D)police as bulldozers to flatten out any site of opposition.
1253 05fd07fce29ce5a3fbe054a06
5fd07fce29ce5a3fbe054a06- 1A-Cfalse
- 2B-Dfalse
- 3C-D and A-Bfalse
- 4C-Dtrue
- 5A-Dfalse
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Answer : 4. "C-D"
Q:Directions : In each of the following questions a grammatically correct and meaningful sentence is given with four words given in bold in each. Which of the following words should replace each other to form a meaningful and grammatically correct sentence. The meaning can be different from the one in question.
The tsunami of 2004 and the (A) threat of piracy in the Indian Ocean provided India an (B)opportunity to test its new posture. Everybody was (C)grateful, but it made no difference to India’s claim to (D)permanent membership.
1361 05fd07f73c46a213fc5b8350b
5fd07f73c46a213fc5b8350b- 1No interchange possiblefalse
- 2A-Bfalse
- 3B-Cfalse
- 4B-Dfalse
- 5A-Dtrue
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Answer : 5. "A-D"
Q:Directions : In each of the following questions a grammatically correct and meaningful sentence is given with four words given in bold in each. Which of the following words should replace each other to form a meaningful and grammatically correct sentence. The meaning can be different from the one in question.
It is (A) imperative that there be course corrections; otherwise the (B)exercise runs the risk of fueling a (C) parallel movement against the state by those being (D)victimised now.
1803 05fd07f212cbd2c3f9a3ca130
5fd07f212cbd2c3f9a3ca130- 1A-Dfalse
- 2A-Cfalse
- 3A-Bfalse
- 4B-Dfalse
- 5No interchange is possibletrue
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Answer : 5. "No interchange is possible"
Q:Directions : In each of the following questions a grammatically correct and meaningful sentence is given with four words given in bold in each. Which of the following words should replace each other to form a meaningful and grammatically correct sentence. The meaning can be different from the one in question.
Immediately the sympathies of the (A) police and (B) magistrates, some sections of the media and (C) public opinion swing towards the (D) perpetrator, not the victim.
1577 05fd07eda1ebe713f940202eb
5fd07eda1ebe713f940202eb- 1A-Cfalse
- 2A-Btrue
- 3B-Dfalse
- 4B-Afalse
- 5No Interchange Possiblefalse
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Answer : 2. "A-B"
Q:Directions : In each of the following questions a grammatically correct and meaningful sentence is given with four words given in bold in each. Which of the following words should replace each other to form a meaningful and grammatically correct sentence. The meaning can be different from the one in question.
The Central government is unable to provide the funds while Kerala has been stopped in its
(A) tracks from seeking resources from
(B) abroad, either from the Kerala
(c) diaspora or from friendly
(D) overseas governments.
1553 05fd07e902cbd2c3f9a3c9f28
5fd07e902cbd2c3f9a3c9f28(A) tracks from seeking resources from
(B) abroad, either from the Kerala
(c) diaspora or from friendly
(D) overseas governments.
- 1C-Bfalse
- 2A-Dfalse
- 3B-Dtrue
- 4A-Bfalse
- 5No Interchange Possiblefalse
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Answer : 3. "B-D"
Q:Directions: Read the following passage and answer the questions as directed.
Start-ups troubled by the so-called angel tax may soon receive some (A)______from the government. On Monday, the Centre set up a five-member working committee to look into revising the (B)norms of the angel tax imposed on start-ups. The tax, which was first introduced in 2012 to curb money-laundering through the (i) at bloated prices, has caused a lot of anguish among start-up investors in the country. Start-up owners have complained that income tax officials have asked many start-ups to cough up money when they try to attract capital into their entities by issuing new shares. For its part, the IT department fears that start-ups may be used as convenient tools to launder illegally acquired money, so a tax on investments beyond a certain threshold is (ii). (C) But while the (1) unintended of such an angel tax may be (2) benefits, the arbitrary nature of it means the cost of (3) intent consequences could be larger than the supposed (4) justifiable. In trying to curb money-laundering, Section 56(2)(viib) of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1961 gives income tax officials a free hand to harass even genuine start-ups looking to raise investments for their growth. Under the Act, the IT department is free to arbitrarily decide the fair value of a company’s share and tax start-ups if the price at which their new shares are sold to investors is higher than the fair value of these shares. The broad-brush tax on all investments means an unnecessary cost is (iii)community simply because of the lack of better means at the government’s disposal to tackle black money.
The committee set up by the government will, among other things, consider raising the threshold beyond which new investments into start-ups will be taxed. It is expected that start-ups with aggregate paid-up share capital and share premium of less than ₹25 crore, against the previous threshold of only ₹10 crore, will not be taxed while attracting new investment. This would definitely make life easier to a certain extent for angel investors and start-ups. But it will not address the real problem with the angel tax, which has to do with the unbridled power that it vests in the hands of the income tax authorities. Investors, foreign or domestic, may become wary of investing in new ideas when they are taxed while risking money on untested ventures. So the government should look to withdraw the angel tax and focus instead on building the capability to better identify and rein in illegal wealth. Otherwise it risks killing the nascent start-up ecosystem in the country.
As per the information given in the passage, out of the following options which option does best explain the term “angel investor”?
1181 05fd07dbc1ebe713f9401eb49
5fd07dbc1ebe713f9401eb49- 1Angel investors are those who don’t look for the low risk investment that might yield a more reliable return, because those start-ups fail too.false
- 2Angel investors are those who own shares in the business, not revenue, and not profitsfalse
- 3An angel investor is an affluent individual who provides capital for a business start-up.true
- 4Angel investors are often retired entrepreneurs or executives, who may be interested in angel investing for reasons that go beyond pure monetary return.false
- 5None of the abovefalse
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Answer : 3. "An angel investor is an affluent individual who provides capital for a business start-up."
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Answer : 5. "Both (a) and (b)"
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