CAT 2008 Question Paper With Solution
CAT 2008 Question Paper With Solution
CAT 2008 Question Paper With Solution
Paper with
CAT
Solutions
2008
https://bodheeprep.com
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Instructions:
1. The Test Paper contains 90 questions. The duration of the test is 150 minutes.
2. The paper is divided into three sections. Section-I: 25 Q:, Section-II: 25 Q:, Section-III: 40 Q.
3. Wrong answers carry negative marks. There is only one correct answer for each question.
Section 1
1. The integers 1, 2, …, 40 are written on a blackboard. The following operation is then repeated 39
times: In each repetition, any two numbers, say a and b, currently on the blackboard are erased and
a new number a + b – 1 is written. What will be the number left on the board at the end?
(1) 820 (2) 821 (3) 781 (4) 819 (5) 780
3. If the roots of the equation x3 – ax2 + bx – c = 0 are three consecutive integers, then what is the
smallest possible value of b?
1 1
(1) − (2) –1 (3) 0 (4) 1 (5)
3 3
4. A shop stores x kg of rice. The first customer buys half this amount plus half a kg of rice. The
second customer buys half the remaining amount plus half a kg of rice. Then the third customer also
buys half the remaining amount plus half a kg of rice. Thereafter, no rice is left in the shop. Which of
the following best describes the value of x?
(1) 2 ≤ x ≤ 6 (2) 5 ≤ x ≤ 8 (3) 9 ≤ x ≤ 12
(4) 11 ≤ x ≤ 14 (5) 13 ≤ x ≤ 18
8. How many integers, greater than 999 but not greater than 4000, can be formed with the digits 0, 1,
2, 3 and 4, if repetition of digits is allowed?
(1) 499 (2) 500 (3) 375 (4) 376 (5) 501
A C
D
P
9. Neelam rides her bicycle from her house at A to her office at B, taking the shortest path. Then the
number of possible shortest paths that she can choose is
(1) 60 (2) 75 (3) 45 (4) 90 (5) 72
10. Neelam rides her bicycle from her house at A to her club at C, via B taking the shortest path. Then
the number of possible shortest paths that she can choose is
(1) 1170 (2) 630 (3) 792 (4) 1200 (5) 936
11. Let f(x) be a function satisfying f(x)f(y) = f(xy) for all real x, y. If f(2) = 4, then what is the value of
1
f ?
2
1 1
(1) 0 (2) (3)
4 2
(4) 1 (5) cannot be determined
14. Consider obtuse-angled triangles with sides 8 cm, 15 cm and x cm. If x is an integer, then how
many such triangles exist?
(1) 5 (2) 21 (3) 10 (4) 15 (5) 14
15. Consider a square ABCD with midpoints E, F, G, H of AB, BC, CD and DA respectively. Let L denote
the line passing through F and H. Consider points P and Q, on L and inside ABCD, such that the
angles APD and BQC both equal 120°. What is the ratio of the area of ABQCDP to the remaining
area inside ABCD?
4 2 10 − 3 3 1
(1) (2) 2 + 3 (3) (4) 1 + (5) 2 3 − 1
3 9 3
18. Suppose, in addition, it is known that Grey came in fourth. Then which of the following cannot be
true?
(1) Spotted came in first
(2) Red finished last
(3) White came in second
(4) Black came in second
(5) There was one horse between Black and White
Directions for Questions 19 and 20:
Mark (1) if Q can be answered from A alone but not from B alone.
Mark (2) if Q can be answered from B alone but not from A alone.
Mark (3) if Q can be answered from A alone as well as from B alone.
Mark (4) if Q can be answered from A and B together but not from any of them alone.
Mark (5) if Q cannot be answered even from A and B together.
In a single elimination tournament, any player is eliminated with a single loss. The tournament is played in
multiple rounds subject to the following rules :
(a) If the number of players, say n, in any round is even, then the players are grouped into n/2 pairs. The
players in each pair play a match against each other and the winner moves on to the next round.
(b) If the number of players, say n, in any round is odd, then one of them is given a bye, that is he
automatically moves on to the next round. The remaining (n–1) players are grouped into (n–1)/2 pairs.
The players in each pair play a match against each other and the winner moves on to the next round.
No player gets more than one bye in the entire tournament.
Thus, if n is even, then n/2 players move on to the next round while if n is odd, then (n+1)/2 players move
on to the next round. The process is continued till the final round, which obviously is played between two
players. The winner in the final round is the champion of the tournament.
21. Two circles, both of radii 1 cm, intersect such that the circumference of each one passes through
the centre of the other. What is the area (in sq. cm.) of the intersecting region?
π 3 2π 3 4π 3
(1) − (2) + (3) −
3 4 3 2 3 2
4π 3 2π 3
(4) + (5) −
3 2 3 2
22. Rahim plans to drive from city A to station C, at the speed of 70 km per hour, to catch a train arriving
there from B. He must reach C at least 15 minutes before the arrival of the train. The train leaves B,
located 500 km south of A, at 8:00 am and travels at a speed of 50 km per hour. It is known that C
is located between west and northwest of B, with BC at 60° to AB. Also, C is located between south
and southwest of A with AC at 30° to AB. The latest time by which Rahim must leave A and still
catch the train is closest to
(1) 6 : 15 am (2) 6 : 30 am (3) 6 :45 am
(4) 7 : 00 am (5) 7 : 15 am
23. Three consecutive positive integers are raised to the first, second and third powers respectively and
then added. The sum so obtained is perfect square whose square root equals the total of the three
original integers. Which of the following best describes the minimum, say m, of these three inte-
gers?
(1) 1 ≤ m ≤ 3 (2) 4 ≤ m ≤ 6 (3) 7 ≤ m ≤ 9
(4) 10 ≤ m ≤ 12 (5) 13 ≤ m ≤ 15
1 1 1 1 1 1
24. Find the sum 1+ + + 1+ + + ....... + 1 + +
2 2 2 2 2
1 2 2 3 2007 20082
1 1 1
(1) 2008 − (2) 2007 − (3) 2007 −
2008 2007 2008
1 1
(4) 2008 − (5) 2008 −
2007 2009
25. Consider a right circular cone of base radius 4 cm and height 10 cm. A cylinder is to be placed
inside the cone with one of the flat surfaces resting on the base of the cone. Find the largest
possible total surface area (in sq. cm) of the cylinder.
80π 120π 130π 110π
(1) 100π (2) (3) (4) (5)
3 3 7 9 7
Section I1
Directions for Questions 26 to 28: Answer the following questions based on the statements given
below:
26. What is the colour of the house diagonally opposite to the Yellow coloured house?
(1) White (2) Blue (3) Green
(4) Red (5) none of these
In do ne sia ($ 2,4 2 % )
R e ve n ue fro m D a ta Tran sfer as a % o f To ta l R eve nu e
UK
M alaysia
G erm a ny
C h in a S w itzerlan d S o uth K ore a
P o la nd Ire la nd
20 %
S ing ap ore N o rw ay
A u stria
R u ssia S w e de n
M exico
USA
H o ng K o ng Spain
Isra el
Th aila nd D e nm a rk C a na da
10 %
In dia B ra zil
$5 $ 10 $ 15
A R D T (in U S D )
Legend : A S IA EUROP E A M E R IC A S
29. It was found that the volume of data transfer in India is the same as that of Singapore. Then which
of the following statements is true?
(1) Total revenue is the same in both countries.
(2) Total revenue in India is about 2 times that of Singapore.
(3) Total revenue in India is about 4 times that of Singapore.
(4) Total revenue in Singapore is about 2 times that of India.
(5) Total revenue in Singapore is about 4 time that of India.
30. It is expected that by 2010, revenue from data transfer as a percentage of total revenue will triple
for India and double for Sweden. Assume that in 2010, the total revenue in India is twice that of
Sweden and that the volume of data transfer is the same in both the countries. What is the
percentage increase of ARDT in India if there is no change in ARDT in Sweden?
(1) 400% (2) 550% (3) 800%
(4) 950% (5) cannot be determined
31. If the total revenue received is the same for the pairs of countries listed in the choices below, choose
the pair that has approximately the same volume of data transfer.
(1) Philippines and Austria
(2) Canada and Poland
(3) Germany and USA
(4) UK and Spain
(5) Denmark and Mexico
Directions for Questions 32 to 34: Answer the following questions based on the information given below:
For admission to various affiliated colleges, a university conducts a written test with four different sections,
each with a maximum of 50 marks. The following table gives the aggregate as well as the sectional cut-off
marks fixed by six different colleges affiliated to the university. A student will get admission only if he/she
gets marks greater than or equal to the cut-off marks in each of the sections and his/her aggregate marks
are at least equal to the aggregate cut-off marks as specified by the college.
32. Bhama got calls from all colleges. What could be the minimum aggregate marks obtained
by her?
(1) 180 (2) 181 (3) 196 (4) 176 (5) 184
33. Charlie got calls from two colleges. What could be the minimum marks obtained by him in a
section?
(1) 0 (2) 21 (3) 25 (4) 35 (5) 41
34. Aditya did not get a call from even a single college. What could be the maximum aggregate
marks obtained by him?
(1) 181 (2) 176 (3) 184 (4) 196 (5) 190
Directions for Questions 35 to 38: Answer the following questions based on the information given below:
In a sports event, six teams (A, B, C, D, E and F) are competing against each other. Matches are
scheduled in two stages. Each team plays three matches in stage – I and two matches in Stage – II. No
team plays against the same team more than once in the event. No ties are permitted in any of the
matches. The observations after the completion of Stage – I and Stage – II are as given below.
Stage-I:
• One team won all the three matches.
• Two teams lost all the matches.
• D lost to A but won against C and F.
• E lost to B but won against C and F.
• B lost at least one match.
• F did not play against the top team of Stage-I.
Stage-II:
• The leader of Stage-I lost the next two matches.
• Of the two teams at the bottom after Stage-I, one team won both matches, while the other lost both
matches.
• One more team lost both matches in Stage-II.
35. The two teams that defeated the leader of Stage-I are:
(1) F & D (2) E & F (3) B & D (4) E & D (5) F & D
36. The only team(s) that won both matches in Stage-II is (are):
(1) B (2) E & F (3) A, E & F (4) B, E & F (5) B & F
37. The teams that won exactly two matches in the event are:
(1) A, D & F (2) D & E (3) E & F (4) D, E & F (5) D & F
38. The team(s) with the most wins in the event is (are):
(1) A (2) A & C (3) F (4) E (5) B & E
Directions for Questions 39 to 42: Answer the following questions based on the information given below:
The bar chart below shows the revenue received in million US Dollars (USD), from subscribers to a particular
Internet service. The data covers the period 2003 to 2007 for the United States (US) and Europe. The bar
chart also shows the estimated revenues from subscription to this service for the period 2008 to 2010.
1000
900
Subscription Revenue in Million USD
800
700
600
500 US
400 Europe
300
200
100
0
03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
Years
39. The difference between the estimated subscription in Europe in 2008 and what it would have been if
it were computed using the percentage growth rate of 2007 (over 2006), is closest to:
(1) 50 (2) 80 (3) 20 (4) 10 (5) 0
40. In 2003, sixty percent of subscribers in Europe were men. Given that women subscribers increase
at the rate of 10 percent per annum and men at the rate of 5 percent per annum, what is the
approximate percentage growth of subscribers between 2003 and 2010 in Europe? The subscription
prices are volatile and may change each year.
(1) 62 (2) 15 (3) 78 (4) 84 (5) 50
41. Consider the annual percent change in the gap between subscription revenues in the US and
Europe. What is the year in which the absolute value of this change is the highest?
(1) 03 - 04 (2) 05 - 06 (3) 06 - 07 (4) 08 - 09 (5) 09 - 10
42. While the subscription in Europe has been growing steadily towards that of the US, the growth rate
in Europe seems to be declining. Which of the following is closest to the percent change in growth
rate of 2007 (over 2006) relative to the growth rate of 2005 (over 2004)?
(1) 17 (2) 20 (3) 35 (4) 60 (5) 100
Directions for questions 43 to 47: Answer the following questions based on the information given below:
Abdul, Bikram and Chetan are three professional traders who trade in shares of a company XYZ Ltd. Abdul
follows the strategy of buying at the opening of the day at 10 am and selling the whole lot at the close of the
day at 3 pm. Bikram follows the strategy of buying at hourly intervals: 10 am, 11 am, 12 noon, 1 pm, and
2 pm, and selling the whole lot at the close of the day. Further, he buys an equal number of shares in each
purchase. Chetan follows a similar pattern as Bikram but his strategy is somewhat different. Chetan’s total
investment amount is divided equally among his purchases. The profit or loss made by each investor is the
difference between the sale value at the close of the day less the investment in purchase. The “return” for
each investor is defined as the ratio of the profit or loss to the investment amount expressed as a percent-
age.
43. On a day of fluctuating market prices, the share price of XYZ Ltd. ends with a gain, i.e, it is higher
at the close of the day compared to the opening value. Which trader got the maximum return on that
day?
(1) Bikram
(2) Chetan
(3) Abdul
(4) Bikram or Chetan
(5) cannot be determined
45. On a “boom” day the share price of XYZ Ltd. keeps rising throughout the day and peaks at the close
of the day. Which trader got the minimum return on that day?
(1) Bikram (2) Chetan (3) Abdul
(4) Abdul or Chetan (5) cannot be determined
One day, two other traders, Dane and Emily joined Abdul, Bikram and Chetan for trading in the shares of
XYZ Ltd. Dane followed a strategy of buying equal numbers of shares at 10 am. 11 am and 12 noon, and
selling the same numbers at 1 pm, 2 pm and 3 pm. Emily, on the other hand, followed the strategy of
buying shares using all her money at 10 am and selling all of them at 12 noon and again buying the shares
for all the money at 1 pm and again selling all of them at the close of the day at 3 pm. At the close of the
day the following was observed.
i. Abdul lost money in the transactions.
ii. Both Dane and Emily made profits.
iii. There was an increase in share price during the closing hour compared to the price at 2 pm.
iv. Share price at 12 noon was lower than the opening price
Directions for Questions 48 to 50: Answer the following questions based on the information given below:
There are 100 employees in an organization across five departments. The following table gives the depart-
ment-wise distribution of average age, average basic pay and allowances. The gross pay of an employee is
the sum of his/her basic pay and allowances.
There are limited numbers of employees considered for transfer/promotion across departments. Whenever
a person is transferred/promoted from a department of lower average age to a department of higher average
age, he/she will get an additional allowance of 10% of basic pay over and above his/her current allowance.
There will not be any change in pay structure if a person is transferred/promoted from a department with
higher average age to a department with lower average age.
48. What is the approximate percentage change in the average gross of the HR department due to
transfer of a 40-year old person with basic pay of Rs. 8000 from the Marketing department?
(1) 9% (2) 11% (3) 13% (4) 15% (5) 17%
49. There was a mutual transfer of an employee between Marketing and Finance departments and
transfer of one employee from Marketing to HR. As a result, the average age of Finance department
increased by one year and that of Marketing department remained the same. What is the new
average age of HR department?
(1) 30 (2) 35 (3) 40
(4) 45 (5) cannot be determined
50. If two employees (each with a basic pay of Rs. 6000) are transferred from Maintenance department
to HR department and one person (with a basic pay of Rs. 8000) was transferred from Marketing
department to HR department, what will be the percentage change in average basic pay of HR
department?
(1) 10.5% (2) 12.5% (3) 15% (4) 30% (5) 40%
Section III
Directions for Questions 51 to 54: In each of the following questions there are sentences that form a
paragraph. Identify the sentence(s) or part(s) of sentence(s) that is/are correct in terms of grammar and
usage (including spelling, punctuation and logical consistency). Then, choose the most appropriate
option.
55. Anita wore a beautiful broach (A)/brooch (B) on the lapel of her jacket.
If you want to complain about the amenities in your neighbourhood, please meet your
councillor(A)/counsellor(B).
I would like your advice(A)/advise(B) on which job I should choose.
The last scene provided a climactic(A)/climatic(B) ending to the film.
Jeans that flair(A)/flare(B) at the bottom are in fashion these days.
(1) BABAA (2) BABAB (3) BAAAB (4) ABABA (5) BAABA
57. She managed to bite back the ironic(A)/caustic(B) retort on the tip of her tongue.
He gave an impassioned and valid(A)/cogent(B) plea for judicial reform.
I am not adverse(A)/averse(B) to helping out.
The coupé(A)/coup(B) broke away as the train climbed the hill.
They heard the bells peeling(A)/pealing(B) far and wide.
(1) BBABA (2) BBBAB (3) BAABB (4) ABBAA (5) BBBBA
Directions for Questions 59 to 62: In each of the questions, a word has been used in sentences in five
different ways. Choose the option corresponding to the sentence in which the usage of the word is incorrect
or inappropriate.
59. Run
(1) I must run fast to catch up with him.
(2) Our team scored a goal against the run of play.
(3) You can’t run over him like that.
(4) The newly released book is enjoying a popular run.
(5) This film is a run-of-the-mill production.
60. Round
(1) The police fired a round of tear gas shells.
(2) The shop is located round the corner.
(3) We took a ride on the merry-go-round.
(4) The doctor is on a hospital round.
(5) I shall proceed further only after you come round to admitting it.
61. Buckle
(1) After the long hike our knees were beginning to buckle.
(2) The horse suddenly broke into a buckle.
(3) The accused did not buckle under police interrogation.
(4) Sometimes, an earthquake can make a bridge buckle.
(5) People should learn to buckle up as soon as they get into a car.
62. File
(1) You will find the paper in the file under C.
(2) I need to file an insurance claim.
(3) The cadets were marching in a single file.
(4) File your nails before you apply nail polish.
(5) When the parade was on, a soldier broke the file.
Directions for Questions 63 to 66: Each of the following questions has a sentence with two blanks. Given
below each question are five pairs of words. Choose the pair that best completes the sentence.
63. The genocides in Bosnia and Rwanda, apart from being mis-described in the most sinister and
_________ manner as ‘ethnic cleansing’, were also blamed, in further hand-washing rhetoric, on
something dark and interior to __________ and perpetrators alike.
(1) innovative; communicator (2) enchanting; leaders
(3) disingenuous; victims (4) exigent; exploiters
(5) tragic; sufferers
64. As navigators, calendar makers, and other __________ of the night sky accumulated evidence to
the contrary, ancient astronomers were forced to __________ that certain bodies might move in
circles about points, which in turn moved in circles about the earth.
(1) scrutinizers; believe (2) observers; agree
(3) scrutinizers; suggest (4) observers; concede
(5) students; conclude
65. Every human being, after the first few days of his life, is a product of two factors: on the one hand,
there is his __________ endowment; and on the other hand, there is the effect of environment,
including _____
(1) constitutional; weather (2) congenital; education
(3) personal; climate (4) economic; learning
(5) genetic; pedagogy
66. Exhaustion of natural resources, destruction of individual initiative by governments, control over
men’s minds by central _______ of education and propaganda are some of the major evils which
appear to be on the increase as a result of the impact of science upon minds suited by __________
to an earlier kind of world.
(1) tenets; fixation (2) aspects; inhibitions
(3) institutions; inhibitions (4) organs; tradition
(5) departments; repulsion
Directions for Questions 67 to 70: Each of the following questions has a paragraph from which the last
sentence has been deleted. From the given options, choose the sentence that completes the paragraph in
the most appropriate way.
67. Most people at their first consultation take a furtive look at the surgeon’s hands in the hope of
reassurance. Prospective patients look for delicacy, sensitivity, steadiness, perhaps unblemished
pallor. On this basis, Henry Perowne loses a number of cases each year. Generally, he knows it’s
about to happen before the patient does: the downward glance repeated, the prepared questions
beginning to falter, the overemphatic thanks during the retreat to the door.
(1) Other people do not communicate due to their poor observation.
(2) Other patients don’t like what they see but are ignorant of their right to go elsewhere.
(3) But Perowne himself is not concerned.’
(4) But others will take their place, he thought.
(5) These hands are steady enough, but they are large.
68. Trade protectionism, disguised as concern for the climate, is raising its head. Citing competitive-
ness concerns, powerful industrialized countries are holding out threats of a levy on imports of
energy-intensive products from developing countries that refuse to accept their demands. The ac-
tual source of protectionist sentiment in the OECD countries is, of course, their current lacklustre
economic performance, combined with the challenges posed by the rapid economic rise of China
and India - in that order.
(1) Climate change is evoked to bring trade protectionism through the back door.
(2) OECD countries are taking refuge in climate change issues to erect trade barriers against these
two countries.
(3) Climate change concerns have come as a convenient stick to beat the rising trade power of
China and India.
(4) Defenders of the global economic status quo are posing as climate change champions.
(5) Today’s climate change champions are the perpetrators of global economic inequity.
69. Mattancherry is Indian Jewry’s most famous settlement. Its pretty streets of pastel coloured houses,
connected by first-floor passages and home to the last twelve saree-and-sarong-wearing, white-
skinned Indian Jews are visited by thousands of tourists each year. Its synagogue, built in 1568,
with a floor of blue-and-white Chinese tiles, a carpet given by Haile Selassie and the frosty Yaheh
selling tickets at the door, stands as an image of religious tolerance.
(1) Mattancherry represents, therefore, the perfect picture of peaceful co-existence.
(2) India’s Jews have almost never suffered discrimination, except for European colonizers and
each other.
(3) Jews in India were always tolerant.
(4) Religious tolerance has always been only a façade and nothing more.
(5) The pretty pastel streets are, thus, very popular with the tourists.
70. Given the cultural and intellectual interconnections, the question of what is ‘Western’ and what is
‘Eastern’ (or ‘Indian’) is often hard to decide, and the issue can be discussed only in more dialecti-
cal terms. The diagnosis of a thought as ‘purely Western’ or ‘purely Indian’ can be very illusory.
(1) Thoughts are not the kind of things that can be easily categorized.
(2) Though ‘occidentalism’ and ‘orientalism’ as dichotomous concepts have found many adherents.
(3) ‘East is East and West is West’ has been a discredited notion for a long time now.
(4) Compartmentalizing thoughts is often desirable.
(5) The origin of a thought is not the kind of thing to which ‘purity’ happens easily.
Directions for Questions 71 to 75: The passage given below is followed by a set of five questions. Choose
the most appropriate answer to each question.
When I was little, children were bought two kinds of ice cream, sold from those white wagons with cano-
pies made of silvery metal: either the two-cent cone or the four-cent ice-cream pie. The two-cent cone was
very small, in fact it could fit comfortably into a child’s hand, and it was made by taking the ice cream from
its container with a special scoop and piling it on the cone. Granny always suggested I eat only a part of
the cone, then throw away the pointed end, because it had been touched by the vendor’s hand (though that
was the best part, nice and crunchy, and it was regularly eaten in secret, after a pretence of discarding it).
The four-cent pie was made by a special little machine, also silvery, which pressed two disks of sweet
biscuit against a cylindrical section of ice cream. First you had to thrust your tongue into the gap between
the biscuits until it touched the central nucleus of ice cream; then, gradually, you ate the whole thing, the
biscuit surfaces softening as they became soaked in creamy nectar. Granny had no advice to give here: in
theory the pies had been touched only by the machine; in practice, the vendor had held them in his hand
while giving them to us, but it was impossible to isolate the contaminated area.
I was fascinated, however, by some of my peers, whose parents bought them not a four-cent pie but two
two-cent cones. These privileged children advanced proudly with one cone in their right hand and one in
their left; and expertly moving their head from side to side, they licked first one, then the other. This liturgy
seemed to me so sumptuously enviable, that many times I asked to be allowed to celebrate it. In vain. My
elders were inflexible: a four-cent ice, yes; but two two-cent ones, absolutely no.
As anyone can see, neither mathematics nor economy nor dietetics justified this refusal. Nor did hygiene,
assuming that in due course the tips of both cones were discarded. The pathetic, and obviously menda-
cious, justification was that a boy concerned with turning his eyes from one cone to the other was more
inclined to stumble over stones, steps, or cracks in the pavement. I dimly sensed that there was another
secret justification, cruelly pedagogical, but I was unable to grasp it.
Today, citizen and victim of a consumer society, a civilization of excess and waste (which the society of the
thirties was not), I realize that those dear and now departed elders were right. Two two-cent cones instead
of one at four cents did not signify squandering, economically speaking, but symbolically they surely did.
It was for this precise reason, that I yearned for them: because two ice creams suggested excess. And this
was precisely why they were denied to me: because they looked indecent, an insult to poverty, a display
of fictitious privilege, a boast of wealth. Only spoiled children ate two cones at once, those children who in
fairy tales were rightly punished, as Pinocchio was when he rejected the skin and the stalk. And parents
who encouraged this weakness, appropriate to little parvenus, were bringing up their children in the foolish
theatre of “I’d like to but I can’t.” They were preparing them to turn up at tourist-class check-in with a fake
Gucci bag bought from a street peddler on the beach at Rimini.
Nowadays the moralist risks seeming at odds with morality, in a world where the consumer civilization now
wants even adults to be spoiled, and promises them always something more, from the wristwatch in the
box of detergent to the bonus bangle sheathed, with the magazine it accompanies, in a plastic envelope.
Like the parents of those ambidextrous gluttons I so envied, the consumer civilization pretends to give
more, but actually gives, for four cents, what is worth four cents. You will throwaway the old transistor radio
to purchase the new one, that boasts an alarm clock as well, but some inexplicable defect in the mecha-
nism will guarantee that the radio lasts only a year. The new cheap car will have leather seats, double side
mirrors adjustable from inside, and a panelled dashboard, but it will not last nearly so long as the glorious
old Fiat 500, which, even when it broke down, could be started again with a kick.
The morality of the old days made Spartans of us all, while today’s morality wants all of us to be Sybarites.
73. The author pined for two two-cent cones instead of one four-cent pie because
(1) it made dietetic sense.
(2) it suggested intemperance.
(3) it was more fun.
(4) it had a visual appeal.
(5) he was a glutton.
74. What does the author mean by “nowadays the moralist risks seeming at odds with morality”?
(1) The moralists of yesterday have become immoral today.
(2) The concept of morality has changed over the years.
(3) Consumerism is amoral.
(4) The risks associated with immorality have gone up.
(5) The purist’s view of morality is fast becoming popular.
75. According to the author, the justification for refusal to let him eat two cones was plausibly
(1) didactic. (2) dietetic. (3) dialectic. (4) diatonic. (5) diastolic.
Directions for Questions 76 to 80: The passage given below is followed by a set of five questions. Choose
the most appropriate answer to each question.
Language is not a cultural artifact that we learn the way we learn to tell time or how the federal government
works. Instead, it is a distinct piece of the biological makeup of our brains. Language is a complex,
specialized skill, which develops in the child spontaneously, without conscious effort or formal instruction,
is deployed without awareness of its underlying logic, is qualitatively the same in every individual, and is
distinct from more general abilities to process information or behave intelligently. For these reasons some
cognitive scientists have described language as a psychological faculty, a mental organ, a neural system,
and a computational module. But I prefer the admittedly quaint term “instinct”. It conveys the idea that
people know how to talk in more or less the sense that spiders know how to spin webs. Web-spinning was
not invented by some unsung spider genius and does not depend on having had the right education or on
having an aptitude for architecture or the construction trades. Rather, spiders spin spider webs because
they have spider brains, which give them the urge to spin and the competence to succeed. Although there
are differences between webs and words, I will encourage you to see language in this way, for it helps to
make sense of the phenomena we will explore.
Thinking of language as an instinct inverts the popular wisdom, especially as it has been passed down in
the canon of the humanities and social sciences. Language is no more a cultural invention than is upright
posture. It is not a manifestation of a general capacity to use symbols: a three-year-old, we shall see, is a
grammatical genius, but is quite incompetent at the visual arts, religious iconography, traffic signs, and the
other staples of the semiotics curriculum. Though language is a magnificent ability unique to Homo sapi-
ens among living species, it does not call for sequestering the study of humans from the domain of biology,
for a magnificent ability unique to a particular living species is far from unique in the animal kingdom. Some
kinds of bats home in on flying insects using Doppler sonar. Some kinds of migratory birds navigate
thousands of miles by calibrating the positions of the constellations against the time of day and year. In
nature’s talent show, we are simply a species of primate with our own act, a knack for communicating
information about who did what to whom by modulating the sounds we make when we exhale.
Once you begin to look at language not as the ineffable essence of human uniqueness hut as a biological
adaptation to communicate information, it is no longer as tempting to see language as an insidious shaper
of thought, and, we shall see, it is not. Moreover, seeing language as one of nature’s engineering marvels
— an organ with “that perfection of structure and co-adaptation which justly excites our admiration,” in
Darwin’s words - gives us a new respect for your ordinary Joe and the much-maligned English language (or
any language). The complexity of language, from the scientist’s point of view, is part of our biological
birthright; it is not something that parents teach their children or something that must be elaborated in
school — as Oscar Wilde said, “Education is an admirable thing, but it is well to remember from time to
time that nothing that is worth knowing can be taught.” A preschooler’s tacit knowledge of grammar is more
sophisticated than the thickest style manual or the most state-of-the-art computer language system, and
the same applies to all healthy human beings, even the notorious syntaxfracturing professional athlete and
the, you know, like, inarticulate teenage skateboarder. Finally, since language is the product of a well-
engineered biological instinct, we shall see that it is not the nutty barrel of monkeys that entertainer-
columnists make it out to be.
76. According to the passage, which of the following does not stem from popular wisdom on language?
(1) Language is a cultural artifact.
(2) Language is a cultural invention.
(3) Language is learnt as we grow.
(4) Language is unique to Homo sapiens.
(5) Language is a psychological faculty.
77. Which of the following can be used to replace the “spiders know how to spin webs” analogy as used
by the author?
(1) A kitten learning to jump over a wall
(2) Bees collecting nectar
(3) A donkey carrying a load
(4) A horse running a Derby
(5) A pet clog protecting its owner’s property
78. According to the passage, which of the following is unique to human beings?
(1) Ability to use symbols while communicating with one another.
(2) Ability to communicate with each other through voice modulation.
(3) Ability to communicate information to other members of the species.
(4) Ability to use sound as means of communication.
(5) All of the above.
79. According to the passage, complexity of language cannot be taught by parents or at school to
children because
(1) children instinctively know language.
(2) children learn the language on their own.
(3) language is not amenable to teaching.
(4) children know language better than their teachers or parents.
(5) children are born with the knowledge of semiotics.
To summarize the Classic Maya collapse, we can tentatively identify five strands. I acknowledge, however,
that Maya archaeologists still disagree vigorously among themselves in part, because the different strands
evidently varied in importance among different parts of the Maya realm; because detailed archaeological
studies are available for only some Maya sites; and because it remains puzzling why most of the Maya
heartland remained nearly empty of population and failed to recover after the collapse and after re-growth of
forests.
With those caveats, it appears to me that one strand consisted of population growth outstripping available
resources: a dilemma similar to the one foreseen by Thomas Malthus in 1798 and being played out today
in Rwanda, Haiti and elsewhere. As the archaeologist David Webster succinctly puts it, “Too many farmers
grew too many crops on too much of landscape.” Compounding that mismatch between population and
resources was the second strand: the effects of deforestation and hillside erosion, which caused a de-
crease in the amount of useable farmland at a time when more rather than less farmland was needed, and
possibly exacerbated by an anthropogenic drought resulting from deforestation, by soil nutrient depletion
and other soil problems, and by the struggle to prevent bracken ferns from overrunning the fields.
The third strand consisted of increased fighting, as more and more people fought over fewer resources.
Maya warfare, already endemic, peaked just before the collapse. That is not surprising when one reflects
that at least five million people, perhaps many more, were crammed into an area smaller than the US state
of Colorado (104,000 square miles). That warfare would have decreased further the amount of land available
for agriculture, by creating no-man’s lands between principalities where it was now unsafe to farm. Bringing
matters to a head was the strand of climate change. The drought at the time of the Classic collapse was
not the first drought that the Maya had lived through, but it was the most severe. At the time of previous
droughts, there were still uninhabited parts of the Maya landscape, and people at a site affected by drought
could save themselves by moving to another site. However, by the time of the Classic collapse the land-
scape was now full, there was no useful unoccupied land in the vicinity on which to begin anew, and the
whole population could not be accommodated in the few areas that continued to have reliable water
supplies.
As our fifth strand, we have to wonder why the kings and nobles failed to recognize and solve these
seemingly obvious problems undermining their society. Their attention was evidently focused on their
short-term concerns of enriching themselves, waging wars, erecting monuments, competing with each
other, and extracting enough food from the peasants to support all those activities. Like most leaders
throughout human history, the Maya kings and nobles did not heed long-term problems, insofar as they
perceived them.
Finally, while we still have some other past societies to consider before we switch our attention to the
modern world, we must already he struck by some parallels between the Maya and the past societies. As
on Mangareva, the Maya environmental and population problems led to increasing warfare and civil strife.
Similarly, on Easter Island and at Chaco Canyon, the Maya peak population numbers were followed swiftly
by political and social collapse. Paralleling the eventual extension of agriculture from Easter Island’s
coastal lowlands to its uplands, and from the Mimbres floodplain to the hills, Copan’s inhabitants also
expanded from the floodplain to the more fragile hill slopes, leaving them with a larger population to feed
when the agricultural boom in the hills went bust. Like Easter Island chiefs erecting ever larger statues,
eventually crowned by pukao, and like Anasazi elite treating themselves to necklaces of 2,000 turquoise
beads, Maya kings sought to outdo each other with more and more impressive temples, covered with
thicker and thicker plaster — reminiscent in turn of the extravagant conspicuous consumption by modern
American CEOs. The passivity of Easter chiefs and Maya kings in the face of the real big threats to their
societies completes our list of disquieting parallels.
81. According to the passage, which of the following best represents the factor that has been cited by
the author in the context of Rwanda and Haiti?
(1) Various ethnic groups competing for land and other resources
(2) Various ethnic groups competing for limited land resources
(3) Various ethnic groups fighting with each other
(4) Various ethnic groups competing for political power
(5) Various ethnic groups fighting for their identity
83. According to the passage, the drought at the time of Maya collapse had a different impact com-
pared to the droughts earlier because
(1) the Maya kings continued to be extravagant when common people were suffering.
(2) it happened at the time of collapse of leadership among Mayas.
(3) it happened when the Maya population had occupied all available land suited for agriculture.
(4) it was followed by internecine warfare among Mayans.
(5) irreversible environmental degradation led to this drought.
84. According to the author, why is it difficult to explain the reasons for Maya collapse?
(1) Copan inhabitants destroyed all records of that period.
(2) The constant deforestation and hillside erosion have wiped out all traces of the Maya kingdom.
(3) Archaeological sites of Mayas do not provide any consistent evidence.
(4) It has not been possible to ascertain which of the factors best explains as to why the Maya
civilization collapsed.
(5) At least five million people were crammed into a small area.
85. Which factor has not been cited as one of the factors causing the collapse of Maya society?
(1) Environmental degradation due to excess population
(2) Social collapse due to excess population
(3) Increased warfare among Maya people
(4) Climate change
(5) Obsession of Maya population with their own short-term concerns
Directions for Questions 86 to 90: The passage given below is followed by a set of five questions. Choose
the most appropriate answer to each question.
A remarkable aspect of art of the present century is the range of concepts and ideologies which it embod-
ies. It is almost tempting to see a pattern emerging within the art field - or alternatively imposed upon it a
posteriori - similar to that which exists under the umbrella of science where the general term covers a
whole range of separate, though interconnecting, activities. Any parallelism is however - in this instance at
least - misleading. A scientific discipline develops systematically once its bare tenets have been estab-
lished, named and categorized as conventions. Many of the concepts of modern art, by contrast, have
resulted from the almost accidental meetings of groups of talented individuals at certain times and certain
places. The ideas generated by these chance meetings had twofold consequences. Firstly, a corpus of
work would be produced which, in great part, remains as a concrete record of the events. Secondly, the
ideas would themselves be disseminated through many different channels of communication - seeds that
often bore fruit in contexts far removed from their generation. Not all movements were exclusively con-
cerned with innovation. Surrealism, for instance, claimed to embody a kind of insight which can be present
in the art of any period. This claim has been generally accepted so that a sixteenth century painting by
Spranger or a mysterious photograph by Atget can legitimately be discussed in surrealist terms. Briefly,
then, the concepts of modern art are of many different (often fundamentally different) kinds and resulted
from the exposures of painters, sculptors and thinkers to the more complex phenomena of the twentieth
century, including our ever increasing knowledge of the thought and products of earlier centuries. Different
groups of artists would collaborate in trying to make sense of a rapidly changing world of visual and spiritual
experience. We should hardly be surprised if no one group succeeded completely, but achievements,
though relative, have been considerable. Landmarks have been established - concrete statements of posi-
tion which give a pattern to a situation which could easily have degenerated into total chaos. Beyond this,
new language tools have been created for those who follow - semantic systems which can provide a
springboard for further explorations.
The codifying of art is often criticized. Certainly one can understand that artists are wary of being pigeon-
holed since they are apt to think of themselves as individuals - sometimes with good reason. The notion of
self-expression, however, no longer carries quite the weight it once did; objectivity has its defenders. There
is good reason to accept the ideas codified by artists and critics, over the past sixty years or so, as having
attained the status of independent existence - an independence which is not without its own value. The
time factor is important here. As an art movement slips into temporal perspective, it ceases to be a living
organism - becoming, rather, a fossil. This is not to say that it becomes useless or uninteresting. Just as
a scientist can reconstruct the life of a prehistoric environment from the messages codified into the structure
of a fossil, so can an artist decipher whole webs of intellectual and creative possibility from the recorded
structure of a ‘dead’ art movement. The artist can match the creative patterns crystallized into this structure
against the potentials and possibilities of his own time. As T.S. Eliot observed, no one starts anything from
scratch; however consciously you may try to live in the present, you are still involved with a nexus of
behaviour patterns bequeathed from the past. The original and creative person is not someone who ignores
these patterns, but someone who is able to translate and develop them so that they conform more exactly
to his - and our - present needs.
86. Many of the concepts of modern art have been the product of
(1) ideas generated from planned deliberations between artists, painters and thinkers.
(2) the dissemination of ideas through the state and its organizations.
(3) accidental interactions among people blessed with creative muse.
(4) patronage by the rich and powerful that supported art.
(5) systematic investigation, codification and conventions.
88. In the passage, which of the following similarities between science and art may lead to erroneous
conclusions?
(1) Both, in general, include a gamut of distinct but interconnecting activities.
(2) Both have movements not necessarily concerned with innovation.
(3) Both depend on collaborations between talented individuals.
(4) Both involve abstract thought and dissemination of ideas.
(5) Both reflect complex priorities of the modern world.
89. The range of concepts and ideologies embodied in the art of the twentieth century is explained by
(1) the existence of movements such as surrealism.
(2) landmarks which give a pattern to the art history of the twentieth century.
(3) new language tools which can be used for further explorations into new areas.
(4) the fast changing world of perceptual and transcendental understanding.
(5) the quick exchange of ideas and concepts enabled by efficient technology.
MY PERFORMANCE
Total Time Taken Total Correct Incorrect Net
Questions (Min) Attempts Attempts Attempts Score
Language Comprehension
Section III 40
and English Usage
TOTAL 90 150
Disclaimer: There are mismatches in our VA Answer key (Question nos. 54, 60, 66, 67 & 69) with the
solutions that IIMs have provided. However, all these questions are quite controversial and Career Launcher
stands by its answer key as we have debated, discussed and 'googled' it time and again.
1. 3 Total sum of the numbers written on the blackboard Therefore, c = –12a
40 × 41 ⇒ f(x) = a(x2 + x –12) = a(x + 4) (x – 3)
= = 820
2 Therefore, the other root of f(x) = 0 is –4.
When two numbers ‘a’ and ‘b’ are erased and replaced
by a new number a + b – 1, the total sum of the 6. 5 f(x) = a(x2 + x –12)
numbers written on the blackboard is reduced by 1. Therefore, the value of a + b + c cannot be uniquely
Since, this operation is repeated 39 times, therefore, determined.
the total sum of the numbers will be reduced by
1 × 39 = 39. 7. 3 Total number of terms in the sequence 17, 21, 25 …
Therefore, after 39 operations there will be only 1 417 − 17
number that will be left on the blackboard and that will 417 is equal to + 1 = 101 .
4
be 820 – 39 = 781. Total number of terms in the sequence 16, 21, 26 …
466 − 16
2. 3 The last two digits of any number in the form of 74n 466 is equal to + 1 = 91 .
5
will always be equal to 01. nth term of the first sequence = 4n + 13.
For example: 74 = 2401 and 78 = 5764801. mth term of the second sequence = 5m + 11.
As per the information given in the question 4n + 13
3. 2 x3 – ax2 + bx – c = 0 = 5m + 11
Let the roots of the above cubic equation be ⇒ 5m – 4n = 2.
(α – 1), α, (α + 1) Possible integral values of n that satisfy 5m = 2 + 4n
⇒ α (α – 1) + α (α + 1) + (α + 1) (α –1) = b are (2, 7, 12 … 97)
⇒ α2 – + α2 + α + α2 – 1 = b ⇒ 3α2 – 1 = b Therefore, the total number of terms common in both
the sequences is 20.
Thus, the minimum possible value of ‘b’ will be equal
to – 1 and this value is attained at α = 0. 8. 4 In other words we need to find the total number of
4-digit numbers not more than 4000 using the digits
4. 2 Amount of rice bought by the first customer 0, 1, 2, 3 and 4.
x 1 The digit at the thousands place can be selected in
= + kgs 3 ways.
2 2
The digits at the hundreds place can be selected in
x 1 x −1 5 ways.
Amount of rice remaining = x − + = kgs The digits at the tens place can be selected in 5 ways.
2 2 2
The digits at the units place can be selected in 5 ways.
Amount of rice bought by the second customer Therefore, the total number of 4-digit numbers less
1 x − 1 1 x + 1 than 4000 is equal to
= × + = kgs 3 × 5 × 5 × 5 = 375.
2 2 2 4
Therefore, the total number of 4-digit numbers not
Amount of rice remaining more than 4000 is equal to 375 + 1 = 376.
x − 1 x + 1 x − 3
= − = 4 kgs A C
2 4 9. 4 Y
Amount of rice bought by the third customer X
1 x−3 1 x +1 E D
= × + 2 = 8 kgs
2 4 P
As per the information given in the question F
x +1 x − 3
= because there is no rice left after the
8 4
third customer has bought the rice. B
Therefore, the value of ‘x’ = 7 kgs. For the shortest route, Neelam follows the following
path:
5. 2 Given that f(x) = ax2 + bx + c A →E→F→B
Also, f(5) = –3f(2) ⇒ f(5) + 3f(2) = 0
⇒ (25a + 5b + c) + 3(4a + 2b + c) = 0 No. of ways to reach from A to E:
(2 + 2 )! = 6
⇒ 37a + 11b + 4c = 0 …(i) 2! × 2!
Also, as 3 is a root of f(x) = 0, thus, f(3) = 0. No. of ways to reach from E to F: 1
Therefore, 9a + 3b + c = 0 …(ii)
( 4 + 2 )! = 15
Using equation (i) and (ii), we get that a = b No. of ways to reach from F to B:
4! × 2!
⇒ Total number of possible shortest paths 14. 3 The three sides of the obtuse triangle are 8 cm, 15 cm
= 6 × 1 × 15 = 90 and x cm. As 15 is greater than 8, hence either x or 15
will be the largest side of this triangle. Consider two
10. 1 Neelam has to reach C via B. cases:
From A to B, the number of paths are 90, as found in
question 9. Case I:
From B to C, Neelam follows the route:
Case I: B → X → C A
OR Case II: B → Y → C .
Case I: B → X → C
1 5 cm
(5 + 1)!
No. of ways to reach from B to X: =6 x
5! × 1!
No. of ways to reach from X to C : 2 9 0°
So, total number of paths are 6 × 2 = 12 ways. C
B 8 cm
Case II: B → Y → C :
There is just one way.
Consider the right ∆ABC above,
Therefore, from B to C, there are 6 × 2 + 1 = 13
ways
x = 152 − 82 = 12.68 cm
∴ Total number of ways of reaching from A to C,
via B = 90 × 13 = 1170.
For all values of x < 12.68, the ∆ABC will be obtuse.
But as the sum of two sides of triangle must be greater
11. 2 f(x).f(y) = f(xy)
than the third side, hence (x + 8) > 15 or x > 7.
Given, f(2) = 4
Thus, the permissible values of x are 8, 9, 10, 11 and
We can also write,
12.
f(2) = f(2 × 1) = f(2) × f(1)
OR f(1) × 4 = 4 Case II:
⇒ f(1) = 1
Now we can also write, A
1 1
f(1) = f 2 × = f(2) × f
2 2
x
1 f(1) 1
⇒ f = = 1 5 cm
2 f(2) 4
a×b×c a×c
or R = =
1 2 × AD
4 × × b × AD
2
17.5 × 9
= = 26.25 cm
2×3
1
15. 5
A E B Also, area of ∆ ABC = ab Sin C
2
1 1
= bc Sin A = ac Sin B
2 2
H P Q F L In the given figure
A E B
x x
P Q
D G C 1 20 1 20 F
a
H L
Let , the length of AH = ‘x’ cm
By symmetry of the figure given above, we can x x
conclude that ∆APD and ∆BQC will have the same C
D G
area. a
Q ∠APD is 120° and line ‘L’ divides the square
ABCD in 2 equal halves, therefore For ∆APD, Let AP = PD = x cms
∠APH = ∠HPD = 60°
a x x
⇒ = =
In ∆AHP :
AH x sin120° sin30° sin30°
= tan60° = 3 ⇒ HP = cm
HP 3
3 1
Area of ∆APD = 2 × area( ∆AHP) ⇒ sin120° = sin (90 + 30) = cos 30 = , sin 30 =
2 2
1 x x2 a x a
= 2× ×x× = cm ⇒ = ⇒x= cms
2 3 3 3 1 3
Area of ABQCDP = area (ABCD) – 2 area ( ∆APD) 2 2
= 4x 2 − =
2
2x2 2x 2 3 − 1 ( ) Thus, area of ∆APD is
1
2
× AP × PD × sin120°
3 3
1 a a 3 a2
= × × × cm2
(
2x 2 2 3 − 1 ) 2 3 3 2
=
4 3
Required Ratio = 3 = 2 3 −1 by symmetry, Area of ∆APD = Area of ∆BQC
2x 2
3 Area of ABQCDP
Thus, ratio of
[Removing area inside square ABCD
A = 2 3 −1
a b
B c C
a b c
⇒ = =
sin A sinB sinC
16. 1 Number of terms in the given expansion is nothing but 17. 4 None of the cases has three horses between White
the non-negative integral solutions of the equation and Red horses.
a + b + c = 20.
Total number of non-negative integral solutions 18. 3 If Grey came fourth, we consider cases (a) and (b).
20 +3 −1 22 All the options except (c) can hold true for these
= C3 −1 = C2 = 231 cases. White horse can either be 2nd or 5th in the
race.
Alternative Method:
19. 4 Statement A: If the number of players at the entry
(a + b + c)20 = {(a + b) + c}
20
level is 83, we can get the following table.
=20 C0 (a + b)20 .C0 +20 C1(a + b)19 .C1 + ...20 C20 (a + b)0 .C20 Round Number of Pair of Byes Number of
Number of terms = 21 + 20 + 19 + ….. + 1 = 231 players players matches
1 83 41 1 41
For questions 17 to 18: 2 41 + 1 = 42 21 0 21
3 21 10 1 10
Raju bets on the horses as follows: 4 10 + 1 = 11 5 1 5
5 5+1=6 3 0 3
Red – Rs.3000 , White – Rs.2000 and Black – Rs.1000 = 6 3 1 1 1
Total of 7 1+1=2 1 0 1
Then the Red and Black horses must have finished at the 4th
and 5th positions, not necessary in that order.
D ⇒ n − 1 + n2 + (n + 1)3 = (3n )2
It is given that AB = BC = AC = BD = DC = 1 cm. ⇒ n3 + 4n2 + 4n = 9n2
Therefore, ∆ABC is an equilateral triangle.
⇒ n2 − 5n + 4 = 0
Hence, ∠ACB = 60°
∴ n = 1 or n = 4
» = 60 × π(1)2 = π
Now area of sector AB Since, the three integers are positive, the value of ‘n’
360 6
cannot be equal to 1, therefore the value of ‘n’ = 4 or
3 2 3 m = n – 1 = 3.
Area of equilateral triangle ∆ABC = (1) = Hence, the three consecutive positive integers are 3,
4 4
4 and 5.
Area of remaining portion in the common region 24. 1
¼ excluding ABC
ABC 1 1 1 1 1 1
S = 1+ + + 1+ + + ... + 1+ +
π 3 12 22 22 32 20072 20082
= 2 × −
6 4 1 1
Tn = 1 + +
Hence, the total area of the intersecting region = n2 (n + 1)2
3 π 3
2× × (1)2 + 4 × −
4 6 4 n4 + 2n3 + 3n2 + 2n + 1
=
n2 (n + 1)2
2π 3
= − sq. cm.
3 2
n2 + n + 1 1
= = 1+
22. 2 As per the conditions given in the questions, we get n2 + n n2 + n
the following figure.
A 2007 2007
1 1 1
S= ∑ Tn = 2007 + ∑ −
n n + 1
= 2008 − 2008
n =1 n =1
k m /h
30 °
km
70
5
42
25. 1 A
50 0 km
90 °
C
P N Q
25
0k 60 °
50 m
km
/h
B h
The train leaving at B reaches C at 1:00 p.m. taking a
total time of 5 hours, which means that Rahim should M
reach C by 12:45 p.m. B C
R S
Now total time taken by Rahim moving with a speed of x
70 km/hr is ‘t’.
250 3 Let, the height of the cylinder be ‘h’ cm and radius
t= km / hr = 6 hrs 12 mins (approx) be ‘x’ cm.
70
∆ANQ is similar to ∆QSC
26. 4 Diagonally opposite to yellow is red.
AN QS 10 − h h
⇒ = ⇒ =
NQ SC x 4−x 27. 5 Second tallest house is either Q or S. So, we can not
determine.
10 x 10 4
⇒ −1= ⇒ = 28. 2 Tallest house is T whose colour is Blue.
h 4−x h 4−x
29. 5 Let volume of data transfer in India = Volume of data
5
∴h = (4 − x) transfer in Singapore = x
2
Surface area of the cylinder PQSR For INDIA:
2 5x ARDT for India ≈ $1 (approx)
= 2π x + hx = 2π x +
2 (4 − x)
2 ∴ Revenue from data transfer = $x (approx)
5 3 Re venue from data transfer
= 2π x 2 − x 2 + 10x = 2π 10x − x 2 × 100 = 9% (approx)
2 2 Total Re venue
3 10
2
50 x
⇒ Total Re venue ; × 100 (approx)
= 2π − x − + 9
2 3 3
Maximum value of surface area of the cylinder will For SINGAPORE:
10
be at x = . ARDT = $9 (approx)
3
∴ Revenue from data transfer = $9x (approx)
For questions 26 to 28:
The given information can be depicted as follows.
Re venue from data transfer
(i) × 100 = 20.5% (approx)
Total Re venue
9x
Road ⇒ Total Re venue = × 100 (approx)
3 houses on each side of the road 20.5
9x
× 100
Total Re venue for Singapore 20.5
(ii) Six houses – P, Q, R, S, T, U = ≈ 4 (approx)
Total Re venue for India x
(iii) Colours – Red, Blue, Green, Orange, Yellow, White × 100
9
(iv) Different heights
(v) T = tallest & opposite to Red 30. 3 Let total revenue of Sweden in 2010 = x
(vi) Shortest opposite to Green Therefore total Revenue of India in 2010 = 2x
(vii) U = orange & the position of U is: P/S U S/P
(viii) R = yellow & opposite to P For Sweden in 2010:
(ix) Q = Green & opposite to U
(x) P = White & (S, Q) > P > R (in height) ARDT = $6
Revenue from data transfer = 2 × 18% of x
From (iv), (v), (vi), (ix) & (x), T > (S, Q) > P > R > U
2 × 18% of x
in terms of height ∴ Volume of data transfer = 6
From (iv), (vii), (viii), (ix) & (x), we get the following
two cases.
For India in 2010:
4 (S ho rte st) 3 /2 9 –1
3 /2 6 4 = × 100 = 800%
6 1
31. 4 For UK: get any call. We notice that by reducing the marks
obtained in section C to 41, we ensure colleges 1, 2,
3 & 5 are ruled out. Now for colleges 4 & 6, reducing
Re venue from Data transfar
× 100 = 30% (approx ) the marks obtained in section D to 43, ensures these
Total Re venue colleges are also ruled out. Please note that we are
reducing the score to 1 less than the minimum cut-off
30
Revenue from Data transfer = × Total Re venue across all colleges for that particular section.
100 In the other two sections A and B, Aditya may score
ARDT = $ 13 (approx) 50 each. So the maximum possible aggregate marks =
50 + 50 + 41 + 43 = 184.
30 Total Re venue
∴ Volume of Data transfer = ×
100 13 For questions 35 to 38:
3 The given basic information can be collated as below:
≈ × Total Re venue (i) Six teams – A, B, C, D, E, F.
130
(ii) Matches scheduled in two stages – I & II.
(ii) No team plays against the same team more than once.
For Spain: (iv) No ties permitted.
As per the instructions given for stage – I, we can
Re venue from Data transfar reach the following conclusions:
× 100 = 15% (approx ) (a) As B lost at least one match, A won all the 3 matches.
Total Re venue
(b) The two teams who lost all the matches cannot be A
ARDT = 6.5 (approx) (as explained above), cannot be B (E lost to B), cannot
15 Total Re venue be D (D won against C & F). Hence, the two teams
∴ Volume of Data transfer = × must be C and F.
100 6.5
(c) F did not play against the top team (i.e. A).
3 We get the following table for stage – I.
≈ × Total Re venue
130
(To be read from rows)
Similarly, we can check the other options and easily
see that the volume of data transfer is NOT the same
for given pair countries. A B C D E F
A X W W W
32. 2 Since Bhama got calls from all colleges, she has to B L X W W
score marks in each section equal to at least the
maximum of the cut-offs across colleges which means C L X L L
45, 45, 46 & 45 in section A, B, C & D respectively. This D L W X W
makes her total to be 181 with which she will clear the E L W X W
overall cut-offs of all institutes also.
F L L L X
33. 3 Since we have to minimise the marks in a particular
As per the instructions given for Stage-II, we can reach the
section, we will have to maximise the marks in other 3 following conclusions.
sections. Let us assume that marks obtained in each (d) A lost both its matches against E and F.
of the three sections in which we are going to maximize (e) F won against A, hence is the bottom team
the score, is equal to 50. Now, the lowest overall cut- (out of C & F) which won both the matches
off is 171 & second lowest is 175. Hence, Charlie ⇒ F won against C as well.
must have scored at least 175 – (50 + 50 + 50) = 25 This also means that C lost both its matches against
marks in the remaining section. B and F.
(f) Apart from A and C, one more team lost both the
Let us confirm whether he can clear sectional cut- matches in Stage-II.
offs also with such a distribution. On seeing the That team can neither be E (A lost to E), nor B
sectional cut-offs, we conclude that they can be (as C lost to B), nor F (as F won both its matches).
cleared with Hence, the team must be D.
50 marks each in section A, B & C and 25 marks in
section D, which may enable Charlie to clear the We get the following table for Stage-II.
sectional cut-off of section D for college 1, 2, 3 or 5.
Hence, 25 is the correct answer.