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: At the age of four, Jagadish Chandra Bose was sent to a village 'pathshala'.P: This step proved beneficial to the boy, for he thus became familiar with his mother tongue and learnt to read and write it.Q: This was very unusual because a man of his father's status was expected to send his son to an English school.R: He also became acquainted with some people of the rich treasures of Indian culture.S: At the same time he mixed with children of all castes and lost the sense of class superiority.S6: His mother, too, reinforced what he learnt and did at school.The Proper sequence should be: QPSR PSRQ RSQP SQRP QPSR PSRQ RSQP SQRP ANSWER DOWNLOAD EXAMIANS APP
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: QSPR QSRP SQPR SQRP QSPR QSRP SQPR SQRP ANSWER DOWNLOAD EXAMIANS APP
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 ancient Indian history the city of Ujjain was quite famous.P: Here lived at one time the poet Kalidasa.Q: He was a famous learned astronomer.R: And here also worked and visited Rajah Jaysingh of Jaipur.S: It was always renowned as a seat of learning.S6: So one can see what a great love all who care for India must feel for the ancientry of Ujjain.The Proper sequence should be: QSRP SPRQ SRPQ PSRQ QSRP SPRQ SRPQ PSRQ ANSWER DOWNLOAD EXAMIANS APP
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: Useful human beings are divided into two classes : those whose work is work and pleasure; and those whose work and pleasure are one.P: The long hours in the office or factory give them keen appetite for pleasure even in its most modest forms.Q: Their life is a natural harmony.R: Of these the former are in majority.S: But fortune's favoured children belong to the second class.S6: For them the working hours are never long enough.The Proper sequence should be: PSQR RPSQ QPRS SQPR PSQR RPSQ QPRS SQPR ANSWER DOWNLOAD EXAMIANS APP
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 QRPS SRQP RQPS PRSQ QRPS SRQP RQPS ANSWER DOWNLOAD EXAMIANS APP