Ordering of Sentences
S1: Welcome to Madam Tussaud's. P: Famous faces, notorious faces haunt these halls; royalty, and world leaders mingling with sports stars and murderers. Q: But don't expect any responses to your smiles or greetings. R: Don't be surprised at anything you see here. S: See how many you can recognise. S6: These life-like, casually posed figures are mere wax statues, though they may look alive. The Proper sequence should be:

RPSQ
SQRP
QRPS
PSRQ

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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: American private lives may seem shallow.P: Students would walk away with books they had not paid for.Q: A Chinese journalist commented on a curious institution: the library.R: Their public morality, however, impressed visitors.S: But in general they returned them.S6: This would not happen in China, he said.The Proper sequence should be:

RPSQ
PSQR
QPSR
RQPS

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Ordering of Sentences
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:

SQRP
QPSR
RSQP
PSRQ

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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:

RSPQ
QPSR
SPRQ
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: 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:

RPQS
PRQS
QPRS
QSPR

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