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: Proverbs contain homely but universal truths.P: They point out the incongruities of situations in life.Q: Naturally, therefore, they are translatable from one language to another.R: Therefore, their appeal is direct.S: Many of them had their birth in folk literature.S6: They are everyman's philosophy.The Proper sequence should be:

QPRS
QSPR
RPSQ
SPQR

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Ordering of Sentences
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:

QPSR
SPRQ
RSPQ
PSQR

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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: He tried the door.P: The room was neat and clean.Q: Then he stepped into the room.R: He waited for a minute or two.S: It opened easily and he peeped in.S6: He was careful not to touch anything.The Proper sequence should be:

SPRQ
QSPR
PQRS
RPQS

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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: Governments are instituted among men to secure their certain inalienable rights.P: Accordingly, men are more disposed to suffer than to right themselves by abolishing the forms of governments to which they are accustomed.Q: But prudence will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes.R: They derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, and therefore, can also be changed by them.S: But whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these rights of the people, it is their duty to throw off such a government.S6: Such was the necessity which constrained the united colonies of America to give up their allegiance to the British Crown and declare themselves free and independent states.The Proper sequence should be:

PRSQ
SRQP
QRPS
RQPS

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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: You know my wife, Madhavi, always urged me to give up smoking.P : I really gave it up.Q : And so When I went to jail I said to myself I really must give it up, if for no other reason than of being self-reliant.R : When I emerged from jail, I wanted to tell her of my great triumph.S : But when I met her, there she was with a packet of cigarettes.S6: poor girl!.The Proper sequence should be:

PSRQ
SPQR
QPRS
RSPQ

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