Select one answer choice from the given options.
Select one entry for the blank. Fill the blank in the way that best completes the text
|
The one thing that may _________ venture capital funds is the uneven distribution of venture outcomes: practically all the returns are concentrated in a few big successes.
For each blank, select an answer choice from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in such a way that they best complete the text.
For each blank, select one entry from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in the way that best completes the text.
|
It's a dense work of analysis, _____(i)______ we associate with the narrative histories of Antony Beevor or John Keegan, so even when immersed in the book—after a purchase-to-start-it lag of several months—I was unable to concentrate on it for more than an hour at a time. As a result it was lugged around to many places. In the process the corners became curled and the spine wrinkled. Spreading in direct proportion to the amount of the book's contents that were being loaded into my brain, those creases became the external embodiment of the _____(ii)______ that reading it required.
For each blank, select an answer choice from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in such a way that they best complete the text.
For each blank, select one entry from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in the way that best completes the text.
|
When Matthew-Arnold wrote his essay on Keats in 1880, the question to which he chiefly addressed himself was whether Keats was something more than an (i)__________ sensuous poet, whether there might be found in his work such intellectual and moral elements as would permit him to be thought of as a great poet, or, since he had died so young, as having been (ii)___________ a great poet.
Passage
The passage is scrollable
Life, they say, is the constant oscillation between the two horns of a dilemma. Going by the history of the Gold Standard, the quotation seems to be worth its weight in gold! Gold Standard allows the governments to sell gold bullion in exchange for circulating currency. Starting somewhere in 610 BC, gold has been the most trusted currency for trade and for determining the value of goods. Since the fascination with gold is rooted in the farthest reaches of recorded human history, it comes hardly as a surprise that alchemists tried for hundreds of years to find a
touchstone that could convert base metals into gold. In the Middle Ages, gold coins issued by the Byzantine Empire were found throughout Europe and the Mediterranean.
The decline of the Byzantine Empire saw a decline in the use of gold as currency and silver became the de-facto medium for trade. However, Sir Isaac Newton, while the master of the Royal Mint, effected a new standard that put gold firmly in the driving seat, once again, as the choice medium for trade.
The Gold Standard, in effect, was the practice of backing circulating currency with full convertibility to gold. Since trade with China involved primarily imports, the cost had to be paid in precious metals, mainly silver. This led to an unprecedented shortfall in the availability of silver as a currency in Europe during the late eighteenth century. This prompted the central banks of European nations to substitute the coins with paper notes (also called bank notes). Since these notes were nothing but a substitute for the silver currency, they continued to be backed by their worth in gold. The first big body blow for the Gold Standard, which proved to be decisive in the long run, was the First World War. Faced with increasingly draining war effort, governments temporarily suspended the convertibility of the bank notes. Germany, after losing the war, could not move back to the gold standard as it had lost all its gold reserves towards war reparations. The process of printing Deutsche Marks, without backing of gold reserves, lead to hyperinflation in Germany, and drove the first nail in the coffin of Gold Reserve.
For each blank, select an answer choice from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in such a way that they best complete the text.
For each blank, select one entry from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in the way that best completes the text.
|
We live in a strange and (i)____________ time that resembles at its heart the hysteria and (ii)____________ fervor of the witch trials of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Men and women are being accused, tried, and convicted with no proof or evidence of guilt other than the word of the accuser. Even when the accusations involve numerous (iii)_____________, inflicting grievous wounds over many years, even decades, the accuser's pointing finger of blame is enough to make believers of judges and juries.
For each blank, select an answer choice from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in such a way that they best complete the text.
For each blank, select one entry from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in the way that best completes the text.
|
In today's (i)__________ world, a crisis is very hard to contain once it spreads beyond its epicenter. And with European banks once thought to be safe now looking decidedly shaky, Europe's crisis now poses a material threat to global stability and prosperity. This is why more (ii)__________ by policymakers is so costly and why the solution is no longer only in Europe's hand. Instead of reacting to the potential consequences of twin sovereign and banking crises, European policymakers have fallen deeper into the "active inertia" policy trap: the temptation to (iii)__________ in the hopes that some immaculate solution will emerge.
For each blank, select an answer choice from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in such a way that they best complete the text.
Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning.
|
When it comes to technology, the art world has often missed the fact that the general public is exposed to a very high level of smart digital ___________ on a daily basis.
Passage
The passage is scrollable
Life, they say, is the constant oscillation between the two horns of a dilemma. Going by the history of the Gold Standard, the quotation seems to be worth its weight in gold! Gold Standard allows the governments to sell gold bullion in exchange for circulating currency. Starting somewhere in 610 BC, gold has been the most trusted currency for trade and for determining the value of goods. Since the fascination with gold is rooted in the farthest reaches of recorded human history, it comes hardly as a surprise that alchemists tried for hundreds of years to find a
touchstone that could convert base metals into gold. In the Middle Ages, gold coins issued by the Byzantine Empire were found throughout Europe and the Mediterranean.
The decline of the Byzantine Empire saw a decline in the use of gold as currency and silver became the de-facto medium for trade. However, Sir Isaac Newton, while the master of the Royal Mint, effected a new standard that put gold firmly in the driving seat, once again, as the choice medium for trade.
The Gold Standard, in effect, was the practice of backing circulating currency with full convertibility to gold. Since trade with China involved primarily imports, the cost had to be paid in precious metals, mainly silver. This led to an unprecedented shortfall in the availability of silver as a currency in Europe during the late eighteenth century. This prompted the central banks of European nations to substitute the coins with paper notes (also called bank notes). Since these notes were nothing but a substitute for the silver currency, they continued to be backed by their worth in gold. The first big body blow for the Gold Standard, which proved to be decisive in the long run, was the First World War. Faced with increasingly draining war effort, governments temporarily suspended the convertibility of the bank notes. Germany, after losing the war, could not move back to the gold standard as it had lost all its gold reserves towards war reparations. The process of printing Deutsche Marks, without backing of gold reserves, lead to hyperinflation in Germany, and drove the first nail in the coffin of Gold Reserve.
Select one or more choices from the given options.
In context of the passage, prior to the First World War, which of the following occurrences would characterize adoption of the Gold Standard in a country?
Passage
The passage is scrollable
Life, they say, is the constant oscillation between the two horns of a dilemma. Going by the history of the Gold Standard, the quotation seems to be worth its weight in gold! Gold Standard allows the governments to sell gold bullion in exchange for circulating currency. Starting somewhere in 610 BC, gold has been the most trusted currency for trade and for determining the value of goods. Since the fascination with gold is rooted in the farthest reaches of recorded human history, it comes hardly as a surprise that alchemists tried for hundreds of years to find a
touchstone that could convert base metals into gold. In the Middle Ages, gold coins issued by the Byzantine Empire were found throughout Europe and the Mediterranean.
The decline of the Byzantine Empire saw a decline in the use of gold as currency and silver became the de-facto medium for trade. However, Sir Isaac Newton, while the master of the Royal Mint, effected a new standard that put gold firmly in the driving seat, once again, as the choice medium for trade.
The Gold Standard, in effect, was the practice of backing circulating currency with full convertibility to gold. Since trade with China involved primarily imports, the cost had to be paid in precious metals, mainly silver. This led to an unprecedented shortfall in the availability of silver as a currency in Europe during the late eighteenth century. This prompted the central banks of European nations to substitute the coins with paper notes (also called bank notes). Since these notes were nothing but a substitute for the silver currency, they continued to be backed by their worth in gold. The first big body blow for the Gold Standard, which proved to be decisive in the long run, was the First World War. Faced with increasingly draining war effort, governments temporarily suspended the convertibility of the bank notes. Germany, after losing the war, could not move back to the gold standard as it had lost all its gold reserves towards war reparations. The process of printing Deutsche Marks, without backing of gold reserves, lead to hyperinflation in Germany, and drove the first nail in the coffin of Gold Reserve.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
In the context in which it appears, "touchstone" most nearly means
Passage
The passage is scrollable
Life, they say, is the constant oscillation between the two horns of a dilemma. Going by the history of the Gold Standard, the quotation seems to be worth its weight in gold! Gold Standard allows the governments to sell gold bullion in exchange for circulating currency. Starting somewhere in 610 BC, gold has been the most trusted currency for trade and for determining the value of goods. Since the fascination with gold is rooted in the farthest reaches of recorded human history, it comes hardly as a surprise that alchemists tried for hundreds of years to find a
touchstone that could convert base metals into gold. In the Middle Ages, gold coins issued by the Byzantine Empire were found throughout Europe and the Mediterranean.
The decline of the Byzantine Empire saw a decline in the use of gold as currency and silver became the de-facto medium for trade. However, Sir Isaac Newton, while the master of the Royal Mint, effected a new standard that put gold firmly in the driving seat, once again, as the choice medium for trade.
The Gold Standard, in effect, was the practice of backing circulating currency with full convertibility to gold. Since trade with China involved primarily imports, the cost had to be paid in precious metals, mainly silver. This led to an unprecedented shortfall in the availability of silver as a currency in Europe during the late eighteenth century. This prompted the central banks of European nations to substitute the coins with paper notes (also called bank notes). Since these notes were nothing but a substitute for the silver currency, they continued to be backed by their worth in gold. The first big body blow for the Gold Standard, which proved to be decisive in the long run, was the First World War. Faced with increasingly draining war effort, governments temporarily suspended the convertibility of the bank notes. Germany, after losing the war, could not move back to the gold standard as it had lost all its gold reserves towards war reparations. The process of printing Deutsche Marks, without backing of gold reserves, lead to hyperinflation in Germany, and drove the first nail in the coffin of Gold Reserve.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
The author uses the opening sentence (see highlighted text) to imply that
Passage
The passage is scrollable
A study of society starts with the human beings living together. In the process of human evolution sociability seems a quality ingrained in human nature. Every individual has his own personality that belongs to him apart from every other individual, but the perpetuation and development of that personality is dependent on relations with other personalities and with the physical environment which limits his activity. As an individual his primary interest is in self, but he finds by experience that he cannot survive in solitude. His impulses, his feelings, and his ideas are due to the relations that he has with that which is outside of himself. He may exercise choice, but it is within the limits set by these outside relations. He may make use of what they can do for him or he may antagonize them, at least he cannot ignore them. How the individual may best adapt himself to his environment and adapt the environment to his own needs helps establish certain definite relationships. Any group of individuals, who have thus consciously established relationships with one another and with their social environment, is a society. The relationships through which the interplay of social forces is constantly going on make up the social organization. The readjustments of these relations for the better adaptation of one individual to another, or to his environment, make up the process of social development. A society which remains in equilibrium is termed static; that which is changing is called dynamic.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
The primary purpose of the passage is to
Passage
The passage is scrollable
A study of society starts with the human beings living together. In the process of human evolution sociability seems a quality ingrained in human nature. Every individual has his own personality that belongs to him apart from every other individual, but the perpetuation and development of that personality is dependent on relations with other personalities and with the physical environment which limits his activity. As an individual his primary interest is in self, but he finds by experience that he cannot survive in solitude. His impulses, his feelings, and his ideas are due to the relations that he has with that which is outside of himself. He may exercise choice, but it is within the limits set by these outside relations. He may make use of what they can do for him or he may antagonize them, at least he cannot ignore them. How the individual may best adapt himself to his environment and adapt the environment to his own needs helps establish certain definite relationships. Any group of individuals, who have thus consciously established relationships with one another and with their social environment, is a society. The relationships through which the interplay of social forces is constantly going on make up the social organization. The readjustments of these relations for the better adaptation of one individual to another, or to his environment, make up the process of social development. A society which remains in equilibrium is termed static; that which is changing is called dynamic.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
It can be inferred that the author of the passage mentions "survive in solitude" primarily to
Select one answer choice from the given options.
Many young, and not so young, brides-to-be, in an effort to look ravishing on 'the' D-day, end up doing more harm than good to themselves. In a desperate effort to drop a few pounds and a couple of dress sizes, they go embrace a deadly combination of over exercising and dieting. What they do not realize is that if the body does not have carbohydrate as the fuel for working out, and we get carbohydrates from food, the body will burn a combination of fat and protein as fuel. Where does the protein come from? It comes from our muscles.
|
All of the following can be inferred from the passage, EXCEPT:
Select one answer choice from the given options.
$2^m - 2^m - 1 + 2^m + 1 = 2^mk$
Select one answer choice from the given options.
2<a<3
Quantity A
| Quantity B
|
$\frac{a-2}{2-a}$
| $\frac{2+a}{a-2}$
|
Select one answer choice from the given options.
ACED is a rectangle, where the area of the rectangle is 28 square centimeters and the length of the rectangle is 7 centimeters. Triangle ADB is a right-angled triangle and BC = 7 – a. The probability that a randomly selected point in rectangle ACED will be in the shaded area of the triangle is $\frac{1}{4}$.
Quantity A
| Quantity B
|
2a
| a+$\frac{1}{2}$
|
Select one answer choice from the given options.
Yerik decided to cycle to his friend's house from his home at a speed of C miles per hour and from his friend's house to college at a speed of G miles per hour. The distance between Yerik's home and his friend's house is double the distance between his friend's house and college, and G = $\frac{1}{2}$C.
Quantity A
| Quantity B
|
Time taken by Yerik to reach his friend's house
| Time taken by Yerik to reach college from his friend's house
|
Select one answer choice from the given options.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
A portion of $3,360 was invested at 6% simple interest per year, while the remaining was invested at 4% simple interest per year. If the annual income earned from the amount invested at 6% was double the amount invested at 4%, then what would be the total income from both the investments after 3 years?
Select one answer choice from the given options.
The number of females playing Hockey is approximately what percent of the total number of players in all the games together?
Select one answer choice from the given options.
What is the ratio of the number of males playing Football to the total number of players in that game?
Select one answer choice from the given options.
The number of males in Swimming forms approximately what percentage of the total number of players in that game?
Select one answer choice from the given options.
Quantity A
| Quantity B
|
$3^5$
| $9^3$
|
For the following question, enter your answer as an integer or a decimal in the given input box.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
In ΔPQR, if $\angle$P = 2q, $\angle$Q = q, $\angle$R = p and 4q – p = 30°, then ΔPQR is a/an
Passage
The passage is scrollable
After hearing a compelling pollution-related story in which a man died, the average person paid more for green products than after having heard scientific facts about water pollution. But the average person in the study was a Democrat. Republicans paid less after hearing the story rather than the simple facts. The deep behavioral divide along party lines is surprising as there is typically little difference in behavior between Democrats and Republicans when it comes to matters such as energy conservation. The findings suggest message framing makes a real difference in people's actions towards the environment. It also suggests there is no single good way to motivate people and policymakers must work harder to tailor messages for specific audiences. Scientists have little scientific evidence to guide them on how best to communicate with the public about environmental threats. Increasingly, scientists have been encouraged to leave their factual comfort zones and tell more stories that connect with people personally and emotionally. But scientists are reluctant to tell such stories because, for example, no one can point to a deadly flood or a forest fire and conclusively say that the deaths were caused by climate change.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
Which of the following may aid in prompting action from the public on environmental issues?
Passage
The passage is scrollable
After hearing a compelling pollution-related story in which a man died, the average person paid more for green products than after having heard scientific facts about water pollution. But the average person in the study was a Democrat. Republicans paid less after hearing the story rather than the simple facts. The deep behavioral divide along party lines is surprising as there is typically little difference in behavior between Democrats and Republicans when it comes to matters such as energy conservation. The findings suggest message framing makes a real difference in people's actions towards the environment. It also suggests there is no single good way to motivate people and policymakers must work harder to tailor messages for specific audiences. Scientists have little scientific evidence to guide them on how best to communicate with the public about environmental threats. Increasingly, scientists have been encouraged to leave their factual comfort zones and tell more stories that connect with people personally and emotionally. But scientists are reluctant to tell such stories because, for example, no one can point to a deadly flood or a forest fire and conclusively say that the deaths were caused by climate change.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
Which of the following presents a circumstance analogous to the one supporting the central argument of the passage?
Passage
The passage is scrollable
This gift that we are born with - to reach out and hear things hundreds of meters away, all these incredible sounds – is in danger of being lost through a generational amnesia. There is a real danger, both of loss of auditory acuity, where we are exposed to noise for so long that we stop listening, but also a loss of listening habits, where we lose the ability to engage with the environment the way we were built to. It's not surprising, people are putting on earphones or even noise cancelling earphones to try and create a quieter or more congenial environment.
As you raise background sound levels, it has the same effect on your hearing that fog would have on your vision. Instead of having this expansive experience of all the sounds around you, you are aware of only a small area around you. Even in most of our cities there are birds and things to appreciate in the environment, and there can be very rich natural choruses to pay attention to. And that is being lost. My advice to you: experience what you are missing. Why natural sounds might be calming to people is unclear but it is speculated that over millions of years of evolution, our brains may have come to associate the more tranquil sounds of the natural world with safety.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
It can be inferred from the passage that the human race has become resistant to listening primarily due to which of the following reasons?
For each blank, select an answer choice from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in such a way that they best complete the text.
For each blank, select one entry from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in the way that best completes the text.
|
What distinguished his new 'gang of four' from the generation it had _____(i)_____ - companies like Intel, Microsoft, Dell and Cisco, which mostly exist to sell gizmos and gadgets and innumerable hours of expensive support services to corporate clients - was that the newcomers sold their products and services to ordinary people. Since there are more ordinary people in the world than there are businesses, and since there's nothing that ordinary people _____(ii)_____, or can't be persuaded to buy when it flashes up alluringly on their screens, _____(iii)_____ is virtually limitless.
Select one or more choices from the given options.
Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning.
|
The series offered a highly reductive and biased version of history, identifying "the West" with qualities such as competition, scientific inquiry and the rule of law, and ________ societies from Asia to the Middle East and Latin America for lacking these virtues.
Select Sentence #1
The passage is scrollable
War is mass murder, and yet, in perhaps the greatest paradox in history, war has nevertheless been the undertaker's worst enemy. Contrary to the general perception, war has been good for something: over the long run, it has made humanity safer and richer. By fighting wars, people have created larger, more organized societies that have reduced the risk that their members will die violently. This observation rests on one of the major findings of archaeologists and anthropologists over the last century: that Stone Age societies were typically tiny. Chiefly because of the challenges of finding food, people lived in bands of a few dozen, villages of a few hundred, or (very occasionally) towns of a few thousand members. People generally worked out their differences peacefully, but if someone decided to use force, there were far fewer constraints on him—or, occasionally, her— than the citizens of modern states are used to. Most of the killing was on a small scale, in vendettas and incessant raiding, although once in a while violence might disrupt an entire band or village so badly that disease and starvation wiped all its members out. But because populations were also small, the steady drip of low-level violence took an appalling toll. By most estimates, 10 to 20 percent of all the people who lived in Stone Age societies died at the hands of other humans. These communities did not need much in the way of internal organization and tended to live on terms of suspicion or even hostility with outsiders.
Select a sentence from the passage, which indicates that the author may be in favor of war.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
A renowned chess grandmaster has defeated the fastest and the biggest computer made so far. The grandmaster comprehensively won the five match series five-zero. One does not have to look far to find the reason for his victory. Although a computer can save thousands of gigabytes of data, it does not have the intuition and anticipation that humans possess. Thus, it can be safely said that computers will always remain, at best, autistic savants.
Which of the following is a necessary assumption for the argument?
Select one or more choices from the given options.
Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning.
|
They are in fact powerful tools that can help people change bad behavior patterns, even those that seem _________.
For each blank, select an answer choice from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in such a way that they best complete the text.
For each blank, select one entry from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in the way that best completes the text.
|
Previously the preserve of dusty, tweed-jacketed academics, physics has enjoyed a/an (i)________ over the past few years. In America, Michio Kaku, a string theorist, has penned several successful books and wowed television and radio audiences with his (ii)________ on esoteric subjects such as the existence of wormholes and the possibility of alien life.
Select one or more choices from the given options.
Select the two answer choices that, when used to complete the sentence, fit the meaning of the sentence as a whole and produce completed sentences that are alike in meaning.
|
The central idea of modern democracy as it evolved in the West is that I am this body and that my self stops at the boundaries of my ___________.
For each blank, select an answer choice from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in such a way that they best complete the text.
For each blank, select one entry from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in the way that best completes the text.
|
Climatologists are _____(i)_____ that political leaders will take any positive action to compensate for the climatic change, or even to allay its effects. They concede that some of the more _____(ii)_____ solutions proposed, such as melting the Arctic ice cap by covering it with black soot or diverting arctic rivers, might create problems far greater than those they solve.
For each blank, select an answer choice from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in such a way that they best complete the text.
For each blank, select one entry from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in the way that best completes the text.
|
We live in a strange and (i)____________ time that resembles at its heart the hysteria and (ii)____________ fervor of the witch trials of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Men and women are being accused, tried, and convicted with no proof or evidence of guilt other than the word of the accuser. Even when the accusations involve numerous (iii)_____________, inflicting grievous wounds over many years, even decades, the accuser's pointing finger of blame is enough to make believers of judges and juries.
For each blank, select an answer choice from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in such a way that they best complete the text.
For each blank, select one entry from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in the way that best completes the text.
|
When Matthew-Arnold wrote his essay on Keats in 1880, the question to which he chiefly addressed himself was whether Keats was something more than an (i)__________ sensuous poet, whether there might be found in his work such intellectual and moral elements as would permit him to be thought of as a great poet, or, since he had died so young, as having been (ii)___________ a great poet.
For each blank, select an answer choice from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in such a way that they best complete the text.
For each blank, select one entry from the corresponding column of choices. Fill all blanks in the way that best completes the text.
|
The novel certainly depicts the oppressive sense of corruption and misery (i)____________, but it takes special care to castigate those eager to exploit the victims of these desperate circumstances. Indeed, an onslaught of everyday (ii)____________ such as the denial of loans, the shame and humiliation inflicted on those in debt, the indignity of having to beg, and so forth forms so painful a backdrop that the murder sometimes gets lost in the larger canvas of (iii)____________ that Dostoyevsky paints in Crime and Punishment.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
Closure, it seems, isn't as easy as seeking it, finding it and moving on. Closure is much more complex than that, affecting both mind and heart. The emotional aspect isn't too hard to grasp, with closure talk abound in popular media. We hear it mentioned in crime shows, television talk shows and even sitcoms. But mental closure, it turns out, is what academics refer to as "cognitive closure". Back in 1923, an Austro-Hungarian psychologist Max Wertheimer first coined the term to describe how our minds have a tendency to fill in what is missing. Our need for cognitive closure is why we feel unsettled when our favorite television series ends on a cliffhanger, or why we get annoyed when we have a name or fact at the tip of our tongues but just can't remember it. Cognitive closure is a way of dealing with the one thing we as human beings are highly averse to: ambiguity. Cognitive closure is about having an answer to your questions. Human beings have a hard time dealing with uncertainty, so "the emphasis is on an answer, not the answer."
|
Which of the following examples can be associated with a need for cognitive closure?
Select one answer choice from the given options.
Quantity A
| Quantity
|
(-4 + 6)6
| (4 – 6)6
|
Select one answer choice from the given options.
How many less/more employees are working in branches 1 and 4 than in branches 2, 3 and 5 together?
Select one answer choice from the given options.
If $\frac{1}{3}rd $of the employees working in branch 3 are females, then what is the ratio of the number of male employees in branch 3 to the total number of employees working in branches 4 and 5?
Select one answer choice from the given options.
What is the angle shown by branch 4 of the bank?
Select one or more choices from the given options.
A box in the shape of a cuboid has length ranging from 2 inches to 4 inches, width ranging from 3 inches to 6 inches and height ranging from 1 inch to 4 inches. Which of the following could be the volume of the box, in cube feet (1 foot = 12 inches)?
Indicate all such values.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
x = {5, 5, 6, 6, 7, 7, 9, 9, 12, 12}
y = {7, 7, 10, 10, 12, 12, 15, 15, 16, 16}
Quantity A
| Quantity B
|
Standard deviation of x
| Standard deviation of y
|
Select one or more choices from the given options.
In the xy-coordinate system, which points do not lie in the exterior of a circle with centre (0, 0) and radius 4?
Indicate all such points.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
The speeds of 'A' and 'B' are 30 miles per hour and 15 meters per second, respectively. 'A' travels for five hours and 'B' travels for three hours. 1 meter per second = 2.236936 mph
Quantity A
| Quantity A
|
Distance traveled by A
| Distance traveled by B
|
Select one answer choice from the given options.
If a dealer marks up the cost of an article by 40% and gives a discount of $\frac{m}{4}$% on its marked price, he gets a profit of 5%. Had he marked up the cost of the article by $\frac{m}{2}$% and given a discount of $\frac{m}{6}$%, what would have been his profit percentage?
For the following question, enter your answer as an integer or a decimal in the given input box.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
John spends $\frac{1}{5}$of his pocket money in the morning and $\frac{1}{5}$ in the afternoon. If he spends $\frac{1}{2}$of the remaining pocket money in the evening, what percentage of pocket money is he left with after spending it in the evening?
Select one answer choice from the given options.
For what value(s) of x will $\sqrt{5-x^2}$be a natural number?
Indicate all such values.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
The heights of 37 sticks were measured and shown in the chart given below.
Height of sticks
| 70
| 81
| 85
| 93
| 110
|
Number of sticks
| 8
| 9
| 7
| 8
| 5
|
Considering the data given above, which of the following statements is true?
For the following question, enter your answer as an integer or a decimal in the given input box.
Select one answer choice from the given options.
In ΔPQR, if $\angle$P = 2q, $\angle$Q = q, $\angle$R = p and 4q – p = 30°, then ΔPQR is a/an