Ordering of Sentences
In each question, the first and the last sentences of the passage are numbered S1 and S6 respectively. The rest of the passage is split into four parts. These four sentences are jumbled. Read the sentences and identify their correct and logical order. S1: We speak today of self-determination in politics.P : So long as one is conscious of a restraint, it is possible to resist it or to near it as a necessary evil and to keep free in spirit.Q : Slavery begins when one ceases to feel that restraint and it depends on if the evil is accepted as good.R : There is, however, a subtler domination exercised in the sphere of ideas by one culture to another.S : Political subjection primarily means restraint on the outer life of people.S6: Cultural subjection is ordinarily of an unconscious character and it implies slavery from the very start.The Proper sequence should be:

RSQP
SPQR
SPRQ
RSPQ

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Ordering of Sentences
S1: In hunting and gathering societies people live in what anthropologists call "the seasonal round". P: When the salmon are running, it comes to the stream; when the wild grasses must be gathered, the band moves on again. Q: The tribal band is delicately adjusted to nature. R: It circulates through space in the rhythm of the seasons each year. S: It moves through space with the flow of time. S6: The circle is not broken into a line; the tribe does not stay in one place altering nature to suit the needs of the human settlement. The Proper sequence should be:

PRQS
QSPR
RPQS
QPRS

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Ordering of Sentences
In each question, the first and the last sentences of the passage are numbered S1 and S6 respectively. The rest of the passage is split into four parts. These four sentences are jumbled. Read the sentences and identify their correct and logical order. S1: Let me elaborate a little on what I mean by a properly channeled scientific approach.P: There are planners deciding the strategy.Q: In a major war, there are several different operations involved.R: There are complex issues involving communications between different nerve centres.S: There are factories producing the required armaments.S6: And of course, there are soldiers, commandos, to say nothing of intelligence men, besides many others who do their bit to make a successful attack.The Proper sequence should be:

SRQP
QPSR
PSRQ
RSPQ

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Ordering of Sentences
S1: The 'age of computers' is considered to have begun in 1946. P: Those early computers were huge and heavy affairs, with problems of speed and size. Q: It was only with the introduction of electronics that the computers really came of age. R: But computers were in use long before that. S: They had several rotating shafts and gears which almost always doomed them to slow operation. S6: And now it is difficult to find a field where computers are not used. The Proper sequence should be:

PRQS
PRSQ
RPQS
RPSQ

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Ordering of Sentences
In each question, the first and the last sentences of the passage are numbered S1 and S6 respectively. The rest of the passage is split into four parts. These four sentences are jumbled. Read the sentences and identify their correct and logical order. S1: In other words, grammar grows and changes, and there is no such thing as correct use of English for the past, the present and the future.P: "The door is broke."Q: Yet this would have been correct in Shakespeare's time.R: Today, only an uneducated person would say,"My arm is broke."S: For example, in Shakespeare's play Hamlet, there is the line.S6: All the words that man has invented are divided into eight classes, which are called parts of speech.The Proper sequence should be:

PSQR
RSPQ
SPRQ
QPSR

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Ordering of Sentences
In each question, the first and the last sentences of the passage are numbered S1 and S6 respectively. The rest of the passage is split into four parts. These four sentences are jumbled. Read the sentences and identify their correct and logical order. S1: I never took payment for speaking.P: The Sunday Society would then assure me that on these terms I might lecture on anything I liked and how I liked.Q: It often happened that provincial Sunday societies offered me the usual ten genuine fee to give the usual sort of lecture, avoiding controversial politics and religion.R: Occasionally to avoid embarrassing other lecturers who lived by lecturing, the account was settled by a debit and credit entry, that is, I was credited with the usual fee and expenses and gave it back as a donation to the society.S: I always replied that I never lectured on anything but very controversial politics and religion and that my fee was the price of my railway ticket third class if the place was farther off than I could afford to go at my own expense.S6: In this way I secured perfect freedom of speech, and was warmed against the accusation of being a professional agitator.The Proper sequence should be:

SQPR
SQRP
QSPR
QSRP

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