CMAT GK Question Bank
CMAT GK Question Bank
CMAT GK Question Bank
CM A T
Geography
1. Consider the following statements I. The part of the Himalayas lying between Satluj and Kali rivers is known as Punjab Himalayas. II. The part of Himalayas lying between Tista and Dihang rivers is known as Assam Himalayas. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 2. The northern part of the western coastal plains of India is also known as (a) Northern Circar (b) Malabar coast (c) Kannad Plain (d) Konkan Which is the largest drainage basin in the world? (a) Nile basin (b) Amazon basin (c) Congo basin (d) Mississippi basin
8.
Consider the following statements I. The bhabhar belt of the northern plains lies south of the terai belt. II. The streams and rivers re-emerge in the terai belt of the northern plains. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
9.
Which of the following is not a tributary of the Indus river? (a) Shyok (b) Zaskar (c) Nubri (d) Lohit Consider the following statements I. Plants take in carbon dioxide through the roots. II. Plants exhibit transpiration through stomata Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
3.
4.
The pattern formed when a river is joined by its tributaries at approximately right angles is known as (a) trellis pattern (b) dendritic pattern (c) rectangular pattern (d) radial pattern Which of the following states does not share its boundary with Nepal? (a) Bihar (b) Uttar Pradesh (c) West Bengal (d) Jharkhand The northern plains of India are formed of (a) alluvial soil (b) red yellow soil (c) black soil (d) laterite soil Which of the following is the highest peak of the Wastern Ghats? (a) Doda Betta (b) Mahendragiri (c) Javadi Hills (d) Shevroy Hills
5.
6.
7.
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10. 11. 12.
Consider the following statements I. The Central Highlands lie north of the Narmada river. II. The Deccan Trap is made up of metamorphic rocks. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. Khadar belt of the northern plains of India is formed of older alluvium. II. The Eastern Ghats are higher than the Western Ghats. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
CM A T
AT
13.
Which is the outermost Himalayan ranges (towards India)? (a) Shiwaliks (b) Himadri (c) Panjal (d) Dhaula Dhar Consider the following statements A : Plants absorb nitrogen through soil. R : Plants cannot absorb nitrogen in the gaseous form. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) if A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) if A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
18.
14.
The Moho discontinuity is the (a) boundary between earths crust and earths mantle. (b) boundary between earths mantle and earths core. (c) lower layer of the earths mantle (d) upper layer of the earths core. Consider the following statements I. The outer core is solid while the inner core is in liquid state. II. Being composed mainly of non metals like carbon, sulphur and hydrogen, the earths core is also known as the non metallic core. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. Density of rocks increases as we do down from the crust to the core of the earth. II. The continental crust is less dense than the oceanic crust. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
19.
15.
Consider the following statements I. According to the Indus Water Treaty, India can use 60% of the total water carried by the Indus river system. II. Before entering India, the Brahmaputra takes a U turn.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 16. Which of the following is a distributary of river Ganga? (a) Teesta (b) Hooghly (c) Damodar (d) Saraswti Which of the following is mass wasting? (a) the various kinds of uphill movements occurring on earth due to the plate collisions. (b) the various kinds of uphill movements occurring on earth due to the gravitational pull from moon (c) the various kinds of downhill movements occurring under the pull of gravity (d) melting of icebergs due to global warming. 21.
17.
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CM
20. 22. 23.
The most abundant element of the earths crust is (a) Silicon (b) Oxygen (c) Aluminium (d) Iron Which of the following is not a metamorphic rock? (a) Gneiss (b) Slate (c) Granite (d) Marble Consider the following statements I. The continental crust of the earth is thinner than the oceanic crust. II. The asthenosphere is a layer found at the top of the upper mantle. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
CM A T
AT
24.
Consider the following statements I. Metamorphic rocks are also called primary or basic rocks II. Igneous rocks are formed when magma cools and solidifies. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
30.
Which of the following is the coldest place in the northern hemisphere? (a) Tomsk (b) Verkhoyansk (c) Irkutsk (d) Nunavut Five nautical miles are equal to (a) 8 km (b) 9.26 km (c) 12.6 km (d) 16 km The Exclusive Economic Zone shall not extend beyond (a) 200 km (b) 280.6 km (c) 320.6 km (d) 370.4 km In terms of the installed capacity of wind energy, which of the following states is at the top in India? (a) Gujarat (b) Kerala (c) Tamil Nadu (d) Madhya Pradesh In wind power generation (a) Kinetic energy is converted into electrical energy (b) Potential energy is converted into electrical energy (c) Thermal energy is converted into kinetic energy (d) Potential energy is converted into thermal energy
31.
25.
Consider the following statements I. Shale is a result of metamorphosis of igneous rocks. II. Himalayas are result of collision of continental plates. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
32.
26.
Consider the following statements I. The San Andreas fault is a result of collision between oceanic and continental plates. II. The inner core of the earth is made mostly of copper and zinc.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 27. Which of the following is the deepest lake in the world? (a) Caspian sea (b) Vostok lake (c) Baikal lake (d) Pinatubo lake Consider the following statements I. The Pamir Knot is the meeting place of many Himalayan rivers. II. The Pamir Knot is located to the south of Mount Everest. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 29. Which of the following is the second highest peak in the world? (a) Kanchenjunga (b) K2 (c) Lhotse (d) Nanga Parbat 35.
28.
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34. 36.
33.
Which of the following Indian states has the highest bauxite reserve? (a) Tamil Nadu (b) Jharkhand (c) Chhattisgarh (d) Odisha Which of the following statements is correct? (a) Net Sown Area is known as gross cropped area (b) Area sown more than once in an agricultural year plus gross cropped area is also known as Net Sown Area (c) Area sown more than once in an agricultural year plus net sown area is known as Gross Cropped Area (d) Net Sown Area is more than Gross Cropped Area
CM A T
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37.
Saurashtra has mostly: (a) red soil (b) alluvial soil (c) black soil (d) laterite soil Consider the following statements I. The total surface area covered by plateaus is more than the total surface area covered by plains in India II. After independence, National Forest Policy was first set up in 1988.
44.
38.
Consider the following statements I. Fossil fuels are non renewable but recyclable resources. II. All renewable resources are inexhaustible resources. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
45. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 39. Consider the following statements I. The Rose-ringed Parakeet is an endemic bird in India II. Indian wild ass is an endangered species.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 40. The Buxa Tiger Reserve is located in (a) Odisha (b) West Bengal (c) Rajasthan (d) Gujarat Dolomite is an ore of (a) Magnesium (b) Manganese (c) Aluminium (d) Iron Who wrote the book Small is Beautiful? (a) Harlem Brundtland (b) Ernst Friedrich Schumacher (c) Mahatma Gandhi (d) Amartya Sen Consider the following statements I. In India hydroelectric power contributes more than half of the total electricity produced II. More than 50 % of worlds total freshwater is stored as groundwater. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Page 4
41.
42.
43.
CM
46. 47. 48.
Consider the following statements I. The Net Sown Area is just less than 50 % of the total surface area in Punjab and Haryana II. In India, there is no appropriate technology to harness stock resources. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none The headquarters of the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources is in (a) Switzerland (b) Austria (c) France (d) United States of America Which of the following is now on the verge of extinction? (a) Madhuca Insignis (b) Azadirachta Indica (c) Prosopis Juliflora (d) Acacia nilotica Consider the following statements I. The State of Forest Report does not differentiate between natural forests and plantations. II. Indian Rhino is an endangered species. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
CM A T
AT
49.
Mithun a cattle breed is found in (a) Rajasthan (b) Maharashtra (c) Arunachal Pradesh (d) Kerala The Chipko movement was practised to stop (a) illegal acquisition of land (b) deforestation (c) hunting of tigers (d) illegal indigo plantation. Which of the following former Prime Ministers pronounced the dams as the temples of modern India? (a) Indira Gandhi (b) Jawaharlal Nehru (c) Lal Bahadur Shastri (d) Morarji Desai Which of the following countries is the largest producer of rice in the world? (a) India (b) China (c) Russia (d) Brazil Who started the Bhoodan-Gramdan movement in 1951? (a) Vinoba Bhave (b) Mahatma Gandhi (c) Sarojini Naidu (d) Vallabhbhai Patel
56.
Which of the following is mined in the Badampahar mines in Odisha? (a) Hematite (b) Bauxite (c) Dolomite (d) Azurite Mica is presently not mined in which of the following states? (a) Rajasthan (b) Andhra Pradesh (c) Bihar (d) Punjab Anthracite is a kind of (a) iron (b) virus (c) coal (d) pesticide The Musi and the Bhima are tributaries of river (a) Krishna (b) Kaveri (c) Mahanadi (d) Brahmaputra Which of the following is the deepest point in the world? (a) Puerto Rico Trench b Mariana Trench (c) Java Trench (d) Eurasia Basin The Tropic of Cancer, the Equator and the Tropic of Capricorn all pass through continent X. What is X? (a) Africa (b) Asia (c) Both Africa and Asia (d) None North America is linked to South America by a very narrow strip of land called (a) the Isthmus of Mexico (b) the Isthmus of Panama (c) the Isthmus of Costa Rica (d) the Isthmus of Honduras What is the ascending order of the following in terms of area covered? (a) Indian Ocean - Arctic Ocean - Atlantic Ocean - Pacific Ocean (b) Atlantic Ocean - Arctic Ocean - Indian Ocean - Pacific Ocean (c) Arctic Ocean - Indian Ocean - Atlantic Ocean - Pacific Ocean (d) Indian Ocean - Arctic Ocean - Pacific Ocean - Atlantic Ocean General Knowledge Question Bank
57.
50.
58.
51.
59.
52.
53.
54.
Rearing of silkworms is known as (a) horticulture (b) apiculture (c) sericulture (d) pisciculture Consider the following statements I. Operation Flood was launched by the Government of India in 1970 to control the damage caused by floods in India II. Rubber plant is an equatorial crop. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
55.
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60. 61. 62. 63.
CM A T
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64.
Arctic Ocean is connected with the Pacific Ocean by a narrow stretch of shallow water which is known as (a) Strait of Dover (b) Strait of Gibraltar (c) Bab-el-Mandeb (d) Berring Strait Which is the longest mountain range in the world? (a) Andes (b) Rocky Mountains (c) Himalayas (d) Great Diving Range Which mountain range separates Europe from Asia? (a) Andes (b) Alps (c) Ural Mountains (d) Rocky Mountains The Indian Standard Time is calculated from a clock tower located in : (a) Kolkata (b) Bhopal (c) Mirzapur (d) New Delhi Which of the following are found in tropical rain forests of India? (a) Ebony and Teak (b) Ebony and Rosewood (c) Mahogany and Sal (d) Sal and Shisham Sundari is a well-known species of trees found in (a) Mangrove forests (b) Tropical deciduous forests (c) Tropical rain forests (d) Himalayan mountains Wild goats are found in (a) Himalayan region (b) Rann of Kachchh (c) Great Indian Desert (d) Sundarbans What is the third most abundant gas in earths atmosphere? (a) Carbon dioxide (b) Argon (c) Hydrogen (d) Helium
72.
You are in Karnataka and moving in the direction of the Pole Star. Highest probability is that you will reach X first as you exit from Karnataka What is X? (a) Andhra Pradesh (b) Maharashtra (c) Tamil Nadu (d) Arabian Sea Which planet is considered as Earths-Twin? (a) Venus (b) Mercurey (c) Mars (d) Saturn Which of the following rivers are west flowing? (a) Mahanadi (b) Godavari (c) Narmada (d) Krishna The highest waterfall in the world is (a) Iguazu Falls (b) Niagara Falls (c) Victoria Falls (d) Angel Falls Tropical grasslands in Brazil are known as (a) Campos (b) Llanos (c) Pampas (d) Prairie Taiga are found in which of the following places? (a) South Africa (b) Russia (c) Egypt (d) Indonesia Ox-bow is a type of (a) Tree (b) Grass (c) Lake (d) None of the above The waters of the Gangotri glacier flow through Gaumukh, giving rise to the river Bhagirathi. Ganga is formed at the town of Devprayag when Bhagirathi (which is its main source) joins with river: (a) Gomti (b) Son (c) Alaknanda (d) Ghaghara Tawa Matsya Sangh is a cooperative of fisherworkers in (a) Madhya Pradesh (b) Assam (c) Orissa (d) Kerala
65.
73.
74.
66.
67.
68.
69.
70.
71.
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75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80.
CM A T
AT
81.
Manas Tiger Reserve is located in which Indian state? (a) Assam (b) Madhya Pradesh (c) Rajasthan (d) Uttaranchal Which is the only state in India which has made roof top rainwater harvesting structure compulsory for every single house in the state? (a) Tamil Nadu (b) Kerala (c) Karnataka (d) Orissa Aus, Aman and Boro are crop varieties of (a) Wheat (b) Maize (c) Rice (d) Bajra
89.
The North-South Corridor highway crosses the East-West Corridor highway in (a) Bhopal (b) Jhansi (c) Jabalpur (d) Gwalior The Indian Railways is divided into how many zones? (a) 4 (b) 8 (c) 12 (d) 16 Which of the following is the premier iron ore exporting port of India? (a) Kandla port (b) Marmagao port (c) Kochchi port (d) Jawaharlal Nehru port Consider the following statements I. Oil India Limited is a wholly public sector undertaking. II. Cryolite is an iron ore. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
82.
90.
91.
83.
84.
Which of the following pairs is wrongly matched? (a) Paddy : Kharif (b) Wheat : Rabi (c) Jute : Rabi (d) Cotton : Kharif Which of the following is the largest producer of jowar in India? (a) Maharashtra (b) Punjab (c) Andhra Pradesh (d) Karnataka Which is the longest national highway in India? (a) National Highway-7 (b) National Highway-8 (c) National Highway-12 (d) National Highway-15 National Highway-1 is also known as (a) Jawaharlal Nehru Marg (b) Qutub Uddin Marg (c) Sher Shah Suri Marg (d) Maharana Pratap Marg The East-West Corridor highway project is from (a) Silcher to Porbander (b) Silcher to New Bhuj (c) Itanagar to New Bhuj (d) Itanagar to Porbander
85.
86.
87.
88.
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92. 93. 94. 95.
Which of the following countries is the largest exporter of jute in the world? (a) India (b) Pakistan (c) Bangladesh (d) Thailand Which of the following countries has the highest average population density in the world (with population above 10 million)? (a) India (b) Bangladesh (c) Japan (d) Pakistan Consider the following statements I. Toothpastes contain fluoride which reduces cavity. II. Odisha is the largest producer of manganese ores in India. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
CM A T
AT
96.
Consider the following statements I. Lignite is a low grade manganese ore. II. About 300 kg of manganese is required to manufacture one tonne of steel. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
103.
Consider the following statements I. Rabi crops are grown with the offset of monsoon in India II. Barley is a rabi crop. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
104.
Where in Rajasthan is the Bhairodev Dakav Sonchuri located? (a) Alwar (b) Ajmer (c) Udaipur (d) Jodhpur Consider the following statements I. Biogas has higher thermal efficiency than kerosene. II. Madhya Pradesh is the biggest producer of copper in India Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Bhangar is a type of (a) Alluvial soil (b) Laterite soil (c) Black soil (d) Red soil The Panchmarhi Biosphere reserve is in (a) Uttarakhand (b) Karnataka (c) Andhra Pradesh (d) Madhya Pradesh Which Indian state has the largest forest cover in the country? (a) Madhya Pradesh (b) Punjab (c) Maharashtra (d) Kerala Consider the following statements I. Forest cover in India is less than the net sown area of the country. II. The forest area in India is just above the scientific norm of one-third of the total area Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
98.
99.
Consider the following statements I. Sabarmati is a west flowing river. II. Hemavati and Kabini are tributaries of river Kaveri.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 100. Monazite sands rich in thorium are found in (a) Kerala (b) Rajasthan (c) Gujarat (d) Chhattisgarh Which of the following is the highest jute producing state in India? (a) Gujarat (b) Maharashtra (c) West Bengal (d) Karnataka Consider the following statements I. Recent years have seen a tendency for the sugar mills to shift and concentrate in the southern and western states, especially in Maharashtra. This is because the cane produced here has higher sucrose content. II. India is the largest producer of sugar in the world Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Page 8
101.
102.
CM
106. 107. 108. 109.
Rawatbhata power station is a (a) nuclear power station (b) coal based thermal power station (c) hydroelectric power station (d) natural gas based thermal power station
105.
CM A T
AT
97.
Which of the following is the oldest petroleum producing state in India? (a) Gujarat (b) Assam (c) Maharashtra (d) Rajasthan
110.
Red soils are red in colour due to the presence (a) Copper (b) Nickel (c) Iron (d) Manganese Consider the following statements I. In India, the total protected forest area is larger than the total reserved forest area II. Out of the total wasteland area in India, the forest degraded area is larger than the water eroded area Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
118.
111.
Which of the countries is at the top of the Human Development Index ranking? (a) Germany (b) United States of America (c) Norway (d) Australia Which of the following is the highest producer of rubber in India? (a) Kerala (b) Tamil Nadu (c) Tripura (d) Assam According to the Census of India 2011, the Indian state with lowest sex ratio is (a) Rajasthan (b) Haryana (c) Madhya Pradesh (d) Bihar Pick the odd one out. (a) Mediterranean sea (b) Caspian sea (c) Aral sea (d) Dead sea Which of the following is the largest fresh water lake in India? (a) Loktak (b) Dal (c) Barapani (d) Wular Which of the following is a man made lake? (a) Loktak (b) Gobind Sagar (c) Chilika (d) Pulicat Consider the following statements I. Forest cover in India is less than the net sown area of the country. II. The forest area in India is just above the scientific norm of one-third of the total area Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
119.
120.
112.
Which of the following is not one of the four identified identified Coral Reef areas in India? (a) Gulf of Mannar (b) Gulf of Khambat (c) Gulf of Kutch (d) Lakshadweep Islands Which of the following soils are also known as regur soils? (a) Red soils (b) Black soils (c) Laterite soils (d) Mountain soils Which Indian state has the highest percentage of forest cover? (a) Kerala (b) Arunachal Pradesh (c) Mizoram (d) Himachal Pradesh
113.
114.
115.
Van Mahotsav in India is celebrated in the month of (a) May (b) June (c) July (d) August The Government of India launched Project Elephant in the year (a) 1973 (b) 1984 (c) 1992 (d) 2001 The Central Vigilance Commission of India was set up in (a) 1951 (b) 1964 (c) 1975 (d) 1987
116.
117.
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121. 122. 123. 124. 125.
The Kirthar Mountains are located in (a) Nepal (b) Bangladesh (c) Bhutan (d) Pakistan
CM A T
AT
126.
127.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 128. Which of the following pairs of rivers join together before flowing into the Bay of Bengal? (a) Godavari and Mahanadi (b) Krishna and Tungabhadra (c) Krishna and Kaveri (d) Tungabhadra and Kaveri Which of the following rivers empties into the Gulf of Khambhat? (a) Narmada (b) Godavari (c) Mahanadi (d) Kaveri The south-easternmost tributary of river Indus is (a) Ravi (b) Sutlej (c) Jhelum (d) Beas Which of the following is the odd one out as we talk about the direction of flow? (a) Tapi (b) Kaveri (c) Krishna (d) Mahanadi Which one of the following rivers emerges in the Amarkantak hills? (a) Krishna (b) Kaveri (c) Narmada (d) Godavari
129.
130.
131.
132.
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136. 137. 138. 139. 140.
Consider the following statements I. River Son joins the Ganga before river Chambal. II. River Chambal originates from the Satpuras.
135.
Which of the following is the largest peninsular river of India? (a) Kaveri (b) Godavari (c) Krishna (d) Narmada Which of the following rivers makes the Sivasamudram falls? (a) Krishna (b) Kaveri (c) Tungabhadra (d) Bhima Mahanadi originates in (a) Chhattisgarh (b) Jharkhand (c) Uttar Pradesh (d) Uttarakhand The Dhuadhar falls is located on river (a) Krishna (b) Narmada (c) Godavari (d) Mahanadi Which of the following is not a tributary of river Godavari? (a) Purna (b) Manjra (c) Wardha (d) Koyana Which of the following rivers is also known as Dakshin Ganga? (a) Godavari (b) Kaveri (c) Krishna (d) Mahanadi
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AT
Which of the following was an initiation taken under the Wildlife (Protection) Amendment Act, 1991? (a) For the first time butterflies and moths were added to the protected species list. (b) For the first time plants were added to the protected species list. (c) For the first time birds were added to the protected species list. (d) none of the above
133.
Which of the following rivers is also known as Tsang Po? (a) Indus (b) Ganga (c) Brahmaputra (d) Mahanadi Which of the following is the odd one out as we talk about the Indian states in which these rivers originate? (a) Tapi (b) Narmada (c) Godavari (d) Son
134.
141.
147. 142. The first International Earth Summit was held in (a) Rio de Janeiro (b) Vienna (c) Johannesburg (d) Frankfurt
143.
Declaration signed by world leaders in 1992 at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) to achieve global sustainable development is called (a) Target 21 (b) Agenda 21 (c) Declaration 92 (d) Agenda 92 There is enough for everybodys need and not for any bodys greed. Who said these word regarding conservation of resources? (a) Jawaharlal Nehru (b) Indira Gandhi (c) Mahatma Gandhi (d) Lal Bahadur Shastri
144.
145.
The Chairperson of a UN commission which introduced the concept of Sustainable Development in 1987 was (a) Javier Perez de Cuellar (b) Mansour Khalid (c) Margaret Thatcher (d) Gro Harlem Brundtland
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148. 149. 150. 151.
What type of soil is the Khadar Soil? (a) Alluvial Soil (b) Laterite Soil (c) Black Soil (d) Red and Yellow Soil Which of the following soils is ideal for cotton cultivation? (a) Alluvial Soil (b) Black Soil (c) Laterite Soil (d) Red and Yellow Soil Which of the following soils is result of intense leaching due to heavy rain? (a) Black Soil (b) Laterite Soil (c) Alluvial Soil (d) Red and Yellow Soil Consider the following statements I. Red and Yellow soils develop a reddish colour due to diffusion of magnesium in crystalline and metamorphic rocks. II. Black soils are generally rich in phosphoric content. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Red and yellow soil is found in which of the following states? (a) Jammu and Kashmir (b) Rajasthan (c) Madhya Pradesh (d) Gujarat
CM A T
AT
Consider the following statements I. Materials in the environment which have the potential to satisfy human needs but human beings do not have the appropriate technology to access them are known as potential resources. II. Resources which are found in a region, but have not been utilised are known as stock resources. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I only (b) II only (c) I and II (d) none
146.
Consider the following statements regarding India I. About 27% of the area of the country is the plateau region. II. According to the National Forest Policy (1952), forest cover should be 25% of the total geographical area of the country. Which of the above statements is/are are not correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
152.
Strip cropping is done to (a) prevent soil erosion caused by water. (b) prevent soil erosion caused by glaciers. (c) prevent soil erosion caused by wind (d) prevent coastal erosion. Which of the following birds falls under normal species category in India? (a) Pink-headed duck (b) Indian cormorant (c) Mountain quail (d) Forest spotted owlet Which of the following is used to make the biggest selling anti-cancer drug in the world? (a) Himalayan Yew (b) Vidanga (c) Poaceae (d) Himalayan oak Belgium does not share its borders with (a) France (b) Luxembourg (c) Austria (d) Germany Most of the Belgian population speaks (a) Dutch and French (b) Dutch and German (c) French and Spanish (d) Spanish and Portuguese The headquarters of the European Union is in (a) Vienna (b) Berlin (c) Zurich (d) Brussels Consider the following I. Providing information to the government about the crops grown in the area concerned II. Organising the collection of land revenue III. Keeping and updating land records like measurement, ownership, etc Which of the above is responsibility of a Patwari? (a) I only (b) II and III (c) I, II and III (d) III only
History
159. Which of the following was not occupied by the British or the French and just remained as a buffer state? (a) Thailand (b) Malaysia (c) Indonesia (d) China
153.
154.
160. Consider the following statements: I. Under the Treaty of Nanking in 1842, China took over Hong Kong from the British. II. The Second Opium War was fought between China and Japan. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none By the Treaty of Boque, X made the British its most favoured nation. X is (a) South Africa (b) China (c) Sri Lanka (d) Indonesia By 1885, Vietnam was completely under the possession of (a) the French (b) the Dutch (c) the British (d) the Portuguese X occupied Egypt from Ottoman Turkey in 1882. X is (a) France (b) Portugal (c) Belgium (d) Britain The Mughal Empire reached its greatest extent under (a) Akbar (b) Aurangzeb (c) Shah Jahan (d) Jahangir Fatwa-i-Alamgiri was created during the reign of (a) Humayun (b) Shah Jahan (c) Aurangzeb (d) Akbar Who was the first Nizam of Hyderabad? (a) Mujaffar Jung (b) Nasir Jung (c) Salabat Jung (d) Chin Quilich Khan
155.
156.
157.
158.
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161. 162. 163. 164. 165. 166.
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167.
Who took away the Peacock Throne from India? (a) Nadir Shah (b) Ahmed Shah Abdali (c) Mahmud of Ghazni (d) Muhammad Ghori Whom did Chhatrapati Shivaji considered his guru? (a) Chokhamela (b) Ramdas (c) Tukaram (d) Eknath The Treaty of Warna divided the Maratha Kingdom between (a) Sahuji and Sambhaji I (b) Rajaram and Sambhaji I (c) Rajaram and Sambhaji II (d) Sahuji and Sambhaji II
174.
The Sardeshmukhi, in the Maratha regime, was a (a) tax levied on revenue (b) designation equivalent to Peshwa (c) designation lesser to Peshwa (d) name given to the Chhatrapati Who was the first of the hereditary Peshwas of the Maratha kingdom? (a) Madhav-Rao I (b) Balaji Bajirao (c) Baji Rao I (d) Balaji Vishwanath Consider the following statements I. In the First Carnatic War, the British defeated the Nawab of Arcot. II. Anwar-ud-Din was the Nawab of Arcot in the First Carnatic War. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. The French, under Joseph Francois Dupleix, won the Third Carnatic War against the British. II. The Dutch joined the British against the French in the Carnatic Wars. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
168.
175.
169.
170.
Who defeated the Nizam-ul-Mulk and imposed the Treaty of Durai Sarai on him? (a) Sahuji (b) Sambhaji I (c) Baji Rao I (d) Shivaji Consider the following statements I. The Marathas restored Shah Alam II on the throne of Delhi in1772. II. Baji Rao I was also known as Nana Saheb
171.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 172. Whom did Shahuji, the Emperor of the Maratha Kingdom, made the Peshwa in 1713? (a) Madhavrao (b) Bajirao I (c) Balaji Vishwanath (d) Narayanrao Jiziya, during the Mughal Empire, was a tax levied on (a) mercantile companies like the East India Company (b) non-Muslim citizens (c) money lenders (d) all the citizens
173.
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177. 178.
176.
Consider the following statements I. Eyre Coote was the British General in the Battle of Wandiwash. II. The British defeated the French in the Battle of Wandiwash in 1760. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
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179.
Consider the following statements I. Robert Clive was the commander of the Company forces in the Battle of Buxar. II. In 1760, the Company replaced Mir Jafar with his son in law as the Nawab of Bengal. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
184.
The Treaty of Sagauli was signed between the British and the (a) Marathas (b) Nawab of Bengal (c) Nawab of Awadh (d) Gorkhas Who was the Governor-General of India during the First Anglo-Sikh War? (a) Lord Auckland (b) Lord Hardinge (c) Lord Dalhousie (d) Lord Canning Who among the following Governor-Generals of India introduced modern civil services based on separation of power? (a) Warren Hastings (b) Lord Dalhousie (c) Lord Cornwallis (d) Lord Ripon Consider the following statements I. Maharaja Dalip Singh entered the subsidiary alliance at Lahore in 1846. II. The Second Anglo-Sikh War was the last war fought by the British within the natural frontiers of India for the extension of their empire. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
185.
180.
181.
Which Governor-General of India sold Allahabad and Kara to the Nawab of Awadh? (a) Warren Hastings (b) Lord Cornwallis (c) Lord Wellesley (d) Lord Minto Who became the first Indian power to accept the subsidiary alliance? (a) Nawab of Awadh (b) Marathas (c) Nizam of Hyderabad (d) Kingdom of Mysore Consider the following statements I. By the Treaty of Bassein, Peshwa Baji Rao II accepted subsidiary alliance with the British. II. By the Treaty of Amritsar signed in1809, river Ravi had been fixed as the boundary between the British and Maharaja Ranjit Singhs territories. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
182.
183.
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187. 188. 189.
The English East India Company received the diwani of Bengal through the (a) Treaty of Bengal (b) Treaty of Allahabad (c) Treaty of Hyderabad (d) Treaty of Buxar
186.
From whom did the British take away the famous diamond Koh-i-noor to send it to Queen Victoria? (a) Maharaja Ranjit Singh (b) Maharaja Dalip Singh (c) Nadir Shah (d) Ahmed Shah Abdali The Holkars, one of the regional Maratha dynasties, was founded by (a) Ranoji (b) Malhar Rao (c) Damaji I (d) Raghuji
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190.
By the Treaty of Deogaon, Orissa was surrendered to the British by (a) Raghuji Bhonsle I (b) Raghuji Bhonsle II (c) Daulat Rao Sindhia (d) Jaswant Rao Holkar Who was the political agent sent by Lord Hardinge to Punjab to make them break the Treaty of Amritsar? (a) Major Broadfoot (b) Major Bardsley (c) Major Lawrence (d) Mojor Whistler The Gaikwar dynasty was founded by (a) Malhar Rao (b) Raghuji Bhonsle I (c) Raghuji Bhonsle II (d) Damaji I
196.
Swami Dayanand Saraswatis parental name was (a) Mula Sankara (b) Mula Krishnacharya (c) Om Sankara (d) Narayan Sankara Which Governor-General of India abolished the sati system? (a) Warren Hastings (b) Lord Cornwallis (c) Lord Dalhousie (d) Lord Bentinck After the premature death of Raja Rammohun Roy, the Brahmo Movement was given a new life by (a) Debendranath Tagore (b) Shankar Seth (c) Atmaram Pandurang (d) Ramakrishna Gopal Bhandarkar Who among the following was not a member of the Brahmo Samaj? (a) Keshab Chandra Sen (b) Debendranath Tagore (c) Mahadev Govind Ranade (d) Dwarkanath Tagore Henry Louis Vivian Derozio founded the (a) Deccan Education Society (b) Servants of India Society (c) Young Bengal Movement (d) Theosophical Movement Who was not a member of the Prarthana Samaj? (a) Mahadev Govind Ranade (b) Atmaram Pandurang (c) Gopal Krishna Gokhale (d) Jyotiba Phule The Deccan Education Society was formed under the spiritual guidance of (a) Swami Vivekananda (b) Mahadev Govind Ranade (c) Swami Dayananda Saraswati (d) Raja Rammohun Roy
191.
197.
192.
193.
Who introduced the dual government in Bengal? (a) Warren Hastings (b) Lord Cornwallis (c) Robert Clive (d) Lord Canning Consider the following statements I. The Governor-General of Bengal was made the Governor-General of India through the Regulating Act of 1773. II. The Charter Act of 1833 declared that no Indian shall hold any government position under the company. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
194.
195.
Which Act made the Governor-General of Bengal general authority over other two presidencies? (a) Regulating Act of 1773 (b) Charter Act of 1813 (c) Charter Act of 1833 (d) Charter Act of 1853
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199. 200. 201. 202.
198.
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203.
Who founded the Servants of India Society? (a) Gopal Krishna Gokhale (b) Annie Besant (c) Sayyid Ahmad Khan (d) Louis Vivian Derozio His campaign for the upliftment of the weak acquired the character of an anti-Brahmin movement. He is (a) Sayyid Ahmad Khan (b) Mohammad Ali Jinnah (c) Jyotiba Phule (d) Mahadev Govind Ranade The famous Fergusson College of Pune was founded under (a) Deccan Education Society (b) Theosophical Society of India (c) British Indian Association (d) none of the above
210.
Whose daughters marriage led to the second split in the Brahmo Samaj? (a) Shivnanda Shastri (b) Anand Mohan Bose (c) Keshab Chandra Sen (d) Raja Rammohun Roy Louis Vivian Derozio was a (a) teacher at Hindu College of Calcutta (b) French General in India in the early eighteenth century (c) Gandhian who actively supported the Indian freedom struggle (d) British General in India during the rebellion of 1857 The Theosophical Movement in India was started by (a) Mahadev Govind Ranade (b) Raja Rammohun Roy (c) Rabindranath Tagore (d) Annie Besant The Theosophical Society of India was founded at (a) Calcutta (b) Adyar (c) Nasik (d) Allahabad The Theosophical Society was first established in (a) USSR (b) United States of America (c) United Kingdom (d) India Who wrote the book Satyartha Prakash? (a) Swami Vivekanada (b) Ramakrishna Paramhamsa (c) Swami Dayanand Saraswati (d) Raja Rammohun Roy The New York Herald, after hearing him in the World Parliament at Chicago in 1893, reported -We feel how foolish it is to send missionaries to to this learned nation. He was (a) Swami Vivekananda (b) Swami Dayanand Saraswati (c) Raja Rammohun Roy (d) Rabindranath Tagore
204.
211.
206.
The Central Hindu College at Varanasi was founded in 1898 by (a) Annie Besant (b) Louis Vivian Derozio (c) Swami Vivekananda (d) Keshab Chandra Sen The first Headquarters of the Arya Samaj were at (a) Calcutta (b) Nasik (c) Lahore (d) Bomday The Shuddhi Movement was started by (a) Swami Dayanand Saraswati (b) Swami Vivekananda (c) Ramakrishna Paramahamsa (d) Baba Kharak Singh Who was the founder of the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College? (a) Maulana Hasrat Mohani (b) Hakim Ajmal Khan (c) Maulana Abul Kalam Azad (d) Sayyid Ahmad Khan
207.
208.
209.
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212. 213. 214. 215. 216.
205.
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217.
Swami Vivekanands original name was (a) Surendra Nath Bhat (b) Narendra Nath Bhat (c) Surendra Nath Dutta (d) Narendra Nath Dutta Tahzib-al-Akhlaq, a monthly periodical, was started by (a) Maulana Abul Kalam Azad (b) Sayyid Ahmad Khan (c) Muhammad Ali Jinnah (d) Pherozeshah Mehta The General Service Enlistment Act of 1856 required (a) the applicants of the Imperial Civil Services to be of the age of 21 years at most. (b) the applicants of the Imperial Civil Services to be of the age of 18 years at most. (c) every Indian soldier to serve wherever required. (d) every Indian soldier to use the Enfield rifles smeared with animal fat. Consider the following statements I. The Santhal Rebellion (1855-56) was against the Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah II. II. The Kuka Movement of 1860 was a socioreligious movement which turned into a political movement. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
223.
Who wrote the book Anandmath? (a) Gopal Krishna Gokhale (b) Bankim Chandra Chatterji (c) Swami Vivekananda (d) Bhartendu Harishchandra In the 1860s, a popular Bengali play highlighted the atrocities commited on workers by Indigo planters. The play was called (a) Neeldhara (b) Neelgagan (c) Neel Darpan (d) Neelkamal Which of the following was an organisation, during the late 1860s, that proved to be a strong force behind the Indian nationalist movement? (a) Hindu Sabha (b) Hindu Mela (c) Hindu Association (d) Hindu Sangh Which of the following books contains the national song of India? (a) Anandmath (b) Lipika (c) Gitanjali (d) Chokher Bali Who among the following is known as the father of modern Hindi literature? (a) Munshi Premchand (b) Bhartendu Harishchandra (c) Mahavir Prasad Dwivedi (d) Sumitranandan Pant Who among the following was one of the founders of the newspapers the Kesari and Mahratta? (a) Bal Gangadhar Tilak (b) Pherozeshah Mehta (c) Lala Lajpat Rai (d) Dadabhai Naoroji The Indian League, in 1875, was established in Bengal by (a) Dadabhai Naoroji (b) Surendranath Banerji (c) V.K. Chiplunkar (d) Sisir Kumar Ghosh
218.
224.
219.
225.
220.
221.
The second unit of the Arya Samaj was formed at (a) Lahore (b) Amritsar (c) Allahabad (d) Calcutta Who among the following was a founding member of the Rahnumai Mazdayasnan Sabha? (a) Badruddin Tyabji (b) Sayyid Ahmad Khan (c) Maulana Abul Kalam Azad (d) Dadabhai Naoroji 229.
222.
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226. 227. 228.
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230.
Who among the following was one of the founders of the Indian Association (1876)? (a) Badruddin Tyabji (b) Anand Mohan Bose (c) W.(C) Bonnerji (d) Sisir Kumar Ghosh Who among the following was the editor of Amrit Bazar Patrika? (a) Sisir Kumar Ghosh (b) M.B. Namjoshi (c) V.K. Chiplunkar (d) Pherozeshah Mehta Who among the following was not the founder of the Bombay Presidency Association (1885)? (a) Pherozeshah Mehta (b) Sisir Kumar Ghosh (c) K.T. Telang (d) Badruddin Tyabji
237.
Which of the following is also known as the Gagging Act? (a) Government of India Act (b) General Service Enlistment Act (c) Arms Act (d) Vernacular Press Act Who was the leader of the Gorkhas in the Anglo-Nepalese War (1814-16)? (a) Samar Singh (b) Amar Singh (c) Digvijay Sigh (d) Shyam Singh According to the Ain-i Akbari, every subadar was supported by other officers such as bakhshi, sadr, etc. Bakhshi and Sadr are (a) a military paymaster and a minister in charge of religious and charitable patronage respectively. (b) a minister in charge of religious and charitable patronage and a military paymaster respectively. (c) a military paymaster and a military commander respectively. (d) a minister in charge of religious and charitable patronage and a military commander respectively. Which Mughal emperor emphasised on the idea Sulh-i kul ? (a) Babur (b) Shah Jahan (c) Humayun (d) Akbar Which of the following temples is not in the UNESCOs World Heritage Sites list? (a) Gangaikondacholisvaram Temple (b) Airavateshvaram Temple (c) Kapaleeshwarar Temple (d) Brihadeeshwara Temple The Mundas and Santhals were tribes from (a) Orissa and Bengal (b) Punjab and Rajasthan (c) Punjab and western Himalayas (d) Punjab and Kashmir
231.
238.
239.
233.
Who founded the India House in 1905 in London? (a) Virendranath Chattopadhyaya (b) V.D. Savarkar (c) Shyamji Krishna Verma (d) Lala Hardayal The Ghadar Party was founded in 1913 in (a) United States of America (b) England (c) Malaysia (d) Japan The Congress declared Purna Swaraj as its goal in 1929 during its (a) Calcutta session (b) Madras session (c) Lahore session (d) Karachi session Jawaharlal Nehru hoisted the tricolour flag of India in December 1929 on the banks of river (a) Narmada (b) Ganga (c) Ravi (d) Sutlej
234.
235.
236.
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240. 241. 242.
232.
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243.
Sultan Iltutmish constructed hauz-i Sultani just outside just outside Dehli-i kuhna What is hauz-i Sultani ? (a) a large shrine (b) a large sculpture (c) a mosque (d) a large reservoir Which of the following kings invaded Sri Lanka and defeated Sena I? (a) Shrimara Shrivallabha (b)Vijayalaya (c) Rajaraja I (d) Rajendra I Who was the Statute Destroyer who attacked the famous Somanath temple? (a) Muhammad Ghori (b) Mahmud of Ghazni (c) Aurangzeb (d) Lord Clive of the East India Company What is Chihil Sutun in Mughal architecture? (a) Large balconies (b) Ceremonial Halls or courts (c) Four section gardens (d) Recreation centres What was the importance of Qibla in audience halls of the Mughal emperors? (a) During a court session everybody faced a specific direction called Qibla (b) During a court session everybody had to sit in a circular formation called Qibla (c) During a court session everybody had to share their views over the issues discussed This type of discussion was called Qibla (d) During a court session no woman was allowed to speak inside the court. This rule was called Qibla In Shah Jahans newly constructed court in the Red Fort at Delhi, behind his throne were a series of pietra dura inlays that depicted (a) The legendary Greek god Orpheus playing the lute (b) Aphrodite in front of a mirror (c) Apollo and Daphne together (d) Aphrodite,Cupid and Ares together
249.
244.
Who was Kunjaramallan Rajaraja Perunthachchan? (a) Son of Chola king Rajaraja (b) Grandson of Chola king Rajaraja (c) Architect of the famous Airavatesvara temple (d) Architect of the famous Rajarajeshvara temple Chola bronze statues were made using the (a) lost clay technique (b) lost wax technique (c) lost wood technique (d) lost metal technique Bhillasvamin is the (a) modern day Bhubaneshwar (b) modern day Belur (c) modern day Vidisha (d) modern day Mahabalipuram X is located in the Krishna-Tungabhadra basin. X fell into ruin in 1565 as the Vijayanagara Empire was defeated What is X? (a) Bellary (b) Hampi (c) Davanagere (d) Hubli In the seventeenth century, which city was regarded as the gateway for trade with west Asia? (a) Karachi (b) Surat (c) Poona (d) Bombay Bhils, Cheros and Berads are tribes of (a) Bihar, Tamil Nadu and Western Himalayas respectively (b) Bihar, Gujarat and Western Himalayas respectively (c) Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Bihar respectively (d) Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and Maharashtra respectively Which nomadic tribe helped Mughal emperors to transport grain to city markets? (a) Charan (b) Gujjar (c) Banjara (d) Bhil General Knowledge Question Bank
250.
246.
247.
248.
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251. 252. 253. 254. 255.
245.
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256.
Which queen died fighting Mughal armies defending Garha Katanga in 1565? (a) Rani Durgawati (b) Rani Ahilyabai (c) Rudramamba (d) Rani Avantibai Which tribe did the kingdom of Garha Katanga belonged to? (a) Gonds (b) Cheros (c) Khonds (d) Ahoms Which of the following tribal kingdoms depended upon forced labour for its functioning? (a) Gonds (b) Cheros (c) Ahoms (d) Bhils Who were the Nayanars? (a) Saints devoted to Brahma (b) Saints devoted to Durga (c) Saints devoted to Vishnu (d) Saints devoted to Shiva Who were the Alvars? (a) Saints devoted to Durga (b) Saints devoted to Vishnu (c) Saints devoted to Brahma (d) Saints devoted to Shiva Virashaiva movement began in Karnataka in the mid-twelfth century against (a) the misrule of Hoysala Empire (b) monotheism (c) inequality and caste system (d) the revenue system Mirabai became a disciple of (a) Kabir (b) Tulsidas (c) Surdas (d) Ravidas Which tribal kingdom created the historical works known as buranjis? (a) Ahoms (b) Balochis (c) Cheros (d) Gonds
264.
257.
258.
265.
259.
260.
261.
262.
263.
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266. 267.
Fa Xian and Xuan Zang were (a) Chinese invaders of the north-east (b) Chinese Buddhist pilgrims (c) Chinese followers of the Alvars (d) Chinese followers of the Nayanars Consider the following statements I. Kadamba Mayurasharman was a Brahmana who gave up his traditional profession and took to arms, successfully establishing the Kadamba kingdom in Karnataka. II. Chola king Rajendra I built a temple of goddess Nishumbhasudini in the town of Thanjavur. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. Siraj-ud-daulah, the nawab of Bengal was a puppet ruler who gifted trade concessions to the East India Company. II. Robert Clive led the companys armies at Plassey in 1757. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
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Consider the following statements I. The British East India Company was the only British trading company to come for trade in India. This is because of the fact that the company acquired exclusive rights from the queen for trading with the East. II. The Portuguese came to India before the British. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
268.
The East India Company was appointed as the Diwan of the provinces of Bengal, by the Mughal emperor, after the death of the then nawab of Bengal (a) Aliwardi Khan (b) Mir Jafar (c) Mir Qasim (d) Sirajuddaulah Consider the following statements I. Tipu Sultan was killed in the Third AngloMysore War. II. Subsidiary alliance did not allow the East India Company to have its independent armed forces. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
274.
Which of the following Governor-Generals initiated the policy of paramountcy? (a) Warren Hastings (b) Richard Wellesley (c) Lord Dalhousie (d) Earl Cornwallis Which of the following was ruled by the Wodeyar dynasty? (a) Hyderabad (b) Awadh (c) Mysore (d) Bengal Consider the following statements I. The Marathas helped Tipu Sultan in the Third Anglo-Mysore war agaisnt the East India Company. II. Tipu Sultan was forced to sign a treaty with the British by which two of his sons were taken away as hostages. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Doctrine of Lapse was the brainchild of (a) Lord Cornwallis (b) Lord Hastings (c) Lord Dalhousie (d) Robert Clive Consider the following statements I. From 1772, each district was to have only one court a civil court (diwani adalat). II. Delhi was not a British presidency in the late eighteenth century. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
269.
275.
276.
270.
Who was the Governor-General in 1801 when the nawab of Awadh was forced to give over half of his territory to the East India Company in 1801? (a) Warren Hastings (b) Richard Wellesley (c) Earl Cornwallis (d) Robert Clive The Treaty of Salbai was signed between the East India Company and (a) the Marathas (b) the Nizam of Hyderabad (c) the Kingdom of Mysore (d) the nawab of Awadh Which of the following nawabs captured Fort William of Calcutta? (a) Alivardi Khan (b) Sirajuddaulah (c) Mir Jafar (d) Mir Qasim
271.
272.
273.
Consider the following statements I. Mir Qasim helped the East India Company in the Battle of Buxar against the Nawab of Awadh and the Mughal Emperor. II. The East India Company defeated Maharaja Ranjit Singh to capture Punjab. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
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277. 278. 279.
Consider the following statements I. Rani Chennamma surrendered the state of Kitoor to the East India Company and ran away with his family. II. Steamships were invented in the early nineteenth century. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
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280.
Which Mughal emperor appointed the East India Company as the Diwan of Bengal? (a) Shah Alam (b) Akbar Shah (c) Bahadur Shah (d) Aurangzeb Initially the East India Company purchased goods in India for (a) the revenue generated by the Company from peasants. (b) Gold and Silver (c) the British goods (d) nothing. It used military power to capture the resources Who was the Governor-General of India when the Permanent Settlement was introduced? (a) Warren Hastings (b) Richard Wellesley (c) Earl Cornwallis (d) Lord Dalhousie In British records, what is a Mahal? (a) A palace (b) An army fort (c) A Mosque (d) A revenue estate Consider the following statements I. The Company expected the Zamindars to invest in the improvement of land which would have benefited the Zamindars as well. II. In the permanent settlement system peasants had to pay the revenue directly to the Company. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
286.
281.
Consider the following statements I. The Indigo Commission set up after the Blue Rebellion of 1859 produced a report against the ryots. II. The agents of the East India Company who helped the Company to get agreements signed from peasants, weavers and artisans were known as Gomasthas Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
283.
284.
285.
The nij system and ryoti system are for the cultivation of (a) Coffee (b) Sugar (c) Opium (d) Indigo
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CM
288. 289. 290. 291.
282.
287.
Holt Mackenzie devised a new system which was called as the (a) Permanent Settlement. (b) Mahalwari System. (c) Ryotwari System. (d) Doctrine of Lapse. Consider the following statements I. Woad is a temperate zone herb which faced competition from indigo grown in India during the eighteenth century. II. The indigo plant grows primarily in the temperate zones. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Siraj-ud-daulah, nawab of Bengal, was betrayed by one of his commanders in his defeatto the East India Companys army. Who was that commander? (a) Mir Jafar (b) Mir Qasim (c) Shujauddaulah (d) Ali Jah The Ryotwari System was devised by (a) Lord Cornwallis (b) Richard Wellesley (c) Thomas Munro (d) Holt Mackenzie The first English factory was set up on the banks of the river (a) Krishna (b) Hugli (c) Saraswati (d) Kaveri General Knowledge Question Bank
CM A T
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292.
Consider the following statements I. Woad is a better dye plant than indigo because woad gives a rich blue colour while indigo gives pale and dull colour. II. The French produced indigo in the French colony of St Domingue in the Caribbean islands. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
296.
A very special tank, which archaeologists call the Great Bath, was built in (a) Mehrgarh (b) Mohenjodaro (c) Lothal (d) Harappa Which of the following archaeological sites is located on the river Ghod and is known for its special burial system? (a) Lothal (b) Chirand (c) Inamgaon (d) Hungsi Ashwamedha was a ritual in which (a) a horse was gifted to the successor of the king (b) a horse was sacrificed (c) a horse was gifted to a brahmin (d) a ritual made in the name of rain gods Bimbisara was a ruler of (a) Avanti (b) Gandhara (c) Kuru (d) Magadha A cartographer is a person who (a) makes maps (b) makes carts (c) makes chariots (d) makes temples Consider the following statements A : The Nawab of Awadh was forced to give over half of his territory to the Company in 1801 R : The Nawab of Awadh failed to fulfil the terms of subsidiary alliance. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
297.
293.
Consider the following statements I. The ryoti system was better than the nij system for the indigo planters as it allowed them to produce indigo on a larger scale without any considerable increase in the cost of production. II. The ryots were benefited from the the ryoti system of indigo plantaion. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none The most primitive stone tools are from (a) Neolithic age (b) Palaeolithic age (c) Mesolithic age (d) Chalcolithic age Consider the following statements A : The subsidiary alliance proved very helpful for the nawabs in protecting their territories. R : The British promised military protection to the nawabs under the terms of subsidiary alliance. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
298.
294.
295.
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299. 300. 301.
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302.
Consider the following statements A : The British fought a long war with Afghanistan between 1838 and 1842 and established indirect rule there. R : If the rulers under subsidiary alliance failed to make the payment for the forces, then part of their territory was taken away by the British as penalty. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
305.
Who among the following was not a part of the Rebellion of 1857? (a) Begum Hazrat Mahal (b) Rani Chennamma (c) Birjis Qadr (d) Nana Saheb Bahadur Shah Jafar was sentenced to life imprisonment for supporting the rebellion of 1857. He died in a prison in (a) Hyderabad (b) Rangoon (c) Lahore (d) Bombay Consider the following statements I. Tantia Tope was killed while protecting Rani Laxmi Bai against the British. II. Birjis Qadr was the son of Nawab Wajid Ali Shah of Lucknow. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Mangal Pandey was hanged in 1857 for attacking his officers in (a) Benaras (b) Barrackpore (c) Calcutta (d) Allahabad Consider the following statements A : Eighty-five sepoys of the regiment at Meerut in 1857 were dismissed from service and sentenced to ten years in jail. R : When the Company ordered the sepoys to go to Burma for fighting by the sea route, the sepoys refused to follow the order. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
306.
307.
303.
Consider the following statements A : After the death of Maharaja Ranjit Singh in 1839, the East India Company took over Punjab in 1849. R : According to the Doctrine of Lapse, if an Indian ruler died without a male heir his kingdom would become part of Company territory. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
304.
Consider the following statements A : Cloth dyers in Europe preferred indigo over woad as a dye. R : Indigo was cheaper than woa(d) Choose the correct option out of the following (a) A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
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308. 309.
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310.
Consider the following statements A : In 1824 the Company ordered the sepoys to go to Burma by the sea route but the sepoys refused to follow the order. R : The sepoys were mostly peasants and had families living in the villages. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
314.
Governor-General of India when Jhansi was annexed by the British? (a) Lord Dalhousie (b) Warren Hastings (c) Lord Cornwallis (d) Richard Wellesley Consider the following statements I. The East India Company was removed from the power in 1858. II. The Doctrine of Lapse was renounced by the Act of 1858. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
315.
311.
In 1801, a subsidiary alliance was imposed on X, and in 1856 it was taken over by the British as they declared that X was being misgoverned and to ensure proper administration British rule was necessary. What is X? (a) Awadh (b) Jhansi (c) Mysore (d) Punjab Sati was banned in British India in (a) 1801 (b) 1809 (c) 1829 (d) 1858 Consider the following statements A : By the end of the eighteenth century, the demand for Indian indigo grew enormously. R : Indian Indigo was better than the indigo produced in the West Indies and America. Choose the correct option out of the following
312.
313.
(a) A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
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317. 318. 319.
316.
Which of the following was not the change introduced by the British in 1858? (a) It was assured to all the ruling chiefs of the country that their territory would never be annexed in future. (b) It was decided to increase the recruitment of soldiers from Awadh, Bihar, central India and south India. (c) Various policies were made to protect the rights of zamindars and landlords. (d) All of the above. Delhi became the capital of British India in (a) 1901 (b) 1905 (c) 1911 (d) 1915 Delhi Durbar was organised by (a) Lord Ripon (b) Lord Minto (c) Lord Lansdowne (d) Lord Lytton Consider the following statements I. Edward Lutyens and Herbert Baker were the architects invited by the British to design New Delhi in 1912. II. The central dome of the Rashtrapati Bhavan was copied from medieval Chola art. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
CM A T
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320.
Who founded the Brahmo Sabha? (a) Raja Rammohun Roy (b) Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar (c) Swami Dayanand Sarawati (d) Swami Vivekanand Consider the following statements A : Ryoti cultivation was preferred over nij cultivation by the British. R : It was easier to expand the area under indigo cultivation by adopting ryoti cultivation. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
(c) a meeting between the British and the French to decide the future of Canada. (d) an act of dumping tea into Boston Harbor 327. The first war between the 13 British North American colonies and the British Government started in 1775 at (a) Lexington (b) Philadelphia (c) Washington (d) Orlando Which of the following Governor-Generals of the British India surrendered as a British General in the American War of Independence in 1781 (a) Warren Hastings (b) William Bentinck (c) Lord Cornwallis (d) Lord Dalhousie Men are born free but everywhere they are in chains. Who said these words? (a) Karl Marx (b) Jean-Jacques Rousseau (c) Friedrich Engels (d) Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel When did France become a republic? (a) 1780 (b) 1784 (c) 1789 (d) 1792 Who devised the system of crop rotation? (a) Thomas Highs (b) Jethro Tull (c) Charles Townsend (d) Lewis Paul Who invented the flying shuttle? (a) John Kay (b) Richard Arkwright (c) James Hargreaves (d) Daniel Bourn Who invented the spinning jenny? (a) Samuel Crompton (b) James Hargreaves (c) Clement Clerke (d) Abraham Darby
321.
328.
322.
When was the law permitting widow remarriage passed in the British India? (a) 1829 (b) 1839 (c) 1856 (d) 1896 The Paramhans Mandali was founded in 1840 in (a) Bombay (b) Calcutta (c) Madras (d) Delhi Which Chola king took the title of Maduraikondavan? (a) Vijayalaya (b) Rajaraja I (c) Parantaka I (d) Rajendra The British government headed by George Grenville in 1765 enacted a tax Act in its colonies in North America The Act was called the (a) Stamp Act (b) Currency Act (c) Revenue Act (d) Trade Act The Boston Tea Party was (a) a meeting between the British and the French to decide the future of Canada. (b) the declaration of Independence, by the 13 British North American colonies. 332. 330.
323.
324.
325.
326.
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329. 331. 333.
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334.
The first power loom was designed by (a) Richard Arkwright (b) Thomas Highs (c) Lewis Paul (d) Edmund Cartwright Who invented the cotton gin? (a) Henry Maudslay (b) Eli Whitney (c) John Kay (d) Henry Cot Who built the first textile factory? (a) Samuel Slater (b) Richard Arkwright (c) Lewis Paul (d) Thomas Highs
341.
The Third Estate, in France, declared itself as the National Assembly in (a) 1729 (b) 1789 (c) 1829 (d) 1879 Consider the following statements I. Age of Enlightenment is a term used to describe the age of spiritualism in Europe during the seventeenth century. II. In France, the Third Estate was of the nobles. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Who invented the hot blast process in metallurgy? (a) Clement Clerke (b) Benjamin Huntsman (c) James Beaumont Neilson (d) George Stephenson Consider the following statements I. King Louis XVI fled France with his family at the start of the French Revolution. II. The first French National Assembly took oath in a tennis court. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
342. 335.
336.
337.
Who among the following is known for his improvements of the steam engine? (a) James Watt (b) John Kay (c) Samuel Slater (d) Lewis Paul Who among the following made attempts to substitute charcoal by coke to obtain iron from its ore? (a) George Stephenson (b) William Murdoch (c) Chance Brothers (d) Abraham Darby Who invented the puddling process of iron purification? (a) John Smeaton (b) Henry Cort (c) James Watt (d) Thomas Newcomen
338.
339.
340.
Consider the following statements I. Luther Burbank invented the process of pasteurisation. II. Voltaire was a staunch critic of the church. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
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343. 344. 345. 346.
Who among the invented a process for producing steel? (a) Henry Bessemer (b) John Metcalf (c) Chance Brothers (d) William Murdoch Who invented the steamboat? (a) Joseph Bramah (b) Joseph Whitworth (c) John Macadam (d) Robert Fulton
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347.
Gugliemo Marconi invented the (a) telephone (b) machinery for wireless telegraphy (c) electric bulb (d) television Who laid the first trans-Atlantic cable? (a) Cyrus Field (b) Gottlieb Daimler (c) George Stephenson (d) Joseph Locke
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 353. Britain wrested Canada from France in 1763 after the (a) Six Years War (b) Seven Years War (c) Eight Years War (d) Nine Years War Whom did Guru Nanak appointed as his successor before his death in 1539? (a) Guru Amardas (b) Guru Angad (c) Guru Arjan (d) Guru Ramdas Which of the following Mughal emperors ordered the execution of Guru Arjan? (a) Shah Jahan (b) Aurangzeb (c) Humayun (d) Jahangir Divya Prabandham is a compilation of devotional songs in honour of Hindu god/ goddess (a) Murugan (b) Shiva (c) Durga (d) Vishnu Which Afghan ruler invaded India five times in the mid-eighteenth century? (a) Ahmed Shah Abdali (b) Timur Shah Durrani (c) Nadir Shah (d) Shuja Shah Durrani The iron pillar at Mehrauli, Delhi is said to be built under which of the following rulers? (a) Alauddin Khalji (b) Akbar (c) Chandragupta (d) Vikramaditya The Silappadikaram, a famous Tamil epic, is the story of Kovalan who was a (a) a merchant (b) a King (c) a priest (d) a peasant
348.
354. 349. Consider the following statements I. The Diesel engine was invented after the World War I. II. The Open-hearth is generally used for the production of fine quality printed textiles.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 350. The Luddites in Britain, during the Industrial Revolution, was a name given to the (a) section of the church which opposed the industrial revolution. (b) masked workers taking part in violent strikes. (c) businessmen who invested and helped the innovators of the revolution (d) the countries mainly involved in the Industrial Revolution. The First Opium War, as it is called, was fought in 1840 between the British and (a) China (b) America (c) Malaysia (d) France Consider the following statements I. The Portuguese took control of Malacca, in the East Indies, in the 17th century from the Dutch. II. Hormuz, at the tip of the Persian Gulf, was a strategic base of the Portuguese in the 16th century.
351.
352.
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355. 356. 357. 358. 359.
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360.
The manuscripts in early India were usually written on (a) palm leaves (b) ashoka tree leaves (c) cloths made of jute (d) banyan leaves Harishena was the court poet of (a) Chandragupta (b) Samudragupta (c) Ashoka (d) Bindusara Which of the following Chalukya rulers stopped king Harshvardhan of Kanauj from advancing to the Deccan? (a) Vijayaditya (b) Vikramaditya (c) Pulakeshin II (d) Vikramaditya II
368.
Who was Mehrunnisa? (a) Wife of Emperor Shah Jahan (b) Wife of Emperor Aurangzeb (c) Wife of Emperor Jahangir (d) Wife of Emperor Shah Alam Consider the following statements I. After the defeat Shivaji was honourably treated by the Mughals when he came to accept Mughal authority. II. The term mansabdar refers to an individual who holds a position or rank. III. By Aurangzebs reign, the number of mansabdars decreased immensely. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) II only (b) II and III (c) III only (d) I, II and III Mirza Hakim was half brother of the Mughal Emperor (a) Babur (b) Humayun (c) Akbar (d) Jahangir The Kandariya Mahadeva temple dedicated to Shiva was constructed by King (a) Dhangadeva (b) Harshdev (c) Vijaypal (d) Yashovarman Which Sinhalese ruler tried to find and restore the gold statue of the Buddha which was taken away by the Pandyan king Shrimara Shrivallabha? (a) Udaya I (b) Udaya II (c) Sena I (d) Sena II Chokhamela was a (a) Marathi merchant (b) Marwari merchant (c) Marwari saint-poet (d) Marathi saint-poet The Rashtrakutas were initially subordinate to the (a) Cheras (b) Chalukyas (c) Cholas (d) Pandyas
369. 361.
362.
363.
Which of the following is not a work of Kalidasa? (a) Abhijnana Shakuntalam (b) Malavikagnimitram (c) Mahavircharitam (d) Vikramorvashiyam
364.
Buddhacharita, a biography of the Buddha was composed by Ashvaghosha. He was a spiritual counselor in the court of (a) King Ashoka (b) King Harshavardhana (c) King Vikramadtya (d) King Kanishka Who were known as the lords of the dakshinapatha? (a) Pandya rulers (b) Satavahana rulers (c) Chera rulers (d) Chola rulers Dhamma Mahamatta were (a) important teachings of Buddha (b) officials appointed by Ashoka to teach dhamma (c) buddhist philosophers of early medieval India (d) buddhist philosophers of Mughal period in India Vinaya Pitaka is a rule book of (a) Hinduism (b) Sikhism (c) Jain sangha (d) Buddhist sangha
365.
366.
367.
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370. 371. 372. 373. 374.
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375.
The Begumpuri mosque was built in the reign of which Delhi Sultan? (a) Ghiyasuddin Tughluq (b) Muhammad Tughluq (c) Firuz Shah Tughluq (d) Alauddin Khalji Consider the following statements I. Mughal emperor Babur succeeded to the throne of Ferghana in 1494 at the age of 15. II. In 1526 Babur defeated the Sultan of Delhi, Ibrahim Lodi, at Delhi. III. Akbar was 13 years old when he became emperor.
380.
Who started the Asiatic Society of Bengal? (a) William Carey (b) Thomas Babington Macaulay (c) William Jones (d) William Adam The Hindu College in Benaras was established in (a) 1791 (b) 1820 (c) 1836 (d) 1898 Who among the following was against the promotion of vernaculars in Indian education? (a) Henry Thomas Colebrooke (b) Thomas Babington Macaulay (c) Nathaniel Halhed (d) William Jones Consider the following statements I. The Woods Despatch emphasised on the importance of oriental learning. II. Shantiniketan was established by Mahatma Gandhi in 1901. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
381. 376.
382.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I only (b) II only (c) II and III (d) III only 377. Who was the Mughal Emperor during the rebellion of 1857? (a) Akbar Shah (b) Shah Alam (c) Muhammad Shah (d) Bahadur Shah Zafar
378.
Banabhatta was the court poet of which of the following Indian monarchs? (a) Chandragupta Maurya (b) Chandragupta (c) Vikramaditya (d) Harshvardhana Consider the following statements A : The Indian Railways had to turn to TISCO in the 1910s. R : World War I broke out in 1914. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) if A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) if A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
379.
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383. 384. 385. 386.
In 1854, the Court of Directors of the East India Company in London sent an educational despatch to the Governor-General in India. It was known as the (a) Woods Despatch (b) Macaulays Despatch (c) Mills Despatch (d) Colebrookes Despatch The English Education Act, following Macaulays minute, was introduced in (a) 1815 (b) 1825 (c) 1835 (d) 1845 The Satnami movement in Central India was founded by (a) Haridas Thakur (b) Ghasidas (c) Shri Narayana Guru (d) Dayanand Saraswati
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387.
Consider the following statements I. Rammohun Roy was keen to spread the knowledge of Western education In India. II. Jyotiba Phule was an ardent supporter of the anti-colonial nationalism. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
393.
Keshub Chunder Sen was one of the main leaders of the (a) Satnami Movement (b) Prarthana Samaj (c) Brahmo Samaj (d) Arya Samaj Consider the following statements I. According to the Child Marriage Restraint Act of 1929 no woman below the age of 16 could marry. II. The Mohammedan Anglo-Oriental College was founded in 1905. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Who founded the Ramakrishna Mission? (a) Swami Vivekanand (b) Swami Dayanand Saraswati (c) Raja Rammohun Roy (d) Baba Amte
394.
388.
389.
Who wrote the book Gulamgiri? (a) Mahatma Gandhi (b) Jyotiba Phule (c) Swami Dayanand Saraswati (d) Vinoba Bhave
390.
Who started the temple entry movement in 1927? (a) Bhimrao Ambedkar (b) Mahatma Gandhi (c) Vinoba Bhave (d) Baba Amte Consider the following statements I. E.V. Ramaswamy Naicker was an ardent critic of the Bhagwad Gita and the Ramayana. II. E.V. Ramaswamy Naicker was once a member of the Indian National Congree. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
391.
392.
The Self Respect Movement was started by (a) Jyotiba Phule (b) E.V. Ramaswamy Naicker (c) Mahatma Gandhi (d) Bhimrao Ambedkar
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395. 396. 397. 398.
The Satyashodhak Samaj was founded by (a) Raja Rammohun Roy (b) Swami Vivekanand (c) Swami Dayanand Saraswati (d) Jyotiba Phule
Thomas Daniell and William Daniell are known for their paintings of (a) the great warrior kings of India (b) war scenes in India (c) picturesque landscapes of India (d) Indian traditions Consider the following statements I. According to the Ilbert Bill, Indian judges were not allowed to try the Europeans. II. The Indian National Congress during its first twenty years was extremist in its objectives and methods. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Who among the following was, for a time, member of the British Parliament? (a) Surendranath Banerji (b) Dadabhai Naoroji (c) Pherozshah Mehta (d) W.C. Bonnerji General Knowledge Question Bank
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399.
Consider the following statements I. A.O. Hume tried to bring in a bill through the British Parliament to ban the Indian National Congress II. Pherozeshah Mehta joined the Indian National Congress during its extremist era. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
404.
Freedom is my birthright and I shall have it. Who said these famous words? (a) Lala Lajpat Rai (b) Bepin Chandra Pal (c) Bal Gangadhar Tilak (d) Subhash Chandra Bose Who partitioned Bengal in 1905? (a) Lord Ripon (b) Lord Curzon (c) Lord Minto (d) Lord Lytton Who was the viceroy of India when the Vernacular Press Act was enacted? (a) Lord Lytton (b) Lord Ripon (c) Lord Canning (d) Lord Dufferin The Swadesi Movement was an immediate reaction to the (a) Jallianwala Bagh massacre (b) Defence of India Act (c) Partition of Bengal (d) Rowlatt Act Who was the viceroy of India when the All India Muslim League was formed? (a) Lord Curzon (b) Lord Lytton (c) Lord Minto (d) Lord Lansdowne Consider the following statements I. The Muslim League supported the partition of Bengal. II. The Non-cooperation Movement in deltaic Andhra was known as the Vandematram Movement. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
405.
406. 400. Who was the first president of the Indian National Congress? (a) W.C. Bonnerji (b) Dadabhai Naoroji (c) Badruddin Tyadji (d) Surendranath Banerji
401.
Who was the viceroy of India when the Arms Act was enacted which disallowed Indians from possessing arms? (a) Lord Ripon (b) Lord Lyyton (c) Lord Lansdowne (d) Lord Northbrook Who founded the Indian Association in 1876? (a) W.C. Bonnerji (b) Bal Gangadhar Tilak (c) Pherozshah Mehta (d) Surendranath Banerji Consider the following statements I. The Vernacular Press Act enabled the local language newspapers to have their say. II. The Poona Sarvajanik Sabha was started after the formation of the Indian National Congress.
402.
403.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
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407. 408. 409. 410.
Consider the following statements I. According to partition of Bengal by Curzon, Bihar, Orissa and Assam were to on one side and Bengal on the other side. II. The partition of Bengal was done for administrative convenience. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
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411.
The demand of separate electorates, made by the Muslim league, was conceded by the government in (a) 1905 (b) 1907 (c) 1909 (d) 1912 What is the importance of the Surat Split of 1907? (a) The Indian National Congress was split in two groups the moderates and the extremists. (b) The partition of Bengal was announced in 1907 in Surat. (c) The government conceded the demand of the Muslim League for separate electorates. (d) The Muslim League was formed under Aga Khan. The Lucknow pact of 1916 was signed between (a) the extremists and the moderates of the Indian National Congress. (b) the Indian National Congress and the Muslim League. (c) the Indian National Congress and the government. (d) the Muslim League and the government. Which event, during the World War I, inspired the nationalists in India? (a) American Civil War (b) French Revolution (c) Russian Revolution (d) First Italo-Ethiopian war When did Mahatma Gandhi arrive in India? (a) 1910 (b) 1912 (c) 1915 (d) 1919 Who was the viceroy of India when the Jallianwala Bagh massacre took place? (a) Lord Chelmsford (b) Sydney Rowlatt (c) Lord Curzon (d) Lord Irwin
417.
The Champaran Satyagraha was against (a) the enormously high taxes imposed on the poor people. (b) indigo plantation in Champaran. (c) the Rowlatt Act. (d) the Defence of India Act. Consider the following statements: I. The Rowlatt Act imposed judgement without trial in India. II. The Rowlatt Act was enacted in 1915. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
412.
418.
413.
414.
415.
416.
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419. 420. 421. 422.
The Khilafat issue was related to the (a) Partition of Bengal (b) Muslim League (c) Turkish Sultan (d) Nizam of Hyderabad Consider the following statements A : Mahatma Gandhi called off the NonCooperation Movement when in February 1922. R : A police station in Chauri Chaura was set on fire in 1922. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) if A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) if A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A The Simon Commission came to India in (a) 1924 (b) 1925 (c) 1926 (d) 1927 Who among the following was one of the founders of the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association in 1928? (a) Subhash Chandra Bose (b) Bipin Chandra Pal (c) Chitta Ranjan Das (d) Bhagat Singh
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423.
Members of the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association assassinated Saunders, a police officer, to avenge the death of (a) Gopal Krishna Gokhale (b) Lala Lajpat Rai (c) Bal Gangadhar Tilak (d) Bipin Chandra Pal When did the Indian National Congress contest its first elections? (a) 1930 (b) 1934 (c) 1937 (d) 1941 Consider the following statements I. The Simon Commission had only two Indian representatives. II. Congress leaders were ready to support the British in the World War II.
429.
Consider the following statements I. Lala Lajpat Rai was among the moderates section of the Indian National Congress. II. The first session of the Indian National Congress was held in Pune. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
424.
430.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 426. Who said the words do or die at the start of the Quit India Movement? (a) Subhash Chandra Bose (b) Mahatma Gandhi (c) Jawaharlal Nehru (d) Vallabhbhai Patel Who formed the Azad Hind Fauj to free India from British control? (a) Chandra Shekhar Azad (b) Bhagat Singh (c) Lala Lajpat Rai (d) Subhash Chandra Bose
427.
428.
Who became the first Indian Governor-General of free India? (a) Chakravarti Rajagopalachari (b) Lal Bahadur Shastri (c) Rajendra Prasad (d) Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
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431. 432. 433. 434.
425.
Who announced August 16 1946 as the Direct Action Day? (a) Mahatma Gandhi (b) Vallabhbhai Patel (c) Mohammad Ali Jinnah (d) Jawaharlal Nehru Who wrote the book Poverty and Un-British rule in India? (a) Dadabhai Naoroji (b) Badruddin Tyabji (c) W.C. Bonnerji (d) Vallabhbhai Patel Consider the following statements I. Division on boycott was the main reason for the Surat Split of 1907. II. The All India Muslim League was formed in Lahore in 1906. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Mahatma Gandhi asked the Indian people to observe 6 April 1919 as a day of non-violent opposition to the (a) Government of India Act (b) Rowlatt Act (c) Defence of India Act (d) Indian Press Act Who among the following renounced his knighthood? (a) Rabindranath Tagore (b) Mahatma Gandhi (c) Surendranath Benerji (d) Gopal Krishna Gokhale
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435.
Potti Sriramulu, a Gandhian leader, went on a hunger fast demanding the formation of (a) Karnataka (b) Tamil Nadu (c) Kerala (d) Andhra Pradesh The bilingual state of Bombay was divided into two states in (a) 1955 (b) 1957 (c) 1960 (d) 1966
(c) It was thought to lead to the rebirth of the sacrificer as a heir to his own empire (d) None of the above. 442. What do you understand by the term Vetti regarding the Cholas? (a) name of a warship under King Rajendra I (b) a ritual performed by the Chola Kings (c) a tax levied the Cholas (d) a piece of land won by the Cholas overthrowing some other ruler The tripartite struggle for control over Kanauj was between (a) Gurjara-Pratiharas, Rashtrakutas and Palas (b) Cholas, Rashtrakutas and Pandyas (c) Chahamanas, Paramaras and Palas (d) Cholas, Cheras and Pandyas Which of the following rulers entrusted a scholar to write Kitab-al Hind, an account of the Indian subcontinent? (a) Akbar (b) Babar (c) Muhammad Ghori (d) Mahmud of Ghazni X defeated Muhammad Ghori in 1191 AD, but lost to him the very next year, in 1192 A.D. Who were X? (a) Cholas (b) Pandyas (c) Chahamanas (d) Pratiharas Who built the town of Thanjavur? (a) Samudragupta (b) Rajendra I (c) Narasimhavarman I (d) Vijayalaya According to Chola inscriptions, land donated to Jaina institutions is called (a) Vellanvagai (b) Pallichchhandam (c) Tirunamattukkani (d) Shalabhoga
436.
437. Consider the following statements I. The British annexed Nagpur through the Doctrine of Lapse. II. The British gained Orissa from the Marathas after winning the second AngloMaratha War. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 438. To break the salt law, Mahatma Gandhi marched from Sabarmati to (a) Surat (b) Ahamedabad (c) Baroda (d) Dandi The Kushanas ruled over central Asia and north-west India around 2000 years ago. What were their two major power centres? (a) Peshawar and Madurai (b) Peshawar and Mathura (c) Madurai and Bukhara (d) Mathura and Kanauj Which Chola ruler raided and captured the Southeast Asian empire Srivijaya and harbour cities of Sumatra and Malay Peninsula? (a) Vijayalaya (b) Rajendra I (c) Rajendra II (d) Raja Raja I
443.
439.
440.
441.
Why was the Hiranya-Garbha ritual performed? (a) It was thought to lead to the rebirth of the sacrificer as a Kshatriya (b) It was thought to lead to the rebirth of the sacrificer as a Brahmana
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444. 445. 446. 447.
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448.
Prashastis were written by learned Brahmanas in administration. They were (a) biographies of foreign invaders (b) in praise of the ruler (c) in praise of their own works and talents (d) in praise of the empire and its natural resources Delhi first became the capital of a kingdom under : (a) Tomara Rajputs (b) Chahamanas of Ajmer (c) Qutbuddin Aybak (d) Ghiyasuddin Balban
454.
Siri Fort was built under which Delhi Sultan? (a) Alauddin Khalji (b) Firuz Shah Tughlaq (c) Muhammad Tughluq (d) Jalaluddin Khilji Which Delhi Sultan emptied and garrisoned the old city Dehli-i Kuhna and sent its residents to Daulatabad in the south? (a) Jalaluddin Khilji (b) Muhammad Tughluq (c) Ghiyasuddin Balban (d) Bahlul Lodi Who was the first Delhi Sultan to plan to capture Mongol territory? (a) Shamsuddin Iltutmish (b) Ghiyasuddin Balban (c) Ghiyasuddin Tughluq (d) Muhammad Tughluq What are Delhiwal? (a) Land tax in Delhi during the early medieval India (b) Tax on trading activities in Delhi during the early medieval India (c) Coins minted in Delhi during the early medieval India (d) Garrisoned towns in Delhi during the early medieval India Who defeated Mughal emperor Humayun in 1540 AD and captured Delhi to establish his own dynasty? (a) Ibrahim Lodi (b) Sher Shah Suri (c) Vikramaditya (d) Firuz Shah Suri The authors of Persian tawarikh criticised the Delhi Sultans (a) for preserving an unjust social order based on birthright. (b) for treating their daughters as inferior to their sons. (c) for appointing their loyal slaves to high administrative posts. (d) none of the above
455.
449.
450.
Which of the following female rulers changed her name and pretended to be a man? (a) Raziyya (b) Kumaradevi (c) Didda (d) Rudramadevi Military expeditions from the Delhi Sultanate into southern India started during the reign of (a) Qutbuddin Aybak (b) Raziyya (c) Jalaluddin Khalji (d) Alauddin Khalji
451.
452.
What is the Bandagan system used by the early Delhi Sultans in their administration? (a) the Delhi Sultans appointed their wives instead of appointing aristocrats or leaders to high administrative posts (b) the Delhi Sultans appointed their trust worthy slaves instead of appointing aristocrats or leaders to high administrative posts (c) the Delhi Sultans decided to appoint themselves instead of appointing aristocrats or leaders to high administrative posts (d) the Delhi Sultans removed all the high administrative posts Kharaj is a type of tax collected under the Sultans of Delhi. It was a tax levied on (a) cultivation (b) cattle (c) road (d) houses
453.
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457. 458. 459.
456.
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460.
Which of the following is the right chronological order of the dynasties that ruled Delhi? (a) Sayyid, Khalji, Tughluq, Lodi (b) Khalji, Tughluq, Lodi, Sayyid (c) Khalji, Tughluq, Sayyid, Lodi (d) Tughluq, Khalji, Sayyid, Lodi The mother of Shah Jahan was a rajput pricess, daughter of the ruler of (a) Amber (b) Marwar (c) Mewar (d) Bundelkhand Consider the following statements Abul Fazl wrote a three volume history of Akbars reign titled Ain-i Akbari II. The third volume is known as Akbar Nama III. The third volume dealt with Akbars ancestors. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I only (b) I and II (c) III (d) none of the above I.
466.
Abul Fazl was a courtier and a close friend of (a) Akbar (b) Humayun (c) Shah Jahan (d) Babur Consider the following statements regarding the Mughal empire in India. I. Humayun was the emperor for a longer period than his father Babur. II. Babur was the emperor for more than 10 years. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. From their fathers side, the Mughals were the successors of Genghis Khan. II. Timur was ruler of Mongol tribes. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Todar Mal was the revenue minister for (a) Babur (b) Humayun (c) Shah Jahan (d) Akbar Consider the following statements A : Humayuns second tenure as the Mughal emperor lasted just for an year. R : Humayun was defeated by Sher Shah Suri at Chausa and Kanauj. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) if A and R both are true and R is the right reason for A (b) if A and R both are true but R is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not R (d) R is true but not A
467.
461.
462.
468.
463.
Zabt was a revenue system adopted during the Mughal period in India. It was (a) a system where tax was directly proportional to the land owned, even if it was not cultivated. (b) based on a survey of crop yields, prices and areas cultivated for a ten-year period. (c) based on past year performance of the cultivator. (d) a system which brought soldiers in the tax paying ambit. Maratha ruler Shivaji was defeated and insulted by (a) Aurangzeb (b) Akbar (c) Safavid Khan (d) Jahangir Aurangzebs son who rebelled, along with the Marathas, against his father was (a) Bahadur Shah (b) Azam Shah (c) Muhammad Akbar (d) none of the above
464.
465.
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469. 470. 471.
Consider the following statements I. The Mughals did not believe in the rule of primogeniture. II. Aurangzeb introduced the revenue system called zabt. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
CM A T
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472.
In the custom of coparcenary inheritance, a fathers property is inherited (a) to the eldest son (b) to the most able son (c) to the eldest daughter (d) among all his sons Consider the following statements I. Ain-i Akbari was not written by Abul Fazl, the author of the Akbar Nama. II. Mehrunnisa was married to the Emperor Humayun. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none In year X, a famine killed about ten million people in Y. What is X and Y? (a) 1770 and Rajasthan (b) 1770 and Bengal (c) 1830 and Gujarat (d) 1830 and Awadh
478.
In 1803, the British gained control of Delhi after defeating the (a) Marathas (b) Mughal emperor Akbar Shah (c) Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah (d) Sikhs of Punjab What is a cul-de-sac? (a) a street along a circular path (b) a fort with several gates (c) a street with a dead end (d) a fort with no windows Which of the following periods in Delhis history is also known as a period of Delhi renaissance? (a) 1830-1857 (b) 1857-1875 (c) 1875-1890 (d) 1890-1911 Consider the following statements I. The Taiping rebellion, started in 1850 in China, was against Christianity. II. The Governor-General of India was given the title of Viceroy after the capital of India was shifted to Delhi. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
473.
479.
480.
474.
475.
Which of the following events occurred first? (a) Introduction of the Permanent Settlement (b) East India Compant appointed as the Diwan of Bengal (c) Blue Rebellion by indigo farmers (d) Introduction of the Mahalwari Settlement Which of the following Governor-Generals of India decided that after the then Mughal Emperors death none of his descendants would be recognised as kings? (a) Lord Ripon (b) Lord Canning (c) Lord Dalhousie (d) Lord Curzon Who among the following was also know as Periyar? (a) Henry Derozio (b) Swami Vivekananda (c) Shri Narayana Guru (d) E.V. Ramaswamy Naicker
476.
477.
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481. 482. 483. 484.
In the second half of the nineteenth century, which of the following came to be known as the workshop of the world? (a) Russia (b) Britain (c) France (d) Germany Consider the following statements I. A Durbar was held in Delhi in 1911 by the British to acknowledge Queen Victoria as the empress of India. II. The Delhi College, formed in 1792, is now known as Lady Shri Ram College for Women. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none The Portuguese first entered India through (a) Surat (b) Calicut (c) Bombay (d) Goa General Knowledge Question Bank
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485. Consider the following statements I. India became worlds largest producer of cotton after the British conquered Bengal in 1757. II. Muslin was a name given by the Europeans to finely woven textiles. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 486. The cotton textiles which the Portuguese took back from Calicut to Europe came to be known as (a) Indico (b) Fabrical (c) Calcot (d) Calico Patola weave is an ancient art from (a) Gujarat (b) Karnataka (c) Punjab (d) Tamil Nadu
492.
Wootz is a type of (a) cotton (b) steel (c) printed textile (d) dye The tank in Hauz Khas complex in Delhi was constructed by (a) Akbar (b) Shah Jahan (c) Aurangzeb (d) Iltutmish Who among the following was a famous Sanskrit grammarian? (a) Satyakama Jabala (b) Gargi Vachaknavi (c) Panini (d) Lopamudra The Lichchhavis group was a part of which of the following mahajanapadas? (a) Malla (b) Vajji (c) Panchala (d) Kashi What was the real name of Lord Mahavira? (a) Satyakama (b) Shankara (c) Vardhamana (d) Paramananda Who wrote the book The Spirit of the Laws? (a) Aristotle (b) Montesquieu (c) Rousseau (d) John Locke Who wrote the book Two Treatises of Government? (a) Rousseau (b) Thomas Hobbes (c) Pierre Joseph Proudhon (d) John Locke Which of the following were the first to come to Kerala? (a) Portuguese traders (b) Jewish and Arab traders (c) Duth traders (d) English traders Which of the following Apostles of Jesus Christ is believed to bring Christianity to India? (a) St. Andrew (b) St. John (c) St. Mathew (d) St. Thomas
493.
494.
487.
488.
The Calico Act of 1720, enacted by the British government, was to ban (a) ban the use of chintz in England. (b) ban the import of cotton from India. (c) ban the use of indigo for dying cloths. (d) ban the import of Indian indigo to promote woad for dying cloths. Who invented the steam engine? (a) Nicolas Joseph Cugnot (b) Richard Arkwright (c) Gottlieb Daimler (d) Karl Benz
489.
490.
Consider the following statements I. With the start of the nineteenth century, demand for Indian the Indian woven cloth increased enormously in Europe, Africa and America II. The charkha was put on the flag of the Indian National Congress in 1931. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
491.
The first cotton mill in India was set up in (a) Madras (b) Surat (c) Calcutta (d) Bombay
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495. 496. 497. 498. 499. 500.
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Science
501. The blue-black colour of boiled rice water, when mixed with a few drops of dilute iodine solution, is due to the presence of (a) Proteins (b) Starch (c) Phosphorus (d) Iron Which vitamin is prepared by our body in the presence of sunlight? (a) Vitamin A (b) Vitamin B-complex (c) Vitamin C (d) Vitamin D Poor vision can be due to the deficiency of (a) Vitamin A (b) Vitamin D (c) Iodine (d) Iron
509.
Scurvy is a disease caused due to the deficiency of (a) Vitamin A (b) Vitamin C (c) Vitamin D (d) Calcium Which of the following is parasitic? (a) Angelica (b) Cuscuta (c) Verbena (d) Thyme Oxalic acid is found in which of the following? (a) Amla (b) Tamarind (c) Lemon (d) Spinach Which acid does an ant injects into the skin, when it bites? (a) Ascorbic Acid (b) Tartaric Acid (c) Formic Adic (d) Hydrochloric Acid Consider the following statements I. A green pigment in plant leaves called chlorophyll helps to capture the energy of the sunlight. II. Plants obtain nitrogen, to make proteins, from air through leaves. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
510.
511.
503.
512.
504.
Which of the following is a product of photosynthesis? (a) Oxygen (b) Carbon dioxyide (c) Hydrogen (d) Water Consider the following statements: I. Plants consume oxygen for respiration. II. Plants need sunlight for respiration Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
505.
506.
How does Rhizobium helps legumes? (a) It helps in getting starch (b) It helps in extracting energy from sunlight (c) It helps in getting nitrogen (d) It helps in absorbing water through the roots Which of the following is a ruminant? (a) Rat (b) Monkey (c) Eagle (d) Cow
507.
508.
Lohi, Rampur Bushair, Nali and Bakharwal are breeds of (a) Goat (b) Sheep (c) Fish (d) Cow
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513. 514. 515.
Consider the following statements: I. When the soil is too acidic, organic matter is added to it to neutralise it. II. A turmeric stain turns red when treated with a base. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. Respiration is an endothermic reaction. II. Formation of water from hydrogen and oxygen is a decomposition reaction. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
CM A T
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502.
516.
Which of the following has the lowest melting point? (a) Thallium (b) Sodium (c) Caesium (d) Germanium Which of the following has an allotrope which is the hardest known natural substance? (a) Carbon (b) Phosphorus (c) Tin (d) Iron Which is the most ductile metal? (a) Copper (b) Gold (c) Aluminium (d) Tin Which of the following metals is kept in kerosine oil to prevent them from burning at room temperature? (a) Barium (b) Indium (c) Potassium (d) Bismuth Which of the following metals is most reactive? (a) Zinc (b) Calcium (c) Iron (d) Copper Which of the following metals is found in Free State? (a) Aluminium (b) Magnesium (c) Calcium (d) Copper
525.
517.
Consider the following statements I. Algae are green in colour because of chlorophyll present in them. II. Every plant has chlorophyll in its leaves. (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements: I. Pitcher plant is a homotroph. II. Protein is one of the products of photosynthesis in plants. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Villi are finger like outgrowths in (a) Oesophagus (b) Pancreas (c) Small intestine (d) Gall bladder What is deposited on iron during the process of galvanisation ? (a) Zinc (b) Aluminium (c) Copper (d) Tin Lion-tailed macaque is naturally found in which of the following states? (a) Gujarat (b) Madhya Pradesh (c) Kerala (d) Jammu and Kashmir Which of the following destroys ozone? (a) Carbon (b) Chlorine (c) Silicon (d) Sulphur Which of the following gases reduces the oxygen carrying capacity of the blood? (a) Carbon dioxide (b) Carbon monoxide (c) Nitrous oxide (d) Nitric oxide What is marble cancer? (a) cancer caused to human beings working in marble mines (b) soil degradation due to marble mining (c) degradation of marble surface by CFCs (d) degradation of marble surface by acid rain Which is the brightest visible star in the sky? (a) Sirius (b) Polaris (c) Alpha Centauri (d) Alpha Orionis General Knowledge Question Bank
526.
518.
520.
521.
522.
Consider the following statements I. 22 carat gold is an alloy. II. 24 carat gold is very hard. 531. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
523.
Amalgam is an alloy that contains (a) Zinc (b) Mercury (c) Tin (d) Copper Solder is an alloy of (a) Tin and Copper (b) Zinc and Lead (c) Zinc and Copper (d) Tin and Lead
524.
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527. 528. 529. 530. 532. 533.
519.
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534.
Which of the following planets is often called a morning star or an evening star? (a) Mercury (b) Venus (c) Mars (d) Jupiter The property of catenation is predominant in (a) carbon (b) sulphur (c) silicon (d) nitrogen Terylene is a form of (a) Nylon (b) Acrylic (c) Rayon (d) Polyester Consider the following statements I. Melamine is an example of thermoplastics. II. Melamine catches fire very easily. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Which of the following is sonorous? (a) Sulphur (b) Phosphorus (c) Gallium (d) Silicon The green coating on a copper vessel when it is exposed to moist air is a mixture of (a) Copper oxide and copper carbonate (b) Copper hydroxide and copper carbonate (c) Copper hydroxide and copper nitrate (d) Copper oxide and copper sulphate Which of the following is the least dense planet in the solar system? (a) Earth (b) Venus (c) Saturn (d) Jupiter Which of the following elements is a metalloid? (a) Bismuth (b) Silicon (c) Tin (d) Phosphorus Consider the following statements I. Metal oxides are acidic in nature. II. Naphthalene is an inorganic compound. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
543.
535.
Red Data Book is a book which keeps a record of (a) earthquakes (b) cyclones (c) endangered species (d) nuclear reactors Consider the following statements I. The cells having nuclear material without nuclear membrane are known as eukaryotic cells. II. Blue green algae are prokaryotic organisms. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Which of the following does not exhibit external fertilization? (a) Frog (b) Starfish (c) Catfish (d) Sea Urchin Consider the following statements I. Crocodile is an oviparous animal. II. Snakes exhibit binary fission reproduction. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. The pair of sex chromosomes in a boy is XY II. There are 23 pairs of chromosomes in the nuclei of human body cells. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Which gland controls the functioning of other endocrine glands? (a) Pituitary gland (b) Adrenal gland (c) Pineal gland (d) Pancreas Goitre is a disease of the (a) Pancreas (b) Liver (c) Thyroid gland (d) Adrenal gland Metamorphosis in frogs is controlled by (a) adrenalin (b) thyroxin (c) insulin (d) melatonin General Knowledge Question Bank
544.
536.
537.
538.
539.
540.
541.
542.
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545. 546. 547. 548. 549. 550.
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551.
Consider the following statements I. An ostrich egg represents a single cell. II. The nucleus of a plant cell contains its chlorophyll. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements: I. When a solid melts, its temperature increases during the melting. II. On increasing the temperature of solids, potential energy of the particles increases. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Which gas, in its solid state, is known as dry ice? (a) Oxygen (b) Carbon dioxide (c) Nitrogen (d) Hydrogen Molecular mass of sulphurous acid is (a) 82 (b) 98 (c) 96 (d) 84 Consider the following statements I. According to Daltons atomic theory, an atom consists of charged particles called electrons and protons. II. The mass of an atom is approximately equal to the total mass of its protons and electrons. Which of the following statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none J. J. Thomson received the Nobel Prize in physics for the discovery of (a) protons (b) neutrons (c) electrons (d) positrons According to Rutherfords -particle scattering experiment results, (a) Only certain special orbits known as discrete orbits of electrons, are allowed inside the atom. (b) The size of the nucleus is very small as compared to the size of the atom.
(c) Nucleus of an atom consists of proton and neutrons. (d) While revolving in discrete orbits the electrons do not radiate energy. 558. Calcium and X are isobars. What is X? (a) Argon (b) Chlorine (c) Potassium (d) Titanium Which of the following is a covalent compound? (b) HCl (a) MgCl 2 (d) KCl (c) CCl4 Buckminsterfullerene is an allotrope of (a) Phosphorus (b) Carbon (c) Boron (d) Iron Which of the following is an aldehyde? (a) Propanol (b) Propanone (c) Propanal (d) Propanol Methyl propane is an isomer of (a) n-propane (b) n-butane (c) n-pentane (d) n-hexane Which of the following has a sweet fruity odour? (a) Methyl acetate (b) Methanol (c) Methanoic acid (d) Methyl chloride Consider the following statements I. Micelles are a formation of soap molecules, surrounding the oily dirt, in which the ionic ends are in the interior of the cluster and the hydrophobic tails are on the surface of the cluster. II. Soaps are sodium or potassium salts of long chain carboxylic acids. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
552.
559.
553.
554.
555.
556.
557.
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561. 562. 563. 564.
560.
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565.
Consider the following statements I. Alcohol is a cleaner fuel than petrol. II. Carboxylic acids are strong acids. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Who discovered electromagnetism? (a) Michael Faraday (b) Hans Christian Oersted (c) James Clerk Maxwell (d) Andre-Marie Ampere
571.
Consider the following statements I. The fingers wrap in the direction of the magnetic field produced by a current carrying wire when you hold the wire in your right hand. II. The desity of magnetic field lines outside a magnet is highest near the poles.
566.
572. 567. Consider the following statements I. A straight current carrying wire produces a magnetic field in a plane in which the wire lies. II. The magnetic field lines of a magnet are closed curves. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
568.
You are standing below a horizontal power line. Current is flowing in the line in north to south direction. What would be the direction of the magnetic field just above you? (a) East (b) West (c) North (d) South Consider the following statements I. Magnetic field lines through a conventional compass, placed in a magnetic field, are opposite to the needle direction. II. A few magnetic field lines of a magnet, near the poles, cross each other. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
569.
570.
The corkscrew rule is also known as (a) Right-hand thumb rule (b) Flemings right-hand rule (c) Flemings left-hand rule (d) Faradays right-hand rule
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573.
The magnetic field intensity inside a current carrying solenoid (a) increases in the direction of the field. (b) decreases in the direction of the field. (c) is the same throughout the length. (d) is maximum at the centre and decreases as we move towards the ends. Consider the following statements I. The right-hand thumb rule which gives the direction of the magnetic field due to a current carrying wire is also known as Flemings right-hand rule. II. If you break a bar magnet in the middle, there will be no magnetic field left as the two poles are separated. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
574. The direction of force acting on a current carrying conductor placed in a uniform magnetic field depends on (a) the direction of the current only. (b) the direction of the magnetic field only. (c) the direction of the current and the direction of the magnetic field. (d) the geometry of the conductor.
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Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
575.
Stretch the thumb, forefinger and middle finger of your left hand such that they are mutually perpendicular. According to Flemings lefthand rule (a) if the middle finger points in the direction of the magnetic field and the forefinger in the direction of the current, then the thumb will point in the direction of the force acting on the conductor. (b) if the forefinger points in the direction of the current and the middle finger in the direction of the magnetic field, then the thumb will point in the direction of the force acting on the conductor. (c) if the thumb points in the direction of the magnetic field and the middle finger in the direction of the current, then the forefinger will point in the direction of the force acting on the conductor. (d) if the forefinger points in the direction of the magnetic field and the middle finger in the direction of the current, then the thumb will point in the direction of the force acting on the conductor. If a uniform magnetic field is switched on in a direction perpendicular to the motion of an electron moving with a constant speed, then the electron will (a) deflect towards the direction of the field and finally move parallel to the field. (b) start moving in a circle in a plane perpendicular to the field. (c) will accelerate in a straight line in the direction of its motion (d) will decelerate in a straight line in the direction of its motion Who discovered electromagnetic induction? (a) James Clerk Maxwell (b) Michael Faraday (c) John Ambrose Fleming (d) Andre Marie Ampere
578.
576.
577.
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579. 580. 581. 582. 583. 584.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none A wire with a square cross section of side 2X, resistivity 4X and length 8X has resistance (a) 1 (b) 8 (c) 4 (d) 16 Olfactory indicators show change in (a) color (b) smell (c) physical state (d) Both color and physical state Alkali metals react with carboxylic acids to give out (a) Hydrogen (b) Oxygen (c) Carbon dioxide (d) Water Baking powder is made by mixing sodium bicarbonate with a (a) mild acid (b) mild base (c) neutral salt (d) none of the above In a neutralisation reaction, an acid and a base react to give out salt and (a) water (b) hydrogen (c) carbon dioxide (d) oxygen The pH value of pure water is (a) 3 (b) 7 (c) 10 (d) 14
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Consider the following statements I. Stretch the thumb, forefinger and middle finger of your right hand such that they are mutually perpendicular. According to Flemings right-hand rule, if the forefinger points in the direction of the magnetic field and the thumb shows the direction of the motion of the conductor, then the middle finger will show the direction of the current induced. II. Split-ring type commutator is used in AC generators.
585.
Consider the following statements I. The process of dissolving a base in water is an endothermic process. II. Hydrogen ions cannot alone. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
591.
Consider the following statements I. Salts of strong acids are always acidic. II. Milk of magnesia is an antacid. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
592. 586. The stinging hair of nettle leaves secret (a) hydrochloric acid (b) tartaric acid (c) methanoic acid (d) ethanoic acid Tooth enamel is made of (a) Calcium phosphate (b) Calcium silicate (c) Calcium carbonate (d) Calcium sulphate Tomato contains (a) acetic acid (b) lactic acid (c) methanoic acid (d) oxalic acid The three products formed when electricity is passed through brine (a) magnesium hydroxide, chlorine and hydrogen (b) sodium hydroxide, chlorine and hydrogen (c) magnesium hydroxide, carbon dioxide and water (d) sodium hydroxide, carbon dioxide and water Consider the following statements I. A solution with pH value 8 has more hydronium ions than a solution with pH value 12. II. Our stomach produces hydrochloric acid. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 593.
What is produced by the action of chlorine on dry slaked lime? (a) Bleaching powder (b) Baking soda (c) Washing soda (d) Calcium chloride Which of the following gases turn lime water milky? (a) Hydrogen (b) Carbon dioxide (c) Nitrogen (d) Oxygen Consider the following statements I. Sodium bicarbonate with a mild edible acid makes bread or cake soft and spongy. II. Sodium chloride (common salt) is basic in nature. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. Gypsum has five water molecules as water of crystallisation. II. Washing soda has ten molecules of water as water of crystallisation. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
587.
588.
589.
590.
Page 46
CM
594. 595. 596.
Which of the following is not a use of sodium bicarbonate? (a) It is an ingredient in antacids. (b) It is used in soda acid fire extinguishers. (c) It is used in making baking powder. (d) It is used for bleaching clothes.
CM A T
AT
597.
Which of the following does not have water of crystallisation? (a) Gypsum (b) Plaster of Paris (c) Washing soda (d) Baking soda Which of the following is acidic in nature? (a) Toothpaste (b) Blood (c) Tomato (d) Common salt What is the colour of the solution when dilute hydrochloric acid is added to copper oxide? (a) blue-green (b) white (c) Brown-black (d) red-yellow
604.
598.
Consider the following statements I. Potassium does not react with cold water. II. Potassium catches fire if kept in the open. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Which of the following metal oxides is odd one out when we talk about their chemical nature? (a) Calcium oxide (b) Aluminium oxide (c) Sodium oxide (d) Magnesium oxide Consider the following statements I. Non-metallic oxides are basic in nature. II. Copper is more malleable than silver. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none The ascending order of reactivity of metals is (a) Al < Zn < Fe < Mg (b) Zn < Mg < Fe < Al (c) Fe < Zn < Al < Mg (d) Mg < Zn < Fe < Al Which of the following is odd one out as we talk about thermal conductivity of metals? (a) Lead (b) Tungsten (c) Aluminium (d) Gold Consider the following statements I. Anodising is a process of depositing a thick layer of zinc on metal surface to prevent corrosion. II. Magnesium reacts with cold water to form magnesium hydroxide and hydrogen Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
605.
599.
606. 600. Which of the following is the best conductor Of heat? (a) Aluminium (b) Silver (c) Zinc (d) Gold
601.
Consider the following statements I. Onion and vanilla are olfactory indicators. II. Zinc reacts with sodium hydroxide to displace sodium metal and form zinc hydroxide. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. Metal hydrogencarbonate + Acid Salt + Carbon dioxide + Water. This reaction describes the action of bleaching powder. II. Anhydrous copper sulphate is blue in colour.
602.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 603. Which of the following is odd one out as we talk about the melting points of metals? (a) Palladium (b) Platinum (c) Caesium (d) Nickel
Page 47
CM
607. 608. 609. . 610.
Which of the following metallic properties is shown by Iodine? (a) Sonorous (b) Lustrous (c) Malleable (d) Ductile
CM A T
AT
611.
Which of the following will be displaced by the other three in its salt solution? (a) Magnesium (b) Iron (c) Copper (d) Zinc Consider the following statements I. Reaction of sodium with oxygen is an exothermic process. II. Magnesium does not react with cold water but reacts with hot water to give magnesium hydroxide and hydrogen. This is an exothermic process. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
617.
Consider the following statements I. Zinc oxide is amphoteric. II. Copper (II) oxide is black in colour. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
612.
618.
613.
The metals used other than iron for making stainless steel are (a) Aluminium and Chromium (b) Zinc and Silver (c) Copper and Nickel (d) Chromium and Nickel
614.
Consider the following statements I. Hydrogen gas is evolved when a silver reacts with nitric acid. II. Calcium is less reactive than aluminium. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
615.
Which of the following is odd one out as we talk about solubility of these metal oxides? (a) Aluminium oxide (b) Potassium oxide (c) Calcium oxide (d) Sodium oxide Which of the following is not a property of ionic compounds? (a) High melting point (b) Strong inter-ionic bonding (c) Brittle (d) High electrical conductivity in solid stat
616.
Page 48
CM
619. 620.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements A : Pure iron is mixed with a small amount of carbon. R : Pure iron corrodes in moist air. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) if A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) if A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A Consider the following statements A : Stainless steel has higher electrical conductivity than iron. R : Stainless steel is an alloy of iron. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) if A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) if A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
CM A T
AT
Consider the following statements I. Sodium chloride does not exist as molecules. II. Ionic compounds are generally present in liquid state.
621.
Consider the following statements I. Higher the humidity, higher is the rate of evaporation. II. Ammonium chloride undergoes sublimation on heating Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
625.
Consider the following statements A : When zinc granules are immersed in a test tube filled with dilute sulphuric acid, hydrogen is released. R : Zinc is above hydrogen in the activity series. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) if A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) if A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A Consider the following statements I. Calcium bicarbonate is soluble in water. II. Limestone and chalk are different forms of calcium bicarbonate. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
622.
(a) if A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) if A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A 623. Which of the following reactions is used in photography?
Sunlight 2Ag(s) + Cl2 (g) (a) 2AgCl(s)
Heat (b) 2Pb(NO3 )2 (s) 2PbO(s) + 4NO2 (g) + O2 (g)
(d) Mg + O2 624.
MgO
Iron nail when immersed in copper sulphate solution turns brownish. This is a (a) decomposition reaction (b) combination reaction (c) displacement reaction (d) double displacement reaction
Page 49
CM
626. 627. 628. 629. 630.
Consider the following statements A : Temperature of a substance does not change when it is melting. R : Particles of a substance gain kinetic energy while melting or evaporating.
Who showed that the atomic number of an element is a more fundamental property than its atomic mass? (a) Ernest Rutherford (b) Henry Moseley (c) Amedeo Avogadro (d) John Newlands Which of the following elements is a lanthanide? (a) Cerium (b) Actinium (c) Polonium (d) Francium Who among the following gave the Law of Octaves? (a) John Newlands (b) Johann Wolfgang Dobereiner (c) Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev (d) Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier In his periodic table, Mendeleev could not assign a correct position to (a) Oxygen (b) Nitrogen (c) Hydrogen (d) Carbon
CM A T
AT
631.
Which of the following elements is an actinide? (a) Ytterbium (b) Lutetium (c) Erbium (d) Curium In nature, according to John Newlands, there existed only (a) 48 elements (b) 56 elements (c) 64 elements (d) 72 elements In the modern periodic table, which of the following elements does not belong to the group to which the other three belong? (a) Aluminium (b) Gallium (c) Thallium (d) Cadmium Consider the following statements I. Helium and Neon were the only noble gases found place in Mendeleevs periodic table as the others were not discovered as that time. II. Only 63 elements were known at the time when Mendeleev prepared his periodic table of elements.
638.
632.
In the modern periodic table, which of the following elements does not belong to the period to which the other three belong? (a) Cadmium (b) Germanium (c) Indium (d) Antimony Which of the following elements has maximum metallic character? (a) Germanium (b) Arsenic (c) Gallium (d) Selenium X exhibits catenation and is the basic ingredient of organic compounds. X s electronic configuration is (a) 2,4 (b) 2,6 (c) 2,8,3 (d) 2,8,4 As we move down the group in the modern periodic table, the electropositive character (a) decreases (b) increases (c) first decreases then increases (d) first increases then decreases Which of the following adjacent elements in the periodic table are unusually not placed in the order of increasing atomic masses? (a) Aluminium, Silicon (b) Titanium, Vanadium (c) Gallium, Germanium (d) Cobalt, Nickel As we move down the group of the periodic table, which of the following decreases? (a) electronegativity (b) valence electrons (c) atomic size (d) metallic character
639.
633.
640.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 635. The element with the electronic configuration 2,8,3 belongs to (a) Group 2 (b) Group 3 (c) Group 8 (d) Group 13 As we move from left to right in a period in the modern periodic table, the electropositive character (a) decreases (b) increases (c) first decreases then increases (d) first increases then decreases The periodic law which states that the properties of elements are the periodic function of their atomic masses was given by (a) Johann Wolfgang Dobereiner (b) Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev (c) Lothar Meyer (d) Henry Cavendish
636.
637.
Page 50
CM
641. 642. 643.
634.
644. Eka-Aluminium, an undiscovered element predicted by Mendeleev, is (a) Gallium (b) Germanium (c) Silicon (d) Phosphorus
CM A T
AT
645.
Consider the following statements I. In moving from left to right along a period in the periodic table of elements, the atomic radius decreases. II. The atomic radius of Chromium atom is less than the atomic radium of Copper atom. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
651.
652. 646. Which of the following is a Dobereiner Triad? (a) Nitrogen, Potassium and Arsenic (b) Calcium, Strontium and Barium (c) Silicon, Germanium and Tin (d) Copper, Silver and Gold
647.
Consider the following statements I. Animal fats generally contain saturated fatty acid. II. Alkaline potassium permanganate is a strong reducing agent.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 648. Which of the following is the correct descending order in terms of atomic radii? (a) Oxygen < Nitrogen < Boron < Beryllium (b) Nitrogen < Oxygen < Boron < Beryllium (c) Beryllium < Boron < Oxygen < Nitrogen (d) Beryllium < Boron < Nitrogen < Oxygen Which of the following has maximum metallic character? (a) Silicon (b) Tin (c) Lead (d) Germanium Which of the following is least chemically reactive? (a) Argon (b) Sulphur (c) Silicon (d) Phosphorus
649.
650.
Page 51
CM
653. 654. 655.
As we move from left to right in a period in the modern periodic table, capability of the elements to form ionic compounds (a) decreases (b) increases (c) first increases then decreases (d) first decreases then increases Which of the following elements would gain an electron easily? (a) Calcium (b) Chromium (c) Cobalt (d) Chlorine
If the current through a resistor is decreased by 50%, what happens to the power dissipated through the resistor? (a) decreases by 25% (b) decreases by 75% (c) decreases by 50% (d) increases by 50% In the Ohms law, V=IR, (a) R is constant for given metallic wire at a given temperature (b) R is constant for all the metallic wire at a given temperature (c) R is constant for given metallic wire at all the temperature (d) R is variable for given metallic wire at a given temperature
CM A T
AT
Which of the following is the correct descending order in terms of atomic radii? (a) Sodium > Potassium > Rubidium > Caesium (b) Sodium > Potassium > Caesium > Rubidium (c) Caesium > Potassium > Rubidium > Sodium (d) Caesium > Rubidium > Potassium > Sodium
656.
Which of the following is true regarding a fuse? (a) A fuse has low melting point (b) A fuse is connected in parallel with the device (c) A fuse wire is usually encased in a cartridge of porcelain (d) If a current of 6 A flows through the circuit, then fuse of value 5.5 A or less should be used Which of the following is the unit of Magnetic field strength (H field) ? (a) Tesla (b) Weber (c) Oersted (d) Gauss Which of the following is correct : (a) According to ohms law, current through resistor is directly proportional to its resistance (b) The voltmeter is always connected in series across the points between which the potential difference is to be measured (c) Resistance of any wire depends on the type of material, area of cross-section and not its length (d) The ammeter reading is increased when a thicker wire of the same material and of the same length is used in the circuit If an electric bulb and electric heater are to be connected by a single circuit, which should be preferred? (a) Series Circuit (b) Parallel Circuit (c) Both the circuit is preferable (d) Series circuit with high voltage battery connected to it Joules law of heating does not imply that heat produced in a resistor is directly proportional to the (a) current for a given resistance (b) time for which the current flows through the resistor (c) resistance for a given current (d) square of current for a given resistance
661.
Which of the following material is almost extensively used for the filament of the electric bulb? (a) Copper (b) Tungsten (c) Nichrome (d) Aluminium Which of the following material has least electrical resistivity at 20C ? (a) Diamond (b) Constantan (c) Chromium (d) Ebonite Three bulbs of equal resistance are connected in parallel and connected with a battery. If one of the bulb along with its branch is removed keeping rest of the circuit same, then: (a) Current flowing through the battery remains unchanged (b) Current flowing through the battery increases (c) Current flowing through the battery decreases (d) No current will flow now On applying ohms law to parallel combination of resistors, which of the following is true? (a) The reciprocal of the equivalent resistance of a group of resistances joined in parallel is equal to the sum of the reciprocals of the individual resistances (b) The reciprocal of the equivalent resistance of a group of resistances joined in parallel is equal to the sum of the individual resistances (c) The equivalent resistance of a group of resistances joined in parallel is equal to the sum of the reciprocals of the individual resistances (d) The reciprocal of the equivalent resistance of a group of resistances joined in parallel is equal to the product of the reciprocals of the individual resistances
662.
657.
663.
658.
659.
660.
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CM
664.
CM A T
AT
665.
The SI unit of the universal gravitational constant G is (b) N m / kg (a) N m2 / kg2 (c) N kg / m (d) N kg2 / m2 The acceleration due to gravity on the moon is approximately (b) 3.3 m/s2 (a) 4.9 m/s2 2 (c) 2.4 m/s (d) 1.6 m/s2 In a human eye, light enters through the (a) Cornea (b) Pupil (c) Iris (d) Retina In a human eye, the size of the pupil is controlled by (a) Aqueous humour (b) Vitreous humour (c) Retina (d) Iris The amount of light entering an eye is regulated by the (a) Retina (b) Optic nerve (c) Pupil (d) Cornea Which of the following, in an eye, has lightsensitive cells? (a) Retina (b) Iris (c) Ciliary muscles (d) Cornea Consider the following statements I. When ciliary muscles of the eye are relaxed, focal length of the eye lens increases. II. When the light is very bright, the iris contracts the pupil. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Near point of a healthy human eye is about (a) 2 cm (b) 25 cm (c) 100 cm (d) 400 cm
673.
666.
Where does most of the refraction for the light rays entering the eye occur? (a) outer surface of the cornea (b) Vitreous humour (c) Iris (d) Crystalline lens The image of a distant object, in a myopic eye, is formed (a) at a point in front of the retina (b) at a point behind the retina (c) at a point on the retina (d) at a point no image is formed at all In the spectrum of white light, the band between the blue band and the yellow band is (a) red (b) orange (c) brown (d) green Consider the following statements I. In the spectrum of white light by a glass prism, the violet band is closest to the normal to the prism surface. II. When a light ray travels from a medium with high refractive index to a medium with low refractive index, the refracted ray bends towards the normal to the intersurface. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Who first explained the spectrum of light? (a) Albert Einstein (b) Isaac Newton (c) Galileo Galilei (d) Neils Bohr Which of the following phenomena is not involved in forming a rainbow? (a) Total Internal Reflection (b) Dispersion of light (c) Scattering of light (d) Refraction of light
674.
667.
669.
670.
671.
672.
Page 53
CM
676. 677. 678.
668.
675.
CM A T
AT
679.
680.
681.
Consider the following statements I. A rainbow is always formed in a direction opposite to that of the Sun. II. Hot air has a refractive index more than that of a cooler air. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none The Tyndall effect is due to the (a) refraction of light. (b) reflection of light. (c) scattering of light. (d) dispersion of light. The relationship between the radius of curvature R, and focal length f, of a spherical mirror is (a) R = f (b) R = 2f (c) R = 3f (d) 2R = f The image of a distant object, in a hypermetropic eye, is formed (a) at a point in front of the retina (b) at a point behind the retina (c) at a point on the retina (d) at a point no image is formed at all
682.
683.
684.
Page 54
CM
688. 689. 690.
The twinkling of a star is due to (a) refraction of light (b) reflection of light (c) scattering of light (d) dispersion of light
687.
Image of an object placed far away from a concave mirror is formed (a) between the pole and the principal focus (b) at the centre of curvature (c) between the principal focus and the centre of curvature (d) at the principal focus The reddish appearance of the Sun at the sunrise or the sunset is due to the (a) scattering of light (b) reflection of light light from the earth (c) refraction of (d) total internal reflection of light
Image of an object placed at the principal focus of a convex mirror is formed (a) between the pole and the principal focus (b) at the centre of curvature (c) between the principal focus and the centre of curvature (d) at the principal focus For the object distance u, the image distance v and the focal length f, the mirror formula is (a) v + u = f (b) 1/v + 1/u = 1/f (c) vu = f2 (d) v u = f
CM A T
AT
Consider the following statements A : The hypermetropic effect in an eye can be corrected by using concave lenses. R : A concave lens extends the point at which light rays focus. Choose the correct option out of the following (a) if A and B both are true and B is the right reason for A (b) if A and B both are true but B is not the right reason for A (c) A is true but not B (d) B is true but not A
685.
Image of an object placed at the centre of curvature of a concave mirror is formed (a) at infinity (b) at the centre of curvature (c) between the principal focus and the centre of curvature (d) at the principal focus The sky appears blue due to the (a) scattering of light (b) reflection of light (c) refraction of light (d) dispersion of light
686.
691.
If i is the angle of incidence and r is the angle of refraction, the according to the laws of refraction (a) sin i / cos r = constant (b) cos i / sin r = constant (c) sin i / sin r = constant (d) cos i / cos r = constant pH value of X is 14. X is (a) weak acid (b) strong acid (c) weak base (d) strong base When electricity is passed through an aqueous solution of sodium chloride, (a) Chlorine gas is formed at the anode (b) Sodium Hydroxide is formed near anode (c) Hydrogen is formed at the anode (d) oxygen gas is formed at anode
697.
If the mass of a body is increased by 50% and its velocity is increased by 100%, its kinetic energy increases by (a) 100% (b) 300% (c) 500% (d) 750% A body of mass 10 kg is thrown upwards from the ground with an initial speed 100 m/s. What is the potential energy possessed by the body after 2 seconds? (Assume g = 10m/s2) (a) 8kJ (b) 18kJ (c) 28kJ (d) 38kJ A body is thrown vertically upwards from the ground with a velocity V. If air resistance is neglected, then the velocity of the body when it returns to the ground is (a) equal to V (b) less than V (c) depends on mass of the body (d) none of the above A body is travelling in a straight line with a constant acceleration. When it reaches point P its velocity is 50 m/s and when it reaches point Q it is travelling with velocity 70 m/s. What was the approximate velocity of the body when it was midway between P and Q? (a) 54m/s (b) 57m/s (c) 61m/s (d) 64m/s In an inelastic collision (a) momentum and kinetic energy are conserved (b) momentum is conserved but kinetic energy is not conserved (c) momentum is not conserved but kinetic energy is conserved (d) neither momentum nor kinetic energy is conserved A body of mass m moving with a speed v collides with another body of mass 2m moving with speed 2v in opposite direction. After the collision, both the bodies stick together. The speed of the combined mass after the collision is (a) v (b) 2v (c) 3v (d) 4v
698.
692.
693.
699.
694.
Consider the following statements I. An acidic solution turns red litmus paper blue. II. When an acid reacts with a metal carbonate, one of the products formed is hydrogen gas. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements Acceleration due to gravity is greater at the equator than at the poles. II. When a body is immersed fully or partially in a fluid, it experiences an upward force that is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by it. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none I.
695.
696.
If the distance between two bodies is increased by 100% and mass of one of the bodies is increased by 100%, then the gravitational force between the two bodies will (a) remain the same (b) decrease by 50% (c) decrease by 100% (d) increase by 50%
Page 55
CM
700. 701. 702.
CM A T
AT
703.
Which of the following organisms causes kala-azar? (a) Staphylococci (b) Trypanosoma (c) Leishmania (d) Giardia intestinalis Consider the following statements I. Gustatory receptors are located in the nose. II. Information like taste or smell is acquired at the end of the dendritic tip of a nerve cell Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Olfactory receptors are located in our (a) Ears (b) Nose (c) Tongue (d) Eyes
710.
A jet plane is travelling at temperature 20C. It will produce sonic boom at a speed of (a) 370m/s (b) 410m/s (c) 520m/s (d) all of the above Out of the following media, at room temperature, the speed of sound is highest in (a) Iron (b) Air (c) Aluminium (d) Nickel The audible range of sound for human beings is from (a) 10 Hz to 10 kHz (b) 20 Hz to 20 kHz (c) 10 Hz to 100 Hz (d) 20 Hz to 200 Hz SONAR stands for (a) Sound Navigation and Ranging (b) Sound Navigation and Reading (c) Sound in Ocean Navigation and Reading (d) Submarine Ocean Navigation and Ranging The time interval between transmission and reception of ultrasound signal sent by a submarine is 5 seconds. Assuming the speed of sound as 1500m/s, the object detected by the sonar is at a distance of (a) 3.75 km (b) 7.5 km (c) 10 km (d) 15 km Consider the following statements I. A bat uses infrasonic waves to track its prey. II. A three year old child can hear sounds of frequencies more than 20kHz. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none In the inner ear, the pressure variations are turned into electrical signals by the (a) pinna (b) anvil (c) stirrup (d) cochlea
704.
711.
712.
705.
706.
Starting from top level and ending with the basic unit, the correct sequence is (a) Order > Class > Family > Genus > Species (b) Class > Order > Family > Genus > Species (c) Family > Genus > Class > Order > Species (d) Genus > Species > Class > Order > Family Who discovered the photoelectric effect? (a) James Clerk Maxwell (b) Albert Einstein (c) Heinrich Rudolph Hertz (d) Paul Villard
707.
708.
Consider the following statements I. Sound waves are transverse waves. II. Sound does not need a medium to travel. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none A sound wave has a frequency 5kHz and a wavelength 50cm. Distance covered by the wave in 4 seconds is (a) 5km (b) 10km (c) 15km (d) 20km
709.
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CM
713. 714. 715. 716.
CM A T
AT
717.
Which of the following animals can produce ultrasonic waves? (a) Rhinoceros (b) Dolphin (c) Elephant (d) Whales Consider the following statements I. Earthquake produces infrasonic waves. II. Rats can produce ultrasonic waves. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Which of the following regions is also known as the region of megadiversity? (a) Region between the tropic of Cancer and the tropic of Capricorn (b) Region between the tropic of Cancer and the Arctic Circle (c) Region between the Antarctic Circle and the tropic of Capricorn (d) Region between the Arctic Circle and the North Pole. The Origin of Species was written by (a) William Paley (b) Carolus Linnaeus (c) Erasmus Darwin (d) Charles Darwin The five kingdom concept of classification of organisms was given by (a) Ernst Haeckel (b) Carl Woese (c) Robert Whittaker (d) Charles Darwin Which of the following are also called the amphibians of the plant kingdom? (a) Pteridophytes (b) Angiosperms (c) Bryophytes (d) Thallophytes Which of the following are called cryptogamae? (a) Thallophytes (b) Pteridophytes (c) Bryophytes (d) all of the above
724.
Ferns belong to (a) Thallophyta (b) Angiosperms (c) Bryophyta (d) Pteridophyta Hydra belong to the (a) Porifera (b) Platyhelminthes (c) Coelenterata (d) Annelida
718.
725.
719.
726.
720.
721.
722.
723.
Page 57
CM
727. 728. 729. 730.
Consider the following statements I. Amoeba belongs to the kingdom Monera. II. Paramecium belongs to the kingdom Protista. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none The worms causing elephantiasis belong to (a) Platyhelminthes (b) Annelida (c) Coelenterata (d) Nematoda Who wrote the book Systema Naturae? (a) Carolus Linnaeus (b) Charles Darwin (c) Ernst Haeckel (d) Robert Whittaker Who introduced the system of scientific nomenclature of organisms? (a) Charles Darwin (b) Carolus Linnaeus (c) Ernst Haeckel (d) Carl Woese Consider the following statements I. Vertebrates are not triploblastic. II. Vertebrates are coelomic. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
CM A T
AT
731.
Which of the following is not a thallophyte? (a) Syirogyra (b) Ulothrix (c) Marchantia (d) Cladophora Plants that do not have well-differentiated body design are called (a) Thallophytes (b) Bryophytes (c) Pteridophytes (d) Gymnosperms A concave lens forms an image 10 cm away from the it of an object kept 30 cm away from it. What is the power of the lens? (a) 3D (b) 3.33D (c) 6.66D (d) 9D Who discovered the electrolysis of water? (a) William Nicholson (b) Michael Faraday (c) Jan Rudolf Deiman (d) Alessandro Volta
740.
When copper is heated in air, it combines with oxygen to form (b) CuO3 (a) CuO2 (c) Cu2O (d) CuO Aqua regia is a freshly prepared mixture of (a) concentrated sodium hydroxide and concentrated nitric acid (b) concentrated hydrochloric acid and concentrated nitric acid (c) concentrated hydrochloric acid and concentrated sulphuric acid (d) concentrated potassium hydroxide and concentrated sulphuric acid Which of the following lies above hydrogen but below Iron in the activity series of metals? (a) Lead (b) Zinc (c) Copper (d) Silver X can acquire a stable noble gas configuration by gaining K number of electrons or by losing K number of electrons. What is X? (K is a constant) (a) Carbon (b) Oxygen (c) Nitrogen (d) Aluminium Propanal is (a) an alcohol (c) an aldehyde
732.
741.
733.
734.
735.
Ethanol when treated with hot concentrated sulphuric acid gives (a) Ethane (b) Ethene (c) Ethye (d) Ethanoic acid A concave lens has a focal length of 15 cm and an object is kept 30 cm away from it. Magnification produced by the lens is (a) 0.3 (b) 0.33 (c) 0.5 (d) 0.66 Which of the following can be cut with knife? (a) Alkali metals (b) Alkaline earth metals (c) Transition metals (d) Metalloids Diamond is an allotrope of (a) Sulphur (b) Carbon (c) Phosphorus (d) none 747. Which of the following elements has the lowest melting point? (a) Gallium (b) Sulphur (c) Silicon (d) Aluminium
736.
CM
742. 743. 744. 745. 746.
737.
Which of the following has the smallest atomic radius? (a) Sodium (b) Potassium (c) Caesium (d) Rubidium Which of the following elements has the highest chemical reactivity? (a) Argon (b) Helium (c) Neon (d) Carbon Tuberculosis is a (a) viral disease (b) bacterial disease (c) protozoan disease (d) fungal disease
738.
739.
Page 58
CM A T
AT
748.
Typhoid is caused by (a) fungi (b) virus (c) bacteria (d) protozoa Which of the following helps in nitrogen fixation in soil? (a) bacteria (b) virus (c) protozoa (d) fungi Rust of wheat is caused by (a) bacteria (b) fungi (c) protozoa (d) virus Consider the following statements I. Bakelite is a thermoplastic. II. Melamine is a thermosetting plasctic. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. Female Aedes mosquito acts as carrier of malaria parasite. II. Measles is a viral disease. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. Magnesium Oxide is basic in nature. II. When sulphur dioxide is dissolved in water sulphurous acid is formed. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
749.
Fermentation is conversion of (a) sugar into acid (b) acid into sugar (c) alcohol into sugar (d) sugar into alcohol Who discovered the vaccine for small-pox? (a) Louis Pasteur (b) Alexander Fleming (c) Edward Jenner (d) Robert Koch Citrus canker is caused by (a) bacteria (b) fungi (c) virus (d) protozoa
750.
759.
760.
751.
752.
Consider the following statements I. Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin. II. Louis Pasteur discovered fermentation.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 753. Malaria is a disease caused by (a) virus (b) bacteria (c) fungi (d) protozoa Which of the following helps in the formation of yoghurt from milk? (a) Lactobacillus (b) Rhizobium (c) Yersinia pestis (d) Streptococcus Who discovered the bacterium which causes anthrax disease? (a) Alexander Fleming (b) Edward Jenner (c) Louis Pasteur (d) Robert Koch When a copper vessel is exposed to moist air for long, it acquires a (a) green coloured coating (b) yellow coloured coating (c) red coloured coating (d) brown coloured coating
754.
755.
756.
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CM
761. 762. 763.
Why phosphorus is stored in water? (a) to keep it cool (b) to prevent contact with atmospheric oxygen (c) to prevent contact with atmospheric nitrogen (d) to prevent it from rusting
CM A T
AT
764. When an iron nail is put in copper sulphate solution, the blue solution turns (a) red (b) colourless (c) violet (d) green 765. When copper turnings are put in iron sulphate solution, the green solution turns (a) colourless (b) blue (c) violet (d) no change in colour
772.
Consider the following statements I. Cytoplasm is present in animal cells but not in plant cells. II. Chromosomes are present in both plant as well as animal cells. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none The colour of chlorophyll is (a) yellow (b) white (c) green (d) blue Which of the following does not exhibit internal fertilization? (a) cows (b) humans (c) starfish (d) hens Consider the following statements I. Vacuoles in plant cells are generally smaller as compared to the vacuaoles present in human cells. II. Instead of cell membrane, cell wall is present in plant cells. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Ursa major is also known as the (a) Great lion (b) Great bear (c) Great warrior (d) Great king Consider the following statements I. Human cells, in addition to the plasma membrane, also have a cell wall. II. Plastids in the cytoplasm of the leaf cells are always green. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. A human cell is a prokaryotic cell. II. Protoplasm is the total content of the cell. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
773. 766. Consider the following statements I. Carbonisation is the process of burning of coal. II. Natural gas is not a fossil fuel. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Bitumen is commonly used in (a) road surfacing (b) ointments (c) aviation fuel (d) solvent for dry cleaning
774.
767.
768.
Who discovered cells in the living organisms? (a) Antoni van Leeuwenhoek (b) Matthias Schleiden (c) Robert Hooke (d) Rudolf Virchow Pseudopodia means false (a) feet (b) blood (c) bones (d) hair Consider the following statements I. Chloroplast is not present in human cell. II. The plasma membrane of a cell allows the movement of substances or materials both inward and outward. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none The thread like structures in the nucleus of a cell are (a) chromosomes (b) nucleuolus (c) cytoplasm (d) plastids
769.
770.
771.
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CM
775. 776. 777. 778.
CM A T
AT
779.
Consider the following statements I. Chromosomes can be seen only when the cell divides. II. Chromosomes are the basic unit of inheritance in living organisms. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none The animals which give birth to young ones are called (a) oviparous (b) monoparous (c) bioparous (d) viviparous Consider the following statements I. The stage of the embryo in which all the body parts can be identified is called zygote. II. In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) is external fertilisation. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
786.
Goitre is caused by lack of (a) iodine (b) fluorine (c) chlorine (d) iron Tadpoles cannot become adults if the water in which they are growing does not contain sufficient (a) iodine (b) fluorine (c) chlorine (d) iron Orion, a constellation, is also known as the (a) hunter (b) king (c) saint (d) farmer Goitre is a disease in humans visible externally as a swelling on the (a) front of the neck (b) abdomen (c) forehead (d) lower back When forces of equal magnitude are applied perpendicular on the centre of the faces marked as 2 and 5 of a common playing die, the magnitude of the resultant force is (a) equal to the applied force (b) less than the applied force (c) more than the applied force (d) zero Consider the following statements I. When a ball is thrown up in the air, the force due to gravity on it keeps on changing during its motion. II. Pressure exerted per unit area is called force. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. The vocal cords in men are smaller than the vocal cords in women. II. Sound can travel through vacuum. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
787.
780.
788.
782.
Consider the following statements I. Hydra reproduces through binary fission. II. Cow is an oviparous animal. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 791. Those animals which lay eggs are called (a) oviparous (b) viviparous (c) monoparous (d) biparous Which of the following metamorphosis? (a) hen (b) frog (c) cow (d) humans exhibit
783.
784.
785.
Consider the following statements I. Sebaceous glands are sweat glands. II. Insulin is produced by the pancreas. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
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CM
790. 792.
781.
789.
CM A T
AT
793.
Consider the following statements I. Sound travels faster through water than air. II. Loudness of sound is proportional to the amplitude of the vibration producing the sound. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Lateral inversion is exhibited in (a) reflection (b) refraction (c) dispersion (d) diffraction Consider the following statements I. Chromium is not corrosion resistant. II. Chromium has a shiny appearance. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Boiling point of water is (a) 0 Kelvin (b) 100 Kelvin (c) 273 Kelvin (d) 373 Kelvin
801.
Which of the following helps our body to use calcium for bones and teeth? (a) Vitamin A (b) Vitamin B (c) Vitamin C (d) Vitamin D Beriberi is caused due to the deficiency of (a) Vitamin A (b) Vitamin B (c) Vitamin C (d) Vitamin D When X is added to an alkaline copper sulphate solution and caustic soda micture, the solution turns violet. X is (a) Fat (b) Carbohydrates (c) Protein (d) Iron Which of the following acids is found in vinegar? (a) Acetic Acid (b) Tartaric Acid (c) Ascorbic Acid (d) Citric Acid Rickets is caused due to the deficiency of (a) Vitamin A (b) Vitamin B (c) Vitamin C (d) Vitamin D Which of the following acids is found in spinach? (a) Lactic Acid (b) Oxalic Acid (c) Citric Acid (d) Acetic Acid Rust is formed of (a) iron oxide (b) calcium oxide (c) sulphur dioxide (d) carbon monoxide Consider the following statements I. Ozone is triatomic. II. After absorbing ultraviolet radiations, ozone breaks down to oxygen. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Anaemia is caused due to the deficiency of (a) Iron (b) Iodine (c) Phosphorus (d) Calcium
802.
803. 794.
796.
797.
Ratio of nitrogen and hydrogen by mass in ammonia is (a) 14:1 (b) 14:2 (c) 14:3 (d) 14:4 807. Which of the following molecules exist as tetra-atomic in nature? (a) Nitrogen (b) Phosphorus (c) Chlorine (d) Helium A ruminant is an animal which (a) lays eggs (b) exhibits external reproduction (c) swallows and stores the food (d) lives in burrows Which of the following contains ascorbic acid? (a) Lemon (b) Spinach (c) Tamarind (d) Amla 809.
798.
799.
800.
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804. 805. 806. 808.
795.
CM A T
AT
810.
Which of the following diseases is caused by a virus? (a) Malaria (b) Typhoid (c) Polio (d) Cholera Consider the following statements I. Cellular respiration cannot take place without oxygen. II. The products of respiration in yeast are alcohol, carbon dioxide and enrgy. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
817.
Consider the following statements I. Soyabean is a kharif crop. II. Groundnut is a rabi crop. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
811.
818.
812.
Consider the following statements I. Human cells can respire anaerobically. II. Muscle cramps are caused due to the accumulation of lactic acid.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 813. Consider the following statements I. Aerobic respiration of yeast is need in making wine and beer. II. Weasts are single-celled organisms. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 814. Penicillium is a (a) virus (c) bacteria
815.
Aspergillosis is caused by (a) virus (b) bacteria (c) fungus (d) protozoa Consider the following statements I. Kharif crops are grown in winter season. II. Mustard is a kharif crop. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
816.
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819. 820. 821.
Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Consider the following statements I. Alexander Fleming discovered fermentation. II. Alexander Fleming discovered the vaccine for small pox. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Curd is made with the help of (a) Rhizobium (b) Yeast (c) Lactobacillus (d) Chlamydomonas Consider the following statements India has the largest number of medical colleges in the world. India is the largest producer of medicines in the world. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I only (b) II only (c) I and II (d) none
CM A T
AT
Consider the following statements I. Female Anopheles mosquito acts as carrier of dengue virus. II. Tuberculosis is a bacterial disease.
Miscellaneous
822. Consider the following statements: I. Buffer stock increases commodity prices when supplies are short. II. Decrease in Minimum Support Price means increase in farmer income. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none 823. Who wrote the book Two Treatises of Government? (a) Rousseau (b) Thomas Hobbes (c) Pierre Joseph Proudhon (d) John Locke
828.
Which of the following states has the highest per capita income? (a) Delhi (b) Maharashtra (c) Kerala (d) Goa Consider the following statements: I. Highest contributing sector to the GDP of India is the secondary sector. II. Primary sectors contribution to the GDP of India is almost double the contribution made by the tertiary sector. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none According to the Constitution of India, who among the villagers is a member of a Gram Sabha? (a) Anyone who is 35 years old or above and elected by the Gram Panchayat to the Gram Sabha (b) Anyone who is 35 years old or above (c) Anyone who is elected by the Gram Panchayat to the Gram Sabha (d) Anyone who has the right to vote Gram Sevak is a term used for (a) Gram Panchayat President (b) Gram Panchayat Secretary (c) Ward Panch (d) Gram Sabha member The FCI pays a pre-announced price to the farmers for their crops. This price is called (a) Minimum Control Price (b) Minimum Stock Price (c) Minimum Market Price (d) Minimum Support price Who is responsible for providing caste certificate to a person? (a) Tehsildar (b) District Collector (c) Patwari (d) Municipal chief auditor
829.
824.
Which is the first ever known autobiography of an Indian woman? (a) City of two gateways (b) Beyond the jungle (c) Amar Jiban (d) My reminiscences
825.
Consider the following statements: I. National Food for Work Programme was launched in 1975. II. Antyodaya is a kind of ration card issued by the government. Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
826.
Who is the first woman train driver for the Northern Railways? (a) Savitribai Phule (b) Toolika Rani (c) Laxmi Lakra (d) Shail Mishra 833. Kesar Saga is (a) a Tibetan epic (b) a Bangla epic (c) Burmese national anthem (d) a Tamil epic
827.
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830. 831. 832.
CM A T
AT
834.
Which of the following is the first state in India to introduce the midday meal scheme? (a) Kerala (b) Tamil Nadu (c) Gujarat (d) Karnataka Article 17 of the Indian Constitution is about (a) Right to religion (b) Right to freedom (c) Right to education (d) Right to equality Amartya Sens entitlement approach is related to (a) Industrialisation (b) Economic Depression (c) Food Security (d) Investment Banking Which of the following states has the highest per capita income? (a) Delhi (b) Maharashtra (c) Kerala (d) Goa Which of the following states has the highest infant mortality rate (IMR) in India? (a) Bihar (b) Madhya Pradesh (c) Rajasthan (d) Haryana According to the 2011 Human Development Report, which of the following has the highest Human Development Index (HDI) ? (a) Sri Lanka (b) India (c) China (d) Bangladesh Which of the following is a tertiary economic sector? (a) Textile Industry (b) Banking (c) Real Estate (d) Sugar Mill Consider the following instance: Transporters of the whole region are on strike. Which of the following is correct regarding the sector which is suffering due to another sector? (a) Tertiary sector due to Primary sector (b) Tertiary sector due to Secondary sector (c) Primary sector due to Secondary sector (d) Secondary sector due to Tertiary sector
842.
835.
Ford Motors came to India in 1995 and set up a large plant near Chennai in collaboration with (a) Hindutan Motors (b) Tata Motors (c) Mahindra and Mahindra (d) Ashok Leyland
843.
836.
837.
838.
839.
840.
841.
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CM
845. 846.
844.
Consider the following statements I. Secondary sector of economic activities is also known as service sector. II. Telecommunication is a secondary sector. Which of the above statements is/are correct? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none Self Help Groups (SHG) are groups of (a) Security personnel in rural areas (b) Money lenders in rural areas (c) Medics in rural areas (d) craftsmen in rural areas Consider the following statements I. Cargill Inc is an Indian enterprise bought over by Wallmart of USA II. Labour cost in China is lower than India Which of the above statements is/are true? (a) I (b) II (c) I and II (d) none
CM A T
AT
COPRA 1986 is (a) Consumer Protection Act (b) Company Protection Act (c) Corruption Prevention Act (d) none of the above
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CM A T
AT
451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500
d b a a b d c b c c b d b a c a a d d b a d d b b b d a c a d b b b b d a a b b d b d c b c b d b d
501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550
b d a a a c d b b b d c a b d c a b c b d a b d a d c a c b b d a b a d d c b c b d c d c a c a c b
551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600
a d b a d c b a c b c b a b a b b a d a b c d c d b b a b b a a a b b c a d b b b a b a b d d c a b
601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650
a d c b a d c a d b c c d a a d c a c a b a a c a a b a a c d b d b d a b b c a b d a a a b d d c a
651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700
d d d b a c c d b a b c c a a d a d c a c b a a d d b c d a a c b b b a d a a b c d a d b b c b d c
701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 739 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748 749 750
b a c b b b c d b d c b a a b d b c a d c c d d c b d a b b c a c a b b a b a d b a a c a d b b d c
751 752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766 767 768 769 770 771 772 773 774 775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782 783 784 785 786 787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800
a c d a d a c a b b b c b d d d a c a c a b c c d b d b a d b d a b b a a a a d c d b a b d c b c d
801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 811 812 813 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845 846
d b c a d b a c a c b c b d c d a b d c a d d c b c a d d d b d a b d c d b a b d c a d b b
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Geography
1. a The part of the Himalayas lying between Satluj and Kali rivers is known as Kumaon Himalayas. Northern Circar is the northern part of eastern coastal plains of Indi (a) The Malabar coast and the Kannad Plain are the southern and central stretches of the western coastal plains. With its hundreds of tributaries, the Amazon drains a territory of more than 7 million sq km, roughly half of which is in Brazil. A trellis drainage pattern develops where hard and soft rocks exist parallel to each other.
16. b
The river Ganga bifurcates in West Bengal. The subsidiary branch, the Bhagirathi, winds south to form the Hooghly river. The gravity of the earth pulls all materials on its surface downwards. These downward movements are called mass movement or mass wasting. The Moho discontinuity, named after the geologist Mohorovicic, is the boundary between earths crust and earths mantle. The outer core is a liquid region composed mostly of iron, with smaller amounts of nickel and sulphur in liquid form. The inner core is solid and is composed mostly of iron and nickel. As the core is made up of mainly metals, it is also known as the metallic core. The continental crust is less dense than the oceanic crust because the continental crust is made of a mix of light and dense rocks while the oceanic crust is composed mostly of dense igneous rocks. Oxygen is the most abundant element of the earths crust followed by silicon, aluminium and iron. Granite is an igneous rock of visible crystalline formation and texture. It is composed of feldspar and quartz, with a small amount of mica. the average thickness of the oceanic crust is about 5 km while the average thickness of the continental crust is about 40 km. The asthenosphere is a 100 km thick layer found at the top of the lower mantle. Igneous rocks are formed by the solidification of magma while metamorphic rocks and sedimentary rocks are composed of pre-existing rocks. Shale is a sedimentary rock formed by the consolidation of beds of clay or mu(d) When two continental plates converge, neither plate can be forced under the other. Instead, folds may be created. The Himalayas have been formed in this way. The San Andreas fault is a rift caused, not by collision between plates, but by the movement of plates away from each other. The inner core of the earth is solid and made of iron, nickel and sulphur. Lake Baikal, the deepest lake in the world, is a salt water lake located in Siberia. It is the deepest lake in the world with a maximum depth of 1,637 m. It is estimated to contain approximately one-fifth of all the earths fresh surface water.
17. c
2. d
18. a
3. b
19. d
4. a
5. d 6. a The northern plains, lying at the foothills of the Himalayas, were formed by the deposition of alluvium over millions of years in this basin. Mahendragiri, at 1501 metres, is the highest peak of the Eastern Ghats. Doda betta and Anai Mudi are the highest peaks of the Western Ghats. 20. c
7. b
8. b
The northern plains start with the bhabhar belt while the terai belt lies south of the bhabhar. The streams which disappear in the bhabhar re-emerge in the terai belt. Lohit is a tributary of river Brahmaputra. Plants take in carbon dioxide through the stomata of the leaves. The Central Highlands lie north of the Narmada river covering a major area of the Malwa plateau. The Deccan Trap is of volcanic origin hence it is made up of igneous rocks. It is the bhangar belt which is made up of older alluvium. The khadar are newer, younger deposits of the flood plains.
9. d 10. b
11. a
12. d
13. a 14. a Plants cannot absorb atmospheric nitrogen through stomata of the leaves. The gaseous nitrogen is converted to useful form by bacteria in the soil, which can finally be absorbed by the roots along with water and other minerals. According to the Indus Water Treaty of 1960, India can use only 20% of the total water carried by the Indus river system. The Brahmaputra takes a U turn on reaching the Mount Namcha Barwa and enters India in Arunachal Pradesh through a gorge.
15. b
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21. b 22. c 23. d 24. b 25. b 26. d 27. c
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AT
28. d
The Pamir Knot is the meeting place of many mountains. It is located in the extreme north of India. K2, at 8,611 m, is the second tallest mountain in the worl(d) Only Mount Everest is taller than K2.
42. b
29. b
Schumacher believed that natural resources should be conserved and concluded that large industries and large cities would lead to the depletion of natural resources. In India hydroelectric power contributes approximately 22 % of the total electricity produced About 70 % of worlds total freshwater occurs as ice sheets and glaciers in Antarctica, Greenland and the mountainous regions of the world, while a little less than 30 % is stored as groundwater in the worlds aquifers. Fossil fuels are non renewable and non recyclable resources. Inexhaustible resources are a subset of renewable resources. There are resources which are renewable, like wildlife, but not inexhaustible. The Net Sown Area is over 80 % of the total surface area in Punjab and Haryana. The IUCN headquarters is at Gland, Switzerland.
43. d 30. b Verkhoyansk is the coldest place in the northern hemisphere with a mean January temperature of 45(C) 1 nautical mile = 1.852 km According to the widely accepted Law of the Sea (Maritime Law), each nation that borders the ocean may claim an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), which extends offshore for 200 nautical miles. Resources within an EEZ belong to the nation that claims it. In terms of installed capacity, Tamil Nadu is ranked number 1 followed by Maharashtra, Karnataka, Gujarat and Rajasthan. In wind power generation, kinetic energy of the blades is converted into electrical energy.
31. b 32. d
44. d
34. a
35. d
The bauxite reserve in Odisha is of the order of 1607 million tonnes which is more than half of the countrys total reserve.
36. c
Net Sown Area represents the total area sown with crops and orchards. Area sown more than once in the same year is counted only once. Gross Crop Area represents the total area sown once and/or more than once in a particular year, i.e. the area is counted as many times as there are sowings in a year.
37. c 50. b 38. d Mountains account for 30 % of the total surface area of India while about 43 % of the area of the country is plain area. The first National Forest Policy after independence was set up in 1952. The Rose-ringed Parakeet population is widely distributed all over India and in many parts of Central Africa. It is given the least concern conservation status by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources. The Indian wild ass, found in the Rann of Kutch and Pakistan, is an endangered animal. Buxa Tiger Reserve lies in Alipurduar sub-division of Jalpaiguri district of West Bengal. Dolomite is CaMg(CO3)2 which is calcium magnesium carbonate. In the 1970s and 1980s, the Chipko movement in India fought for preservation of the forests that provided livelihood to the people. Jawaharlal Nehru proudly proclaimed the dams as the temples of modern India; the reason being that it would integrate development of agriculture and the village economy with rapid industrialisation and growth of the urban economy. China is the largest producer of rice in the world while India stands at number two. Bhoodan-Gramdan movement initiated by Vinobha Bhave is also known as the Blood-less Revolution. Rearing of silk worms for the production of silk fibre is known as sericulture. Operation Flood, also known as the White Revolution, was a dairy development programme launched in India in 1970.
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Madhuca Insignis, a wild variety of mahua, is now on the verge of extinction. Azadirachta Indica (neem tree), Prosopis Juliflora (vilayati kikar) and Acacia nilotica (babul) are extensively found in India. The State of Forest Report includes plantations in natural forests and therefore fails to to deliver accurate information about actual loss of natural forests. Gayal, also known as Mithun, is a massive semidomesticated ox found in India. Gayals are raised in eastern states like Assam and Arunachal Pradesh for meat and milk
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In Odisha high grade hematite ore is found in Badampahar mines in the Mayurbhanj and Kendujhar districts. Mica is mined in Ajmer and Beawar districts of Rajasthan, Gaya in Bihar and Nellore district in Andhra Pradesh. Anthracite is highest quality hard coal. It has the highest fixed-carbon content and the lowest amount of volatile material of all types of coal.
70. d 71. b Argon is the third most abundant gas comprising 0.93% of the atmosphere. Pole Star (North Start) is in north direction. Tamil Nadu is south of Karnataka and Arabian Sea is left of Karnataka. Maximum area of Karnataka lies below Maharashtra (not Andhra Pradesh). So you will most probably reach Maharashtra.
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59. a 60. b The greatest depth in the world has been recorded at Mariana Trench (11,022 metres) in the Pacific Ocean. Puerto Rico Trench is the deepest point in Atlantic ocean. Eurasia Basin and Java Trench are the deepest points in Arctic Ocean and Indian Ocean respectively. Africa is the only continent through which all three of the Tropic of Cancer, the Equator and the Tropic of Capricorn pass through. Only the Tropic of Cancer and the Equator pass through Asia. Arctic Circle also passes through Asia. An isthmus is a marrow strip of land that joins two landmasses. The Isthmus of Panama (contains the country of Panama and the Panama Canal) links the two continents. Other three does no exist. 74. c
Narmada is one of the only three major rivers in India that flow westewards and drain into the Arabian Sea, Tapi and Mahi being the other two. Angel falls in Venezuela (South America) is the highest waterfall in the world. Llanos are tropical grasslands in Venezuela. Pampas and Prairie are temperate grasslands in Argentina and North America respectively.
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63. c 64. d Strait of Dover connects the North Sea and the English Channel. Strait of Gibraltar connects the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean sea, Bab-el-Mandeb connects the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. The Andes in South America are the longest mountain range in the world with an approximate length of 7200 km.
65. a
66. c 67. c To have a standard time all over the country, we cannot calculate time on the basis of the suns movement in the sky. It is therefore necessary to adopt the local time of some central meridian of the country as the standard time. The IST is calculated from a clock tower located in Mirzapur (Uttar Pradesh) which is located on the Standard Meridian of India (82.5 E). Mahogany, Ebony and Rosewood are important trees of tropical rain forests (evergreen forests) while Teal, Sal and Shisham are important tropical deciduous forest (monsoon forests) trees. Sundari is found in mangrove forests of the Sundarbans. Sundarbans have been named after Sundari.
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Taiga are coniferous trees found in very cold and snow covered regions of the world. Ox-bow is a type of lake cut off from a river due to continuous deposition over the meanders.
Tawa Matsya Sangh a cooperative of fisherworkers in Madhya Pradesh. It is an organisation fighting for the rights of the displaced forest dwellers of the Satpura forest in Madhya Pradesh
Tamil Nadu is the first and the only state in India which has made roof top rainwater harvesting structure compulsory to all the houses across the state. There are legal provisions to punish the defaulters. Aus, Aman and Boro are three main crop varieties of rice grown in states like West Bengal and Odisha. Jute is a Kharif season crop. Maharashtra is the largest producer of jowar in India followed by the states of Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh. National Highway-7 is the longest and traverses 2, 369 km between Varanasi and Kanyakumari. The historical Sher Shah Suri Marg between Delhi and Amritsar is the National Highway-1 of India.
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Venus is called Earths-Twin because its size and shape are very much similar to that of the earth.
88. a 89. b 90. a 105. c 91. b Marmagao port (Goa) is the premier iron ore exporting port of the country. This port accounts for about fifty per cent of Indias iron ore export. Oil India Lt(d) (OIL) is jointly owned by public and private sector. Cryolite is an aluminium ore which is also used in the electrolytic processing of bauxite. India is the largest producer of raw jute and jute goods and stands at second place as an exporter after Bangladesh. 108. a 106. a 107. d
as the Bhairodev Dakav Sonchuri, declaring their own set of rules and regulations which do not allow hunting, and are protecting the wildlife against any outside encroachments. Biogas has higher thermal efficiency in comparison to kerosene, dung cake and charcoal. Madhya Pradesh is the biggest producer of copper in India. The Balaghat mines produce about 50% of Indias copper.
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The Panchmarhi Biosphere Reserve located at Satpura Hill-ranges in Central India in the State of Madhya Pradesh. It was designated as Biosphere Reserve in 1999. The state of Madhya Pradesh has the largest forest cover in the country at 77,700 square km followed by Aruncachal Pradesh at 67, 410 square km. Forest area of India is about 23% of the total area while the net sown area is about 46% of the total area. Red soil has high iron content and is fit for crops like red gram, Bengal gram and green gram. In India, the total protected forest area and the total reserved forest area are about 55% and 30% of the total forest area respectively. Out of the total wasteland area in India, the forest degraded area is more than 50% while the water eroded area is around 30%. The four coral reef areas identified for conservation and management in India are : Gulf of Mannar, Gulf of Kutch, Lakshadweep Islands and Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The local name for the black soil in the deccan is regur soil. In terms of percentage of forest cover in relation to total geographical area, Mizoram tops with 90.68% followed by Lakshadweep Islands with 84.56%. Van Mahotsav in India is celebrated in first week of July. Project Elephant, a centrally sponsored project, was launched in 1992. Its objectives are to protect elephants and their habitat, to address issues of man-animal conflict and welfare of domesticated elephants. The Central Vigilance Commission of India was set up in 1964 to look into the complaints of corruption against the public servants.
94. b 95. c
Fluoride in the teeth and saliva increases the ability of teeth to replace minerals immediately when decayproducing acids attack the teeth.
96. d
Lignite is a low grade brown coal, which is soft with high moisture content. One tonne of steel requires nearly 10 kg of manganese. Assam is the oldest oil producing state of Indi a. Digboi, Naharkatiya and Moran-Hugrijan are the important oil fields in the state. Rawatbhata nuclear power station, also known as Rajasthan Atomic Power Plant, is a nuclear power plant located in Rawatbhata, Rajasthan.
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99. c 100. a The black monazite sand of the coastal regions of Kerala contains radioactive material thorium. There are about 70 jute mills in India. Most of these are located in West Bengal, mainly along the banks of the Hugli river. The cane produced in these states has higher sucrose content. The cooler climate also ensures a longer crushing season. Moreover, the cooperatives are more successful in these states. India is the second largest producer of sugar in the world, Brazil being at number one. Rabi crops are Rabi crops are sown in winter from October to December and harvested in summer from April to June. 117. b 104. a The inhabitants of five villages in the Alwar district of Rajasthan have declared 1,200 hectares of forest
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Alluvial soils are of two types Khadar, the new alluvium cover, and Bhangar, the old alluvium cover.
118. c
According to the Human Development Report 2011, Norway is at the top of the Human Development Index ranking while India is at 134. Kerala produces about nine-tenths of the total rubber production in India.
133. c
Brahmaputra is called Tsang Po in Tibet and Jamuna in Bangladesh. Godavari originates in Maharashtra while the other three originate in Madhya Pradesh. Godavari rises in Maharashtra near Nasik in the Western Ghats. It flows 1,500 km generally southeast to its delta on the Bay of Bengal, into which seven mouths of the river empty.
134. c 119. a
135. b 120. b According to the Census of India 2011, Haryana has lowest sex ratio (861). Kerala has the highest sex ratio (1058) Except the Mediterranean sea, the other three are lakes. The Wular lake in Jammu and Kashmir is the largest fresh water lake in India. This lake is the result of the tectonic activity. The Bhakra Nangal Project in Himachal Pradesh led to the formation of Guru Gobind Sagar. Forest area of India is about 23% of the total area while the net sown area is about 46% of the total area. 136. b
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137. a
The Mahanadi rises in the highlands of Chhattisgarh and flows through Odisha to reach the Bay of Bengal. Dhuadhar falls is located on Narmada river in Jabalpur district of Madhyapradesh. Koyana is a tributary of river Krishna.
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125. d
Some of the areas where women and men first began to grow crops such as wheat and barley about 8000 years ago are located here.
126. b 127. d Chambal Joins Yamuna in Etawah district of UP. Yamuna Joins Ganga at Allahabad. Son River joins River Gange near Patna, Bihar. Chambal rises in the Vindhya Range, a mountain system in central India, and flows in a generally northeastern direction for 1,000 km to join the Yamuna River. River Tungabhadra joins river Kaveri in Andhra Pradesh. Narmada flows between the Vindhya and Satpura ranges in a generally southwestern direction for 1,300 km, emptying into the Gulf of Khambhat, an arm of the Arabian Sea. The Sutlej is the south-easternmost of the five rivers of the Punjab which are also the tributaries of river Indus. It rises in Tibet, flows southwest through Himchal Pradesh State, India, and then passes through the great arid plains of Punjab Province, Pakistan, joining the Indus after a course of 1,450 km. Tapi flows in west direction while the other three flow east. The Narmada rises in the Amarkantak hills in Madhya Pradesh. The Amarkantak region is the meeting point of the Vindhyas and the Satpuras.
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Godavari has got this name because of its length and the large area it covers. Materials in the environment which have the potential to satisfy human needs but human beings do not have the appropriate technology to access them are known as stock resources. Resources which are found in a region, but have not been utilised are known as potential resources. Between June 3 and June 14 representatives from more than 170 nations converged on Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, for the Earth Summit. The 1992 Earth Summits major theme was sustainable economic development, meaning development that does not use up or destroy so many of the worlds natural resources that it cannot be sustained over time. The meeting produced an overall plan, called Agenda 21, in which large developing countries promised to develop their industries with an eye toward protecting the environment. Mahatma Gandhi placed the greedy and selfish individuals and exploitative nature of modern technology as the root cause for resource depletion at the global level. He was against mass production and wanted to replace it with the production by the masses. The 1987 Brundtland Commission, chaired by the then Prime Minister of Norway Gro Harlem Brundtland, on Environment and Development defined sustainable development as development that meets the needs of the present, without compromising the ability of future generations to
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The river Kaveri makes the second biggest waterfall in India, known as Sivasamudram.
meet their own needs. Javier Perez de Cuellar was the United Nations Secretary General who appointed the commission. 146. b Forest area in the country should be 33% of the total geographical area, according to the National Forest Policy of 1952. Khadar is new alluvial soil. It is more fertile than the old alluvial soil called Bangar. Black soil is ideal for growing cotton and is also known as black cotton soil. Leaching is a process in which water carries materials in solution down from one soil level to another. The laterite soil develops in areas with high temperature and heavy rainfall. The reddish colour of the red and yellow soils is due to diffusion of iron in crystalline and metamorphic rocks. Black soils are generally poor in phosphoric content.
161. b
After the Treaty of Nanking, the Chinese signed the Treaty of Boque which made the British its most favoured state. The British also got the right of extra-territoriality through this treaty. Vietnam signed a treaty with the French in 1862 which gave control of southern Vietnam to the French. By 1885, the French completely took over Vietnam. Soon Cambodia and Laos were also added to the French Colonial Empire.
162. a
147. a
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In strip cropping, strips of grass are left to grow between the crops. This breaks up the force of the wind and prevents soil from eroding. 167. a According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), species whose population levels are considered to be normal for their survival are called normal species. The drug paclitaxel (Taxol), approved in 1992 for treating ovarian and other cancers, is extracted from the bark of the Himalayan yew. Belgium shares its borders with France, Luxembourg, Germany and Netherlands 169. d
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156. a 157. d The headquarters of the European Union is in the capital of Belgium, Brussels. 170. c
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History
171. a 159. a Thailand is the only Southeast Asian country never to have been occupied by any European or other foreign power, except in war. Under the Treaty of Nanking in 1842, China ceded Hong Kong to the British. Both the British and the French fought the Second Opium War against China.
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165. c 166. d 168. b
Under Aurangzeb the Mughal Empire reached its greatest extent. In all, it comprised 21 provinces, covering a geographical spread from Afghanistan to the north-west to the eastern extremity of Bengal in the east and from Kashmir in north to the Carnatic in the south. Aurangzeb imposed a set of Islamic laws called Fatwa-i-Alamgiri in defence of Islam and Muslim society. Chin Quilich Khan, popularly known as Nizam-ulMulk, founded the state of Hyderabad in 1724 and became the first Nizam of Hyderaba(d) Nadir Shah of Iran invaded Delhi in 1738-1739 and plundered the city. He also took away the Peacock Throne and the Koh-i-noor diamond. Bhakti Saints like Samarth Ramdas since the 15th century had created in the minds of the Marathas the abiding sense of mutual love and faith in one God. These saints too had an influence which emphasised on the principles of good work and purity of heart. According to the treaty, the Maratha Kingdom was divided into two halves. The southern half of the kingdom went to Sambhaji II while the Northern Half went to Sahuji. The Treaty made the Nizam surrender the whole of Malwa. By this treaty, Baji Rao I also obtained from Nizam the territory lying between rivers Narmada and Chambal other than 50 lakh rupees as war compensation. The Maratha power revived in norther India after almost a decade under Madhav Rao I. Following the death of Najib-ud-Daula the Marathas restored the exiled Mughal emperor Shah Alam II on the throne of Delhi in 1772. Balaji Baji Rao was known as Nana Saheb, not Baji Rao.
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Britain occupied Egypt from Turkey to guarantee its repayment of the huge foreign debt.
172. c
During difficult times, diwan Balaji Vishwanath stood steadfastly by Sahuji (son of Sambhaji). Hence Sahuji elevated him to the post of Peshwa. Jiziya is a poll tax that early Islamic rulers demanded from their non-Muslim subjects. Aurangzeb imposed this tax during his reign in India. Sardeshmukhi was an additional 10% tax levied on top of the Chauth, which was 25% tax on the revenue produced. During difficult times, diwan Balaji Vishwanath stood steadfastly by Sahuji (son of Sambhaji). Hence Sahuji elevated him to the post of Peshwa. From then on, the office of the Peshwa became hereditary and Balaji and his successors became the de facto rulers of the Maratha kingdom. In the First Carnatic War, the French defeated the Nawab of Arcot. The Third Carnatic War was won by the British. This finally decided the fate of the two European powers in India. The Dutch were not involved at all in the Carnatic Wars. The Battle of Wandiwash put an end to the colonial ambitions of the French in India. Hector Munro was the commander of the Company forces in the Battle of Buxar. Clive was away in England during the war. The Company replaced Mir Jafar with his son in law as the Nawab of Bengal. In 1760, the Company replaced Mir Jafar with his son in law Mir Qasim as the Nawab of Bengal. Robert Clive signed the Treaty of Allahabad on 12 August 1765 with the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II. By this treaty, the Emperor was taken under the Companys protection and was assigned Allahabad and Kara. Further, the Company also granted the Emperor an annual pension of rupees 26 lakh in return for a farman, which granted the Company the diwani of Bengal. Warren Hastings stopped the annual grant of Emperor Shah Alam II. He also took away Allahabad and Kara from the Emperor and sold these territories back to the Nawab of Awadh. The Nizam of Hyderabad was the first Indian power to accept the subsidiary alliance with pleasure. By the Treaty of Bassein, Peshwa Baji Rao II entered into subsidiary alliance with the British. In fact, he had been forced to seek British protection after Jaswant Rao Holkar captured Pune. 189. b 184. d
By the Treaty of Amritsar signed in 1809, river Sutlej had been fixed as the boundary between the British and Maharaja Ranjit Singhs territories. The Treaty of Sagauli was signed between the British and the Gorkhas. The Gorkha leader Amar Singh was defeated in the First Anglo-Nepalese War (1814-16) and signed the treaty in 1816. The First Anglo-Sikh War took place in 1845-1846. Lord Hardinge was the Governor-General of India from 1844 to 1848. Although Robert Clive gave birth to the Covenanted Civil Services in India, it was Lord Cornwallis who was regarded as the father of modern civil services. It was Cornwallis who separated the commercial and the revenue branches of the administration while simultaneously excluding Indians from all high offices.
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187. c 188. b 190. b 191. a 192. d 193. c 194. d
Maharaja Dalip Singh entered the subsidiary alliance at Lahore in 1846 through the Treaty of Lahore. After the Second Anglo-Sikh War, the British annexed territories in India through a law called the Doctrine of Lapse. The British took away the famous diamond Koh-inoor from Maharaja Dalip Singh after defeating him in the Second Anglo-Sikh War. The Holkars dynasty was founded by Malhar Rao with his headquarters at Indore. Raghunath Rao II was defeated at Argaon and agreed to sign a treaty. By this treaty signed at Deogaon Raghuji Bhonsle II surrendered Orissa to the British. Major Broadfoot, who was sent to Punjab by Lord Hardinge as the political agent of the British, did everything to divide the Sikh nobles and induce the Sikh army to cross river Sutlej. By the Treaty of Amritsar signed in 1809, the river had been fixed as the boundary between the British and Maharaj Ranjit Singh territories. Thus, barely the Sikh army had crossed the river then Lord Hardinge declared war. The Gaikwar dynasty was founded by Damaji I in Gujarat with his headquarters at Baroda. After getting the diwani of Bengal, Robert Clive introduced the dual government in Bengal. The right of revenue collection was with the British while the administration of the empire was handled by the nawab. The Governor-General of Bengal was made the Governor-General of India through the Charter Act of 1833.
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The Charter Act of 1833 allowed Indians to hold government positions under the company. 195. a The Regulating Act of 1773 gave the GovernorGeneral of Bengal general authority over other two presidencies, Bombay and Madras.
207. d
In 1875, Dayanand Saraswati formally established the Arya Samaj unit at Bombay. Swami Dayanand Saraswati started the Suddhi Movement to convert the non-Hindus into Hinduism. In 1875, Sayyid Ahmad Khan established the Aligarh School, which was upgraded to the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College in 1877. Keshab Chandra Sens minor daughter was married with the minor son of the Maharaja of Cooch Behar. This was against the ideologies of the Brahmo Samaj which led to another split in the organisation. Louis Vivian Derozio taught English literature and History in the Hindu College of Calcutta. The Young Bengal Movement revolved around him. His attraction as a teacher lay in motivating the students to live by truth and shun all kinds of vices. The Theosophical Movement in India was started by Annie Besant. The movement was inspired by the philosophy of western enlightenment. The Theosophical Society of India was founded at Adyar near Madras (present day Chennai) in 1886 by Annie Besant. The Theosophical Society was first established in United States of America by Madam H.P. Blavatsky and H.S. Olcott. Swami Dayanand Saraswati translated vedas and wrote three books - Satyartha Prakash, VedaBhasya Bhoomika and Veda Bhasya. After Ramakrishna Paramahamsas death in 1886, Vivekananda spent a period wandering in India before coming to international attention at the World Parliament of Religions at Chicago in 1893. There he presented Ramakrishnas teachings as both the true Hinduism and a world religion.
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209. d 196. a 197. d In 1829, Lord William Bentinck abolished the system of sati and made it punishable by law. After the premature death of Raja Rammohun Roy, the Brahmo Movement was carried forward by Dwarkanath Tagorefor some time. But it was his son Debendranath Tagore who infused new life into the organisation and introduced the regular system of worship in the Brahmo temples. Mahadev Govind Ranade was the founder of the Prarthana Samaj.
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Louis Vivian Derozio taught English literature and History in the Hindu College of Calcutta. The Young Bengal Movement revolved around him. His attraction as a teacher lay in motivating the students to live by truth and shun all kinds of vices.
201. d
Jyotiba Phule was not a member of the Prarthana Samaj. He founded the Satyashodhak Samaj. The Deccan Education Society was formed in 1884 under the spiritual guidance of Swami Dayananda Saraswati. It has a small school, which in course of time grew into the famous Fergusson College of Pune. Gopal Krishna Gokhale, a member of the Prarthana Samaj, founded the Servants of India Society in 1905. Jyotiba Phule was an active social reformer who took up sincerely the cause of women and downtrodden people in Maharashtra. But his campaign for the upliftment of the economically weaker sections of the society and the removal of untouchability acquired the character of an antiBramhan movement. He believed that the plight of the weaker sections is due to the Brahmins and there vedic traditions. The Deccan Education Society was formed in 1884 under the spiritual guidance of Swami Dayananda Saraswati. It has a small school, which in course of time grew into the famous Fergusson College of Pune. The Central Hindu College at Varanasi was founded in 1898 by Annie Besant under the Theosophical Society of India.
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Tahzib-al-Akhlaq (Reform of Morals)was a monthly periodical started by Sayyid Ahmad Khan to arouse the muslim masses to a sense of self confidence and exertion. The General Service Enlistment Act of 1856 required every Indian soldier to serve wherever required. The upper caste Hindu recruits particularly felt disturbed by the prospect of travelling overseas, which was a social taboo. The Santhal Rebellion of 1855-56 was against the British Colonial Authority and their oppressive policies.
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The Kuka Movement began in the western part of Punjab with a View to cleanse the Sikh religion of its various abuses and superstitions. The movement worked for the abolition of caste and restrictions put upon inter-caste marriages, etc. However this movement turned into a political movement after the British conquest of Punjab. The ouster of the British from Punjab and restoration of the Sikh sovereignty thereafter became the chief programme of the Kukas. 221. a In 1875, Swami Dayananda Saraswati formally established the first Arya Samaj unit in Bombay. Three years later its second unit was formed at Lahore and its headquarters were shifted there. The Rahnumai Mazdayasnan Sabha was founded by a group of educated Parsis for the regeneration of the social conditions of the Parsis and the restoration of the Zoroastrian religion to its pristine purity. Dadabhai Naoroji was one of its founders. Anandmath was written by Bankim Chandra Chatterji in 1882. It portrayed the tyranny of the colonial masters.
232. b
Bombay Presidency Association was founded in 1885 by three popular leaders of the time Pherozeshah Mehta, K.T. Telang and Badruddin Tyabji. Sisir Kumar Ghosh was the founder of the Indian League (1875) and editor of the famous newspaper Amrit Bazar Patrika. In 1905, Shyamji Krishna Verma set up the India House in London. It became the hub of revolutionary activities outside India. The activities of India House became more radical after V.(D) Savarkar joined it in 1907. Other active members of this group were Virendranath Chattopadhyaya, Lala Hardayal, Bhai Paramananda, Madame Bhikaiji Cama and Madanlal Dhingra. The Ghadar Party was founded in 1913 in the US (A) Lala Hardayal was it main leader. As soon as the World War I broke out, many of the Ghadrites returned to India and for several months during 1915 carried on revolutionary activities in central Punjab. This attempted uprising was quickly crushed by the British. Jawaharlal Nehru was the youngest elected president of the Congress in December 1929, when it passed its Purna Swaraj (Complete Self-Rule) resolution in Lahore. Jawaharlal Nehru hoisted the tricolour flag of India in December 1929 on the banks of river Ravi in Lahore. It was also resolved to observe 26 January 1930 as the countrys Independence Day. The Vernacular Press Act, which imposed censorship on the press and seditious writings in Indian languages, was also known as the Gagging Act. The Anglo-Nepalese War (1814-16) ended with the Treaty of Sagauli signed in March 1816. By this Treaty, Gorkhas surrendered Garhwal and Kumaon to the British. Bakhshi is a military paymaster and Sadr is a minister in charge of religious and charitable patronage. A military commander was known as faujdar. Akbar emphasised on the idea Sulh-i kul which means universal peace. This idea of tolerance did not discriminate between people of different religions, instead it focused on honesty, justice, and peace. Gangaikondacholisvaram Temple, Airavateshvaram Temple and Brihadeeshwara Temple are three of the four sites in Tamil Nadu which are in the list of UNESCOs World Heritage Sites, Monuments at Mahabalipuram being the fourth one.
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224. c
Neel Darpan is a Bengali play written by Dinabandhu Mitra. This play highlighted the plight of indigo farmers. A group of Bengali leaders organised the Hindu Mela for some years from 1867 onwards. Its aim was to spread nationalist ideas and promote indigenous arts and crafts. Anandamath contains the national song of India Vande Mataram. Anandmath was written by Bankim Chandra Chatterji in 1882. It portrayed the tyranny of the colonial masters towards their Indian subjects. Bhartendu Harishchandra is known as the father of modern Hindi literature. His great contributions in founding a new tradition of Hindi prose were recognized even in his short lifetime The Kesari and Mahratta were started in 1881 by a small group of Pune intellectuals which included Bal Gangadhar Tilak, V.K. Chiplunkar, G.G. Agarkar and M.(B) Namjoshi.
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229. d 230. b The Indian Association was founded in 1876 by Anand Mohan Bose and Surendranath Banerji in Bengal. Amrit Bazar Patrika, one of the oldest newspapers in India, was a started by Sisir Kumar Ghosh and his brother. It was written in Bengali.
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242. a 243. d Sultan Iltutmish won universal respect for constructing a large reservoir just outside Dehli-i kuhna. It was called the hauz-i Sultani or the Kings Reservoir. In the early ninth century the Pandyan king Shrimara Shrivallabha invaded Sri Lanka and defeated king Sena I. Mahmud of Ghazni was famous for his looting of temples of defeated kings. He was called the Statute Destroyer after he attacked the famous Somnath temple and destroyed the famous Somanath statue in it. The ceremonial halls or courts of public and private audience (diwan-i khas) were also described as Chihil Sutun or forty-pillared halls, placed within a large courtyard.
254. d
Bhilsweree prominent in Rajasthan, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh. Chero chiefdoms had emerged by the twelfth century in many areas of presentday Bihar and Jharkhand. The Maharashtra highlands and Karnataka were home to Kolis, Berads and numerous other tribes. The Banjaras carried grain on their bullocks from different areas and sold it in towns for Mughal emperors. They transported food grain for the Mughal army during military campaigns. With a large army there could be 100,000 bullocks carrying grain In 1565, the Mughal forces under Asaf Khan attacked Garha Katanga. A strong resistance was put up by Rani Durgawati (widow of Dalpat). She was defeated and preferred to die rather than surrender. Her son Birnarain too died fighting soon after. The Gond Kingdom of Garha Katanga was a rich state in modern day Madhya Pradesh. The Ahom state depended upon forced labour. Those forced to work for the state were called paiks . Nayanars were the Tamil saint-poets of the 7th and 8th centuries who composed devotional songs in honour of Shiva. They preached ardent love of Shiva. Alvars were the South Indian saints-poets in the 7th to 10th century who composed ecstatic songs and poems in honour of Vishnu. The Virashaivas proponded monotheism and equality of all human beings. They rejected the caste system and ill treatment of women. Mirabai was married into the royal family of Mewar. Mirabai became a disciple of Ravidas, a saint from a caste considered untouchable. Ahom society was very sophisticated. Poets and scholars were given land grants. Historical works, known as buranjis, were written first in the Ahom language and then in Assamese. Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama discovered the route to India through the Cape of Good Hope in 1498. Fa Xian and Xuan Zang were Chinese Buddhist pilgrims who came to the subcontinent to visit places associated with the life of the Buddha as well as famous monasteries. Vijayalaya built the temple of goddess Nishumbhasudini in the town of Thanjavur.
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Qibla is the direction faced by Muslims at prayer. Shah Jahans audience halls were specially constructed to resemble a mosque. The pedestal on which his throne was placed was frequently described as the Qibla, since everybody faced that direction when court was in session.
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It was believed that Orpheuss music could calm ferocious beasts until they resided together peacefully. The construction of Shah Jahans audience hall aimed to communicate that the kings justice would treat the high and the low as equals where all could live together in harmony. Kunjaramallan Rajaraja Perunthachchan was the architect of the Rajarajeshvara temple in Thanjavur. He carved his name on the temple wall.
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In the lost wax technique, an image was made of wax and then covered with clay, which was final allowed to dry. The wax inside was taken out by heating, through a tiny hole. Molten metal was then poured into the clay mould through the hole. Once the metal solidified the clay was carefully remove(d) The image was then cleaned and polished. Bhillasvamin (Bhilsa or Vidisha) is a temple town in Madhya Pradesh. Hampi is located in the Krishna-Tungabhadra basin, which formed the nucleus of the Vijayanagara Empire, founded in 1336. Hampi fell into ruin following the defeat of Vijayanagara in 1565 by the Deccani Sultans. Surat was the gateway for trade with West Asia via the Gulf of Ormuz.
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Sirajuddaulah was a strong ruler who refused to be a puppet of the company. He refused to give trade concessions and fought against the company and died at the Battle of Plassey. Although at first, the company was only interested in trade benefits and was unwilling to take over the responsibility of administration. But the company failed to work with the inefficient puppet nawabs. After the death of Mir Jafar in 1765, the East India Company was appointed as the Diwan of the provinces of Bengal, after Robert Clive decided that the company should get into the administration. Tipu Sultan was killed in the Battle of Seringapatam. This was the fourth Anglo-Mysore War. Subsidiary alliance did not allow the Indian rulers to have their independent armed forces. They were to be protected by the Company, but had to pay for the subsidiary forces that the Company was supposed to maintain for the purpose of this protection. If the Indian rulers failed to make the payment, then part of their territory was taken away as penalty. When Richard Wellesley was Governor-General (1798-1805), Nawab Shujauddaulah of Awadh was forced to hand over half of his territory to the Company in 1801, as he failed to fulfil the terms of the subsidiary alliance. The Treaty of Salbai was signed between the East India Company and the Marathas. This was the treaty under which the Marathas agreed to support the East India Company against Mysore. The fort fell to Siraj-ud-daulah, the then nawab of Bengal, in 1756. Mir Qasim, the then nawab of Bengal, along with the Nawab of Awadh and the Mughal Emperor stood against the East India Company in the Battle of Buxar. He was defeated in the battle and driven out of Bengal, and Mir Jafar was reinstalled as the nawab of Bengal. The East India Company could not capture Punjab till it was under Maharaja Ranjit Singh, but captured it after his death. By the policy of paramountcy, the Company claimed that its authority was paramount or supreme, hence its power was greater than that of Indian states. Wodeyar was the royal family of the princely state of Mysore. The forces of thr Marathas and the Nizam of Hyderabad joined the company forces against Tipu Sultan in the Third Anglo-Mysore War.
277. c
Lord Dalhousie, the Governor-General from 1848 to 1856, devised this policy. Doctrine of Lapse : If an Indian ruler died without a male heir his kingdom would become part of Company territory. From 1772, each district was to have two courts a civil court (diwani adalat) and a criminal court (faujdari adalat). In the late eighteenth century, there were three British presidencies Bombay, Bengal and Madras. Delhi was still not under the control of the Company. When the British tried to annex the small state of Kitoor, Rani Chennamma took to arms and led an anti-British resistance movement. She was arrested in by the Company officials and died in prison in 1829. In 1765 Mughal emperor Shah Alam appointed the Company as the Diwan of the provinces of Bengal. The Diwani allowed the Company to use the vast revenue resources of Bengal. Initially the Company had purchased goods in India by importing gold and silver from Britain. In 1765 Mughal emperor Shah Alam appointed the Company as the Diwan of the provinces of Bengal. The Diwani allowed the Company to use the vast revenue resources of Bengal for further trading. Earl Cornwallis, appointed in 1786, was the governor-General of India when the Permanent Settlement was introduced. After the introduction of the Permanent Settlement in 1793, Cornwallis returned to England the same year. In British revenue records Mahal is a revenue estate which may be a village or a group of villages. As the revenue was fixed permanently, the Company expected that the Zamindars would invest in the improvement of land to maximise their own profits. But this did not happen. In the nij system, the land under cultivation is totally under control the of planter. In the ryoti system the ryots cultivate indigo on 25% of their land for indigo planters The Indigo Commission set up after the Blue Rebellion of 1859 produced a report that said that It declared that indigo production was not profitable for ryots . The Commission asked the ryots to fulfil their existing contracts but also told them that they could refuse to produce indigo in future. In the North Western Provinces of the Bengal Presidency, an Englishman called Holt Mackenzie devised the new system called the Mahalwari
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System. Under his directions, estimations on land revenue were made and revised periodically, not permanently fixed. 288. a 289. a The indigo plant grows primarily in the tropical zones. One of the main reasons for Sirajuddaulahs defeat was that the forces led by Mir Jafar, one of Sirajuddaulahs commanders, never fought the battle. Under this system, the settlement was to be made directly with the cultivators (ryots) who had tilled the land for generations. The first English factory was set up on the banks of river Hugli in Calcutta in 1651. Indigo is a better dye plant than woad. Indigo produced a rich blue colour, whereas the dye from woad was pale and dull.
300. a 301. a The Nawab of Awadh was forced to give over half of his territory to the Company in 1801 because he failed to pay for the subsidiary forces. In the late 1830s the East India Company became worried about Russia. It imagined that Russia might expand across Asia and enter India from the northwest. The British fought a long war with Afghanistan between 1838 and 1842 and established indirect rule there. The company could not take over Punjab before 1839. But after the death of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, it fought long wars and finally annexed Punjab in 1849. Cloth dyers in Europe preferred indigo over woad as a dye because indigo produced a rich blue colour, whereas the dye from woad was pale and dull. Rani Chennamma of Kitoor took to arms and led an anti-British resistance movement. She was arrested in 1824 and died in prison in 1829. The other three were active member of the rebellion. He and his wife Begum Zeenat Mahal were sent to prison in Rangoon in October 1858 after his sons were shot dead in front of him. Bahadur Shah Zafar died in the Rangoon jail in November 1862. After the death of Rani Laxmi Bai, Tatia Tope escaped to the jungles and continued to fight a guerrilla war with the support of many tribal leaders. He was captured, tried and killed in April 1859. Birjis Qadr was the son of deposed Nawab Wajid Ali Shah of Lucknow. Qadr was proclaimed the new Nawab of Lucknow during the 1857 rebellion. Mangal Pandey was a soldier in the Bengal regiment of the East India Company. He was hanged to death on 29 March 1857 for attacking his officers in Barrackpore. Eighty-five sepoys of the regiment at Meerut in 1857 were dismissed from service and sentenced to ten years in jail as they refused to do the army drill using the new cartridges, which were suspected of being coated with the fat of cows and pigs. In those days many people in the India believed that they would lose their religion and caste if they crossed the sea. The British said they were obliged by duty to take over Awadh in order to free the people from the misgovernment of the Nawab
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The price the ryots got for the indigo they produced was very low. Also, the planters usually insisted that indigo be cultivated on the best soils in which peasants preferred to cultivate rice. Indigo, moreover, had deep roots and it exhausted the soil rapidly. After an indigo harvest the land could not be sown with rice.
294. b
The Palaeolithic period extends from 2 million years ago to about 12,000 years ago. This long stretch of time is divided into the Lower, Middle and Upper Palaeolithic. This long span of time covers 99% of human history. According to the terms of subsidiary alliance, Indian rulers were not allowed to have their independent armed forces. They were to be protected by the Company, but had to pay huge for the forces. If the Indian rulers failed to make the payment, then part of their territory was taken away as penalty.
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296. b 297. c At Inamgaon, adults were generally buried in the ground, laid out straight, with the head towards the north. Sometimes burials were within the houses. Vessels that probably contained food and water were placed with the dead. Ashwamedha : A horse was let loose to wander freely and it was guarded by the rajas men. If the horse wandered into the kingdoms of other rajas and they stopped it, they had to fight. If they allowed the horse to pass, it meant that they accepted that the raja who wanted to perform the ashwamedha was stronger than them. Bimbisara of Haryanka dynasty was a ruler of the Magadha empire.
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Raja Rammohun Roy made great efforts to prove to the British that the practice of widow burning had no sanction in ancient texts. With the onset of industrialisation Britains requirement for indigo grew enormously. But its existing supplies from the West Indies and America collapsed for a variety of reasons. Between 1783 and 1789 the production of indigo in the world fell by half. Cloth dyers in Britain now desperately looked for new sources of indigo supply. India was the obvious answer for this. Jhansi was annexed in 1854. Lord Dalhousie was the Governor-General of India from 1848 to 1856. The British parliament in 1858 transferred the powers of the Company to the British Crown in order to ensure more responsible management and governance. All ruling chiefs of the country were assured that their territory would never be annexed in future. They were allowed to pass on their kingdoms to their heirs, including adopted sons, hence renounced the Doctrine of Lapse. the British decided to recruit the gurkhas, sikhs and pathans as soldiers instead of recruiting soldiers from Awadh, Bihar, central India and south India. The capital of British India was transferred from Calcutta to Delhi in 1911. Lord Lytton organised Delhi Durbar to acknowledge Queen Victoria as the Empress of India.
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The Paramhans Mandali was founded in 1840, in Bombay, to work for the abolition of caste system. Parantaka I conquered the land of Pandyas and took the title of Maduraikondavan which means the conqueror of Madurai. The Stamp Act required the colonists to buy and place stamps on all legal documents, licenses, commercial contracts, newspapers, pamphlets, and playing cards. This, along with other tax policies of the British government, were strongly opposed by the colonists. Boston Tea Party, incident on December 16, 1773, when a group of citizens in Boston dumped tea into Boston Harbour. It was one of several events that led to the outbreak of the American Revolution in 1775. It began on April 19, 1775. General Thomas Gage, the royal governor of colonial Massachusetts, ordered British troops to march on the small towns of Lexington and Concord, not far from Boston. The soldiers were told to capture resistance leaders and destroy arms and supplies. A battle began when the British troops exchanged fire in Lexington. On October 19, 1781, Lord Cornwallis surrendered to American General George Washington in Yorktown, Virginia. The surrender signalled the end of actual fighting in the American Revolution, although the Treaty of Paris, which officially ended the war, was not signed until 1783. Jean Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778), French philosopher, social and political theorist, musician, botanist, and one of the most eloquent writers of the Age of Enlightenment. He spread the ideas of democracy among the french. The National Covention, which met on 21 September 1792, translated the demand to form a republic in reality. France was now a republic. Viscount Charles Townsend (1674-1738) devised the system of crop rotation. It helped in keeping the soil rich by not letting the land idle on any season. The flying shuttle, invented by John Kay in 1733, increased the speed of the weaving operation. The spinning jenny, which Hargreaves is credited with inventing in 1764, made possible the automatic production of cotton thread. The invention of power loom, and its introduction into the manufacturing industry, was opposed by many cloth workers who were, not unnaturally, afraid of losing their jobs to a machine. Mechanization, however, became one of the more
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The central dome of the Rashtrapati Bhavan was copied from the Buddhist stupa at Sanchi. Raja Rammohun Roy founded a reform association known as the Brahmo Sabha (later known as the Brahmo Samaj) in Calcutta. Within the system of nij cultivation, the planter produced indigo only in lands that he directly controlled. Planters needed large areas to cultivate indigo. Under the ryoti system, the planters forced the ryots to sign a contract. The contract committed the ryot to cultivating indigo on at least 25 per cent of the area under his holding. The planter provided the seed and the drill, while the cultivators prepared the soil, sowed the seed and looked after the crop. Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar, used the ancient texts to suggest that widows could remarry. His suggestion was adopted by British officials, and a law was passed in 1856 permitting widow remarriage.
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significant factors that enabled the Industrial Revolution to take place. 335. b Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin to separate cotton fibres from the seeds.
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Robert Fulton (1765-1815), an American inventor and engineer, designed the first efficient steamboat, thus inaugurating a new era of power-driven navigation. Guglielmo Marconi (1874-1937), an Italian electrical engineer and Nobel laureate, invented the first practical radio-signaling system. Cyrus Field, an American merchant and financier, succeeded in laying the first trans-Atlantic cable in 1866. The Diesel engine was invented which before the World War I in 1892. The Open-hearth is used for the production of steel from pig iron on large scale. Poor working conditions for workers encouraged people to rise against the system. The workers started to protest by organising strikes. The gangs of masked workers, who took part in such violent strikes, came to be called Luddites after their legendary leader Ned Ludd. The First Opium War was fought between the British and China over the issue of opium trade which was not being allowed by the Chinese Emperor. The Dutch took control of Malacca in the 17th century from the Portuguese. Hormuz, Goa and Malacca were some of the strategic bases of the Portuguese in Asia in the 16th century. The Seven Years War was worldwide series of conflicts fought from 1756 to 1763 for the control of Germany and for supremacy in colonial North America and India. In North America, the warfare ended with the Treaty of Paris in 1763, and the peace terms reflected British military successes. Britain gained control over half the North American continent, including French Canada, all French territorial claims east of the Mississippi River, and Spanish Florida. Before his death, Guru Nanak appointed Bhai Lehna (one of his followers) as his successor. He was renamed as Guru Angad, expressing that he was a part of Guru Nanak himself. Jahangir looked upon the Sikh community as a potential threat to his empire. So he ordered the execution of Guru Arjan in 1606. Divya Prabandham is a compilation of devotional songs, written by the Alvars, in honour of Hindu god Vishnu.
347. b 336. a The first textile factory was built in Rhode Island in the United States by Samuel Slater. James improved the steam engine in 1769 making the machine more economical and valuable not only for the textile mills but also for industries. In the early 18th century the demand for coal escalated when English iron founders John Wilkinson and Abraham Darby used coal, in the form of coke, instead of charcoal to manufacture iron. 348. a
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Louis Pasteur invented the process of pasteurisation. Voltaire exposed the evils of absolutism and corruption in the church. The flavor of Voltaires activities could be summarized in the phrase he often used: crasons linfme (let us crush the infamous one). With this phrase, he referred to any form of religion that persecutes nonadherents or that constitutes fanaticism. The representatives of the Third Estate demanded the three Estates to meet as a single chamber with member having a vote. The first two Estates opposed this demand forcing the Third Estate to declare itself as the National Assembly on 17 Junu 1789. Age of Enlightenment is a term used to describe the trends in thought and letters in Europe and the American colonies during the 18th century prior to the French Revolution. It describes a new age enlightened by reason, science, and a respect for humanity. The Third Estate was of the commons. The hot blast process refers to the preheating of air blown into blast furnace in metallurgical processes. King Louis XVI tried to flee from France with his family at the start of the French Revolution, but this attempt failed. The first French National Assembly took oath in a tennis court because the king closed the hall of the assembly to prevent the Third Estate from carrying out its revolutionary proceedings. Henry Bessemer invented the Bessemer process to obtain steel directly from cast iron for making rails and ship plates.
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Nadir Shah, the ruler of Iran, looted Delhi in 1739. This was followed by a series of plundering attacks by Afghan ruler Ahmed Shah Abdali. He invaded North India five times between 1748 and 1761. Timur Shah Durrani was the successor of Ahmed Shah Abdali and Shuja Shah Durrani was the successor of Timur Shah Durrani. There is an inscription on the pillar mentioning a ruler named Chandra, who probably belonged to the Gupta dynasty. It is the story of a merchant named Kovalan. He fell in love with a courtesan named Madhavi, neglecting his wife Kannagi. Later, he and Kannagi left for Madurai, where he was wrongly accused of theft and sentenced to death. Kannagi, full of grief and anger at this injustice, destroyed the entire city of Madurai. The manuscripts in early India were usually written on palm leaf, or on the specially prepared bark of a tree known as the birch, which grows in the Himalayas.
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Aurangzeb insulted Shivaji when he came to accept Mughal authority after his defeat. Mansabdar is one who holds a mansab, meaning a position or rank. There was a huge increase in the number of mansabdars by Aurangzebs reign. This was a big problem for Aurangzeb. Mirza Hakim was stepbrother of Akbar and Governor of Kabul.
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A poem composed by Harshena (in Sanskrit) is inscribed on the Ashokan pillar at Allahaba(d) The poem is full of praise for Samudragupta.
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Harshvardhan was successful in the east and conquered both Magadha and Bengal after conquering Kanauj. But he failed to advanced towards the Deccan when he was stopped by the Chalukya king Pulakeshin II. Mahavircharitam was written by Bhavabhuti, an 8th century scholar of India noted for his plays and poetry, written in Sanskrit.
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Ashvaghosha was an Indian philosopher-poet who lived in Kanishkas court of Peshawar. He was the part of a war indemnity won by Kanishka. 378. d Satavahana rulers were known as lords of the dakshinapatha, literally the route leading to the south. Satakarni was the most important Satavahana ruler. 379. a Ashoka appointed officials, known as the dhamma mahamatta who went from place to place teaching people about dhamma. The rules made for the Buddhist sangha were written down in a book called the Vinaya Pitaka. The book contained about who could join the sangha and who couldnt. Emperor Jahangir married Mehrunnisa in 1611. Mehrunnisa was given the title Nur Jahan (light of the world).
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Shrimara Shrivallabha defeated Sena I and plundered Sri Lanka. Sena II tried to avenge this defeat of his predecessor and launched an attack on Madurai where he tried to find and restore the gold statue of the Buddha which was taken away by Shrimara Shrivallabha. Chokhamela, who belonged to the untouchable Mahar caste, was a Marathi saint-poet. He was a devotee of Vitthalaa. form of Vishnu). Rashtrakutas in the Deccan were subordinate to the Basdami Chalukyas of Karnataka till the mideighth century.
Babur was just 12 when he succeeded to the throne of Ferghana in 1494. Babur defeated Sultan Ibrahim Lodi in the first Battle of Panipat. The British government officially abolished the Mughal Empire in 1857 and exiled Bahadur Shah Zafar to Burma. His sons were shot dead. Harshcharita is a biography of Harshvardhana, who ruled nearly 1400 years ago, written by his court poet Banabhatta. In 1914 the First World War broke out. Steel produced in Britain now had to meet the demands of war in Europe. So imports of British steel into India declined dramatically and the Indian Railways turned to TISCO for supply of rails. In January 1784 Jones founded the Bengal Asiatic Society. He initiated its research journal, Asiatic Researches, in 1788. The Hindu College was established in Benaras in 1791 to encourage the study of ancient Sanskrit texts that would be useful for the administration of the country.
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The Kandariya Mahadeva temple at Khajurao in Madhya Pradesh was constructed in 999 by King Dhangadeva of the Chandela dynasty. The temple is dedicated to Shiva.
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Thomas Babington Macaulay saw India as an uncivilised country that needed to be civilised. No branch of Eastern knowledge, according to him could be compared to what England had produced. The Woods Despatch emphasised on the practical benefits of a system of European learning, as opposed to Oriental knowledge.
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Keshub Chunder Sen was one of the main leaders of the Brahmo Samaj. He joined the sect in 1857 and emphasised social reform. He broke away from the movement to form the Bharatvarshiya Brahmo Samaj. Chunder Sens group promoted education for women, remarriage by widows and the abolition of child marriage. According to the Child Marriage Restraint Act of 1929 no man below the age of 18 and woman below the age of 16 could marry. The Mohammedan Anglo-Oriental College was founded in 1875 by Sayyid Ahmed Khan. Returning to India from the United States in 1897 with many of his followers, Vivekananda established first the Ramakrishna Mission in Calcutta. The Ramakrishna Mission stressed the ideal of salvation through social service and selfless action. They came to India in 1785 and stayed for seven years, journeying from Calcutta to northern and southern India. They produced some of the most evocative picturesque landscapes of Britains newly conquered territories in India. According to the Ilbert Bill, Indian judges were allowed to try the Europeans. This offended the white community and they all stood against the bill. The Indian National Congress during its first twenty years was moderate in its objectives and methods, which was rightly so as the organisation was in its infant phase at that time. Naoroji, a businessman in a mercantile firm of Cama and Company and publicist settled in London, and for a time member of the British Parliament, guided the younger nationalists. A.O. Hume, a retired British official, played a part in bringing Indians from the various regions together to form the Indian National Congress. Pherozeshah Mehta was one of the founding members of the Indian National Congress. This was the time of the moderates in the Indian National Congress. Womesh Chandra Banerjee (1844 1906) was one of the founding members of the Indian National Congress from Calcutta and its first president. The Arms act of 1878 was one of the policies of Lytton which proved fatal for his reign and sowed the seeds of freedom struggle in India. Surendranath Banerji founded the Indian Association in 1876 with the help of Anand Mohan Bose. It was one of the first avowed nationalist organisation founded in British India.
394. a 384. a Issued by Charles Wood, the President of the Board of Control of the Company, it has come to be known as Woods Despatch. The English Education Act was introduced to make English the medium of instruction for higher education and to stop the promotion of Oriental institutions. The Satnami movement in Central India, founded by a leader named Ghasidas who came from a low caste, worked among the leather workers and organised a movement to improve their social status Rammohun Roy wanted Indian people to give up old practices and adopt a new way of life. He was keen to spread western education in the country and bring about greater freedom and equality for women. Jyotiba Phule was very critical of the upper-caste leaders who preached the anti-colonial nationalism.
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388. d 389. b Gulamgiri was written by Jyotiba Phule in 1873. He dedicated the book to all those Americans who had fought to free slaves in the American Civil War. Ambedkar started a temple entry movement in which his Mahar caste followers participated. Ambedkar led three such movements for temple entry between 1927 and 1935. Naicker was an outspoken critic the Bhagavad Gita and the Ramayana. He said that these texts had been used to establish the authority of Brahmans over lower castes and the domination of men over women. He became a member of the Congress, only to leave it in disgust when he found that at a feast organised by nationalists, seating arrangements were such that the lower castes were made to sit at a distance from the upper castes. Convinced that untouchables had to fight for their dignity, Naicker founded the Self Respect Movement. He argued that untouchables were the true upholders of an original Tamil and Dravidian culture which had been subjugated by Brahmans.
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The newspapers printed in vernaculars used to be very critical of the government. The Vernacular Press Act allowed the government to confiscate the assets of newspapers including their printing presses if the newspapers published anything that was found objectionable. The Poona Sarvajanik Sabha was started in 1870 while the Indian National Congress was founded in 1885. Bal Gangadhar Tilak was among the leaders who raised questions about the political style of the Congress in its initial phase. He believed that people must rely on their own strength, not on the good intentions of the government. He wanted that the people must fight for swaraj. Curzon partitioned Bengal to curtail the influence of Bengali politicians and to split the Bengali people on the basis of religion.
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The Congress split at its Surat Session in 1907. The Moderates were opposed to the use of boycott. They felt that it involved the use of force. After the split the Congress came to be dominated by the Moderates with Bal Gangadhar Tilaks followers functioning from outside. The Congress and the Muslim League signed the historic Lucknow Pact and decided to work together for representative government in the country.
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Mahatma Gandhi, aged 46, arrived in India in 1915 from South Africa.
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The Vernacular Press Act was one of Lyttons reactionary policies which played a part in sowing the seeds of freedom struggle in India. The partition of Bengal infuriated people all over India. All sections of the Congress opposed it. The struggle that unfolded came to be known as the Swadeshi movement, strongest in Bengal but with echoes in the other parts of India as well.
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In October 1906 a delegation of about 35 Muslim leaders called upon Lord Minto, the viceroy, to ask for separate electorates for Muslims and a weighted proportion of legislative representation that would reflect their historic role as rulers and their record of cooperating with the British. This delegation, joined by others, formed the All-India Muslim League in December 1906. The League supported the partition of Bengal and it demanded for separate electorates for Muslims. The Swadeshi Movement in deltaic Andhra was known as the Vandematram Movement. According to partition of Bengal by Curzon, Bihar, Orissa , Assam and West Bengal were to be on one side and East Bengal, the muslim dominated part of Bengal, on the other side. The British said that partition of Bengal was being done for administrative convenience but the main reason behind the way the partition was done was to curtail the nationalist movement and divide the people on communal basis. The demand for separate electorates for Muslims was conceded by the government in 1909. Some seats in the councils were now reserved for Muslims who would be elected by Muslim voters.
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The poor farmers of Champaran were forced to grow indigo and other cash crops instead of food crops. The Champaran Satyagraha was against this cruel treatment of the farmers by the British. The Rowlatt Act was enacted in 1919. The act curbed fundamental rights such as the freedom of expression and strengthened police powers. It empowered the police to act without any trial. In 1920 the British imposed a harsh treaty on the Turkish Sultan or Khalifa. People in India were furious about this as they had been about the Jallianwala massacre. This started the Khilafat Movement. Mahatma Gandhi was against violent movements. He abruptly called off the Non-Cooperation Movement when in February 1922 a crowd of peasants set fire to a police station in Chauri Chaura. Twenty-two policemen were killed on that day. In 1927 the British government in England decided to send a commission headed by Lord Simon to decide Indias political future. Revolutionary nationalists such as Bhagat Singh and his comrades wanted to fight colonial rule and the rich exploiting classes through a revolution of workers and peasants. For this purpose they founded the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association (HSRA) in 1928 at Ferozeshah Kotla in Delhi. Members of the HSRA assassinated Saunders, a police officer who had led a lathi-charge that caused the death of Lala Lajpat Rai. The Government of India Act of 1935 prescribed provincial autonomy and the government announced
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414. b
The Russian Revoltion in 1917 inspired many Indian nationalists. News about peasants and workers struggles and ideas of socialism circulated widely which encouraged the nationalists in India.
elections to the provincial legislatures in 1937. The Congress formed governments in 7 out of 11 provinces. 425. c The Simon Commission had no Indian representatives in it. Congress leaders were ready to support the British in the World War II. But in return they wanted that India be granted independence after the war. The British refused to concede the demand. The Congress ministries resigned in protest. Mahatma Gandhi led a mass civil disobedience movement in 1942, demanding an end to British rule in India. The British must quit India immediately, he told them. To the people he said, do or die in your effort to fight the British but you must fight nonviolently. In January 1941, Bose went to Singapore, via Germany, and raised the Azad Hind Fauj or the Indian National Army, to free India from British control. C. Rajagopalachari, popularly known as Rajaji, served as member of the Interim Government of 1946 and as free Indias first Indian GovernorGeneral. Lala Lajpat Rai was one of the extremists. He criticised the moderates section and believed that people must rely on their own strength, not on the good intentions of the government; people must fight for swaraj. The first session of the Indian National Congress was held in Bombay in December 1885. Jinnah proclaimed August 16 1946 as the Direct Action Day for the purpose of winning a separate Muslim state. Savage Hindu-Muslim riots broke out in Calcutta the next day and quickly spread throughout India. Thousands of people lost their lives in the riots. Naorojis book Poverty and Un-British rule in India offered a scathing criticism of the negetive impact of British rule on the economy. The moderates were opposed to the use of boycott. They felt that it involved the use of force. The All India Muslim League was formed in Dacca (present day Dhaka) in 1906.
434. a
On learning about the Jallianwala Bagh massacre, Rabindranath Tagore expressed the pain and anger of the country by renouncing his knighthood which he got from the British crown in 1915. In October 1952, a veteran Gandhian named Potti Sriramulu went on a hunger fast demanding the formation of Andhra state to protect the interests of Telugu speakers. Potti Sriramulu died fasting on 15 December 1952 which resulted in huge protests. The central government was forced to listen to the demand. Thus, on 1 October 1953, the new state of Andhra Pradesh came into being. In 1960, the bilingual state of Bombay was divided into separate states for Marathi and Gujarati speakers. The British annexed Nagpur in 1853 through the Doctrine of Lapse. The Second Anglo-Maratha War (1803-05) resulted in the British gaining Orissa and the territories north of the Yamuna river including Agra and Delhi. Gandhiji and his followers marched for over 240 miles from Sabarmati to the coastal town of Dandi where they broke the government law by gathering natural salt found on the seashore, and boiling sea water to produce salt.
435. d
426. b
436. c
427. d
428. a
429. d
430. c
431. a
432. a
433. b
The Rowlatt Act curbed fundamental rights of the people such as the freedom of expression and strengthened police powers. Mahatma Gandhi asked the Indian people to observe 6 April 1919 as a day of non-violent opposition to this Act, as a day of humiliation and prayer
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438. d 439. b 440. b 441. a 442. c 443. a 444. d 445. c 446. d
437. c
Hiranya-Garbha literally meaning Golden-Womb was a ritual performed for a Kshatriya rebirth, even if he (the sacrificer) was not one by birth. Vetti is a tax levied by the Cholas which was taken not in cash but in form of forced labour.
Because there were three parties in this longdrawn conflict, historians often describe it as the tripartite struggle. Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni from Afghanistan extended control over parts of Central Asia, Iran and the north-western part of the subcontinent. He was interested in finding out more about the people he conquered. So he entrusted a scholar named alBiruni to write an account of the subcontinent. Prithviraj III of Chahamanas defeated Muhammad Ghori in 1191 ADat the town of Tarain. But he lost to Ghori the very next year at the Second Battle of Tarain. It was the Chola king Vijayalaya from Uraiyur who built the town of Thanjavur.
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447. b
Vellanvagai is land of non-Brahmana peasant proprietors, Tirunamattukkani is land gifted to temples and Shalabhoga is land for the maintenance of a school, according to Chola inscriptions. Many rulers described their achievements in Prashastis written by Brahmanas in administration Prashastis contain details that may be biased towards the emperor and may not be true. Delhi first became the capital of a kingdom under the Tomara Rajputs, who were defeated in 1165 AD by the Chauhans (Chahamanas) of Ajmer lead by Prithviraj Chauhan. Qutbuddin Aybak was the first Turkish ruler of Delhi while Ghiyasuddin Balban rules during the later half of the thirteenth century. Rudramadevi (1262-1289) of the Kakatiya dynasty of Warangal changed her name on her inscriptions and pretended to be a man.
Khalji (1290 - 1320), Tughluq (1320 - 1414), Sayyid (1414 - 1451), Lodi (1451 1526) Pricess Manmati of Marwar was married to Shah Jahans mother. Abul Fazl wrote a three volume history of Akbars reign titled Akbar Nama. The third volume is the Ain-i Akbari. The third volume deals with Akbars administration, household, army, the revenues and geography of his empire. It also explains about the traditions and culture of the people living in India. Todar Mal (Akbars revenue minister) carried out this survey during 1570-1580. On the basis of this survey, tax was fixed on each crop in cash. Each province was divided into revenue circles with its own schedule of revenue rates for individual crops. Aurangzeb insulted Shivaji after defreating him. He escaped from Agra, declared himself an independent king and resumed his campaigns against the Mughals. Prince Akbar rebelled against Aurangzeb and received support from the Marathas and Deccan Sultanate. He finally fled to Safavid Iran. Abul Fazl wrote a three volume history of Akbars reign titled, Akbar Nama . Baburs reign : 1526-1530 Humayuns reign: 1530-1540 and 1555-1556 From their fathers side, the Mughals were the successors of Timur. Timur was ruler of Iran, Iraq and modern day Turkey. Todar Mal, born in Uttar Pradesh in a Khatri family, and rose to become the Finance Minister in Akbars Darbar of the Mughal Empire. Sher Khan defeated Humayun at Chausa (1539) and Kanauj (1540), forcing him to flee to Iran. Humayun recaptured Delhi in 1555 but died in an accident the following year. The Mughals did not believe in the rule of primogeniture, where the eldest son inherited his fathers estate. Akbars revenue minister, Todar Mal introduced the revenue system known as zabt. The custom of coparcenary inheritance means a division of the inheritance amongst all the sons. The Ain-i Akbari is the third volume of the Akbar Nama, written by Abul Fazl. Mehrunnisa, married the Emperor Jahangir in 1611 and received the title Nur Jahan.
448. b
449. a
463. b
450. d
451. d 452. b
The Delhi Sultans appointed their trust worthy slaves instead of appointing aristocrats or leaders to high administrative posts. They believed that worthy and experienced slaves would make reliable governors and administrators.
453. a
Kharaj is a tax levied under the Delhi Sultans on cultivation of agricultural land amounting to about 50 percent of the peasants produce. Alauddin Khilji constructed Siri Fort to defend the city from Mongols. Muhammad bin Tughluq, instead of building a new garrison town, garrisoned his soldiers in the oldest of four cities of Delhi after moving its residents to Daulatabad. Muhammad bin Tughluq raised a large standing army to plan an attack on Transoxiana. In Delhi, Coins were named Delhiwal during the reign of Tomaras and Chahamanas (Chauhans) during the early medieval India. These coins had a wide circulation.
454. a
455. b
456. d
457. c
458. b 459. c The authors of Persian tawarikh advised rulers on the need to preserve an ideal social order based on birthright and gender distinctions. But the Delhi Sultans believed that worthy and experienced slaves would make reliable governors and administrators. So they appointed their loyal and experienced slaved to high administrative posts.
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465. c 466. a 467. a 468. d 469. d 470. b 471. a 472. d 473. d
464. a
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474. b
In 1770 a terrible famine killed ten million people in Bengal. About one-third of the population was wiped out. 1793 - Introduction of the Permanent Settlement 1765 - East India Compant appointed as the Diwan of Bengal. 1859 - Blue Rebellion by indigo farmers 1822 - Introduction of the Mahalwari Settlement In 1856, Governor-General Canning decided that Bahadur Shah Zafar would be the last Mughal king and after his death none of his descendants would be recognised as kings they would just be called princes.
486. d
Calico, one of the oldest textiles known, originated as a fine weave in Calicut (now Kozhikode), India, for which it was named. Patola was woven in Surat, Ahmedabad and Patan. Although existent patolas of Gujarat do not predate the late 18th century, their history certainly goes back to the 12th century, if not earlier. Worried by the popularity of Indian textiles, wool and silk makers in England began protesting against the import of Indian cotton textiles. In 1720, the British government enacted a legislation banning the use of printed cotton textiles chintz in England. This act was known as the Calico Act. Richard Arkwright invented the steam engine in 1786. By the beginning of the nineteenth century, Englishmade cotton textiles successfully ousted Indian textiles from their markets in Africa, America and Europe. With this thousands of weavers in India were thrown out of employment. The first cotton mill in India was set up as a spinning mill in Bombay in 1854. Wootz steel when made into swords produced a very sharp edge with a flowing water pattern. This pattern came from very small carbon crystals embedded in the iron. Tipu Sultans legendary swords were made of wootz. In the 14th Century, Iltutmish constructed the tank in Hauz Khas, Delhi for supplying water to Siri Fort area. Panini, born around 6th century BC, prepared a grammar for Sanskrit in which he arranged the vowels and the consonants in a special order, and then used these to create formulae like those found in Algebra. He used these to write down the rules of the language in short formulae Vajji, or Vrijji, was the confederacy of the Licchavis and neighbouring peoples in Bihar, India, that existed from the 6th century BC to the 4th century BC. Its capital was at Vaishali. Vardhamana Mahavira was the 24 and most recent tirthankara (ford-maker) of Jainism. In the Spirit of the Laws, Montesquieu proposed a division of power within the government between the legislative, the executive and the judiciary. Lockes views, in his Two Treatises of Government (1690), attacked the theory of divine right of kings and the nature of the state as conceived by English philosopher and political theorist Thomas Hobbes.
th
475. b
487. a
476. b
488. a
477. d 478. a The British gained control of Delhi from the Marathas after defeating them in the second Anglo-Maratha war in 1803.
489. b
479. c
A cul-de-sac is a street with a dead en(d) Open squares, winding lanes, quiet cul-de-sacs and water channels were the pride of Delhis residents during the Mughals. The period from 1830 to 1857 is sometimes referred to as a period of Delhi renaissance. Delhi College, formed in 1792, during the 1840s and 1850s was the epicentre of Delhi Renaissance.
480. a
481. d
The rebels of Taiping wanted to establish a kingdom where a form of Christianity was practised, where no one held any private property, where there was no difference between social classes and between men and women. The Governor-General of India was given the title of Viceroy in 1858 while the capital of India was shifted to Delhi from Calcutta in 1911. For its sprawling iron and steel industry in the second half of the nineteenth century, Britain came to be known as the workshop of the world King George V was crowned in England in 1911. The Durbar held in Delhi in 1911 by the British was to celebrate the coronation of King George V. The Delhi College, formed in 1792, is now under the Delhi University and is named as Zakir Hussain Delhi College. When the Portuguese first came to India in search of spices they landed in Calicut on the south-west coast of India. India, around 1750, was already by far the worlds largest producer of cotton. Muslin was a name given by the Europeans to all finely woven textiles from India carried by Arab merchants in Mosul in present-day Iraq.
482. b
483. b
484. b
485. b
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490. b 491. d 492. b 493. d 494. c 495. b 496. c 497. b 498. d
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499. b
A number of spices like pepper and cloves are grown on the hills of Kerala. The spices made this region an attractive place for foreign traders, Jewish and Arab being the first. St. Thomas is said to have come to Kerala nearly 2000 years ago and is credited with bringing Christianity to India.
512. c
Formic acid is widely used in the chemical industries and in dyeing and tanning. In nature, formic acid occurs in the poisons of stinging ants and other insects and in stinging nettles. The green pigment in plant leaves called chlorophyll helps plant leaves to capture the energy of the sunlight for photosynthesis. Soil has bacteria that convert gaseous nitrogen into a usable form and release it into the soil. These are absorbed by the plants along with water. Organic matter releases acids. If the soil is too acidic, it can be neutralised by adding bases like quick lime (calcium oxide). Turmeric is a good naturally occurring indicator which turns red when treated with a base. Respiration is an exothermic process, a process in which heat is released along with other products. Formation of water from hydrogen and oxygen is a combination reaction. Two molecules of hydrogen combine with one molecule of oxygen to for two molecules of water. Caesium has a very low melting point (28.39 C) than the other three. Caesium will melt if you keep it on your palm. Diamond, an allotrope of carbon, is the hardest known natural substance. Ductility is the property of a metal or any other material that allows a it to be drawn into wires. Gold is the most ductile metal. Alkali metals such as potassium and sodium are so highly reactive that they catch fire if kept in the open. Hence, to protect them from catching fire, they are kept immersed in kerosene oil.
500. d
513. a
Science
501. b Rice is rich in starch which is a carbohydrate. When a few drops of dilute iodine solution is put in a substance rich in starch, its turns blue-black in colour. Vitamin D can be made by our body itself. Our skin uses sunlight to produce vitamin (D) Vitamin A keeps our skin and eyes healthy. 514. b
502. d
503. a 504. a
Plants use water and carbon dioxyide to prepare food through the process of photosynthesis with oxygen as a by product.
505. a
Just like animals, plants too consume oxygen for respiration. Plants need sunlight for the process of photosynthesis, not respiration. Rhizobium is a soil bacterium that forms nodules on the roots of legumes. It takes up nitrogen from the atmosphere and coverts it into a soluble form which is consumed by the plant. Ruminent animals quickly swallow the food and store it in a part of the stomach called rumen. The food gets partially digested here and is called cud. Later the cud returns to the mouth in small lumps and the animal chews it. Lohi, Rampur Bushair, Nali and Bakharwal are different breeds of sheep. Lohi - Rajasthan and Punjab, Rampur Bushair - Uttar Pradesh and Himachal Pradesh, Nali - Rajasthan, Punjab and Haryana Bakharwal Jammu and Kashmir
506. c
507. d
508. b
509. b
Scurvy is a disease of human beings caused by a prolonged deficiency of vitamin C in the diet. Cuscuta (Amarbel) does not have chlorophyll. It takes its food from a host plant and deprives it of valuable nutrients. Amla contains ascorbic acid, Tamarind contains tartaric acid and Lemon contains citric acid.
510. b
511. d
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516. c 517. a 518. b 519. c 520. b 521. d 522. a 523. b 524. d
515. d
Copper has a very low reactivity so it is found in the free state. Other three are highly reactive metals therefore they are never found in the free state. 24 carat gold is very soft and hence not suitable for making ornaments. It is alloyed with either copper or silver to make it hard. In India, 22 carat gold is used for making ornaments. It means 22 parts of pure gold is alloyed with 2 parts of either copper or silver. Mercury combines with all the common metals except iron and platinum to form alloys that are called amalgams. Solder is an alloy of lead and tin (Pb and Sn). It is used for welding electrical wires together due to its low melting point.
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525. a
Not every plant has chlorophyll in its leaves. Some plants get their chlorophyll from other host plants. They are parasitic in nature. Pitcher plant is an insectivorous plant. This is why it is a heterotroph (one who depends on the food produced by others). Starch is produced by photosynthesis, not protein. The inner walls of the small intestine have thousands of finger-like outgrowths called villi. The villi increase the absorption surface area for digestion providing efficient absorption of nutrients. Galvanisation is a process of depositing a layer of zinc on iron or steel to prevent rusting. The lion-tailed macaque (also called Beard ape) lives in the rain forests of Western Ghats. It is thought to be the rarest old world monkey and is in serious danger of extinction. CFCs damage the ozone layer when they escape from sources such as refrigerators, air conditioners and aerosol sprays. The CFCs drift up to the stratosphere, an upper layer of the atmosphere where strong ultraviolet radiation from the Sun breaks them down. As they break down, they release chlorine, which depletes the protective ozone layer. When inhaled carbon monoxide combines with hemoglobin in the blood, preventing absorption of oxygen and resulting in asphyxiation. Pollutants like sulphur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide react with atmospheric water vapour to form sulphuric acid and nitric acid. The acids drop down with rain, making the rain acidic. This is called acid rain. Acid rain corrodes the marble of the monuments like Taj Mahal. Sirius, also known as Dog Star, is the brightest star in the sky. It is situated in the constellation Canis Major. Venus is the brightest object in the sky after the Sun and the Moon. It is often called the morning star when it appears in the east at sunrise, and the evening star when it is in the west at sunset. The ability of an element to form bonds with other atoms of the same element, giving rise to large molecules, is known as catenation. Carbon predominantly exhibits catenation, while sulphur, silicon and nitrogen also exhibit this property to some extent.
536. d
Terylene is made from a polyester derived from terephthalic acid and ethylene. It can be drawn into very fine fibres that can be woven like any other yarn. Melamine is an example of thermosetting plastics. It resists fire and can tolerate heat better than other plastics. It is used for making floor tiles, kitchenware and fabrics which resist fire. Metals are said to be sonorous because they make ringing sound when struck hard. Gallium, a metal, is sonorous while the other three are not. The green coating on copper surface is a mixture of copper hydroxide and copper carbonate. 2Cu + H2O + CO2 + O2 Cu(OH)2 + CuCO3 Saturn is the least dense of the solar systems planets. Its density is less than that of water. The very low density of Saturn is attributed to the fact that the planet consists mainly of the lightweight gas hydrogen. Metalloids are elements which possess characters of both metals and non metals. Silicon is a metalloid. Bismuth and tin are metals while phosphorus is a non metal. Metal oxides are basic in nature. Naphthalene is an organic compound with formula C10H8. A Red Data Book contains lists of endangered species. Cells having well organised nucleus with a nuclear membrane are called eukaryotic. On the other hand, cells having nuclear material without nuclear membrane are prokaryotic. Bacteria and blue green algae are eukaryotic organisms. Frog, starfish and sea urchin exhibit external fertilization. Catfish lays its eggs on the nest made by both male and female. An oviparous animal lays eggs instead of giving birth to young ones. So crocodile is an oviparous animal. Binary fission reproduction is a type of asexual reproduction in which an animal reproduces by dividing into two individuals. Amoeba which is a single celled organism exhibits binary fission reproduction. The pair of sex chromosomes in a boy is XY and in a girl is XX.
526. d
537. d
527. c
538. c
528. a
539. b
529. c
530. b
531. b
532. d
533. a
534. b
535. a
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541. b 542. d 543. c 544. d 545. c 546. a 547. c
540. c
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548. a
Pituitary gland is the master endocrine gland in vertebrate animals. The hormones secreted by the pituitary stimulate and control the functioning of almost all the other endocrine glands in the body. Goitre is an enlargement of the thyroid gland which happens when the thyroid gland stops producing the hormone thyroxine. Thyroxine production requires the presence of iodine in water. If the water in which the tadpoles are growing does not contain sufficient iodine, the tadpoles cannot become adults. An egg along with its shell is regarded as a single cell. Plastids, scattered in the cytoplasm, contain chlorophyll. When a solid melts, the temperature of the system remains same as the melting point till the melting is complete. The additional heat gained is used up in overcoming the forces of attraction between the particles. On increasing the temperature of solids, kinetic energy of the particles increases. When brought down to atmospheric pressure, solid carbon dioxide gets converted directly to gaseous state without coming into liquid state. This is why it is also called dry ice. Molecular mass of H2SO3 = sum of individual atomic masses = 2 1 + 1 32 + 3 16 = 82
560. b
Buckminsterfullerene (C-60) is an allotrope of carbon which has carbon atoms arranged in the shape of a football.
561. c 549. c 562. b Compounds with identical molecular formula but different structures are called structural isomers. n-butane : c-c-c-c methyl propane : c- c -c | c 563. a
550. b
551. a
Esters are sweet smelling agents. These are used in making perfumes and as flavouring agents. Micelles is a formation of soap molecules, surrounding the oily dirt, in which the hydrophobic tails are in the interior of the cluster and the ionic ends are on the surface of the cluster. Alcohol gives rise to only carbon dioxide and water on burning in sufficient air, while petrol on burning gives out various other products which are harmful for the environment. Carboxylic acids do not ionize completely in their aqueous solutions. In 1820 Oersted accidentally discovered that a compass needle got deflected when an electric current passed through a metallic wire placed nearby. Through this observation Oersted showed that electricity and magnetism were related phenomena. A straight current carrying wire produces a magnetic field in a plane to which the wire is perpendicular. According to the right-hand thumb rule, if you hold the power line in such a way that the thumb is pointing towards the flow of current, then the fingers wrap around the wire in direction of the magnetic field. Magnetic field lines through a conventional compass, placed in a magnetic field, are in the direction in which the needle points. Magnetic field lines never cross each other. Maxwells corkscrew rule, also know as the righthand thumb rule, gives the direction directions of the magnetic field due to a current carrying conductor. Statement (I) is not always correct. It depends on how you hold the wire. If you are holding the wire in your right hand in such a way that the thumb points towards the direction of the current then statement (I) is correct. Otherwise its not.
564. b
552. d
553. b
554. a
555. d
According to Daltons atomic theory, an atom is indivisible and indestructible (which is not true). The mass of an atom is approximately equal to the total mass of its protons and neutrons. Mass of electrons is negligible in comparison to neutrons and protons.
556. c 569. d 557. b a and d postulates about an atom given by Neil Bohr. Neutrons were not discovered during the time of Rutherfords -particle scattering experiment. 570. a 558. a Isobars have different atomic numbers but same mass number. Atomic number of calcium is 20 and that of argon is 18 but both of them have mass number 40. 571. b 559. c Carbon shares its four outermost electrons with each of the four chlorine atoms. Other three compounds have ionic bonding.
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565. a 566. b 567. b 568. a
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572. c
The field lines inside the solenoid are in the form of parallel straight lines. Thus the magnetic field in a current carrying solenoid is the same at all points inside the solenoid. That is, the field is uniform inside the solenoid. Flemings right hand rule gives the direction of induced current in a conductor moving in a magnetic field. Its not the right-hand thumb rule which gives the direction of the magnetic field due to a current carrying conductor.
589. b
Aqueous soulution of sodium chloride is also called brine. 2NaCl(aq) + 2H2O(l) 2NaOH(aq) + Cl2(g) + H2(g) This process is also known as chlor-alkali process. A solution with pH value 8 is more acidic than a solution with pH value 12. Therefore the first solution has more concentration of hydronium ions than the second solution. Our stomach produces hydrochloric acid which helps in digestion. Acidity of salts of strong acids depend on both the acidity of the acid as well as the base out of which the salt is made of. Salts of strong acids with strong bases are neutral and with weak bases are acidic. Ca(OH)2 + Cl2
573. d
590. b
574. c 575. d 576. b When a constant force is applied to an object (moving with a constant speed) perpendicular to its motion, then the object starts moving in a circular path.
591. b
592. a 593. b
577. b 578. a
Source : Class 10 Page 236 (Chapter 13) Split-ring type commutator is used in DC generators. Cross sectional area = 2X * 2X = 4X2 Resistance = (resistivity*length)/area = (4X * 8X)/ 4X2 = 8
579. b
580. b
Olfactory indicators are substances whose odour changes in acidic or basic media.
581. a 582. a Baking powder (NaHCO3 + H+) is a mixture of baking soda and a mild edible acid like tartaric acid. Neutralisation : Acid + Base > Salt + Water pH value of an acidic solution is less than 7 while that of a basic solution is more than 7. pH value of a neutral solution is 7. The process of dissolving a base in water is highly exothermic which means it gives out large amount of energy. Hydrogen ions cannot alone, but they exist after combining with water molecules as hydronium ions. H+ + H2O > H3O+ Ants and the stinging hair of nettle leaves secret formic acid (methanoic acid) which causes pain. Tooth enamel, the clear outer layer of the tooth above the gum line, is the hardest substance in the human body. Tooth enamel is made of calcium phosphate. 602. d 596. d
583. a
584. b
585. b
586. c
587. a
588. d
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594. a 595. b 597. d 598. c 599. a 600. b 601. a
When carbon dioxide is passed through lime water, a white precipitate of calcium carbonate is formed. Baking powder is a mixture of sodium bicarbonate and a mild edible acid like tartaric acid. When baking powder is heated or mixed in water, carbon dioxide is produced as one of the products. Carbon dioxide produced here causes bread or cake to rise making them soft and spongy. Sodium chloride (common salt) is a neutral salt.
Gypsum (CaSO4.2H2O) has two water molecules as water of crystallisation. Washing soda is Na2CO3.10H2O Sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) is baking soda which is not used for bleaching. Gypsum is CaSO4.2H2O Plaster of Paris is CaSO4.1/2H2O Washing soda is Na2CO3.10H2O Baking soda is NaHCO3 Tomato contains tartaric aci(d) The blue-green colour of the solution is due to the formation of copper (II) chloride in the reaction Silver and Copper are the best conductors of heat. Onion and vanilla are olfactory indicators which mean that their odour changes in acidic or basic media. Zinc reacts with sodium hydroxide to displace hydrogen gas and form sodium zincate. The reaction given here describes baking action of baking powder. Crystals of hydrated copper sulphate are blue in colour while anhydrous copper sulphate is white coloured.
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603. c
Caesium has very low melting point and melts if you keep it on your palm. Palladium, platinum and nickel have very high melting points. Sodium and potassium are so reactive that they react vigorously even with cold water. Sodium and potassium catches fire if kept in the open. So they are kept immersed in kerosene oil. Aluminium oxide is amphoteric in nature which means that it shows both acidic as well as basic character. Calcium oxide, Sodium oxide and Magnesium oxide, like other metal oxides, are basic in nature. Non-metallic oxides are acidic in nature. Ability of metals to be beaten into thin sheets malleability. Gold and silver are the most malleable metals
617. c
604. b
Zinc oxide can act as acidic as well as basic oxide. This dual behaviour is known as amphoterism. When copper is heated, it is coated with a black coloured layer over its surface. This black layer is copper(II) oxide Sodium chloride does not exist as molecules but aggregates of oppositely charged ions. Ionic compounds are solids and are somewhat hard because of the strong force of attraction between the positive and negative ions. Pure iron is very soft and stretches easily when hot. Therefore it is mixed with a small amount of carbon to make it hard and strong. The electrical conductivity of an alloy is less than that of pure metals. If the amount of water in air is already high, the rate of evaporation decreases. Temperature of a substance does not change when it is melting because the heat gained is used up by the particles in gaining kinetic energy. White silver chloride turns grey in sunlight. This is due to the decomposition of silver chloride into silver and chlorine by light. This reaction is used in black and white photography. Iron, which is more reactive than copper, displaces copper from copper sulphate to form iron sulphate. This is a simple displacement reaction where zinc, which is more reactive than hydrogen, displaces hydrogen from the solution. Limestone and chalk are different forms of calcium carbonate. By means of X-ray diffraction, Moseley established, in 1913, a relationship between the frequencies of X-ray emission lines and what he concluded must be the atoms nuclear charge, thereby confirming that the nuclear charge indicated an elements position in the periodic table. Actinium is an actinide element while Polonium and Francium belong to group 1 and 16 respectively. In 1864 British chemist John A. R. Newlands listed the elements in the order of increasing atomic weights and noted that a given set of properties recurs at every eighth place. He named this periodic repetition the law of octaves, by analogy with the musical scales.
618. a
605. a
619. c
606. d
620. a
607. c 608. a
609. d
Anodising is a process of depositing a thick oxide layer on metal surface to prevent further corrosion. Magnesium does not react with cold water. It reacts with hot water to form magnesium hydroxide and hydrogen. Iodine is a non metal but it is lustrous.
610. b 611. c
Less reactive metal will be displaced by more reactive metal in its salt solution. 625. a Source : Class 10 Page 40 (Chapter 3) A process in which energy is released is called an exothermic process. Both of the above reactions are exothermic.
612. c
613. d 627. b 614. a Hydrogen gas is not evolved when a metal reacts with nitric acid. It is because nitric acid is a strong oxidising agent. It oxidises the hydrogen produced to water and itself gets reduced to nitrogen oxides. Magnesium and manganese are exceptions which react with very dilute nitric acid to give hydrogen. Calcium is above aluminium in the activity series of metals. Aluminium oxide is insoluble in water like most metal oxides. Other three are soluble in water. Ionic compounds in the solid state do not conduct electricity because movement of ions in the solid is not possible due to their rigid structure.
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The position of hydrogen was not correctly defined by Mendeleev in his periodic table. It was placed along with alkali metals although its properties resembled both the alkali metals and the halogens. The other three are lanthanides. It was assumed by Newlands that only 56 elements existed in nature and no more elements would be discovered in the future. But, later on, several new elements were discovered, whose properties did not fit into his Law of Octaves Cadmium belongs to group 12 while the other three belong to group 13. Noble gases were not discovered at the time Mendeleev prepared his periodic table. These gases were discovered very late because they are very inert and present in extremely low concentrations in our atmosphere.
643. a
631. d 632. b
As we move down a group, electronegativity decreases because the shells increase down the group and thus there is an increased distance between the valence electrons and nucleus. This decreases the ability to accept electrons to attain stable configuration. In Mendeleevs Periodic Table, gaps were left for the elements to be discovered later. The gap now occupied by Gallium was named Eka-Aluminium by Mendeleev. The atomic radius decreases in moving from left to right along a period. This is due to an increase in nuclear charge which tends to pull the electrons closer to the nucleus and reduces the size of the atom. Johann Wolfgang Dobereiner observed that certain elements with closely similar properties occur in triads, or groups of three, such as chlorine, bromine, and iodine. Dbereiner could identify only three triads from the elements known at that time. These were Lithium-Sodium-Potassium, Calcium-StrontiumBarium and Chlorine-Bromine-Iodine. Animal fats generally contain saturated fatty acids which are said to be harmful for health. Oils containing unsaturated fatty acids should be chosen for cooking. Alkaline potassium permanganate is an oxidising agents. In moving from left to right along a period in the periodic table of elements, the atomic radius decreases. As we move down the group in the periodic table, metallic character increases. Argon is a noble gas which has a stable electronic configuration. This is why Argon is called inert gas. You will see that the atomic size increases down the group. This is because new shells are being added as we go down the group. This increases the distance between the outermost electrons and the nucleus so that the atomic size increases in spite of the increase in nuclear charge. Elements form ionic compounds when they are capable of gaining or losing electrons to form ions. As the effective nuclear charge acting on the valence shell electrons increases across a period, the tendency to lose electrons will decrease. Thus across a group electropositivity decreases while electronegativity increases. A large electronegativity (or electropositivity) difference leads to an ionic bond.
644. a
645. a 633. d
634. b
635. d
Aluminium has the electronic configuration of 2,8,3 and belongs to group 13.
636. a
As the effective nuclear charge acting on the valence shell electrons increases across a period, the tendency to lose electrons will decrease. Dmitry Mendeleyev was best known for his development of the periodic law of the properties of the chemical elements. This law states that elements show a periodicity (regular pattern) of properties when they are arranged according to atomic weight. Germanium belongs to period 4 while the other three belong to group 5 of the periodic table. As the effective nuclear charge acting on the valence shell electrons increases across a period, the tendency to lose electrons will decrease. Hence the metallic character decreases from left to right in a period. X is carbon which exhibits catenation at very high level and is the basic element needed for forming organic compounds. Its electronic configuration is 2,4.
637. b
638. b
639. c
640. a
641. b
As the valence shell electrons move away from the nucleus as we move down the group, the tendency to lose electrons will increase. Hence the electropositivity will increase. The sequence is inverted here so that elements with similar properties could be grouped together.
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As we move across a period from left to right, electronegative character increases. Chlorine has 7 electrons in its outermost shell, hence needs just one electron to complete its octet. Power = I2R where I is current and R is resistance. When current is decreased by 50%, Power = (I/2)2R = I2R/4 = 75% less of I2R R (resistance) of the wire changes with the change in material as its resistivity gets changed and also resistance vary with temperature. Source : Class 10 Page 218 (Chapter 12) Fuse protects the circuit and appliance by stopping the flow of any unduly high electric current. It is placed in series with the device. If current larger than specified value flows through the circuit, temperature of fuse wire increases. This melts the fuse wire and breaks the circuit. Unit of magnetic field strength is named after Hans Christian Oersted who played a major role in understanding electromagnetism.
667. a
The cornea is a tough, five-layered membrane through which light is admitted to the interior of the eye. The iris consists of two sheets of smooth muscle with contrary actions: dilation (expansion) and contraction (constriction). These muscles control the size of the pupil and thus determine how much light reaches the sensory tissue of the retina. The iris consists of two sheets of smooth muscle with contrary actions: dilation (expansion) and contraction (constriction). These muscles control the size of the pupil and thus determine how much light reaches the sensory tissue of the retina. The retina is a complex layer, composed largely of nerve cells. The light-sensitive receptor cells lie on the outer surface of the retina in front of a pigmented tissue layer. These cells take the form of rods or cones packed closely together like matches in a box. The eye lens curvature can be modified to some extent by the ciliary muscles. The change in the curvature of the eye lens can thus change its focal length. When the muscles are relaxed, the lens becomes thin. Thus, its focal length increases. This enables us to see distant objects clearly. The pupil of an eye acts like a variable aperture whose size can be varied with the help of the iris. When the light is very bright, the iris contracts the pupil to allow less light to enter the eye. The minimum distance, at which objects can be seen most distinctly without strain, is called the near point of the eye. Most of the refraction for the light rays entering the eye occurs at the outer surface of the cornea. The crystalline lens merely provides the finer adjustment of focal length required to focus objects at different distances on the retina. In a myopic eye, the distance between the lens and the retina is too long. As a result, light rays from distant objects focus before they strike the retina. Near objects appear clearly because light rays from them focus correctly on the retina. The band pattern for the spectrum of white light is VIBGYOR i.e. Violet Indigo Blue Green Yellow Orange Red. In the spectrum of white light by a glass prism, the violet band is farhest while the red band is closest to the normal to the prism surface. When a light ray travels from a medium with high refractive index to a medium with low refractive index, the refracted ray bends away from the normal to the inter-surface.
668. d 654. b
655. a
669. c
656. c
670. a
657. c
658. d
Ammeter reading increases when resistance decreases. Resistance is inversely proportional to the cross-section area of the wire.
659. b
It is practically not possible to connect electric bulb and electric heater in series because they require current of widely different values to operate properly. According to the Joules Law of Heating, H = i2Rt where H = heat produced, i = current, R = resistance, t = time Tungsten has the highest melting temperature of all metals. Diamond and Ebonite are insulators so they have high electrical resistivity. Alloys (Constantan) also have high electrical resistivity. Chromium is a metal so it is a good conductor of electricity. As one of the parallel branches is removed, resistance of the circuit increases therefore, current will decrease in the circuit according to ohms law. 675. d 1/Req = 1/R1 + 1/R2 Gravitational Force F = G (Mass1 x Mass 2) / distance2 The acceleration due to gravity on the moon is onesixth of the acceleration due to gravity on the earth (9.8 m/s2)
660. a
661. b
662. c
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The first correct explanation of the phenomenon was advanced in 1666 by the English mathematician and physicist Sir Isaac Newton. The water droplets act like small prisms. They refract and disperse the incident sunlight, then reflect it internally, and finally refract it again when it comes out of the raindrop. Due to the dispersion of light and internal reflection, different colours reach the observers eye. A concave lens although extends the point at which light rays focus, this is not exactly required measure to correct hypermetropic effect. Hypermetropia is far-sightedness where image is formed beyond the retina. It an can be corrected by using covex lenses. These converging lenses provide the additional focussing power required for forming the image on the retina.
678. c
light of longer wavelengths at the red en(d) Hence, blue light, which is at the short wavelength end of the visible spectrum, will be scattered much more strongly than will the long wavelength red light. This results in the blue colour of the sunlit sky, 687. d Image of an object placed far away from a concave mirror is formed at the principal focus. The image is real and inverted and its size is highly diminished. Light from the Sun near the horizon passes through thicker layers of air and larger distance in the earths atmosphere before reaching our eyes. Hence, at the sunrise or the sunset, most of the blue light and shorter wavelengths are scattered away by the particles and the light that reaches our eyes is of longer wavelengths. This gives rise to the reddish appearance of the Sun. Image of an object placed at the principal focus of a convex mirror is formed between the pole and the principal focus, behind the mirror. The image is diminished, virtual and erect. Source : Class 10 Page 167 (Chapter 10)
688. a 679. d
680. a
The twinkling of a star is due to atmospheric refraction of starlight. Since the atmosphere bends starlight towards the normal, the apparent position of the star is slightly different from its actual position. This apparent position of the star is not stationary, but keeps on changing slightly due to turbulence in the atmosphere. Since the stars are very distant, they approximate point-sized sources of light. As the path of rays of light coming from the star goes on varying slightly, the stars appear twinkling to us. Due to the total internal reflection, a rainbow is always formed in a direction opposite to that of the Sun. The hotter air is lighter (less dense) than the cooler air above it, and has a refractive index slightly less than that of the cooler air. Tyndall effect, also called Tyndall phenomenon, scattering of a beam of light by a medium containing small suspended particlese.g., smoke or dust in a room, which makes visible a light beam entering a window.
681. a
682. c
683. b 684. b The light is not bent sufficiently in a hypermetropic eye. Therefore it focuses at a point behind the retina. A person with hypermetropia sees well for distance but near vision is difficult and causes strain. Image of an object placed at the centre of curvature of a concave mirror is formed at the centre of curvature. The size of image is same as the size of the object. The image is real and inverted. The molecules of air and other fine particles in the atmosphere have size smaller than the wavelength of visible light. These are more effective in scattering light of shorter wavelengths at the blue end than 696. b 697. c
685. b
686. a
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689. a 690. b 691. c 692. d 693. a 694. d 695. b
According to the laws of refraction sin i / sin r = n2 / n1 = n21 = refractive index of medium 2 with respect to medium 1, where the ray travels from medium 1 to medium 2. Values less than 7 on the pH scale represent an acidic solution. As the pH value increases from 7 to 14, it represents an increase in OH ion concentration in the solution, that is, increase in the strength of base. The process is called the chlor-alkali process because of the products formed. Chlorine gas is given off at the anode, and hydrogen gas at the cathode. Sodium hydroxide solution is formed near the cathode. An acidic solution turns blue litmus paper red. When an acid reacts with a metal carbonate or metal hydrogencarbonate, it gives the corresponding salt, carbon dioxide gas and water. The earth is not a perfect sphere. As the radius of the earth increases from the poles to the equator, the value of g becomes greater at the poles than at the equator. Statement II is known as the Archimedes Principle. The upwasrd force we are talking about is the buoyant force. Gravitational Force F = G ( Mass1 x Mass2) / distance2 Kinetic Energy = mass * velocity2 / 2.
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Initial speed = u = 100 m/s, Distance travelled in 2s = h = ut + at 2 = 100*2 - 10*4 = 180 m Potential energy = mgh = 10*10*180 = 18kJ Yes the speed would be same as the speed with which the body was thrown upwards but velocity is not just speed but speed and direction. The velocity of the body when it returns to the ground is equal and opposite to V i.e. -V Let the midway point be R and PQ = 2x. Applying equations of motion between point P and R v2 = u2 + 2as, v2 = 502 + 2ax Applying equations of motion between point R and Q, 702 = v2 + 2ax Adding both the equations, 2400 = 4ax or ax = 600 Substituting the value of ax in previous equations, v2 = 502 + 1200 Momentum is conserved in inelastic collisions, but the kinetic energy after the collision changes since some of it is converted to other forms of energy. Initial momentum = Final momentum 2m*2v mv = (2m + m)Vfinal Vfinal = v
710. d
699. d
Speed of sound in air at 20C 344 m/s. When a sound producing source moves with a speed higher than that of sound, it produces a very sharp and loud sound called the sonic boom. The shock waves produced by a supersonic aircraft have enough energy to shatter glass and even damage buildings. The speed of sound in metals is very high in comparison to the speed of sound in air. Speed of sound at 25C in Aluminium = 6420m/s, in Nickel = 6040m/s, in Iron = 5950m/s. Sounds of frequencies below 20 Hz are called infrasonic sound and sounds of frequencies higher than 20 kHz are called ultrasonic sound. Sonar, acronym for SOund Navigation And Ranging, is a detection system based on the reflection of underwater sound waves. 2d = t * v = 5 * 1500 = 7500 d = 3750 m = 3.75 km A bat uses ultrasonic waves to track its prey. Children under the age of five and some animals, such as dogs can hear up to 25 kHz. As people grow older their ears become less sensitive to higher frequencies. Cochlea is a spiral structure in the inner ear that looks like a snail shell and contains tiny hair cells whose movement is interpreted by the brain as soun(d) Except Dolphins, the other three produce ultrasonic waves. Earthquake produces infrasonic waves which can be detected by some animals. The warm and humid tropical regions of the earth, between the tropic of Cancer and the tropic of Capricorn, are rich in diversity of plant and animal life which is why this region is called the region of megadiversity. Charles Darwin first described this idea of evolution in 1859 in his book, The Origin of Species. In 1959 American biologist R. H. Whittaker described a classification system of five primary kingdoms: plants, animals, fungi, protista, and bacteria. Bryophytes are called the amphibians of the plant kingdom since they require both aquatic and terrestrial conditions to complete their life cycle.
711. c
712. b
701. b
702. a
703. c
Leishmania, a protozoan organism, causes kalaazar. The organisms are oval-shaped, and each has one long whip-like structure. 716. d Gustatory receptors are located in the tongue. Gustatory receptors detect taste of food. Information like taste or smell is acquired at the end of the dendritic tip of a nerve cell. This information sets off a chemical reaction that creates an electrical impulse. This impulse travels from the dendrite to the cell body, and then along the axon to its end. Olfactory receptors detect smell and are located in our nose. 719. a By separating organisms on the basis of a hierarchy of characteristics into smaller and smaller groups, we arrive at the basic unit of classification, which is a species. Heinrich Rudolph Hertz discovered the photoelectric effect which was later explained by Albert Einstein. Sound waves are longitudinal waves. Sound needs a medium to travel. Sound cannot travel through vacuum. Speed = wavelength * frequency = 5000 * 0.5 = 2500 m/s Distance travelled in 4 seconds = 2500 * 4 = 10 km. 720. d
704. b
705. b
706. b
707. c
708. d
709. b
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The reproductive organs of plants in all these three groups are very inconspicuous, and they are therefore called cryptogamae, or those with hidden reproductive organs. In the Pteridophyta, the plant body is differentiated into roots, stem and leaves and has specialised tissue for the conduction of water and other substances from one part of the plant body to another. Cnidarians, also known as coelenterates, diverse group of aquatic, invertebrate animals armed with microscopic stinging structures. Cnidarians make up the phylum Cnidaria, which encompasses more than 9,000 species, including corals, hydras, jellyfish, Portuguese man-of-war, and sea anemones. Both Amoeba and Paramecium both are protozoa and belong to the group Protista.
734. a
724. d
In 1800, a British chemist, William Nicholson (1753 1815), had shown that if electrodes were immersed in water, and a current was passed, bubbles of oxygen and hydrogen were produced. Oxygen bubbles formed on the electrode connected to the positive terminal of the battery and hydrogen bubbles formed on the other electrode. CH3CH2OH hot con(c) H2SO4 > CH2 = CH2 + H2O By the lens formula, 1/v -1/u = 1/f 1/v 1/-30 = 1/-15 v = 10 cm, Magnification (m) = v/u = 10/30 = 0.33 Alkali metals are so soft that they can be cut with a knife. They have low densities and low melting points. Diamond, an allotrope of carbon, is the hardest natural substance known and has a very high melting and boiling point. Gallium has a very low melting point. It will melt if you keep it on your palm When copper is heated in air, it combines with oxygen to form copper(II) oxide, a black oxide. Aqua regia, (Latin for royal water) is a freshly prepared mixture of concentrated hydrochloric acid and concentrated nitric acid in the ratio of 3:1. It can dissolve gold, even though neither of these acids can do so alone. Activity series of metals : K > Na > Ca > Mg > Al > Zn > Fe > Pb > H > Cu > Hg > Ag > Au Carbon has an electronic configuration of 2,4. So if it loses 4 electrons from the outermost shell or gains 4 electrons, it will acquire a stable noble gas configuration. Aldehyde : R-CH=O Propanal : CH3-CH2-CH=O The atomic size increases down the group. Out of the four, all except carbon are inert gases. Tuberculosis disease is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, a rod-shaped bacterium. Acetic Acid : CH3COOH Fermentation results in the breakdown of complex organic substances into simpler ones through the action of catalysis. For example, by the action of
735. b
736. b
737. a
726. b
727. d
Roundworms make up the phylum Nematoda. Significant forms of roundworm include the various genera known as hookworm; the filaria , which cause elephantiasis; the trichina worm, the cause of trichinosis; and the whipworm, which infests the human intestine.
728. a
Carolus Linnaeus was a Swedish naturalist who developed binomial nomenclature to classify and organize plants and animals. He published 14 papers and also brought out the famous book Systema Naturae from which all fundamental taxonomical researches have taken off. His system of classification was a simple scheme for arranging plants so as to be able to identify them again. The system of scientific naming or nomenclature we use today was introduced by Carolus Linnaeus in the eighteenth century. Triploblastic is used to describe a multicellular animal that has three primary germ layers ectoderm endoderm mesoderm during embryonic development. Coelom is the cavity between the body wall and the gut of many animals, formed when the embryonic mesoderm is divided into two layers. Source : Class 9 Page 86 (Chapter 7) Marchantia is a bryophyte. Thallophytes are characterized by the simple nature of their structure, an undifferentiated thallus that has no root, stem, or leaves. By the lens formula, 1/v -1/u = 1/f 1/-10 1/-30 = 1/-15 f = -15 cm, Power = 1/f = 1/-0.15 = -6.66D
729. b
730. b
731. c
732. a
733. c
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diastase, zymase, and invertase, starch is broken down (hydrolyzed) into complex sugars, then simple sugars, and finally alcohol. 750. c Edward Jenner discovered the vaccine for smallpox in 1798. Citrus canker, a plant disease, is caused by variants of the bacterium Xanthomonas citri. Sir Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin in 1929. Louis Pasteur discovered fermentation in 1857. Malaria is a disease caused by infection with singlecelled parasites of the genus Plasmodium . Anopheles mosquitoes transmit these parasites from one person to another in their bites.
765. d 766. d
Copper cannot displace iron from its solution. The slow process of conversion of dead vegetation into coal is called carbonisation. Natural gas was formed from the dead remains of living organisms (fossils). These days, bitumen, a petroleum product, is used in place of coal-tar for metalling the roads. The first observations of cells were made in 1665 by English scientist Robert Hooke, who used a crude microscope of his own invention to examine a variety of objects, including a thin piece of cork. Noting the rows of tiny boxes that made up the dead woods tissue, Hooke coined the term cell. Pseudopodia are the projections of varying lengths protruding out of an amoebas body. Green coloured plastids present in plant cells are called chloroplast. The plasma membrane is porous and allows the movement of substances or materials both inward and outward. Nucleus contains thread-like structures called chromosomes. These carry genes and help in inheritance or transfer of characters from the parents to the offspring. Cytoplasm is present in both animal as well as plant cells. Chlorophyll, in the chloroplasts of leaves, is essential for photosynthesis. In external fertilization the fusion of a male and a female gamete takes place outside the body of the female. Vacuoles in plant cells are generally large as compared to the vacuoles present in human cells. Plant cells have both cell membrane and cell wall. Ursa major is also known as the Big Dipper, the Great Bear or the Saptarshi. Cell wall is present in plant cells, not human cells. Plant cells need protection against variations in temperature, high wind speed, atmospheric moisture, etc. They are exposed to these variations because they cannot move. Plastids are scattered in the cytoplasm of the leaf cells. They are of different colours not just green. A human cell has a well defined nucleus inside it, so it is a eukaryotic cell. The entire content of a living cell is known as protoplasm. It includes the cytoplasm and the
751. a
767. a
752. c
768. c
753. d
769. a 754. a The bacterium Lactobacillus promotes the formation of curd. It multiplies in milk and converts it into curd.
755. d
Robert Kch (1876) discovered the bacterium (Bacillus anthracis) which causes anthrax disease.
756. a
When a copper vessel is exposed to moist air for long, it acquires a dull green coating. The green material is a mixture of copper hydroxide (Cu(OH)2) and copper carbonate (CuCO3). Typhoid Fever is acute infectious disease caused by the typhoid bacillus Salmonella typhi.
757. c
758. a
In agriculture bacteria are used to increase soil fertility by fixing nitrogen. 773. c Rust of wheat is a disease of wheat caused by various fungi and marked by blackish, brownish, or yellowish streaks on the leaves and stems. Bakelite is a thermosetting plasti(c) Female Aedes mosquito acts as carrier of dengue virus. Measles, also called rubeola, is an acute, highly contagious, fever-producing disease caused by a filterable virus. Magnesium Oxide turns red litmus blue. In general, metallic oxides are basic in nature. Sulphur dioxide (SO2) + Water (H2O) Sulphurous acid (H2SO3) Phosphorus is a very reactive non-metal. It catches fire if exposed to air. To prevent the contact of phosphorus with atmospheric oxygen, it is stored in water. Iron displaces copper from its solution to form green coloured iron sulphate solution (FeSO4). 775. d
759. b
760. b 761. b
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nucleus. Protoplasm is called the living substance of the cell. 779. a Genes, carried by chromosomes, are a unit of inheritance in living organisms.
792. d
Source : Class 8 Page 164 (Chapter 13) The vocal cords in men are about 20mm long. In women these are about 5mm shorter. Sound needs a medium to travel through. Loudness of sound is proportional to the square of the amplitude of the vibration producing the sound. In an image formed by a mirror the left of the object appears on the right and the right appears on the left. This is known as lateral inversion. Chromium has a shiny appearance and it does not corrode. 100C = 373 Kelvin
793. b 780. d The animals which give birth to young ones are called viviparous such as humans. 794. a 781. b The stage of the embryo in which all the body parts can be identified is called a foetus. In some women oviducts are blocked. These women are unable to bear babies because sperms cannot reach the egg for fertilization. In such cases, doctors collect freshly released egg and sperms and keep them together for a few hours for IVF or in vitro fertilization (fertilization outside the body). Hydra reproduce through budding. Those animals which lay eggs are called oviparous animals.
795. b
796. d 797. c
783. a
Those animals which lay eggs are called oviparous such as hen. The transformation of the larva into an adult through drastic changes is called metamorphosis. Sebaceous gland is a tiny oil-producing gland that is commonly found in human skin. Insulin hormone is produced in the islets of Langerhans of the pancreas, that regulates the metabolism of carbohydrates, fats, and starches in the body.
784. b
785. b
786. a
If people do not have enough iodine in their diet, they get goitre caused by lack of thyroxine. In a frog, metamorphosis is controlled by thyroxine, the hormone produced by thyroid. Thyroxine production requires the presence of iodine in water. Orion is a well-known constellation that can be seen during winter in the late evenings. Orion is also called the Hunter. The three middle stars represent the belt of the hunter. The four bright stars appear to be arranged in the form of a quadrilateral. Goiter is a disease of the thyroid gland characterized by an enlargement of the gland, visible externally as a swelling on the front of the neck. On a common playing die, the markings on the opposite face add-up to 7. This means that 2 and 5 are opposite faces. Equal and opposite forces cancel each other out. Gravitational force on an object depends on the distance of the object from the centre of the earth. Force exerted per unit area is called pressure. 802. b
787. a
788. a
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782. d
Chemical formula of ammonia is NH3. Atomic mass of nitrogen is 14 and that of hydrogen is 1. Nitrogen: diatomic, Chlorine : diatomic, Helium : monoatomic. Ruminent animals quickly swallow the food and store it in a part of the stomach called rumen. The food gets partially digested here and is called cud. Later the cud returns to the mouth in small lumps and the animal chews it.
Lemon contains citric acid, Spinach contains oxalic acid and tamarind contains tartaric acid Vitamin D is necessary for keeping the bones and teeth strong and healthy. It performs this function by helping the intestines absorb calcium and by regulating levels of the minerals calcium and phosphorus in the blood. Beriberi is a degenerative disease of the nerves caused by a deficiency of the vitamin thiamine (Vitamin B1) and marked by pain, inability to move, and swelling. The above is a test for the presence of proteins in a food item. Vinegar is a sour-tasting liquid that is used to flavor and preserve foods. It is a dilute acetic acid made by fermenting beer, wine, or cider. Rickets is a disease, especially of children, caused by a deficiency in vitamin D that makes the bones become soft and prone to bending and structural change. Oxalic acid is found in several green leafy vegetables. Spinach, beet greens and Swiss chard are all rich in oxalic acid.
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Source : Class 7 Page 63 (Chapter 6) Rust is a reddish brown coating of iron oxide on the surface of iron or steel that forms when the metal is exposed to air and moisture. Ozone is O3. After absorbing ultraviolet radiations, ozone breaks down to oxygen. Anaemia is a blood condition in which there are too few red blood cells or the red blood cells are deficient in haemoglobin, a red, iron-rich protein that carries oxygen in the blood to the bodys tissues. Malaria is caused by protozoa, Typhoid and Cholera are caused by bacteria. Source : Class 7 Page 108 (Chapter 10) Food can also be broken down, without using oxygen. This is called anaerobic respiration.
Miscellaneous
822. d Buffer stock is a stock of a basic commodity accumulated by a government when supplies are plentiful and prices low, and held for use when supplies are short to stabilize the price. Minimum Support Price is that price at which government is ready to purchase the crop from the farmers directly. Lockes views, in his Two Treatises of Government (1690), attacked the theory of divine right of kings and the nature of the state as conceived by English philosopher and political theorist Thomas Hobbes. Amar Jiban, autobiography of Rashsundari Devi (1800 1890), is the first ever known autobiography of an Indian woman. It is wriiten in Bangla. National Food for Work Programme was launched in 2004. Antyodaya ration cards are issue by the government for the poorest of the poor. Laxmi Lakra, from a poor tribal family in Jharkhand, became the first women train driver with Northern Railway in 2006. Savitribai Phule is the first woman teacher of India Toolika Rani is the first woman from UP to climb Mount Everest. Shail Mishra is the first Indian woman to drive metro train. Kesar Saga is a Tibetan epic performed and sung by both Muslims and Buddhists. According to the Economic Survey of India, Goa has the highest per capita income which is over Rs. 130000 per capita. Highest contributing sector to the GDP of India is the tertiary sector (service sector). According to the Constitution of India, anyone who is 18 years old or above and who has the right to vote is a member of the Gram Sabha.
808. c
809. a
823. d
810. c
824. c
811. b
812. c
Our muscle cells can also respire anaerobically, but only for a short time, when there is a temporary deficiency of oxygen. The cramps occur when muscle cells respire anaerobically. The partial breakdown of glucose produces lactic acid. The accumulation of lactic acid causes muscle cramps.
813. b
Yeasts are single-celled organisms. They respire anaerobically and during this process yield alcohol. They are, therefore, used to make wine and beer. Penicillium is a bluish green fungus that grows on stale or ripening food Aspergillosis is an infection of the skin, nasal sinuses, and lungs or other internal organs caused by molds of the genus Aspergillus. Kharif crops are grown in the rainy season. Mustard is a rabi crop. Groundnut is a kharif crop. Female Anopheles mosquito acts as carrier of malaria parasite. Louis Pasteur discovered fermentation in 1857. Edward Jenner discovered the vaccine for smallpox in 1798. The bacterium Lactobacillus promotes the formation of curd. It multiplies in milk and converts it into curd. India has the largest number of medical colleges in the world and is the fourth largest producer of medicines in the world.
814. d
815. c
816. d
817. a 818. b
819. d
820. c
821. a
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826. c 827. a 828. d 829. d 830. d 831. b 832. d 833. a 834. b
825. b
The MSP is declared by the government every year before the sowing season to provide incentives to the farmers for raising the production of these crops. Tehesildars make sure that the farmers can easily obtain a copy of their record, students can obtain their caste certificates etc. The Tehsildars office is where land disputes are also heard. Midday meal scheme (programme introduced in all government elementary schools to provide children with cooked meal) was first introduced in Tamil Nadu. The Supreme Court of India, in 2001, ordered all state governments to begin this programme in their schools.
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835. d
Articles 14-17 protect an individuals fundamental right to equality. Article 14 - Equality before law Article 15 - Prohibition of discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth. Article 16 - Equality of opportunity in public employment Article 17 - Abolition of Untouchability Article 18 - Abolition of titles
841. d
Both primary as well as secondary are suffering due tertiary sector here. Availability of raw materials for the factories is dependent on transportation. Primary sectors selling raw materials is also dependent on transportation.
842. c 843. a A major step taken in The Indian government enacted the Consumer Protection Act in 1986, popularly known as COPRA, to correct business conduct which may be unfair and against the interests of consumers. Secondary sector of economic activities is known as industrial sector while tertiary sector is known as service sector. Telecommunication is a service sector (tertiary sector).
836. c 837. d According to the Economic Survey of India, Goa has the highest per capita income which is over Rs. 130000 per capita. According to the Census of India 2011, Madhya Pradesh has the highest IMR in India which is 67. HDI ranking of Sri Lanka - 97 HDI ranking of India - 134 HDI ranking of China - 101 HDI ranking of Bangladesh - 146
844. d
838. b
839. a
840. b
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845. b 846. b
Cargill Inc. is an American enterprise which has acquired smaller companies like Parakh Foods in India. Cargill is now the largest producer of edible oil in India. China provides the advantage of being a cheap manufacturing location. One of the important reasons for this is very low labour cost in China.
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