2. Read the flowchart given below and answer the question that follows:
If a student has secured 57,
88, 69, 66 and 79 marks in
all subjects what grade will
he get?
A. Grade A
B. Grade B
C. Fail
D. Pass
3. In the following question, the symbols +, -, ~, @, and # are used with the following
meanings illustrated.
' P#Q ' means 'P is either greater than or equal to Q'.
' P@Q ' means 'P is neither greater than nor smaller than Q'.
' P-Q ' means 'P is smaller than Q'.
' P+Q ' means 'P is either smaller than or equal to Q'.
' P~Q ' means 'P is greater than to Q'.
In each of the following questions, assuming the given statements to be true, find out
which of the three conclusions 1,2, and 3 given below them is /are definitely true and
mark your answer accordingly:
4. Statement:
1. X#M
2. M@Y
3. Y+T
Conclusion:
1. X~M
2. T@M
3. Y-X
A. None follows
B. only conclusion 3 follows
C. only conclusion 1 and conclusion 2 follows
D. only conclusion 2 and conclusion 3 follows
5. Statements:
[1] All knives are springs.
[2] Some springs are clippers.
Conclusions:
[1] All springs are clippers
[2] Some clippers are knives.
A. Only conclusion ii follows
B. Both conclusion i and conclusion ii follow
C. Neither conclusion i nor conclusion ii follows
D. Only conclusion i follows
6. The question given below is followed by two statements numbered 1 and 2. Determine if the
statements are individually or together, Sufficient to another the question.
Question: What is the C.P of cheese?
Statements:
[1] Pam mixes cheese and flour in the ratio of 3:5 to make “Pam's famous Cheesy Dough ”.
She sells “Pam's famous cheesy dough ” at $18 per kg.
[2] The ratio of the price of flour and cheese is 7:4 per kg.
A. Both statements 1 and 2 together are sufficient to answer the question asked but
neither statement alone is sufficient.
B. Statements 1 and 2 together are not sufficient to answer the question asked but neither
statement alone is sufficient.
C. Each statement alone is sufficient to answer the question.
D. Only one of the statements, alone is sufficient to answer the question but other
statement is not.
7. Read the information given below carefully and answer the questions that follow:
Five friends – Manny, Nathan, Olivia, Pamela, and Joshua (not necessarily in the same
order) are competing in a friendly swimming race. Each of them is wearing a different
colored swimming cap out of Red, Blue, Green, Yellow and Black. No two swimmers
finish together.
The following information is known about them.
[1] Joshua, who was wearing a red cap, finished third, and Nathan finished just before
him.
[2] Manny, Who didn’t finish last and second last, wore a black cap.
[3] Olivia didn’t finish last and didn’t wear a green cap.
8. Who was the winner of the race?
A. Pamela
B. Olivia
C. Nathan
D. Manny
9. Read the information given below and answer the questions that follow.
There are five people: A, B, C, D and E. There are chairs placed linearly from left to
right, numbered from 11 to 18. Three chairs are empty. The following conditions apply:
[1] A sits on the chair whose number is divisible by 2.
[2] B sits on the chair whose number is divisible by 3 and 4.
[3] C sits on the chair whose number is divisible by 1 and the number itself.
[4] E sits third to the right of A.
What is the number of empty chairs between A and E?
A. 3
B. 1
C. 2
D. Cannot be determined
10. Read the information given below and answer the questions that follow.
There are five people : A,B,C,D and E. There are chairs placed linearly from left to
right, numbered from 11 to 18. Three chairs are empty. The following conditions apply:
[1] A sits on the chair whose number is divisible by 2.
[2] B sits on the chair whose number is divisible by 3 and 4.
[3] C sits on the chair whose number is divisible by 1 and the number itself.
[4] E sits third to the right of A.
If it is given that there are exactly two chairs empty between A and E, and three chairs
empty between B and E, then which chair will be occupied by D ?
A. Either 11 or 18
B. 18
C. 16
D. 11
11. In the following questions, the symbols @,+,#,/ and - are used with the following
meanings.
A @ B means “A is not greater than B”
A + B means “A is neither greater than nor equal to B”
A # B means “A is not smaller than B”
A / B means “A is neither smaller than nor equal to B”
A – B means “A is neither smaller than nor greater than B”
Now assuming in the following question the given statements to be true, Find which of
the given conclusions given below
Your answer accordingly
12. Statements:
1. M + N
2. N – D
3. D # S
Conclusions:
1. D / M
2. S - N
3. S / N
A. Only conclusion 2 follows
B. Only either conclusion 2 or conclusion 3 follow
C. Only conclusion 1 follows
D. Only conclusion 1, and either conclusion 2 or conclusion 3 follow.
13. Read the information given below and answer the questions that follow;
There are two horizontal rows of five students facing each other. The rows are called
row1 and row2. The following condition applies.
[1] The extremes of row 1 are occupied by B and C.
[2] E stands opposite to the student, who stands second to the right of B.
[3] Either D or F stands at the centre of row 1.
[4] F stands opposite to the second right of the student who is standing opposite to C.
[5] F and D do not occupy the same row.
[6] A stands opposite to B and G stands opposite to C.
[7] H stands in Row 2.
14. Who is standing between A and E?
A. H
B. D
C. Either H or D
D. F
15. Read the information given below and answer the questions that follow;
There are two horizontal rows of five students each facing each other. The rows are called
row1 and row2. The following condition applies.
[1] The extremes of row 1 are occupied by B and C.
[2] E stands opposite to the student, Who stands second to the right of B.
[3] Either D or F stands at the centre of row 1.
[4] F stands opposite to the second right of the student who is standing opposite to c.
[5] F and D do not occupy the same row.
[6] A stands opposite to B and G stands opposite to C.
[7] H stands in Row 2.
16. If I stands opposite to H, then who stands opposite to D?
A. J
B. F
C. E
D. G
17. Read the flowchart given below and answer the question that follows
What is the total profit by selling 75
units of the product?
A. 1300.5
B. 1312.5
C. 1500.0
D. 187.5
18. Consider the following statements and determine which of the given conclusions follow.
Statements:
A. No pencil is an eraser.
B. Pen is a pencil.
Conclusions:
I. Pen is not an eraser.
II. All pencils are not pens.
A. Only conclusion I follow
B. Only conclusion II follows
C. Either conclusion I or II follows
D. Neither conclusions I or II follow
19. Statement:
A. All good jumpers win.
B. All good jumpers eat well.
Conclusions:
I. All those who eat well are good jumpers.
II. All those who win eat well.
A. Only I follows
B. Only II follows
C. Either I or II follows
D. None follow
20. Statements:
I. All roads are poles.
II. No pole is a house.
Conclusions:
I. Some roads are houses
II. Some houses are poles
A. Only conclusion II follows
B. Neither conclusion I nor conclusion II follows
C. Only conclusion I follows
D. Both conclusion I and conclusion II follows
21. Statements:
I. Some apples are guavas.
II. All apples are oranges.
III. No orange is a papaya.
IV. All papayas are guavas.
Conclusions:
I. Some papayas are apples.
II. Some oranges are papayas.
III. Some guavas are oranges
A. Only conclusion III follows
B. Either conclusion I or conclusion III follows
C. None follow
D. Only conclusion I follows
22. Statements:
1. All towels are shirts.
2. No shirt is a pant.
3. Some pants are trousers.
Conclusions:
1. Some trousers are pants.
2. Some towels are trousers.
A. only conclusion 1 follows
B. Neither conclusion 1 nor conclusion 2 follows
C. Both conclusion 1 and conclusion 2 follows
D. only conclusion 2 follows
23. Statements:
1. Some bottles are bracelets.
2. All bracelets are threads.
Conclusions:
1. Some threads are bracelets.
2. Some bracelets are not bottles.
A. only conclusion 1 follows
B. Neither conclusion 1 nor conclusion 2 follows
C. Both conclusion 1 and conclusion 2 follows
D. only conclusion 2 follows
24. Statements:
1. All rabbits are snails.
2. No snails is a frog.
Conclusions:
1. No frog is rabbit.
2. No rabbit is a frog.
A. only conclusion 1 follows
B. None of the conclusions follows
C. Both conclusion 1 and conclusion 2 follow
D. only conclusion 2 follows
25. Statements:
I. Some risks are chances.
II. All chances are danger.
III. All danger are brutal.
IV. Some brutal are fatal.
Conclusions:
I. Some risks are brutal
II. Some danger are risks
A. Only conclusion II follows
B. Neither conclusion I nor conclusion II follows
C. Only conclusion I follows
D. Both conclusion I and conclusion II follows
26. In the following questions, the symbols @,+,#,/, and - are used with the following
meanings.
P @ Q means “P is either greater than or equal to Q”
P + Q means “P is neither greater than nor smaller than Q”
P # Q means “P is smaller than Q”
P / Q means “P is either smaller than or equal to Q”
P – Q means “P is greater than Q”
Now assuming in the following question the given statements to be true, Find which of
the conclusions given below are correct and mark your answer accordingly.
27. Statements:
X # M
M @ Y
Y + T
Conclusions:
X – M
T @ M
Y – X
A. Only conclusion 1 and 2 follows
B. None follows
C. Only conclusion 3 follows
D. Only conclusion 2 and conclusion 3 follow
28. Directions: The problem below consists of a problem followed by two statements.
Decide whether the data in the statements is sufficient to answer the question. Select
your answer depending upon whether the data provided in:
(A) statement 1 alone is sufficient, but statement 2 alone is not sufficient to answer the
question
(B) statement 2 alone is sufficient, but statement 1 alone is not sufficient to answer the
question
(C) both statements taken together are sufficient to answer the question, but neither
statement alone is sufficient to answer the question
(D) each statement alone is sufficient to answer the question
(E) statements 1 and 2 together are not sufficient, and additional data is needed to
answer the question
29. Problem: Does the integer y have at least two different prime factors?
Statement 1: y/10 is an integer.
Statement 2: y/6 is an integer.
A. A
B. B
C. C
D. D
30. Five friends, Jay, Raj, Shivansh, Monu and Mehul have different professions-Teacher,
Singer, Police, Bank Manager and Actor. Each one wears different colors of ties-Yellow,
Black, Grey, Green and orange though not respectively in the same order. Shivansh is
an Actor but doesn't wear a Black or Orange colored tie. The person who is wearing
Green colored tie is neither teacher nor police. Jay and Mehul are not Bank manager
and they do not wear Yellow-colored tie. Grey colored tie is worn by Monu, who is
neither a Singer nor a Bank Manager. Bank Manager wears a Green colored tie. Who
is Bank Manager?
A. Jay
B. Raj
C. Monu
D. None of these
31. There are six houses in a colony, such that 3 houses are in one row and the other 3
houses are in the opposite row. The three houses in a row are equidistant from each
other. Each house is exactly opposite the house in the other row. Each house is
painted with a different color from red, blue, green, yellow, pink and orange.
1. Houses at the corner are not painted with blue and red color
2. House painted with orange color is not opposite the house painted with green color
3. Yellow and pink colored houses are not in the same row
Which house is diagonally opposite the orange colored house?
A. Green
B. Yellow
C. Pink
D. Blue
32. Pradhan, Qureshi, Rastogi, Sharma and Talreja are students coming from Gwalior,
Bhopal, Indore, Ujjain and guna not necessarily in that order. They have topped in
different subjects among math, English, Hindi, science and geography. The student
from guna has topped in math, Qureshi comes from Ujjain and Sharma from Gwalior.
The student from Indore has not topped in science. Pardhan topped in science and
Talreja in geography. From which city does the topper in English come from?
A. Ujjain
B. Gwalior
C. Indore
D. Gwalior or Ujjain
33. On a racing track, six players, U, V, W, X, Y and Z were positioned in such a way
that U was to the left of Y and fourth to the left of X. W was in between and
equidistant from Y and Z but Y is not adjacent to X. The winner was at the fourth
section of the track from the left. Who was he?
A. U
B. Z
C. W
D. Z or W
34. Five friends A, B, C, D and E, with different occupational backgrounds (Teacher,
Doctor, Accountant, Businessman, Engineer) went to a conference. The doctor sat
next to B. The engineer sat in between B and C. Neither A nor the accountant sat
at any of the extreme ends. If D does not sit next to B, then which of the following
is definitely sitting at one of the extreme ends?
A. A
B. B
C. C
D. D
35. In a row of friends, Tia occupies fifteenth place from the right end and Tina
occupies twelfth place from the left end, respectively. Tristen is ninth on the left of
Tia. If Tristen and Tia interchange their places, then Tristen occupies twentieth
place from the left end. How many friends were there between Tristen and Tina
originally?
A. 15
B. 12
C. 0
D. 3
36. The question given below is followed by two statements numbered I and II. Determine
if the statements are, individually or together, sufficient to answer the question.
Question: How many questions did Jacob attempt in the English test?
Statements:
I. There was 35 questions in the test.
II. He got 25 marks in the test, in which every correct answer fetched 1 mark, for every
unattempted question fetched 0 mark, and for every incorrect answer ⅓ mark was
deducted from the total.
37. A. Each statement alone is sufficient to answer the question.
B. Only one of the statements, alone, is sufficient to answer the question but other
statement is not.
C. Statements I and II together are not sufficient to answer the question asked and
additional data to the problem is needed.
D. Both statements I and II together are sufficient to answer the question asked but
neither statement alone is sufficient
38. In the following question, the symbols +, -, *, /, and $ are used with the following
meanings illustrated.
‘X * Y’ means ‘X is either greater than or equal to Y’.
‘X - Y’ means ‘X is neither greater than nor smaller than Y’.
‘X $ Y’ means ‘X is smaller than Y’.
'X / Y' means 'X is either smaller than or equal to Y'.
'X + Y' means 'X is greater than Y'.
In the following question assuming the given statements to be true, find out which of
the three
conclusions I, II and III given below them is/are definitely true and mark your answer
accordingly.
39. Statements:
I. M + J
II. J/Y
III. Y$K
IV. K-N
Conclusions:
I. K * J
II. J + N
III. K $ M
A. Only conclusion I and conclusion III follow
B. None follow
C. Only conclusion I and conclusion II follow
D. Only conclusion II and conclusion III follow
40. The statements given below are followed by some conclusions. Assume the statements are
true, even if they contradict commonly known facts, and determine the conclusion/s that
follow/s from the statements logically.
Statements:
I. All stamps are baskets.
II. II. Some baskets are hamsters.
Conclusions:
I. All baskets are hamsters.
II. Some hamsters are stamps
A. Neither conclusion I nor conclusion II follows
B. Only conclusion I follows
C. Both conclusion I and conclusion II follow
D. Only conclusion II follows
41. The sentences given below are followed by two statements numbered 1 and 2. Determine if
the statement are individually or together, sufficient question.
Question: Is the number of parts into which the lines divide the plane less than 60?
Statements:
1.Nine straight lines are drawn such that no two lines are parallel.
2.NIne straight lines are drawn such that no three lines are concurrent.
42. A. Both statement 1 and 2 together are sufficient to answer the question asked but neither
statement alone is sufficient
B. Each statement alone is sufficient to answer the question
C. statement 1 and 2 together are not sufficient to answer the question asked and
additional data to the problem is needed
D. only one of the statements, alone is sufficient to answer the questions but other
statement is not.
43. Which among the following sentences supports the below-given argument?
Argument: Cyclone Amphan, one of the worst storms ever in the Bay of Bengal,
displaced thousands of people.
A. The cyclone brought heavy rains that caused the displacement of people.
B. The airport got flooded with water.
C. The Cyclone barrelled into the coast with gusting winds of up to 185 km/hr.
D. 12 people were killed by the cyclone.
44. The statements given below are followed by some conclusions. Assume the
statements are true, even if they contradict commonly known facts, and determine the
conclusion/s that follow/s from the statements logically.
Statements:
“It has been decided by the government to withdraw 33% of the subsidy on cooking
gas from the beginning of next month.” – A spokesman of the government.
Conclusions:
1. People now no more desire or need such subsidies from the government as they
can afford the increased price of cooking gas.
2. The price of cooking gas will increase at least by 33% from the next month.
45. A. Only conclusion II follows
B. Neither conclusion I nor conclusion II follows
C. Only conclusion I follows
D. Both conclusion I and conclusion II follows
46. Statements:
I. All swimmers are short.
II. Jamie is short
Conclusions:
I. All swimmers are Jamie.
II. Jamie may be a swimmer
A. Only conclusion II follows
B. Neither conclusion I nor conclusion II follows
C. Only conclusion I follows
D. Both conclusion I and conclusion II follows
47. Statements:
I. Some letters are shovels
II. All shovels are bottle
Conclusions:
I. All letters are bottle
II. All shovels are letters
A. Only conclusion II follows
B. Neither conclusion I nor conclusion II follows
C. Only conclusion I follows
D. Both conclusion I and conclusion II follows
48. Mohan earned twice as much as Deep. Yogesh earned rs.3/- more than half as much
as deep. If the amounts earned by Mohan, Deep, Yogesh are M, D, Y respectively,
which of the following is the correct ordering of these amounts?
A. M<D<Y
B. M<Y<D
C. D<M<Y
D. cannot be determined
E. D<Y<M
49. Statements:
l. All yellows are green
ll. Some green and blues
Conclusions:
l. All blues are greens.
Il. Some greens are not yellows
A. Neither conclusion l nor conclusion ll follows
B. Both conclusion l and conclusion ll follows
C. Only conclusion ll follows
D. Only conclusion l follows
50. In the following question, the symbols @, %, #, !, and - are used with the following
meanings illustrated.
‘M @ N’ means ‘M is not greater than N’.
“M % N’ means ‘M is neither greater than nor equal to N’.
‘M # N’ means ‘M is not smaller than N.’
“M ! N’ means ‘M is neither smaller than nor equal to N’.
‘M - N means ‘M is neither smaller than nor greater than N’.
Now assuming in the following question the given statements to be true, find which of
the
conclusions given below them is/are definitely true and give your answer accordingly.
51. Statements:
I. C % G
II. G - Y
III. Y # I
Conclusions:
I. Y ! C
II. I % G
III. I - G
A. Only conclusion I, and either conclusion II or conclusion III follow
B. Only conclusion II follows
C. Only either conclusion II or conclusion III follow
D. Only conclusion I follows
52. Six persons are sitting around a circular table such that they are diametrically opposite
to each other. A is sitting between Band C. D is sitting between E and F. If B is sitting
opposite to F. who is sitting to the left of C? (consider that all people are sitting facing
the center)
A. D
B. A
C. can't be determined
D. F
53. In the following question, the symbols %, [L<>, and are used with the following
meanings illustrated.
'U:: V' means 'U is neither smaller than nor greater than V'
'U% V means 'U is neither smaller than nor equal to V'
'U[ ]V' means U is neither greater than nor equal to V
'U<> V' means U is not greater than V
'U@V' means 'U is not smaller than V'
Assuming the information to be true, read the statements and determine the
conclusion/s that most definitely follow/s
54. Statements:
l. A % B
ll. B<>C
III. D[ ]E
Conclusions:
l.D::B
II.A@E
A. Only conclusion II follows
B. Neither conclusion I nor conclusion II follows
C. Only conclusion I follows
D. Both conclusion I and conclusion follow
55. In the following question, the symbols, and s are used with the following.
'P*Q' means P is not greater than Q
'P-Q' means is not greater than PQ means 'P is neither greater than nor equal to Q
'P$Q' means is not smaller than Q
'P +Q means 'P is neither smaller than nor equal to of
P/Q means P is neither smaller than nor greater than
Now assuming in the following question the given statements to be true, answer
accordingly.
56. Statements:
l. D*R
Il. R/F
III. F+A
Conclusions:
l. D*F
II. A+D
III. R+A
A. only conclusion l follows
B. only conclusion ll follows
C. only conclusion lll follows
D. none of the above
57. Common Content:
Read the information given below and answer the questions that follow
Seven boys-George, Sheldon, Leonard, Howard, John, Jason, and Oliver- are sitting in
a row. All of them are facing North.
1. Sheldon sits to the immediate left of Leonard and third to the right of George.
2. Howard, who sits at the left extreme, is sitting next to Oliver.
58. Who is sitting second to the right of Oliver?
A. John or Jason
B. Jason
C. John
D. Leonard
59. If sheldon sits between Jason and Leonard, who is exactly in the middle of the row?
A. George
B. Howard
C. John
D. Oliver
61. When will the sum S be 0?
A. when n=2
B. None of the mentioned options
C. when n=1
D. when n tends to infinity
62. If t1=1, t2=1, then what will be the value of s for n=4?
A. 12
B. 15
C. 20
D. 18
63. Common Content:
In swimming cap Red, Blue, Green, Yellow, and black, No two swimmers finish
together:
The following information is known about them.
1. Joshua, who was wearing a red cap finished third and Nathan finished just before
him.
2. Manny, who didn't finish last and second last wore a black cap.
3. Olivia didn't finish last and didn't wear a green cap.
4. The person who finished last didn't wear a blue or yellow cap.
64. What was the colour of the cap of Pamela?
A. Green or Blue
B. Green
C. Blue
D. None
66. What number is stored in Box 2 at the end of the flowchart?
A. 3
B. 4
C. 8
D. 6
67. How many times you will get a NO for the condition in step E?
A. 0
B. 2
C. 4
D. 1
68. Common Content:
Read the following information given below and answer the questions that follow:
Six friends - Sheldon, Jack, Justin, Bruce, Peter, and Nicholas are sitting around a
circular table, not
necessarily in the same order. All of them are facing the center.
I. Peter is sitting exactly opposite to Jack.
II. Justin is the only person sitting between Bruce and Peter.
III. Sheldon is sitting to the immediate left of Jack.
69. Who among the following are not the immediate neighbours?
A. Bruce and Justin
B. Nicholas and Peter
C. Nicholas and Justin
D. Jack and Sheldon
70. Who is sitting second to the right of Peter?
A. Peter
B. Justin
C. Jack
D. Sheldon
71. Who is sitting to the opposite of Sheldon?
A. Bruce
B. Justin
C. Peter
D. Nicholas
72. Which of the following is false regarding the position of Jack?
A. Jack is sitting third of the left of Nicholas.
B. Jack is sitting second to the right of Nicholas
C. Jack is sitting between Bruce and Sheldon
D. Jack is sitting to the immediate left of Bruce
73. Common Content:
Read the following information given below and answer the questions that follow:
There were six participants - M, N, O, P, Q and R in the final of coffee making
competitions. The six participants belong to six different locations - Delhi, Mumbai, New
York, Paris, Tokyo and London. David, the judge of this competition, rated the coffee
prepared by the participants on a scale of 1 to 10 giving a unique rating to each
participant.
I. R was from London.
II. Participants from New York got the highest ranking but was not O.
III. Only two participants got ratings in even numbers.
IV. The rating of O was double the rating of Q.
V. N got the minimum rating and the rating was an even number.
VI. O got a higher rating than M.
74. What was the second highest rating given?
A. 7
B. 8
C. 9
D. 6
75. Which of the following statements is definitely true?
1. P got a rating of 10
2. M got a rating of 5
3. O belongs to Mumbai
4. Q belongs to Paris
77. P-> Add: (number in Box 9)+(number in Box 6). Put the result in Box 3.
Q-> Is (number in Box 2) < (number in Box 3)?
R-> Divide : (number in Box 1) / (number in Box 4). Put the result in Box 10.
S-> Add: (number in Box 10) + (number in Box 5). Put the result in Box 8.
T-> Multiply: (number in Box 8) * (number in Box 4). Put the result in Box 7.
78. At the end of the flowchart which of the following boxes will have the lowest value?
A. Box 8
B. Box 7
C. Box 2
D. Box 10
79. How many boxes have positive integral values at the end of flowchart?
A. 2
B. 4
C. 6
D. 0
80. Find the value of {(number in Box 10) + (number in Box 6)} at the end of the flowchart.
A. 4
B. -2
C. 2
D. -4
81. Common Content:
Read the Information given below carefully and answer the questions that follow
Six friends Ray, John, Michael, Chris, Timothy, and Cassedy live in a six-storey building
In Brooklyn, each living on the floors one, two, three, four, five or six. Each of them has
one of the vehicles SUV, LUV, EV, Sedan, Superbike, and Hatchback, Each of them
has one of these as a profession - Baker, Artist, surgeon, pilot, Policeman, and
Lineman. Each of them hails from one of these cities- Zurich, Moscow, Cergy,
Auckland, Prague and Texas,
The following information is known about them
82. 1. Timothy, an Artist from Moscow, lives on a floor that is a multiple of three and owns a
hatchback.
2. The person living on the lowest floor is a Pilot, own is a superbike and the Surgeon
is not from Prague
3. Michael lives two floors above the person who is a Policeman and is from Zurich,
and the difference between the floors of the Pilot and the person from Auckland is
three.
4. Cassedy, who lives four floors above Ray, is neither a Lineman nor a Surgeon and
drives a LUV.
5. The person who drives an EV is not from Texas or Auckland and Ray drives an SUV
and lives one floor below the person who drives a hatchback.
6. Michael drives a sedan lives on a floor which is not a multiple of 3, or 5 and the
person who drives an EV lives on a floor which is in between the floor of a Lineman
and the person from Texas.
83. If Chris doesn't hail from Prague, then who owns a Superbike?
A. Cassedy
B. Ray
C. John
D. Michael
84. If Chris is the Pilot, then where does the Baker hail from?
A. Texas
B. Prague
C. Cergy
D. Auckland
85. Who is a Lineman?
A. Chris
B. Michael
C. John
D. Cassedy
86. Statements:
I. All boxers are tall
II. Jason is tall
Conclusions:
I. All boxers are Jason
II. Jason may be a boxer
A. Only conclusion II follows
B. Neither conclusion I nor conclusion II follows
C. Only conclusion I follows
D. Both conclusion I and conclusion II follows
87. Statements:
I. Some evils are guns
II. Some guns are snakes
III. Some snakes are arrogant
Conclusions:
I. Some evils are snakes
II. Some guns are arrogant
III. Some arrogant are snakes
IV. Some arrogant are guns
A. Only conclusion II
follows
B. Only conclusion III
follows
C. Only conclusion I
follows
D. Only conclusion IV
follows
E. None of these
88. Read the information given below carefully and answer the questions that follow.
Six friends – Ella, Scarlett, Mason, Evelyn, Harper and James live in a six-storey
building. Each living on the floors numbered one to six, One being the ground floor,
Each of them has one vehicle out of SUV, LUV, EV, Sedan, Superbike and Hatchback.
Each of them has one of these as their unique profession – Chef, Doctor, Psychologist,
Professor, Athlete, and Dentist. Each of them hails from one of these cities. Paris,
Madrid, Barcelona, Sydney, Cairo and Detroit.
The following information is known about them.
89. [1] Harper, a doctor from Madrid, lives on the floor which is a multiple of three and
owns a hatchback.
[2] The person living on the lowest floor is a professor and owns a superbike, and the
Psychologist is not from Cairo.
[3] Mason lives two floors above the person who is an athlete from Paris, and the difference
between the floors of the professor and the person from Sydney is three.
[4] James, who lives four floors above Ella, is neither a dentist nor a Psychologist and
drives a LUV
90. [5] The person who drives an EV is not from Detroit or Sydney, and Ella drives an
SUV and lives one floor below the person Who drives the hatchback.
[6] Mason drives a sedan and lives on a floor which is not a multiple of 3 or 5, and the
person who drives an EV lives on a floor which is in between the floors of the Dentist
and the person from Detroit.
If Evelyn doesn’t hail from Cairo, Then who owns a superbike?
A. Ella
B. Scarlett
C. Mason
D. James
91. If Scarlett is the Professor, then where does the Chef hail from?
A. Detroit
B. Cairo
C. Barcelona
D. Sydney
92. Who is the dentist?
A. Scarlett
B. Mason
C. Evelyn
D. James