Study the 10 statements given below and answer the questions :: 1. Six businessmen from six different nations are staying in different rooms in succession in the same row in a hotel. 2. Each of them owns a different number of cars and has donated to different number of institutions during the last year. 3. The businessman in Room no. 102 owns twice as many as the number of cars owned by the businessmen who has donated to 8 institutions in the last year. 4. The businessman from Uruguay and the businessman in Room no. 106 together own 40 cars in total. 5. The businessman from Argentina owns 8 cars less than the businessman from England but donated to 10 more instillations in the last year. 6. Four times the number of cars owned by the businessman in Room no. 104 is lesser than the number of institutions to which he has donated in the last year. 7. The businessman in Room No. 103 owns 12 cars and donated to 8 institutions in the last year. 8. The businessman who owns 16 cars donated to 24 institutions in the last year. 9. The businessman in Room no. 105 owns 8 cars and donated to 2 institutions less than those donated by the businessman from Canada in the last year. 10. The Brazilian businessman is staying two rooms ahead of the English businessman who is staying two rooms ahead of the Canadian businessman.
Answer: D From Information 7, the occupant of room number 103 owns 12 cars and he donated to 8 institutions. Then from Information 3, occupant of room number 102 must be having 24 cars. From information 6, occupant of room number 104 must be having 4z number of cars and donated to y number of institutions where 4z < y. From information 9, occupant of room number 105 owns 8 cars and if the businessman from Canada donated to ‘x’ number of institutions, then the occupant of room number 105 must have donated to (x–2) number of institutions. From information 10, residents of Canada, England and Brazil are staying in alternate rooms in that order starting from left.Though room numbers of residents of Canada, England and Brazil can also be 102, 104 and 106 respectively. But from question 80 we can conclude that room numbers are 101, 103, and 105 respectively as room number 106 is not given for Brazilian Businessman. Although the nationality of the occupant of room number 106 is not known from the information given, it can be found out to be Germany from the options of the 3rd question in the set. We can compile the following table now and answer all questions.
Room no.
101
102
103
104
105
106
Nationality
Canada
Uruguay
England
Argentina
Brazil
Germany
Number of cars
24
12
4
8
16
Number of institution in which they have donated.
x
8
18
x-2
24
Q. No. 2:
What is the number of institutions to which the Argentinean businessman donated in the last year?
Answer: C From Information 7, the occupant of room number 103 owns 12 cars and he
donated to 8 institutions. Then from Information 3, occupant of room
number 102 must be having 24 cars. From information 6, occupant of room
number 104 must be having 4z number of cars and donated to y number of
institutions where 4z < y. From information 9, occupant of room
number 105 owns 8 cars and if the businessman from Canada donated to ‘x’
number of institutions, then the occupant of room number 105 must have
donated to (x–2) number of institutions. From information 10,
residents of Canada, England and Brazil are staying in alternate rooms
in that order starting from left.Though room numbers of residents of
Canada, England and Brazil can also be 102, 104 and 106 respectively.
But from question 80 we can conclude that room numbers are 101, 103, and
105 respectively as room number 106 is not given for Brazilian
Businessman. Although the nationality of the occupant of room
number 106 is not known from the information given, it can be found out
to be Germany from the options of the 3rd question in the set. We can
compile the following table now and answer all
questions.
Room no.
101
102
103
104
105
106
Nationality
Canada
Uruguay
England
Argentina
Brazil
Germany
Number of cars
24
12
4
8
16
Number of institution in which they have
donated.
x
8
18
x-2
24
Q. No. 3:
The businessman of which country is staying in Room no. 106?
Answer: D From Information 7, the occupant of room number 103 owns 12 cars and he
donated to 8 institutions. Then from Information 3, occupant of room
number 102 must be having 24 cars. From information 6, occupant of room
number 104 must be having 4z number of cars and donated to y number of
institutions where 4z < y. From information 9, occupant of room
number 105 owns 8 cars and if the businessman from Canada donated to ‘x’
number of institutions, then the occupant of room number 105 must have
donated to (x–2) number of institutions. From information 10,
residents of Canada, England and Brazil are staying in alternate rooms
in that order starting from left.Though room numbers of residents of
Canada, England and Brazil can also be 102, 104 and 106 respectively.
But from question 80 we can conclude that room numbers are 101, 103, and
105 respectively as room number 106 is not given for Brazilian
Businessman. Although the nationality of the occupant of room
number 106 is not known from the information given, it can be found out
to be Germany from the options of the 3rd question in the set. We can
compile the following table now and answer all
questions.
Room no.
101
102
103
104
105
106
Nationality
Canada
Uruguay
England
Argentina
Brazil
Germany
Number of cars
24
12
4
8
16
Number of institution in which they have
donated.
x
8
18
x-2
24
Q. No. 4:
The businessman of which country has donated to 24 institutions in the last year?
Answer: D From Information 7, the occupant of room number 103 owns 12 cars and he
donated to 8 institutions. Then from Information 3, occupant of room
number 102 must be having 24 cars. From information 6, occupant of room
number 104 must be having 4z number of cars and donated to y number of
institutions where 4z < y. From information 9, occupant of room
number 105 owns 8 cars and if the businessman from Canada donated to ‘x’
number of institutions, then the occupant of room number 105 must have
donated to (x–2) number of institutions. From information 10,
residents of Canada, England and Brazil are staying in alternate rooms
in that order starting from left.Though room numbers of residents of
Canada, England and Brazil can also be 102, 104 and 106 respectively.
But from question 80 we can conclude that room numbers are 101, 103, and
105 respectively as room number 106 is not given for Brazilian
Businessman. Although the nationality of the occupant of room
number 106 is not known from the information given, it can be found out
to be Germany from the options of the 3rd question in the set. We can
compile the following table now and answer all
questions.
Room no.
101
102
103
104
105
106
Nationality
Canada
Uruguay
England
Argentina
Brazil
Germany
Number of cars
24
12
4
8
16
Number of institution in which they have
donated.
x
8
18
x-2
24
Q. No. 5:
The businessman of which country owns the highest number of cars?
Answer: B
From Information 7, the occupant of room number 103 owns 12 cars and he
donated to 8 institutions. Then from Information 3, occupant of room
number 102 must be having 24 cars. From information 6, occupant of room
number 104 must be having 4z number of cars and donated to y number of
institutions where 4z < y. From information 9, occupant of room
number 105 owns 8 cars and if the businessman from Canada donated to ‘x’
number of institutions, then the occupant of room number 105 must have
donated to (x–2) number of institutions. From information 10,
residents of Canada, England and Brazil are staying in alternate rooms
in that order starting from left.Though room numbers of residents of
Canada, England and Brazil can also be 102, 104 and 106 respectively.
But from question 80 we can conclude that room numbers are 101, 103, and
105 respectively as room number 106 is not given for Brazilian
Businessman. Although the nationality of the occupant of room
number 106 is not known from the information given, it can be found out
to be Germany from the options of the 3rd question in the set. We can
compile the following table now and answer all
questions.
Room no.
101
102
103
104
105
106
Nationality
Canada
Uruguay
England
Argentina
Brazil
Germany
Number of cars
24
12
4
8
16
Number of institutionin which they have
donated.
x
8
18
x-2
24
Q. No. 6:
How many cars are owned by the English businessman?
Answer: B
From Information 7, the occupant of room number 103 owns 12 cars and he
donated to 8 institutions. Then from Information 3, occupant of room
number 102 must be having 24 cars. From information 6, occupant of room
number 104 must be having 4z number of cars and donated to y number of
institutions where 4z < y. From information 9, occupant of room
number 105 owns 8 cars and if the businessman from Canada donated to ‘x’
number of institutions, then the occupant of room number 105 must have
donated to (x–2) number of institutions. From information 10,
residents of Canada, England and Brazil are staying in alternate rooms
in that order starting from left.Though room numbers of residents of
Canada, England and Brazil can also be 102, 104 and 106 respectively.
But from question 80 we can conclude that room numbers are 101, 103, and
105 respectively as room number 106 is not given for Brazilian
Businessman. Although the nationality of the occupant of room
number 106 is not known from the information given, it can be found out
to be Germany from the options of the 3rd question in the set. We can
compile the following table now and answer all
questions.
Room no.
101
102
103
104
105
106
Nationality
Canada
Uruguay
England
Argentina
Brazil
Germany
Number of cars
24
12
4
8
16
Number of institutionin which they have
donated.
x
8
18
x-2
24
The question given below are based on the following information :: i) Five girls - Seema, Reema, Neeta, Mona and Vena have total five tickets of movie theaters - Priya,Chanakya, M2K, PVR Saket, Styam where movies- Gangster, Khiladi, Hero, Saalaam Namaste and Iqbal are currently playing. Each girl has one movie ticket of one of the five theaters. ii) Movie Gangster is running in Priya theater whose ticket is not with Veena and Seema. iii) Mona has ticket of Iqbal movie. iv) Neeta has ticket for the M2K theater. Veena has the ticket of Satyam theatre where Khiladi is not running. v) In PVR Saket theater Saalaam Namaste is running.
Q. No. 1:
Which is the correct combination of the Theater - Girl - Movie?
Answer the questions based on following information ::
Four persons (1) Mohit, (2) Manohar, (3) Prasant and (4) Dinesh each had some initial money with them. They all were playing bridge in a way that the lower doubled the money of each of the other three persons from his share. They played four rounds and each person lost one round in the order 1, 2, 3 and 4 as mentioned above. At the end of fourth round each person had Rs. 32000/-.
Answer: C
If we move from the fourth round, after which each of them had Rs.32000 with him, and move to the third, second, first and finally to the beginning of the game then we can draw the following table. (The figures are in Rs’000)
Mohit
Manohar
Prashant
Dinesh
Initially
66
34
18
10
Round-1
4
68
36
20
Round-2
8
8
72
40
Round-3
16
16
16
80
Round-4
32
32
32
32
Q. No. 2:
What was the mount with Manohar at the end of first round?
Answer: A If we move from the fourth round, after which each of them had Rs.32000
with him, and move to the third, second, first and finally to the
beginning of the game then we can draw the following
table.
(The figures are in Rs’000)
Mohit
Manohar
Prashant
Dinesh
Initially
66
34
18
10
Round-1
4
68
36
20
Round-2
8
8
72
40
Round-3
16
16
16
80
Round-4
32
32
32
32
Q. No. 3:
Who had the lowest amount at any round of play throughout the tournament?
Answer: A If we move from the fourth round, after which each of them had Rs.32000
with him, and move to the third, second, first and finally to the
beginning of the game then we can draw the following
table.
(The figures are in Rs’000)
Mohit
Manohar
Prashant
Dinesh
Initially
66
34
18
10
Round-1
4
68
36
20
Round-2
8
8
72
40
Round-3
16
16
16
80
Round-4
32
32
32
32
Q. No. 4:
What was the amount with Prasant at the end of the second round?
Answer: B If we move from the fourth round, after which each of them had Rs.32000
with him, and move to the third, second, first and finally to the
beginning of the game then we can draw the following
table.
(The figures are in Rs’000)
Mohit
Manohar
Prashant
Dinesh
Initially
66
34
18
10
Round-1
4
68
36
20
Round-2
8
8
72
40
Round-3
16
16
16
80
Round-4
32
32
32
32
The question given below are based on the following information ::
While selecting candidates for positions of engineering, a software firm followed criteria as given below. A candidate must i. be an engineering graduate with at least 60% marks at degree and 80% marks at higher secondary level. ii. have at least one year’s experience of working iii. be ready it sign a bond of three years iv. must not be more than 28 years of age on 1.2.2007. However, if a candidate fulfills all the criteria except - a). at (i) above has obtained 50% marks at degree and 70%at higher secondary respectively and has at least three years experience of working, the case may be referred to the director of the firm. b). at (iii) above, but is willing to pay an amount of 1 lakh if required to leave, the case may be referred to the president of the firm c. at (ii) above but is a computer engineer, the case may be referred of DGM. Based on the above criteria and the information given in each of the following cases, you have to take the decision on employing a candidate. You are not to assume anything and in the absence of adequate information, your answer will be not to be selected. The case is given to you as on 1.2.2007.
Q. No. 1:
Amar is a mechanical engineer with 65% marks at degree and 88% marks at HSC. He completed his engineering degree in 2003 at the age of 22 years and immediately started working in an engineering firm. He id keenly interested in going to USA and is not ready to sign a bond. However, he has not mind paying an amount of Rs. 1 lakh
Answer: B Amar satisfies the conditions in (i) and (iv). He does not meet the condition in (iii) but as he is willing to pay an amount of Rs.1 lakh, if required to leave the software firm, his case could have been referred to the “President” of the firm. We are given that in 2003, he had started working for an engineering firm but we have no information on the duration of his employment in that firm, hence we cannot conclude that he satisfies the condition of having at least one year’s experience which is required as per condition (ii). Due to lack of this information, he should not be selected. Hence (B) is the correct answer.
Q. No. 2:
Raj kishore, a computer engineer, has just completed graduation in July 2006, at the age of 23 years obtaining 72% marks. He had obtained 92% marks in HSC. He is willing to sign a bond with the company. He was joined a software company as trainee in August 2006 and working there till date
Answer: D Rajkishore satisfies the conditions in (i), (iii) and (iv). He does not satisfy the condition in (ii) but as he is a computer engineer, his case may be referred to DGM.
Q. No. 3:
Madhuri is an electrical engineer and working as an assistant engineer for past two years. She had secured 85% and 69% marks at HSC and degree receptively. She has just completed 25 years of age.
Answer: B Madhuri satisfies the conditions in (ii) and (iv). She does not satisfy the condition in (i) and as she has scored less than 70% marks, even the exception “a” cannot be applied to her case. Further, there is no information on either her acceptance or her nonacceptance of the condition of bond in (iii). Hence, due to lack of information, she should not be selected and (B) is the correct answer.
Q. No. 4:
Kamla is an engineering graduate wit 66% marks at degree and 90% at HSC. She has joined engineering firm 2 years ago at the age of 24 years. She is ready to sign the bond.
Answer: A Kamla satisfies the conditions in (i),(ii), (iii) and (iv). Hence (A) is correct.
Answer the questions based on the following information.
To get admission in a management course at Dadhichi Institute of Management (DIM) following criteria are given. A candidate must: 1. be a graduate from a recognized university with minimum 54 percent marks. 2. not be more than 33 years of age as on 1.4.2008-11-24 3. have secured 60 percent or more marks in the entrance test. 4. pay one-time deposit fee of Rs. 2,00,000 at time of admission. 5. pay tuition fee of Rs. 4,000 per month. – Any candidate who fails to fulfill the condition (4) at above, he/she may be referred to the chairman admission. – Any candidate who has scored 80 percent mark in the entrance test but does not fulfill the condition (1) at above, he/she may be referred to the director. – Any candidate having work experience of at least 10 years in supervisory cadre and does not satisfy the condition (2) at above, he/she may be admitted under sponsored quota. Given the above information and condition in each of the following questions, you have to decide which of the following course of action should be taken. You should not assume anything in case of any of the candidates. Mark answer I. if the candidate is admitted II. if the candidate is not admitted III. if the candidate is referred to the director IV. if the candidate is referred to the chairman-admission V. if the candidate is admitted under sponsor quota
Q. No. 1:
Kamaljeet secured 60 percent marks in graduation and was born on 15th April 1976. He scored 56 percent marks in the entrance test. He can pay one-time deposit of Rs. 2,00,000 and monthly tuition fee of Rs. 4,000.
Answer: B He does not but have the required makes in the entrance test.
Q. No. 2:
Gourav is a first-class science graduate who obtained 81 percent marks in entrance test. He has 12 years of work experience in supervisory cadre. He can pay the stipulated one-time deposit and monthly tuition fees. His date of birth is 20th October, 1970.
Answer: D He is more than 33 yrs old but since he has work experience of 12 yr. So, he should be admitted under sponsored quota.
Q. No. 42:
All employees have to pass through three consecutive entrance doors to enter into the office and one security guard is deployed at each door. These security guards report to the manager about those who come to office after 10 AM. Ms. Rani is an employee of this office and came late on the annual day. In order to avoid report to the manager she had to pay each security guard half of the money she had in her purse and 2 rupees more besides. She found only rupee with her at the end. How much money Ms. Rani had before entering the office on the annual day?
Answer: B Since Rani found only 1 Rs. with her at the end, Before 3rd security guard she had (1 + 2) × 2 = 6 Before 2nd security guard she had (6 + 2) × 2 = 16 Before 1st security guard she had (16 + 2) × 2 = 36