Study the following information carefully and answer the questions given below:
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H and J are sitting around a circle facing the center. C is third to the left of A. E is fourth to the right of A. D is fourth to the left of J who is second to the right of A. F is third to the right of B. G is not an immediate neighbour of A.
In which of the following groups is the third person sitting between the first and the second persons ?
In these questions, relationship between different elements is shown in the statements. The statements are followed by two Conclusions numbered I and II. Study the Conclusions based on the given statements and select the appropriate answer.
Statement :
Conclusions :
I. I < L
II. L = I
In each of the questions below are given three statements followed by three conclusions numbered I, II and III. You have to take the given statements to be true even if they seem to be at variance from commonly known facts. Read all the conclusions and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statements disregarding commonly known facts.
Statements:
Some rivers are jungles.
All jungles are ponds.
All ponds are trees.
Conclusions:
I. Some trees are rivers.
II. Some ponds are rivers.
III. All rivers are trees.
Statements:
All desks are mirrors.
Some mirrors are houses.
All houses are buildings.
Conclusions:
I. Some buildings are mirrors.
II. Some houses are desks.
III. Some buildings are desks.
Statements:
All lanterns are walls.
No wall is brick.
Some bricks are chairs.
Conclusions:
I. Some chairs are lanterns.
II. Some bricks are lanterns.
III. No chair is lantern.
Statements:
Some calculators are notes.
Some notes are books.
Some books are pens.
Conclusions:
I. Some pens are notes
II. Some books are calculators.
III. Some pens are calculators.
Statements :
Some buses are doors
Some doors are windows.
All windows are gardens.
Conclusions:
I. Some gardens are buses.
II. Some windows are buses.
III. Some gardens are doors.
Each vowel in the word ’GAMBLE’ is substituted by the next letter in the English alphabet and each consonant is substituted by the previous letter of the English alphabet. If the new letters are then rearranged in alphabetical order, which of the following will be the fourth letter from the right end after the rearrangement ?
How many meaningful English words can be made with the letters NNEO using each letter only once in each word ?
What should come next in the following letter series ?
A B C D P Q R S A B C D E P Q R S T A B C D E F P Q R S T
How many such pairs of digits are there in the number 5134876, each of which has as many digits between them in the number as when the digits are rearranged in ascending order within the number ?
If it is possible to make only one such number with the first, the fourth and the sixth digits of the number 531697 which is the perfect square of a two digit even number, which of the following will be the second digit of the two digit even number. If no such number can be made, give ’@’ as the answer and if more than one such number can be made, give ’©’ as the answer.
Study the following arrangement carefully and answer the questions given below:
F @ 5 3 R $ J P E 1 H % I Q 4 B 8 A W 2 U G 6 ★ 9 G Z N M © V
How many such numbers are there in the above arrangement, each of which is immediately preceded by a consonant and not immediately followed by a consonant ?
Four of the following five are alike in a certain way based on their positions in the above arrangement and so form a group. Which is the one that does not belong to that group ?
How many such symbols are there in the above arrangement, each of which is immediately followed by a letter but not immediately preceded by a letter ?
Which of the following is the tenth to the left of the eighteenth from the left end of the above arrangement ?
What should come in place of the question mark (?) in the following series based on the above arrangement ? 5RJ 1%Q 8WU ?
Study the following information carefully and answer the questions given below :
Seven friends viz., Bharat, Kamal, Ashok, Ali, Harleen, Serena and Joel have birthdays on one of the seven days of the same week starting on Monday and ending on Sunday but not necessarily in the same order.
Joel has birthday on one of the days before Wednesday. Only three persons have birthdays between Joel and Kamal. Only two persons have birthdays between Ashok and Harleen. Harleen’s birthday is before Ashok’s but not on Thursday. As many persons have birthdays between Ashok and Kamal as between Serena and Bharat. Serena’s birthday is on one of the days before Ashok’s.
On which of the following days is Bharat’s birthday?
Harleen is related to Wednesday in a certain way based on the given arrangement. In the same way Bharat is related to Sunday. To which of the following days is Joel related to following the same pattern?
Each of the questions below consists of a question and two statements numbered I and II given below it. You have to decide whether the data provided in the statements are sufficient to answer the question.
Read both the statements and
Among P, Q, R, S and T, each having a different height, who is the tallest ?
I. T is taller than only P among them.
II. S is shorter than only R among them.
How many daughters does A have ?
I. A has four children.
II. B and C are sisters of D who is son of A.
How is ’jump’ written in a certain code language ?
I. ’jump and play’ is written as ’3 5 7’ in that code language.
II. ’play for now’ is written as ’5 9 8’ in that code language.
What is R’s position from the left end in a row of children facing South ?
I. There are forty children in the row.
II. D is tenth to the left of R and fifteenth from the right end of the row.
Towards which direction was D facing when he started his journey ?
I. D walked 20 metres after he started, took a right turn and walked 30 metres and again took a right turn and faced West.
II. D walked 20 metres after he started, took a left turn and walked, 30 metres and again took left turn and faced West.