(Paper) CAT 2007 Exam Paper
CAT 2007 Exam Paper
Section I: This section contains 25 questions
1. The price of Darjeeling tea (in rupees per kilogram) is
100 + 0.10n, on the nth day of 2007 (n = 1, 2, ..., 100), and then remains
constant. On the other hand, the price of Ooty tea (in rupees per kilogram) is
89 + 0.15n, on the nth day of 2007 (n = 1, 2, ..., 365). On which date in 2007
will the prices of these two varieties of tea be equal?
(1) May 21
(2) April 11
(3) May 20
(4) April 10
(5) June 30
2. A quadratic function f(x) attains a maximum of 3 at x = 1. The value of
the function at x = 0 is 1. What is the value of f(x) at x = 10?
(1) –119
(2) –159
(3) –110
(4) –180
(5) –105
3. Two circles with centres P and Q cut each other at two distinct points A
and B. The circles have the same radii and neither P nor Q falls within the
intersection of the circles. What is the smallest range that includes all
possible values of the angle AQP in degrees?
(1) Between 0 and 90
(2) Between 0 and 30
(3) Between 0 and 60
(4) Between 0 and 75
(5) Between 0 and 45
Directions for Questions 4 and 5:
Let S be the set of all pairs (i, j) where 1 ≤ i < j ≤ n and n ≥ 4. Any two
distinct members of S are called “friends” if they have one constituent of the
pairs in common and “enemies” otherwise. For example, if n = 4, then S = {(1,
2), (1, 3), (1, 4), (2, 3), (2, 4), (3, 4)}. Here, (1, 2) and (1, 3) are
friends, (1, 2) and (2, 3) are also friends, but (1, 4) and (2, 3) are enemies.
4. For general n, how many enemies will each member of S have?
(1) n – 3
(2)
(3) 2n – 7
(4)
(5)
5. For general n, consider any two members of S that are friends. How many
other members of S will be common friends of both these members?
(1)
(2) 2n – 6
(3)
(4) n – 2
(5)
Directions for Questions 6 and 7:
Shabnam is considering three alternatives to invest her surplus cash for a
week. She wishes to guarantee maximum returns on her investment. She has three
options, each of which can be utilized fully or partially in conjunction with
others. Option A: Invest in a public sector bank. It promises a return of +0.10%
Option B: Invest in mutual funds of ABC Ltd. A rise in the stock market will
result in a return of +5%, while a fall will entail a return of –3% Option C:
Invest in mutual funds of CBA Ltd. A rise in the stock market will result in a
return of –2.5%, while a fall will entail a return of +2%
6. The maximum guaranteed return to Shabnam is
(1) 0.25%
(2) 0.10%
(3) 0.20%
(4) 0.15%
(5) 0.30%
7. What strategy will maximize the guaranteed return to Shabnam?
(1) 100% in option A
(2) 36% in option B and 64% in option C
(3) 64% in option B and 36% in option C
(4) 1/3 in each of the three options
(5) 30% in option A, 32% in option B and 38% in option C
Directions for Questions 8 and 9:
Cities A and B are in different time zones. A is located 3000 km east of B.
The table below describes the schedule of an airline operating non-stop flights
between A and B. All the times indicated are local and on the same day.
Departure Arrival City Time City Time
B 8:00 a.m.
A 3:00 p.m.
A 4:00 p.m.
B 8: p.m.
Assume that planes cruise at the same speed in both directions. However, the
effective speed is influenced by a steady wind blowing from east to west at 50
km per hour.
8. What is the time difference between A and B?
(1) 1 hour and 30 minutes
(2) 2 hours
(3) 2 hours and 30 minutes
(4) 1 hour
(5) Cannot be determined
9. What is the plane’s cruising speed in km per hour?
(1) 700
(2) 550
(3) 600
(4) 500
(5) Cannot be determined
10. Consider all four digit numbers for which the first two digits are equal
and the last two digits are also equal. How many such numbers are perfect
squares?
(1) 3
(2) 2
(3) 4
(4) 0
(5) 1
11. In a tournament, there are n teams T1 , T2 ....., Tn with n > 5. Each
team consists of k players, k > 3. The following pairs of teams have one player
in common: T1 & T2 , T2 & T3 ,......, Tn − 1 & Tn , and Tn & T1. No other pair
of teams has any player in common. How many players are participating in the
tournament, considering all the n teams together?
(1) n(k – 1)
(2) k(n – 1)
(3) n(k – 2)
(4) k(k – 2)
(5) (n – 1)(k – 1)
Directions for Questions 12 and 13:
Mr. David manufactures and sells a single product at a fixed price in a niche
market. The selling price of each unit is Rs. 30. On the other hand, the cost,
in rupees, of producing x units is 240 + bx + cx2, where b and c are some
constants. Mr. David noticed that doubling the daily production from 20 to 40
units increases the daily production cost by 66.66%. However, an increase in
daily production from 40 to 60 units results in an increase of only 50% in the
daily production cost. Assume that demand is unlimited and that Mr. David can
sell as much as he can produce. His objective is to maximize the profit.
12. How many units should Mr. David produce daily?
(1) 130
(2) 100
(3) 70
(4) 150
(5) Cannot be determined
13. What is the maximum daily profit, in rupees, that Mr. David can realize
from his business?
(1) 620
(2) 920
(3) 840
(4) 760
(5) Cannot be determined
Directions for Questions 14 and 15:
14. Let a1 = p and b1 = q, where p and q are positive quantities. Define: an
= pbn – 1 ; bn = qbn − 1 (for even n > 1) and an = pan – 1 ; bn = qan − 1 (for
odd n > 1)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
15. If p = 1/3 and q = 2/3, then what is the smallest odd n such that an + bn
< 0.01?
(1) 7
(2) 13
(3) 11
(4) 9
(5) 15
Directions for Questions 16 through 19:
Each question is followed by two statements A and B. Answer each question using
the following instructions. Mark (1) if the question can be answered by using
statement A alone but not by using statement B alone. Mark (2) if the question
can be answered by using statement B alone but not by using statement A alone.
Mark (3) if the question can be answered by using both the statements together
but not by using either of the statements alone. Mark (4) if the question cannot
be answered on the basis of the two statements.
16. The average weight of a class of 100 students is 45 kg. The class
consists of two sections, I and II, each with 50 students. The average weight,
WI, of Section I is smaller than the average weight, WII, of Section II. If the
heaviest student, say Deepak, of Section II is moved to Section I, and the
lightest student, say Poonam, of Section I is moved to Section II, then the
average weights of the two sections are switched, i.e., the average weight of
Section I becomes WII and that of Section II becomes WI. What is the weight of
Poonam?
A. WII – WI = 1.0
B. Moving Deepak from Section II to I (without any move from I to II) makes the
average weights of the two sections equal.
17. Consider integers x, y and z. What is the minimum possible value of x2 +
y2 + z2 ?
A. x + y + z = 89
B. Among x, y, z two are equal.
18. Rahim plans to draw a square JKLM with a point O on the side JK but is
not successful. Why is Rahim unable to draw the square?
A. The length of OM is twice that of OL.
B. The length of OM is 4 cm.
19. ABC Corporation is required to maintain at least 400 Kilolitres of water
at all times in its factory, in order to meet safety and regulatory
requirements. ABC is considering the suitability of a spherical tank with
uniform wall thickness for the purpose. The outer diameter of the tank is 10
meters. Is the tank capacity adequate to meet ABC’s requirements?
A. The inner diameter of the tank is at least 8 meters.
B. The tank weighs 30,000 kg when empty, and is made of a material with density
of 3 gm/cc.
20. Suppose you have a currency, named Miso, in three denominations: 1 Miso,
10 Misos and 50 Misos. In how many ways can you pay a bill of 107 Misos?
(1) 17
(2) 16
(3) 18
(4) 15
(5) 19
21. How many pairs of positive integers m, n satisfy 1/m + 4/n = 1/12 where n
is an odd integer less than 60?
(1) 6
(2) 4
(3) 7
(4) 5
(5) 3
22. A confused bank teller transposed the rupees and paise when he cashed a
cheque for Shailaja, giving her rupees instead of paise and paise instead of
rupees. After buying a toffee for 50 paise, Shailaja noticed that she was left
with exactly three times as much as the amount on the cheque. Which of the
following is a valid statement about the cheque amount?
(1) Over Rupees 13 but less than Rupees 14
(2) Over Rupees 7 but less than Rupees 8
(3) Over Rupees 22 but less than Rupees 23
(4) Over Rupees 18 but less than Rupees 19
(5) Over Rupees 4 but less than Rupees 5
23. Consider the set S = {2, 3, 4, ...., 2n + 1}, where n is a positive
integer larger than 2007. Define X as the average of the odd integers in S and Y
as the average of the even integers in S. What is the value of X – Y?
(1) 0
(2) 1
(3) n/2
(4) n + 1/2n
(5) 2008
24. Ten years ago, the ages of the members of a joint family of eight people
added up to 231 years. Three years later, one member died at the age of 60 years
and a child was born during the same year. After another three years, one more
member died, again at 60, and a child was born during the same year. The current
average age of this eight member joint family is nearest to:
(1) 23 years
(2) 22 years
(3) 21 years
(4) 25 years
(5) 24 years
25. A function f(x) satisfies f (1) = 3600, and f(1) + f(2) + ... + f(n) = n²
f(n), for all positive integers n >1. What is the value of f(9) ?
(1) 80
(2) 240
(3) 200
(4) 100
(5) 120
Section II This section contains 25 questions Directions for Questions 26 to
29: Each question is followed by two statements, A and B. Answer each
question using the following instructions:
Mark (1) if the question can be answered by using the statement A alone but not
by using the statement B alone.
Mark (2) if the question can be answered by using the statement B alone but not
by using the statement A alone.
Mark (3) if the question can be answered by using either of the statements
alone.
Mark (4) if the question can be answered by using both the statements together
but not by either of the statements alone.
Mark (5) if the question cannot be answered on the basis of the two statements.
26. In a football match, at half-time, Mahindra and Mahindra Club was
trailing by three goals. Did it win the match?
A. In the second half Mahindra and Mahindra Club scored four goals.
B. The opponent scored four goals in the match.
27. In a particular school, sixty students were athletes. Ten among them were
also among the top academic performers. How many top academic performers were in
the school?
A. Sixty per cent of the top academic performers were not athletes.
B. All the top academic performers were not necessarily athletes.
28. Five students Atul, Bala, Chetan, Dev and Ernesto were the only ones who
participated in a quiz contest. They were ranked based on their scores in the
contest. Dev got a higher rank as compared to Ernesto, while Bala got a higher
rank as compared to Chetan. Chetan’s rank was lower than the median. Who among
the five got the highest rank?
A. Atul was the last rank holder.
B. Bala was not among the top two rank holders.
29. Thirty per cent of the employees of a call centre are males. Ten per cent
of the female employees have an engineering background. What is the percentage
of male employees with engineering background?
A. Twenty five per cent of the employees have engineering background.
B. Number of male employees having an engineering background is 20% more than
the number of female employees having an engineering background.
DIRECTIONS for Questions 30 to 33: Answer the following questions based
on the information given below: The proportion of male students and the
proportion of vegetarian students in a school are given below. The school has a
total of 800 students, 80% of whom are in the Secondary Section and rest equally
divided between Class 11 and 12.
Male (M)
Vegetarian (V)
Class 12
0.6
Class 11
0.55
0.5
Secondary Section
0.55
Total
0.475
0.53
30. What is the percentage of male students in the secondary section?
(1) 40
(2) 45
(3) 50
(4) 55
(5) 60
31. In Class 12, twenty five per cent of the vegetarians are male. What is
the difference between the number of female vegetarians and male
non-vegetarians?
(1) less than 8
(2) 10
(3) 12
(4) 14
(5) 16
32. What is the percentage of vegetarian students in Class 12?
(1) 40
(2) 45
(3) 50
(4) 55
(5) 60
33. In the Secondary Section, 50% of the students are vegetarian males. Which
of the following statements is correct?
(1) Except vegetarian males, all other groups have same number of students.
(2) Except non-vegetarian males, all other groups have same number of students.
(3) Except vegetarian females, all other groups have same number of students.
(4) Except non-vegetarian females, all other groups have same number of students
(5) All of the above groups have the same number of students.
Section III
This section contains 25 questions Directions for Questions 51 to 53: In each
question, there are four sentences. Each sentence has pairs of words/phrases
that are italicized and highlighted. From the italicized and highlighted word(s)/phrase(s),
select the most appropriate word(s)/phrase(s) to form correct sentences. Then,
from the options given, choose the best one.
51. The cricket council that was[A]/were[B] elected last March is[A]/are[B]
at sixes and sevens over new rules. The critics censored[A]/censured[B] the new
movie because of its social inaccessibility. Amit’s explanation for missing the
meeting was credulous[A]/credible[B]. She coughed discreetly[A]/discretely[B] to
announce her presence.
1) BBAAA
2) AAABA
3) BBBBA
4) AABBA
5) BBBAA
52. The further[A]/farther[B] he pushed himself, the more disillusioned he
grew. For the crowds it was more of a historical[A]/historic[B] event; for their
leader, it was just another day. The old man has a healthy distrust[A]/mistrust[B]
for all new technology. This film is based on a real[A]/true [B] story. One
suspects that the compliment[A]/complement[B] was backhanded.
1) BABAB
2) ABBBA
3) BAABA
4) BBAAB
5) ABABA
53. Regrettably[A]/Regretfully[B] I have to decline your invitation. I am
drawn to the poetic, sensual[A]/sensuous[B] quality of her paintings. He was
besides[A]/beside[B] himself with rage when I told him what I had done. After
brushing against a stationary[A]/stationery[B] truck my car turned turtle. As
the water began to rise over[A]/above[B] the danger mark, the signs of an
imminent flood were clear.
1) BAABA
2) BBBAB
3) AAABA
4) BBAAB
5) BABAB
Directions for Questions 54 to 56:
The passage given below is followed by a set of three questions. Choose the most
appropriate answer to each question. To discover the relation between rules,
paradigms, and normal science, consider first how the historian isolates the
particular loci of commitment that have been described as accepted rules. Close
historical investigation of a given specialty at a given time discloses a set of
recurrent and quasi-standard illustrations of various theories in their
conceptual, observational, and instrumental applications. These are the
community's paradigms, revealed in its textbooks, lectures, and laboratory
exercises. By studying them and by practicing with them, the members of the
corresponding community learn their trade. The historian, of course, will
discover in addition a penumbral area occupied by achievements whose status is
still in doubt, but the core of solved problems and techniques will usually be
clear. Despite occasional ambiguities, the paradigms of a mature scientific
community can be determined with relative ease. That demands a second step and
one of a somewhat different kind. When undertaking it, the historian must
compare the community's paradigms with each other and with its current research
reports. In doing so, his object is to discover what isolable elements, explicit
or implicit, the members of that community may have abstracted from their more
global paradigms and deploy it as rules in their research. Anyone who has
attempted to describe or analyze the evolution of a particular scientific
tradition will necessarily have sought accepted principles and rules of this
sort. Almost certainly, he will have met with at least partial success.
But, if his experience has been at all like my own, he will
have found the search for rules both more difficult and less satisfying than the
search for paradigms. Some of the generalizations he employs to describe the
community's shared beliefs will present more problems. Others, however, will
seem a shade too strong. Phrased in just that way, or in any other way he can
imagine, they would almost certainly have been rejected by some members of the
group he studies. Nevertheless, if the coherence of the research tradition is to
be understood in terms of rules, some specification of common ground in the
corresponding area is needed. As a result, the search for a body of rules
competent to constitute a given normal research tradition becomes a source of
continual and deep frustration.Recognizing that frustration, however, makes it
possible to diagnose its source. Scientists can agree that a Newton, Lavoisier,
Maxwell, or Einstein has produced an apparently permanent solution to a group of
outstanding problems and still disagree, sometimes without being aware of it,
about the particular abstract characteristics that make those solutions
permanent. They can, that is, agree in their identification of a paradigm
without agreeing on, or even attempting to produce, a full interpretation or
rationalization of it. Lack of a standard interpretation or of an agreed
reduction to rules will not prevent a paradigm from guiding research. Normal
science can be determined in part by the direct inspection of paradigms, a
process that is often aided by but does not depend upon the formulation of rules
and assumption. Indeed, the existence of a paradigm need not even imply that any
full set of rules exists.
54. What is the author attempting to illustrate through this passage?
(1) Relationships between rules, paradigms, and normal science.
(2) How a historian would isolate a particular ‘loci of commitment’.
(3) How a set of shared beliefs evolve in to a paradigm.
(4) Ways of understanding a scientific tradition.
(5) The frustrations of attempting to define a paradigm of a tradition
55. The term ‘loci of commitment’ as used in the passage would most likely
correspond with which of the following?
(1) Loyalty between a group of scientists in a research laboratory.
(2) Loyalty between groups of scientists across research laboratories.
(3) Loyalty to a certain paradigm of scientific inquiry.
(4) Loyalty to global patterns of scientific inquiry.
(5) Loyalty to evolving trends of scientific inquiry.
56. The author of this passage is likely to agree with which of the
following?
(1) Paradigms almost entirely define a scientific tradition.
(2) A group of scientists investigating a phenomenon would benefit by defining a
set of rules.
(3) Acceptance by the giants of a tradition is a sine qua non for a paradigm to
emerge.
(4) Choice of isolation mechanism determines the types of paradigm that may
emerge from a tradition.
(5) Paradigms are a general representation of rules and beliefs of a scientific
tradition.
Directions for Questions 57 to 59: 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.
57. Characters are also part of deep structure. Characters tie events in a
story together and provide a thread of continuity and meaning. Stories can be
about individuals, groups, projects or whole organizations, so from an
organizational studies perspective, the focal actor(s) determine the level and
unit of analysis used in a study. Stories of mergers and acquisitions, for
example, are common place. In these stories whole organizations are personified
as actors. But these macro-level stories usually are not told from the
perspective of the macro-level participants, because whole organizations cannot
narrate their experiences in the first person.
(1) More generally, data concerning the identities and relationships of the
characters in the story are required, if one is to understand role structure and
social networks in which that process is embedded.
(2) Personification of a whole organization abstracts away from the particular
actors and from traditional notions of level of analysis.
(3) The personification of a whole organization is important because stories
differ depending on who is enacting various events.
(4) Every story is told from a particular point of view, with a particular
narrative voice, which is not regarded as part of the deep structure.
(5) The personification of a whole organization is a textual device we use to
make macro-level theories more comprehensible.
58. Nevertheless, photographs still retain some of the magical allure that
the earliest daguerreotypes inspired. As objects, our photographs have changed;
they have become physically flimsier as they have become more technologically
sophisticated. Daguerre produced pictures on copper plates; today many of our
photographs never become tangible thins, but instead remain filed away on
computers and cameras, part of the digital ether that envelops the modern world.
At the same time, our patience for the creation of images has also eroded.
Children today are used to being tracked from birth by digital cameras and video
recorders and they expect to see the results of their poses and performances
instantly. The space between life as it is being lived and life as it is being
displayed shrinks to a mere second.
(1) Yet, despite these technical developments, photographs still remain
powerful because they are reminders of the people and things we care about.
(2) Images, after all, are surrogates carried into battle by a soldier or by a
traveller on holiday.
(3) Photographs, be they digital or traditional, exist to remind us of the
absent, the beloved, and the dead.
(4) In the new era of the digital image, the images also have a greater
potential for fostering falsehood and trickery, perpetuating fictions that seem
so real we cannot tell the difference.
(5) Anyway, human nature being what it is, little time has passed after
photography’s inventions became means of living life through images.
59. Mma Ramotswe had a detective agency in Africa, at the foot of Kgale Hill.
These were its assets; a tiny white van, two desks, two chairs, a telephone, and
an old typewriter. Then there was a teapot, in which Mma Ramotswe - the only
private lady detective in Botswana - brewed red bush tea. And three mugs - one
for herself, one for her secretary and one for the client. What else does a
detective agency really need? Detective agencies rely on human intuition and
intelligence, both of which Mma Ramotswe had in abundance.
(1) But there was also the view, which again would appear on no inventory.
(2) No inventory would ever include those, of course.
(3) She had an intelligent secretary too.
(4) She was a good detective and a good woman.
(5) What she lacked in possessions was more than made up by a natural
shrewdness.
Directions for Questions 60 to 62:
The passage given below is followed by a set of three questions. Choose the most
appropriate answer to each question.
The difficulties historians face in establishing cause-and-effect relations in
the history of human societies are broadly similar to the difficulties facing
astronomers, climatologists, ecologists, evolutionary biologists, geologists,
and palaeontologists. To varying degrees each of these fields is plagued by the
impossibility of performing replicated, controlled experimental interventions,
the complexity arising from enormous numbers of variables, the resulting
uniqueness of each system, the consequent impossibility of formulating universal
laws, and the difficulties of predicting emergent properties and future
behaviour. Prediction in history, as in other historical sciences, is most
feasible on large spatial scales and over long times, when the unique features
of millions of small-scale brief events become averaged out. Just as I could
predict the sex ratio of the next 1,000 newborns but not the sexes of my own two
children, the historian can recognize factors that made inevitable the broad
outcome of the collision between American and Eurasian societies after 13,000
years of separate developments, but not the outcome of the 1960 U.S.
presidential election. The details of which candidate said what during a single
televised debate in October 1960 could have given the electoral victory to Nixon
instead of to Kennedy, but no details of who said what could have blocked the
European conquest of Native Americans. How can students of human history profit
from the experience of scientists in other historical sciences? A methodology
that has proved useful involves the comparative method and so-called natural
experiments.
While neither astronomers studying galaxy formation nor human
historians can manipulate their systems in controlled laboratory experiments,
they both can take advantage of natural experiments, by comparing systems
differing in the presence or absence (or in the strong or weak effect) of some
putative causative factor. For example, epidemiologists, forbidden to feed large
amounts of salt to people experimentally, have still been able to identify
effects of high salt intake by comparing groups of humans who already differ
greatly in their salt intake; and cultural anthropologists, unable to provide
human groups experimentally with varying resource abundances for many centuries,
still study long-term effects of resource abundance on human societies by
comparing recent Polynesian populations living on islands differing naturally in
resource abundance. The student of human history can draw on many more natural
experiments than just comparisons among the five inhabited continents.
Comparisons can also utilize large islands that have developed complex societies
in a considerable degree of isolation (such as Japan, Madagascar, Native
American Hispaniola, New Guinea, Hawaii, and many others), as well as societies
on hundreds of smaller islands and regional societies within each of the
continents. Natural experiments in any field, whether in ecology or human
history, are inherently open to potential methodological criticisms. Those
include confounding effects of natural variation in additional variables besides
the one of interest, as well as problems in inferring chains of causation from
observed correlations between variables. Such methodological problems have been
discussed in great detail for some of the historical sciences. In particular,
epidemiology, the science of drawing inferences about human diseases by
comparing groups of people (often by retrospective historical studies), has for
a long time successfully employed formalized procedures for dealing with
problems similar to those facing historians of human societies. In short, I
acknowledge that it is much more difficult to understand human history than to
understand problems in fields of science where history is unimportant and where
fewer individual variables operate. Nevertheless, successful methodologies for
analyzing historical problems have been worked out in several fields. As a
result, the histories of dinosaurs, nebulae, and glaciers are generally
acknowledged to belong to fields of science rather than to the humanities.
60. Why do islands with considerable degree of isolation provide valuable
insights into human history?
(1) Isolated islands may evolve differently and this difference is of
interest to us.
(2) Isolated islands increase the number of observations available to
historians.
(3) Isolated islands, differing in their endowments and size may evolve
differently and this difference can be attributed to their endowments and size.
(4) Isolated islands, differing in their endowments and size, provide a good
comparison to large islands such as Eurasia, Africa, Americas and Australia.
(5) Isolated islands, in so far as they are inhabited, arouse curiosity about
how human beings evolved there.
61. According to the author, why is prediction difficult in history?
(1) Historical explanations are usually broad so that no prediction is
possible.
(2) Historical out comes depend upon a large number of factors and hence
prediction is difficult for each case.
(3) Historical sciences, by their very nature, are not interested in a multitude
of minor factors, which might be important in a specific historical outcome.
(4) Historians are interested in evolution of human history and hence are only
interested in log term predictions.
(5) Historical sciences suffer from the inability to conduct controlled
experiments and therefore have explanations based on a few long-term factors.
62. According to the author, which of the following statements would be true?
(1) Students of history are missing significant opportunities by not
conducting any natural experiments.
(2) Complex societies inhabiting large islands provide great opportunities for
natural experiments.
(3) Students of history are missing significant opportunities by not studying an
adequate variety of natural experiments.
(4) A unique problem faced by historians is their inability to establish cause
and effect relationships.
(5) Cultural anthropologists have overcome the problem of confounding variables
through natural experiments.
Directions for Questions 63 to 65: In each question, there are five
sentences or parts of 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.
Then, choose the most appropriate option.
63. read this
A. When I returned to home, I began to read
B. everything I could get my hand on about Israel.
C. That same year Israel’s Jewish Agency sent
D. a Shaliach a sort of recruiter to Minneapolis.
E. I became one of his most active devotees.
(1) C & E
(2) C only
(3) E only
(4) B, C & E
(5) C, D & E
64. read this
A. So once an economy is actually in recession,
B. The authorities can, in principle, move the economy
C. Out of slump - assuming hypothetically
D. That they know how to - by a temporary stimuli.
E. In the longer term, however, such policies have no affect on the overall
behaviour of the economy.
(1) A, B & E
(2) B, C & E
(3) C & D
(4) E only
(5) B only
65. read this
A. It is sometimes told that democratic
B. government originated in the city-states
C. of ancient Greece. Democratic ideals have been handed to us from that time.
D. In truth, however, this is an unhelpful assertion.
E. The Greeks gave us the word, hence did not provide us with a model.
(1) A, B & D
(2) B, C & D
(3) B & D
(4) B only
(5) D only
Directions for Questions 66 to 68: The passage given below is followed by
a set of three questions. Choose the most appropriate answer to each question.
Human Biology does nothing to structure human society. Age may enfeeble us all,
but cultures vary considerably in the prestige and power they accord to the
elderly. Giving birth is a necessary condition for being a mother, but it is not
sufficient. We expect mothers to behave in maternal ways and to display
appropriately maternal sentiments. We prescribe a clutch of norms or rules that
govern the role of a mother. That the social role is independent of the
biological base can be demonstrated by going back three sentences. Giving birth
is certainly not sufficient to be a mother but, as adoption and fostering show,
it is not even necessary! The fine detail of what is expected of a mother or a
father or a dutiful son differs from culture to culture, but everywhere
behaviour is coordinated by the reciprocal nature of roles. Husbands and wives,
parents and children, employers and employees, waiters and customers, teachers
and pupils, warlords and followers; each makes sense only in its relation to the
other. The term ‘role’ is an appropriate one, because the metaphor of an actor
in a play neatly expresses the rule-governed nature or scripted nature of much
of social life and the sense that society is a joint production. Social life
occurs only because people play their parts (and that is as true for war and
conflicts as for peace and love) and those parts make sense only in the context
of the overall show. The drama metaphor also reminds us of the artistic licence
available to the players.
We can play a part straight or, as the following from J.P.
Sartre conveys, we can ham it up. Let us consider this waiter in the cafe. His
movement is quick and forward, a little too precise, a little too rapid. He
comes towards the patrons with a step a little too quick. He bends forward a
little too eagerly; his voice, his eyes express an interest a little too
solicitous for the order of the customer. Finally there he returns, trying to
imitate in his walk the inflexible stiffness of some kind of automaton while
carrying his tray with the recklessness of a tightrope-walker....All his
behaviour seems to us a game....But what is he playing? We need not watch long
before we can explain it: he is playing at being a waiter in a cafe. The
American sociologist Erving Goffman built an influential body of social analysis
on elaborations of the metaphor of social life as drama. Perhaps his most
telling point was that it is only through acting out a part that we express
character. It is not enough to be evil or virtuous; we have to be seen to be
evil or virtuous. There is distinction between the roles we play and some
underlying self. Here we might note that some roles are more absorbing than
others. We would not be surprised by the waitress who plays the part in such a
way as to signal to us that she is much more than her occupation. We would be
surprised and offended by the father who played his part ‘tongue in cheek’. Some
roles are broader and more far-reaching than others. Describing someone as a
clergyman or faith healer would say far more about that person than describing
someone as a bus driver.
66. What is the thematic highlight of this passage?
(1) In the absence of strong biological linkages, reciprocal roles provide
the mechanism for coordinating human behaviour.
(2) In the absence of reciprocal roles, biological linkages provide the
mechanism for coordinating human behaviour.
(3) Human behaviour is independent of biological linkages and reciprocal roles.
(4) Human behaviour depends on biological linkages and reciprocal roles.
(5) Reciprocal roles determine normative human behavior in society.
67. Which of the following would have been true if biological linkages
structured human society?
(1) The role of mother would have been defined through her reciprocal
relationship with her children.
(2) We would not have been offended by the father playing his role ‘tongue in
cheek’.
(3) Women would have adopted and fostered children rather than giving birth to
them.
(4) Even if warlords were physically weaker than their followers, they would
still dominate them.
(5) Waiters would have stronger motivation to serve their customers.
68. It has been claimed in the passage that “some roles are more absorbing
than others”. According to the passage, which of the following seem(s)
appropriate reason(s) for such a claim?
A. Some roles carry great expectations from the society preventing
manifestation of the true self.
B. Society ascribes so much importance to some roles that the conception of self
may get aligned with the roles being performed.
C. Some roles require development of skill and expertise leaving little time for
manifestation of self.
(1) A only
(2) B only
(3) C only
(4) A & B
(5) B & C
Directions for Questions 69 to 72: In each question, there are five
sentences/paragraphs. The sentence/ paragraph labelled A is in its correct
place. The four that follow are labelled B, C, D and E, and need to be arranged
in the logical order to form a coherent paragraph/passage. From the given
options, choose the most appropriate option.
69.
A. In America, highly educated women, who are in stronger position in the labour
market than less qualified ones, have higher rates of marriage than other
groups.
B. Some work supports the Becker thesis, and some appears to contradict it.
C. And, as with crime, it is equally inconclusive.
D. But regardless of the conclusion of any particular piece of work, it is hard
to establish convincing connections between family changes and economic factors
using conventional approaches.
E. Indeed, just as with crime, an enormous academic literature exists on the
validity of the pure economic approach to the evolution of family structures.
(1) BCDE
(2) DBEC
(3) BDCE
(4) ECBD
(5) EBCD
70.
A. Personal experience of mothering and motherhood are largely framed in
relation to two discernible or “official” discourses: the “medical discourse and
natural childbirth discourse”. Both of these tend to focus on the “optimistic
stories” of birth and mothering and underpin stereotypes of the “godmother”.
B. At the same time, the need for medical expert guidance is also a feature for contemporary reproduction and motherhood. But constructions of good mothering have not always been so conceived - and in different contexts may exist in parallel to other equally dominant discourses.
C. Similarly, historical work has shown how what are now taken-for-granted aspects of reproduction and mothering practices result from contemporary “pseudoscientific directives” and “managed constructs”. These changes have led to a reframing of modern discourses that pattern pregnancy and motherhood leading to an acceptance of the need for greater expert management.
D. The contrasting, overlapping and ambiguous strands within these frameworks focus to varying degrees on a woman’s biological tie to her child and predisposition to instinctively know and be able to care for her child.
E. In addition, a third, “unofficial popular discourse” comprising “old wives” tales and based on maternal experiences of childbirth has also been noted. These discourses have also been acknowledged in work exploring the experiences of those who apparently do not “conform” to conventional stereotypes of the “good mother”
(1) EDBC
(2) BCED
(3) DBCE
(4) EDCB
(5) BCDE
71.
A. Indonesia has experienced dramatic shifts in its formal governance
arrangements since the fall of President Soeharto and the close of his
centralized, authoritarian "New Order" regime in 1997.
B. The political system has taken its place in the nearly 10 years since Reformasi began. It has featured the active contest for political office among a proliferation of parties at central, provincial and district levels; direct elections for the presidency (since 2004); and radical changes in centre-local government relations towards administrative, fiscal, and political decentralization.
C. The mass media, once tidily under Soeharto's thumb, has experienced significant liberalization as has the legal basis for non-governmental organizations, including many dedicated to such controversial issues as corruption control and human rights.
D. Such developments are seen optimistically by a number of donors and some external analysts, who interpret them as signs of Indonesia's political normalization.
E. A different group of analysts paint a picture in which the institutional forms have changed, but power relations have not. Vedi Hadiz argues that Indonesia's "democratic transition" has been anything but linear.
(1) BDEC
(2) CBDE
(3) CEBD
(4) DEBC
(5) BCDE
72.
A. I had six thousand acres of land, and had thus got much spare land
besides the coffee plantation. Part of the farm was native forest, and about one
thousand acres were squatters' land, what [the Kikuyu] called their shambas.
B. The squatters' land was more intensely alive than the rest of the farm, and was changing with the seasons the year round. The maize grew up higher than your head as you walked on the narrow hard-trampled footpaths in between the tall green rustling regiments.
C. The squatters are Natives, who with their families hold a few acres on a white man's farm, and in return have to work for him a certain number of days in the year. My squatters, I think, saw the relationship in a different light, for many of them were born on the farm, and their fathers before them, and they very likely regarded me as a sort of superior squatter on their estates.
D. The Kikuyu also grew the sweet potatoes that have a vine like leaf and spread over the ground like a dense entangled mat, and many varieties of big yellow and green speckled pumpkins.
E. The beans ripened in the fields, were gathered and thrashed by the women, and the maize stalk and coffee pods were collected and burned, so that in certain seasons thin blue columns of smoke rose here and there all over the farm.
(1) CBDE
(2) BCDE
(3) CBED
(4) DBCE
(5) EDBC
Directions for Questions 73 to 75: The passage given below is followed by
a set of three questions. Choose the most appropriate answer to each question.
Every civilized society lives and thrives on a silent but profound agreement as
to what is to be accepted as the valid mould of experience. Civilization is a
complex system of dams, dykes, and canals warding off, directing, and
articulating the influx of the surrounding fluid element; a fertile fenland,
elaborately drained and protected from the high tides of chaotic, unexercised,
and inarticulate experience. In such a culture, stable and sure of itself within
the frontiers of 'naturalized' experience, the arts wield their creative power
not so much in width as in depth. They do not create new experience, but deepen
and purify the old. Their works do not differ from one another like a new
horizon from a new horizon, but like a madonna from a madonna. The periods of
art which are most vigorous in creative passion seem to occur when the
established pattern of experience loosens its rigidity without as yet losing its
force. Such a period was the Renaissance, and Shakespeare its poetic
consummation.
Then it was as though the discipline of the old order gave
depth to the excitement of the breaking away, the depth of job and tragedy, of
incomparable conquests and irredeemable losses. Adventurers of experience set
out as though in lifeboats to rescue and bring back to the shore treasures of
knowing and feeling which the old order had left floating on the high seas. The
works of the early Renaissance and the poetry of Shakespeare vibrate with the
compassion for live experience in danger of dying from exposure and neglect. In
this compassion was the creative genius of the age. Yet, it was a genius of
courage, not of desperate audacity. For, however elusively, it still knew of
harbours and anchors, of homes to which to return, and of barns in which to
store the harvest. The exploring spirit of art was in the depths of its
consciousness still aware of a scheme of things into which to fit its exploits
and creations. But the more this scheme of things loses its stability, the more
boundless and uncharted appears the ocean of potential exploration. In the blank
confusion of infinite potentialities flotsam of significance gets attached to
jetsam of experience; for everything is sea, everything is at sea - .... The sea
is all about us; The sea is the land's edge also, the granite Into which it
reaches, the beaches where it tosses Its hints of earlier and other creation ...
- and Rilke tells a story in which, as in T.S. Eliot's poem, it is again the sea
and the distance of 'other creation' that becomes the image of the poet's
reality. A rowing boat sets out on a difficult passage. The oarsmen labour in
exact rhythm. There is no sign yet of the destination. Suddenly a man, seemingly
idle, breaks out into song. And if the labour of the oarsmen meaninglessly
defeats the real resistance of the real waves, it is the idle single who
magically conquers the despair of apparent aimlessness. While the people next to
him try to come to grips with the element that is next to them, his voice seems
to bind the boat to the farthest distance so that the farthest distance draws it
towards itself. 'I don't know why and how,' is Rilke's conclusion, 'but suddenly
I understood the situation of the poet, his place and function in this age. It
does not matter if one denies him every place - except this one. There one must
tolerate him.'
73. In the passage, the expression “like a madonna from a madonna” alludes to
(1) The difference arising as a consequence of artistic license.
(2) The difference between two artistic interpretations.
(3) The difference between ‘life’ and ‘interpretation of life’.
(4) The difference between ‘width’ and ‘depth’ of creative power.
(5) The difference between the legendary character and the modern day singer.
74. The sea and ‘other creation’ leads Rilke to
(1) Define the place of the poet in his culture.
(2) Reflect on the role of the oarsman and the singer.
(3) Muse on artistic labour and its aimlessness.
(4) Understand the elements that one has to deal with.
(5) Delve into natural experience and real waves.
75. According to the passage, the term “adventurers of experience” refers to
(1) Poets and artists who are driven by courage.
(2) Poets and artists who create their own genre.
(3) Poets and artists of the Renaissance.
(4) Poets and artists who revitalize and enrich the past for us.
(5) Poets and artists who delve in flotsam and jetsam in sea.