PSI Main 2014 - Paper 1

PSI Main 2014 - Paper 1 Questions And Answers:

आपल्या मित्रांना पाठवा :
81.

Point out the correct sentence : 

82.

A person who strongly believes in the existence of God in this universe is :

83.

Identify the sentence given below 

It's well within my ability to help him.

84.

Change the degree of comparison of the sentence given below :

This is the ideal solution to the problem

(a) This the most ideal solution to the problem. 

(b) This is the idealest solution to the problem.

(c) This solution to the problem is more ideal than all others.

(d) This solution to the problem is idealer than all others. 

Answer Options : 

85.

Rewrite the sentence below using the word 'walking' :

As they walked on the shore, they could hear the surf,

(a) They could hear the surf in walking on the shore

(b) While walking on the shore, they could hear the surf.

(c) They could hear the surf walking on the shore.

(d) During walking on the shore they could hear the surf.

Answer Options :

86.

Punctuate the following to make a rmeaningful sentence :
She told themhesaidwhy we didn't want to leave early.

87.

Which of the following sentences are grammatically correct ?

(a) I suggest that he be allowed to sit for the paper.

(b) Had he my opportunity, he would have minted gold. 

(c) Turn. 

(d) If she was beautiful, she would have gone on stage.

Answer Options :

88.

Choose the most appropriate antonym for the underlined word from the options given
below : 

The organization is known for its probity.

89.

Fill the blank space with a suitable term to make the most acceptable statement :

I now ___________ the chief guest to address the audience. 

90.

Identify the grammatically correct sentence/s : 

(a) None of the brothers has their father's talents.

(b) None of the brothers have their father's talents.

(c) None of the brothers had their father's talents.

(d) None of the brother's had their father's talents. 

Answer Options : 

Directions for question numbers 91 to 95 :

Read the passage below and answer the questions that follow :
          I am not a man of letters, and I am not prepared to say that the many years I have spent in gaol have been the sweetest in my life, but I must say that reading and writing have helped me wonderfully to get through them. I am not a literary man, and I am not a historian; what, indeed, am I? I find it difficult to answer that question. I have been a dabbler in many things; I began with science at college and then took to the law, and after developing various other interests in life, finally adopted the popular and widely practised profession of gaol-going in India !
        You must not take what I have written in these letters as the final authority on any subject. A politician wants to have a say on every subject, and he always pretends to know much more than he actually does. He has to be watched carefully ! These letters of mine are but superficial sketches joined together by a thin thread. I have rambled on, skipping centuries and many important happenings, and then pitching my tent for quite a long time on some event which interested me. As you will notice, my likes and dislikes are pretty obvious, and so also sometimes are my moods in gaol. I do not want you to take all this for granted, there may, indeed, be many errors in my accounts.

        A prison, with no libraries or reference books at hand, is not the most suitable place in which to write on historical subjects. I have had to rely very largely on the many note-books which I have accumulated since I began my visits to gaol twelve years ago. Many books have also come to me here; they have come and gone, for I could not collect a library here. I have shamelessly taken from these books facts and ideas; there is nothing original in what I have written.

91.

The author of this passage has made a modest attempt :

Directions for question numbers 91 to 95 : Read the passage below and answer the questions that follow :
            I am not a man of letters, and I am not prepared to say that the many years I have spent in gaol have been the sweetest in my life, but I must say that reading and writing have helped me wonderfully to get through them. I am not a literary man, and I am not a historian; what, indeed, am I? I find it difficult to answer that question. I have been a dabbler in many things; I began with science at college and then took to the law, and after developing various other interests in life, finally adopted the popular and widely practised profession of gaol-going in India !
                     You must not take what I have written in these letters as the final authority on any subject. A politician wants to have a say on every subject, and he always pretends to know much more than he actually does. He has to be watched carefully! These letters of mine are but superficial sketches joined together by a thin thread. I have rambled on, skipping centuries and many important happenings, and then pitching my tent for quite a long time on some event which interested me. As you will notice, my likes and dislikes are pretty obvious, and so also sometimes are my moods in gaol. I do not want you to take all this for granted, there may, indeed, be many errors in my accounts. A prison, with no libraries or reference books at hand, is not the most suitable place in which to write on historical subjects. I have had to rely very largely on the many note-books which I have accumulated since I began my visits to gaol twelve years ago. Many books have also come to me here; they have come and gone, for I could not collect a library here. I have shamelessly taken from these books facts and ideas; there is nothing original in what I have written.

92.

This passage shows the author as a frank and self-criticizing :

93.

This passage clearly shows that the author has :

94.

It seems that the creative urge has made the author active even in the midst of:

95.

The author does not claim to be an accomplished :

Directions for question numbers 96 to 100 :

Read the passage below and answer the questions that follow :
            It is not as if human nature changes. Just as the hand that held the hand axe was the same shape as the hand that holds the mouse, so people always have and always will seek food, desire sex, care for off-spring, compete for status and avoid pain just like any other animal. Many of the idiosyncrasies of the human species are unchanging too. You can travel to the farthest corner of the earth and still expect to encounter singing, smiling, speech, sexual jealousy and a sense of humour-none of which you would find to be the same in a chimpanzee. You could travel back in time and empathise easily with the motives of Shakespeare, Homer, Confucius and the Buddha. If I could meet the man who painted exquisite images of rhinos on the wall of the Chauvet Cave in southern France 32,000 years ago, I have no doubt that I would find him fully human in every psychological way. There is a great deal of human life that does not change.
             Yet, to say that human life is the same as it was 32,000 years ago would be absurd. In that time my species has multiplied 100,000 percent, from perhaps three million to nearly 7 billion people. It has given itself comforts and luxuries to a level that no other species can even imagine. It has colonized every habitable corner of the planet and explored almost every uninhabitable one. It has altered the appearance, the genetics and the chemistry of the world and pinched perhaps 23 percent of the productivity of all the land planets for its own purposes. It has surrounded itself with peculiar, non-random arrangement of atoms called technologies, which it invents, re-invents and discards almost continuously. This is not true for other creatures, not even brainy ones like chimpanzees, bottlenose dolphins, parrots and octopi. They may occasionally use tools, they may occasionally shift their ecological niche, but they do not raise their standard of living, or experience 'economic growth'. They do not encounter 'poverty either,

96.

Identify the incorrect statement for completing the sentence : 

As compared to 32,000 years ago human life has charged in the following aspects : 

97.

The image of ahinos on the wall of the Chauvet Cave indicate that ____________ .

98.

Technologies, the writer says, are _________.

99.

The writer says that Shakespeare, Homer, Confucius and the Buddha _________ .

100.

According to the passage,the common factor among human being and other animals are _________ . 

(a) desire for sex

(b) singing 

(c) competition for status 

(d) sence of humour

अधिक प्रश्न पुढील पेजवर:

PSI Main 2014 - Paper 1 Question And Answers

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