Banking exam PCI202586 Welcome to your Banking exam PCI202586 Name Email DIRECTIONS (Qs. 1-5) : Study the following information carefully and answer the question given below. K, L, M, P, Q, R, S and T are sitting around a square table in such a way that four of them sit at four corners of the square while four sit in the middle of each of the four sides. The ones who sit at the four corners face outside while those who sit in the middle of the sides face the centre of the table. P sits third to the right of S. S faces the centre. Q sits third to the left of M. M does not sit in the middle of the sides. Only one person sits between Q and R. R is not an immediate neighbour of M. T faces the centre. K is not an immediate neighbour of R. None 1. What is position of M with respect to L? (a) Third to the right (b) M and L sit diagonally opposite to each other (c) Second to the right (d) Second to the left (e) Fifth to the right None 2. Who sits exactly between Q and R? (a) T (b) P (c) K (d) M (e) S and K None 3. Which of the following pairs represents the persons seated in middle of the sides who face each other? (a) S, Q (b) K, L (c) M, P (d) R, T (e) T, Q None 4. Who among the following sit between R and K when counted in anti-clockwise direction from K? (a) No one sits between R and K as R and K are immediate neighbours of each other (b) S, P and L (c) P and Q (d) L and R (e) M, S and T None 5. If K is made to face the opposite direction, who would sit to his immediate right? (a) R (b) Q (c) P (d) T (e) S None DIRECTIONS (Qs. 1-5): Read the following information carefully and answer the question given below: A family of eight people P, Q, R, S, T, U, V & W are sitting around a square table in such a way that each of the female is sitting between two males and vice versa. Four persons are sitting at the middle of each side of the table and facing towards the center of the table. All the mothers present in that family facing their own respective daughters. P is the sister of Q. W is the son in law of S. W is sitting 3rd to the left of S. U is sitting 3rd to the right of R. R is the wife of U. R is the mother of Q. Grandmother of Q is sitting to his first left. Granddaughter of T is sitting to his first right. Only S is sitting between U & Q. Mother of U is sitting to his first right and father is sitting to his 2nd left. None DIRECTIONS (Qs. 1-5): Read the following information carefully and answer the question given below: A family of eight people P, Q, R, S, T, U, V & W are sitting around a square table in such a way that each of the female is sitting between two males and vice versa. Four persons are sitting at the middle of each side of the table and facing towards the center of the table. All the mothers present in that family facing their own respective daughters. P is the sister of Q. W is the son in law of S. W is sitting 3rd to the left of S. U is sitting 3rd to the right of R. R is the wife of U. R is the mother of Q. Grandmother of Q is sitting to his first left. Granddaughter of T is sitting to his first right. Only S is sitting between U & Q. Mother of U is sitting to his first right and father is sitting to his 2nd left.Who is the daughter of T? (a) V (b) P (c) S (d) Q (e) None of these None 2. Who is sitting at first right of the wife of U? A family of eight people P, Q, R, S, T, U, V & W are sitting around a square table in such a way that each of the female is sitting between two males and vice versa. Four persons are sitting at the middle of each side of the table and facing towards the center of the table. All the mothers present in that family facing their own respective daughters. P is the sister of Q. W is the son in law of S. W is sitting 3rd to the left of S. U is sitting 3rd to the right of R. R is the wife of U. R is the mother of Q. Grandmother of Q is sitting to his first left. Granddaughter of T is sitting to his first right. Only S is sitting between U & Q. Mother of U is sitting to his first right and father is sitting to his 2nd left. (a) W (b) Q (c) U (d) P (e) None of these None 3. Which of the following persons are siting between W and S? A family of eight people P, Q, R, S, T, U, V & W are sitting around a square table in such a way that each of the female is sitting between two males and vice versa. Four persons are sitting at the middle of each side of the table and facing towards the center of the table. All the mothers present in that family facing their own respective daughters. P is the sister of Q. W is the son in law of S. W is sitting 3rd to the left of S. U is sitting 3rd to the right of R. R is the wife of U. R is the mother of Q. Grandmother of Q is sitting to his first left. Granddaughter of T is sitting to his first right. Only S is sitting between U & Q. Mother of U is sitting to his first right and father is sitting to his 2nd left. (a) P, R (b) Q, P (c) Q, R (d) V, T (e) None of these None 4. What is position of the daughter of U with respect to U? A family of eight people P, Q, R, S, T, U, V & W are sitting around a square table in such a way that each of the female is sitting between two males and vice versa. Four persons are sitting at the middle of each side of the table and facing towards the center of the table. All the mothers present in that family facing their own respective daughters. P is the sister of Q. W is the son in law of S. W is sitting 3rd to the left of S. U is sitting 3rd to the right of R. R is the wife of U. R is the mother of Q. Grandmother of Q is sitting to his first left. Granddaughter of T is sitting to his first right. Only S is sitting between U & Q. Mother of U is sitting to his first right and father is sitting to his 2nd left. (a) 1st left (b) 2nd right (c) 3rd left (d) 2nd right (e) None of these None 5. Which of the following is not correct according to their position in the table? A family of eight people P, Q, R, S, T, U, V & W are sitting around a square table in such a way that each of the female is sitting between two males and vice versa. Four persons are sitting at the middle of each side of the table and facing towards the center of the table. All the mothers present in that family facing their own respective daughters. P is the sister of Q. W is the son in law of S. W is sitting 3rd to the left of S. U is sitting 3rd to the right of R. R is the wife of U. R is the mother of Q. Grandmother of Q is sitting to his first left. Granddaughter of T is sitting to his first right. Only S is sitting between U & Q. Mother of U is sitting to his first right and father is sitting to his 2nd left. (a) Q, R, T (b) S, U, P (c) W, P, T (d) Q, U, W (e) None of these None DIRECTIONS (Qs. 1-5) : Read the passage carefully and answer the questions given below it. There are some blanks given in the passage based on which some questions are framed, and some words are highlighted as well to help you answer some of the questions. It has become clear that India hasn't seen so many non-violent protests since the days of its freedom struggle as it has over the last few weeks. Photos and videos of large and small gatherings of people expressing disapproval of the Citizenship Amendment act (CAA), which cuts loose from the secular roots of the Indian Constitution through offering legal (i) ...............non-Muslim refugees from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan who have moved to India before 2015, and of the National Registry of Citizens (NRC), which leaves crores of Indians(ii) ..................status is left to be verified by taluk and district-level officials. The patience, determination and strength of the protesters, the creativity and the political energy of their protest songs and slogans, and their renewal of the idea of a hospitable India, the rejuvenation of the spirit of the Constitution on the streets, the cultivation of democratic consciousness among students across campuses: these have been clear to observe in the peaceful dissent gatherings all over India. The texture of the protest voices suggests a larger scope for the ..... II.......: the assault on student autonomy on various campuses, the removal of statehood status from Jammu and Kashmir, the curbing of media freedom, (iii) ..................other troubling issues, (I) have (a) tragic with the anti-CAA concerns. Even as one notices the protest episodes (b) brutal India's democracy, there is no forgetting the (c) coalesced turn of events alongside, with the (d) vitalizing counter-dissent measures of the police in Uttar Pradesh, taking the lives of over 18 protesters, and similar measures in Mangalore taking the lives of two personsFour words have been highlighted in statement (I), which may or may not be at their correct positions. Identify the possible rearrangement of words to make the statementgrammatically and contextually meaningful. (a) B-C & A-D (b) C-D (c) A-C & B-D (d) A-B & C-D (e) No interchange required None 2. It has become clear that India hasn't seen so many non-violent protests since the days of its freedom struggle as it has over the last few weeks. Photos and videos of large and small gatherings of people expressing disapproval of the Citizenship Amendment act (CAA), which cuts loose from the secular roots of the Indian Constitution through offering legal (i) ...............non-Muslim refugees from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan who have moved to India before 2015, and of the National Registry of Citizens (NRC), which leaves crores of Indians(ii) ..................status is left to be verified by taluk and district-level officials. The patience, determination and strength of the protesters, the creativity and the political energy of their protest songs and slogans, and their renewal of the idea of a hospitable India, the rejuvenation of the spirit of the Constitution on the streets, the cultivation of democratic consciousness among students across campuses: these have been clear to observe in the peaceful dissent gatherings all over India. The texture of the protest voices suggests a larger scope for the ..... II.......: the assault on student autonomy on various campuses, the removal of statehood status from Jammu and Kashmir, the curbing of media freedom, (iii) ..................other troubling issues, (I) have (a) tragic with the anti-CAA concerns. Even as one notices the protest episodes (b) brutal India's democracy, there is no forgetting the (c) coalesced turn of events alongside, with the (d) vitalizing counter-dissent measures of the police in Uttar Pradesh, taking the lives of over 18 protesters, and similar measures in Mangalore taking the lives of two personsWhich of the following phrases can fill in the blanks (1), (2) and (3) in the similar sequence as given in the options below?(i) The menace of fake news, among many(ii) Without proper documents vulnerable as their citizenship(iii) With proper documents(iv) Avenues for citizenship only to(v) The lives of two persons(vi) Other troubling issue (a) (iv), (iii), (v) (b) (iii), (vi), (i) (c) (iii), (i), (vi) (d) (iv), (ii), (i) (e) None of these None 3. It has become clear that India hasn't seen so many non-violent protests since the days of its freedom struggle as it has over the last few weeks. Photos and videos of large and small gatherings of people expressing disapproval of the Citizenship Amendment act (CAA), which cuts loose from the secular roots of the Indian Constitution through offering legal (i) ...............non-Muslim refugees from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan who have moved to India before 2015, and of the National Registry of Citizens (NRC), which leaves crores of Indians(ii) ..................status is left to be verified by taluk and district-level officials. The patience, determination and strength of the protesters, the creativity and the political energy of their protest songs and slogans, and their renewal of the idea of a hospitable India, the rejuvenation of the spirit of the Constitution on the streets, the cultivation of democratic consciousness among students across campuses: these have been clear to observe in the peaceful dissent gatherings all over India. The texture of the protest voices suggests a larger scope for the ..... II.......: the assault on student autonomy on various campuses, the removal of statehood status from Jammu and Kashmir, the curbing of media freedom, (iii) ..................other troubling issues, (I) have (a) tragic with the anti-CAA concerns. Even as one notices the protest episodes (b) brutal India's democracy, there is no forgetting the (c) coalesced turn of events alongside, with the (d) vitalizing counter-dissent measures of the police in Uttar Pradesh, taking the lives of over 18 protesters, and similar measures in Mangalore taking the lives of two personsWhich of the following words could replace "assault", as highlighted in the above passage, to make the statement grammatically and contextually correct? (a) Thwack (b) Concede (c) Elocution (d) Contraposition (e) None of these None 4. It has become clear that India hasn't seen so many non-violent protests since the days of its freedom struggle as it has over the last few weeks. Photos and videos of large and small gatherings of people expressing disapproval of the Citizenship Amendment act (CAA), which cuts loose from the secular roots of the Indian Constitution through offering legal (i) ...............non-Muslim refugees from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan who have moved to India before 2015, and of the National Registry of Citizens (NRC), which leaves crores of Indians(ii) ..................status is left to be verified by taluk and district-level officials. The patience, determination and strength of the protesters, the creativity and the political energy of their protest songs and slogans, and their renewal of the idea of a hospitable India, the rejuvenation of the spirit of the Constitution on the streets, the cultivation of democratic consciousness among students across campuses: these have been clear to observe in the peaceful dissent gatherings all over India. The texture of the protest voices suggests a larger scope for the ..... II.......: the assault on student autonomy on various campuses, the removal of statehood status from Jammu and Kashmir, the curbing of media freedom, (iii) ..................other troubling issues, (I) have (a) tragic with the anti-CAA concerns. Even as one notices the protest episodes (b) brutal India's democracy, there is no forgetting the (c) coalesced turn of events alongside, with the (d) vitalizing counter-dissent measures of the police in Uttar Pradesh, taking the lives of over 18 protesters, and similar measures in Mangalore taking the lives of two persons Which of the following words could fit in the blank (II), to make the statement grammatically and contextually correct? Also, it must fit in the other two statements given below.(i) The decision was supported by almost everyone. Baldwin was the only one to -------(ii) No one dared ............from the official party line. (a) Concern (b) Nukes (c) Cirrhosis (d) Dissent (e) Antipopes None 5. It has become clear that India hasn't seen so many non-violent protests since the days of its freedom struggle as it has over the last few weeks. Photos and videos of large and small gatherings of people expressing disapproval of the Citizenship Amendment act (CAA), which cuts loose from the secular roots of the Indian Constitution through offering legal (i) ...............non-Muslim refugees from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan who have moved to India before 2015, and of the National Registry of Citizens (NRC), which leaves crores of Indians(ii) ..................status is left to be verified by taluk and district-level officials. The patience, determination and strength of the protesters, the creativity and the political energy of their protest songs and slogans, and their renewal of the idea of a hospitable India, the rejuvenation of the spirit of the Constitution on the streets, the cultivation of democratic consciousness among students across campuses: these have been clear to observe in the peaceful dissent gatherings all over India. The texture of the protest voices suggests a larger scope for the ..... II.......: the assault on student autonomy on various campuses, the removal of statehood status from Jammu and Kashmir, the curbing of media freedom, (iii) ..................other troubling issues, (I) have (a) tragic with the anti-CAA concerns. Even as one notices the protest episodes (b) brutal India's democracy, there is no forgetting the (c) coalesced turn of events alongside, with the (d) vitalizing counter-dissent measures of the police in Uttar Pradesh, taking the lives of over 18 protesters, and similar measures in Mangalore taking the lives of two personsWhich of the following statements is not true as per the information given in the passage?(A) It has become clear that India hasn't seen so many non-violent protests since the days of its freedom struggle(B) These have been clear to observe in the peaceful dissent gatherings all over India(C) Photos and videos of large and small gatherings of people expressing approval of the Citizenship Amendment act (a) Both B & C (b) Both A & B (c) Only C (d) Only B (e) All are true None DIRECTIONS (Qs. 1-10) : In the following passage, there are blanks each of which has been numbered. These numbers are printed below the passage and against each five words have been suggested, one of which fills the blanks appropriately. Find out the appropriate word in each case. Traditional bank architecture is based on bank branches. These branches ensure the physical (1) of a customer's savings. A customer may go there to deposit and withdraw money, (2) loans and (3) in other financial transactions. In the past two decades, banking architecture has changed the Automated Teller Machine (ATM). There has been a big (4) and credit and debit cards have created new financial spaces. (5) the bank branch has remained the bedrock of the banking system after all a person needs a bank account in a branch before he can operate a debit or ATM card. This may be about to change as technocrats now (6) cell phones as the new architecture of virtual banks. This has the potential to make branches (7). Cell phone banking looks especially relevant for India, since it can penetrate the countryside cheaply and (8). The world over cell phones are spreding at a (9) rate and in India alone new cell phone connection are growing at the rate of six million a month a rate of customer (10) that no bank can dream of. (a) Knowledge (b) security (c) presence (d) confidentiality (e) guarantee None 2. Traditional bank architecture is based on bank branches. These branches ensure the physical (1) of a customer's savings. A customer may go there to deposit and withdraw money, (2) loans and (3) in other financial transactions. In the past two decades, banking architecture has changed the Automated Teller Machine (ATM). There has been a big (4) and credit and debit cards have created new financial spaces. (5) the bank branch has remained the bedrock of the banking system after all a person needs a bank account in a branch before he can operate a debit or ATM card. This may be about to change as technocrats now (6) cell phones as the new architecture of virtual banks. This has the potential to make branches (7). Cell phone banking looks especially relevant for India, since it can penetrate the countryside cheaply and (8). The world over cell phones are spreding at a (9) rate and in India alone new cell phone connection are growing at the rate of six million a month a rate of customer (10) that no bank can dream of. (a) negotiate (b) advance (c) credit (d) disburse (e) sanction None 3. Traditional bank architecture is based on bank branches. These branches ensure the physical (1) of a customer's savings. A customer may go there to deposit and withdraw money, (2) loans and (3) in other financial transactions. In the past two decades, banking architecture has changed the Automated Teller Machine (ATM). There has been a big (4) and credit and debit cards have created new financial spaces. (5) the bank branch has remained the bedrock of the banking system after all a person needs a bank account in a branch before he can operate a debit or ATM card. This may be about to change as technocrats now (6) cell phones as the new architecture of virtual banks. This has the potential to make branches (7). Cell phone banking looks especially relevant for India, since it can penetrate the countryside cheaply and (8). The world over cell phones are spreding at a (9) rate and in India alone new cell phone connection are growing at the rate of six million a month a rate of customer (10) that no bank can dream of. (a) pursue (b) interact (c) operate (d) enable (e) engage None 4. Traditional bank architecture is based on bank branches. These branches ensure the physical (1) of a customer's savings. A customer may go there to deposit and withdraw money, (2) loans and (3) in other financial transactions. In the past two decades, banking architecture has changed the Automated Teller Machine (ATM). There has been a big (4) and credit and debit cards have created new financial spaces. (5) the bank branch has remained the bedrock of the banking system after all a person needs a bank account in a branch before he can operate a debit or ATM card. This may be about to change as technocrats now (6) cell phones as the new architecture of virtual banks. This has the potential to make branches (7). Cell phone banking looks especially relevant for India, since it can penetrate the countryside cheaply and (8). The world over cell phones are spreding at a (9) rate and in India alone new cell phone connection are growing at the rate of six million a month a rate of customer (10) that no bank can dream of. (a) drawback (b) hurdle (c) consequence (d) luxury (e) innovation None 5. Traditional bank architecture is based on bank branches. These branches ensure the physical (1) of a customer's savings. A customer may go there to deposit and withdraw money, (2) loans and (3) in other financial transactions. In the past two decades, banking architecture has changed the Automated Teller Machine (ATM). There has been a big (4) and credit and debit cards have created new financial spaces. (5) the bank branch has remained the bedrock of the banking system after all a person needs a bank account in a branch before he can operate a debit or ATM card. This may be about to change as technocrats now (6) cell phones as the new architecture of virtual banks. This has the potential to make branches (7). Cell phone banking looks especially relevant for India, since it can penetrate the countryside cheaply and (8). The world over cell phones are spreding at a (9) rate and in India alone new cell phone connection are growing at the rate of six million a month a rate of customer (10) that no bank can dream of. (a) Despite (b) Although (c) Even (d) Yet (e) Until None 6. Traditional bank architecture is based on bank branches. These branches ensure the physical (1) of a customer's savings. A customer may go there to deposit and withdraw money, (2) loans and (3) in other financial transactions. In the past two decades, banking architecture has changed the Automated Teller Machine (ATM). There has been a big (4) and credit and debit cards have created new financial spaces. (5) the bank branch has remained the bedrock of the banking system after all a person needs a bank account in a branch before he can operate a debit or ATM card. This may be about to change as technocrats now (6) cell phones as the new architecture of virtual banks. This has the potential to make branches (7). Cell phone banking looks especially relevant for India, since it can penetrate the countryside cheaply and (8). The world over cell phones are spreding at a (9) rate and in India alone new cell phone connection are growing at the rate of six million a month a rate of customer (10) that no bank can dream of. (a) View (b) realize (c) Display (d) engineer (e) assess None 7. Traditional bank architecture is based on bank branches. These branches ensure the physical (1) of a customer's savings. A customer may go there to deposit and withdraw money, (2) loans and (3) in other financial transactions. In the past two decades, banking architecture has changed the Automated Teller Machine (ATM). There has been a big (4) and credit and debit cards have created new financial spaces. (5) the bank branch has remained the bedrock of the banking system after all a person needs a bank account in a branch before he can operate a debit or ATM card. This may be about to change as technocrats now (6) cell phones as the new architecture of virtual banks. This has the potential to make branches (7). Cell phone banking looks especially relevant for India, since it can penetrate the countryside cheaply and (8). The world over cell phones are spreding at a (9) rate and in India alone new cell phone connection are growing at the rate of six million a month a rate of customer (10) that no bank can dream of. (a) essential (b) obsolete (c) extant (d) retreat (e) expired None 8. Traditional bank architecture is based on bank branches. These branches ensure the physical (1) of a customer's savings. A customer may go there to deposit and withdraw money, (2) loans and (3) in other financial transactions. In the past two decades, banking architecture has changed the Automated Teller Machine (ATM). There has been a big (4) and credit and debit cards have created new financial spaces. (5) the bank branch has remained the bedrock of the banking system after all a person needs a bank account in a branch before he can operate a debit or ATM card. This may be about to change as technocrats now (6) cell phones as the new architecture of virtual banks. This has the potential to make branches (7). Cell phone banking looks especially relevant for India, since it can penetrate the countryside cheaply and (8). The world over cell phones are spreding at a (9) rate and in India alone new cell phone connection are growing at the rate of six million a month a rate of customer (10) that no bank can dream of. (a) moderately (b) occasionally (c) compulsorily (d) indiscriminately (e) effectively None 9. Traditional bank architecture is based on bank branches. These branches ensure the physical (1) of a customer's savings. A customer may go there to deposit and withdraw money, (2) loans and (3) in other financial transactions. In the past two decades, banking architecture has changed the Automated Teller Machine (ATM). There has been a big (4) and credit and debit cards have created new financial spaces. (5) the bank branch has remained the bedrock of the banking system after all a person needs a bank account in a branch before he can operate a debit or ATM card. This may be about to change as technocrats now (6) cell phones as the new architecture of virtual banks. This has the potential to make branches (7). Cell phone banking looks especially relevant for India, since it can penetrate the countryside cheaply and (8). The world over cell phones are spreding at a (9) rate and in India alone new cell phone connection are growing at the rate of six million a month a rate of customer (10) that no bank can dream of. (a) phenomenal (b) gradual (c) proportionate (d) competitive (e) projected None 10. Traditional bank architecture is based on bank branches. These branches ensure the physical (1) of a customer's savings. A customer may go there to deposit and withdraw money, (2) loans and (3) in other financial transactions. In the past two decades, banking architecture has changed the Automated Teller Machine (ATM). There has been a big (4) and credit and debit cards have created new financial spaces. (5) the bank branch has remained the bedrock of the banking system after all a person needs a bank account in a branch before he can operate a debit or ATM card. This may be about to change as technocrats now (6) cell phones as the new architecture of virtual banks. This has the potential to make branches (7). Cell phone banking looks especially relevant for India, since it can penetrate the countryside cheaply and (8). The world over cell phones are spreding at a (9) rate and in India alone new cell phone connection are growing at the rate of six million a month a rate of customer (10) that no bank can dream of. (a) discount (b) base (c) expansion (d) satisfaction (e) relationship None DIRECTIONS (Qs. 1-5): In the following graph the number of laptops manufactured by six different companies in the years 2013 and 2014 has been given. Read the graph carefully and answer the questions The respective ratio between the number of laptops manufactured by Lenovo in 2013 and that by Abascus in 2014 is (a) 8 : 7 (b) 7 : 8 (c) 3 : 5 (d) 5 : 3 (e) None of these None 2. What is the average number of laptops (in thousands) manufactured by all companies taken together in 2013 ? (a) 22 (b) 22.5 (c) 32.5 (d) 23.5 (e) 27.5 None 3. What is the percentage increase in production of laptops by HP in 2014 in comparison to that in 2013 ? (a) 125 (b) 100 (c) 150 (d) 250 (e) None of these None 4. The difference between the number of laptops manufactured by Apple, Lenovo and Samsung in 2013 and that by Dell,HP and Abascus in 2014 is (a) 5500 (b) 4550 (c) 3550 (d) 4500 (e) 5000 None 5. In 2014, which company manufactured the maximum number of laptops? (a) Abascus (b) Lenovo (c) Dell (d) Samsung (e) HP None