1. DIRECTIONS for the following three questions: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.Five women decided to go shopping to M.G. Road, Bangalore. They arrived at the designated meeting place in the following order:[list=1][*]Archana,[*]Chellamma,[*]Dhenuka,[*]Helen, and[*]Shahnaz.[/list]Each woman spent at least Rs. 1000. Below are some additional facts about how much they spent during their shopping spree.i. The woman who spent Rs. 2234 arrived before the lady who spent Rs. 1193.ii. One woman spent Rs. 1340 and she was not Dhenuka.iii. One woman spent Rs. 1378 more than Chellamma.iv. One woman spent Rs. 2517 and she was not Archana.v. Helen spent more than Dhenuka.vi. Shahnaz spent the largest amount and Chellamma the smallest.What was the amount spent by Helen?
 





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  • By: anil on 05 May 2019 02.30 am

    According to given conditions amount spent by everyone is,

    Hence option B.
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MCQ-> DIRECTIONS for the following three questions: Answer the questions on the basis of the information given below.Five women decided to go shopping to M.G. Road, Bangalore. They arrived at the designated meeting place in the following order:[list=1][*]Archana,[*]Chellamma,[*]Dhenuka,[*]Helen, and[*]Shahnaz.[/list]Each woman spent at least Rs. 1000. Below are some additional facts about how much they spent during their shopping spree.i. The woman who spent Rs. 2234 arrived before the lady who spent Rs. 1193.ii. One woman spent Rs. 1340 and she was not Dhenuka.iii. One woman spent Rs. 1378 more than Chellamma.iv. One woman spent Rs. 2517 and she was not Archana.v. Helen spent more than Dhenuka.vi. Shahnaz spent the largest amount and Chellamma the smallest.What was the amount spent by Helen?
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MCQ-> Answer the questions based on the following information. Five women decided to go for shopping to South Extension, New Delhi. They arrived at the designated meeting place in the following order: 1. Aradhana, 2. Chandrima, 3. Deepika, 4. Heena and 5. Sumitra. Each of them spent at least Rs. 1000. The woman who spent Rs. 2234 arrived before the woman who spent Rs. 1193. One of them spent Rs. 1340 and she was not Deepika. One woman spent Rs. 1378 more than Chandrima. One of them spent Rs. 2517 and she was not Aradhana. Heena spent more than Deepika. Sumitra spent the largest amount and Chandrima the smallest.What was the amount spent by Heena?
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People who are hard, grasping, selfish, cruel, and always ready to take advantage of their neighbours, become very rich if they are clever enough not to overreach themselves. On the other hand, people who are generous, public spirited, friendly, and not always thinking of the main chance, stay poor when they are born poor unless they have extraordinary talents. Also as things are today, some are born poor and others are born with silver spoons in their mouths: that is to say, they are divided into rich and poor before they are old enough to have any character at all. The notion that our present system distributes wealth according to merit, even roughly, may be dismissed at once as ridiculous. Everyone can see that it generally has the contrary effect; it makes a few idle people very rich, and a great many hardworking people very poor.On this, intelligent Lady, your first thought may be that if wealth is not distributed according to merit, it ought to be; and that we should at once set to work to alter our laws so that in future the good people shall be rich in proportion to their goodness and the bad people poor in proportion to their badness. There are several objections to this; but the very first one settles the question for good and all. It is, that the proposal is impossible and impractical. How are you going to measure anyone's merit in money? Choose any pair of human beings you like, male or female, and see whether you can decide how much each of them should have on her or his merits. If you live in the country, take the village blacksmith and the village clergyman, or the village washerwoman and the village schoolmistress, to begin with. At present, the clergyman often gets less pay than the blacksmith; it is only in some villages he gets more. But never mind what they get at present: you are trying whether you can set up a new order of things in which each will get what he deserves. You need not fix a sum of money for them: all you have to do is to settle the proportion between them. Is the blacksmith to have as much as the clergyman? Or twice as much as the clergyman? Or half as much as the clergyman? Or how much more or less? It is no use saying that one ought to have more the other less; you must be prepared to say exactly how much more or less in calculable proportion.Well, think it out. The clergyman has had a college education; but that is not any merit on his part: he owns it to his father; so you cannot allow him anything for that. But through it he is able to read the New Testament in Greek; so that he can do something the blacksmith cannot do. 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In other words, if the blacksmith is to have a shilling, is the parson to have six pence, or five pence and one-third, or two shillings? Clearly these are fools' questions: the moment they bring us down from moral generalities to business particulars it becomes plain to every sensible person that no relation can be established between human qualities, good or bad, and sums of money, large or small.It may seem scandalous that a prize-fighter, for hitting another prize-fighter so hard at Wembley that he fell down and could not rise within ten seconds, received the same sum that was paid to the Archbishop of Canterbury for acting as Primate of the Church of England for nine months; but none of those who cry out against the scandal can express any better in money the difference between the two. Not one of the persons who think that the prize-fighter should get less than the Archbishop can say how much less. 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