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Study the passage carefully and answer the following questions. Whatever the problem, someone can always oversimplify it. Sometimes a problem is simpler than it seems at first sight, and a cool mind can point to an easy answer. More often though, the simple answers don’t really meet the case. A great scientist of an earlier day, Sir Arthur Eddington, once said that we often think that when we have completed our study of one, we know all about two, because “two is one and one”. We forget that we still have to make a study of “and”. There’s an important point here, an…
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Read the passage carefully and answer the following questions    For achieving inclusive growth there is a critical need to rethink the role of the State. The early debate among economist about the size of the Government can be misleading. The need of the hour is to have an enabling Government. India is too large and complex a nation for the State to be able to deliver all that is needed. Asking the Government to produce all the essential goods, create all the necessary jobs, and keep a curb on the prices of all goods is to lead to a large cumbersome bureaucracy and widespread corruption.    The aim must be to stay with the objective of inclusive growth that was laid down by the founding fathers of the nation and also to take a more modern view of what the state can realistically deliver.    …
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In the following passage there are blanks, each of which has been numbered. For each number, choose the word which fits the blank appropriately from the suggestions provided. Find out the appropriate word in each case. Around the world, forests are being (1) at a rate of about thirteen million hectares a year and deforestation accounts for an estimated 17% – 20% of all global emissions. In addition, forests and other terrestrial carbon sinks play a (2) role in preventing runaway climate change, soaking up a full 2.6 Gt of atmospheric carbon every year. The destruction of forests, therefore not only emits carbon a staggering 1.6 Gt a year, which severely (3) forests capacity to absorb emissions from other sources but drastically (4) the amount of forested land available to act as a carbon sink in the future. However, the…
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