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: Why then, do sharks attack?P: "The only way a shark can warn you is with its mouth and teeth," says Baldridge.Q: In murky water it may simply be a case of mistaken identity.R: Snork bumps and open - mouthed slashings are ways of trying to frighten you off.S: But the most persuasive explanation is that they perceive their victim as a threat.S6: Attacks of this kind may be generated by a swimmer who unwittingly interrupts a courting procedure, trespasses in a shark's territory and cuts off its escape route.The Proper sequence should be:

QSPR
PRQS
PRSQ
QPRS

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Ordering of Sentences
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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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 don't know whether the machines are the masters or we are.P: They must be given or rather 'fed' with coal and given petrol to drink from time to time.Q: Already man spends most of his time looking after and waiting upon them.R: Yet he has grown so dependent on them that they have almost become the masters now.S: It is very true that they were made for the sole purpose of being man's servants.S6: And if they don't get their meals when they expect them, they will just refuse to work.The Proper sequence should be:

SRQP
RSQP
RSPQ
SPQR

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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: The earliest reference to the playing card has been found in China, as long ago as the tenth century.P: They appeared in Italy around 1320.Q: Long before that the Chinese use paper money which was similar in design to the playing cards.R: It is believed that perhaps travelling gypsies introduced them to Europe.S: In olden days cards were used both for telling fortune and playing games.S6: The current pack of 52 cards was only regulated in the seventeenth century.The Proper sequence should be:

QSRP
QRSP
RQSP
RSQP

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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: But Mr. Ford was by no means the inventor of mass production.P: It is difficult, indeed, to say who was.Q: Brilliant men perfected cotton gins and looms.R: The invention of the steam-engine gave manufacturers the cheap power they needed.S: When the first large mills for the manufacture of cloth were built, mass production began.S6: When one huge machine began to perform rapidly due operations previously done slowly by hand, the age of mass production was born.The Proper sequence should be:

PSRQ
PQRS
PSQR
SPQR

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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: Nobody likes staying at home on a public holiday - especially if the weather is fine.P: We had brought plenty of food with us and we got it out of the car.Q: The only difficulty was that millions of other people had the same idea.R: Now everything was ready so we sat down near a path at the foot of a hill.S: We moved out of the city slowly behind a long line of cars, but at last we came to a quiet country road and, after sometime, stopped at a lonely farm.S6: It was very peaceful in the cool grass-until we heard bells ringing at the top of the hill.The Proper sequence should be:

PSQR
PQRS
QSPR
SPQR

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