1. Read the given statement(s) and conclusions carefully and select which of the conclusions logically follow(s) from the statement(s): Statement: "Don't park the vehicle here. Don't you see the no parking sign here?" says Ramu to Shamu. Conclusions: I. Ramu understands the meaning of no parking sign. II. Shamu does not follow the road rules.





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MCQ->Read the given statement(s) and conclusions carefully and select which of the conclusions logically follow(s) from the statement(s): Statement: "Don't park the vehicle here. Don't you see the no parking sign here?" says Ramu to Shamu. Conclusions: I. Ramu understands the meaning of no parking sign. II. Shamu does not follow the road rules.....
MCQ-> DIRECTIONS for questions 24 to 50: Each of the five passages given below is followed by questions. For each question, choose the best answer.The World Trade Organisation (WTO) was created in the early 1990s as a component of the Uruguay Round negotiation. However, it could have been negotiated as part of the Tokyo Round of the 1970s, since that negotiation was an attempt at a 'constitutional reform' of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). Or it could have been put off to the future, as the US government wanted. What factors led to the creation of the WTO in the early 1990s?One factor was the pattern of multilateral bargaining that developed late in the Uruguay Round. Like all complex international agreements, the WTO was a product of a series of trade-offs between principal actors and groups. For the United States, which did not want a new Organisation, the dispute settlement part of the WTO package achieved its longstanding goal of a more effective and more legal dispute settlement system. For the Europeans, who by the 1990s had come to view GATT dispute settlement less in political terms and more as a regime of legal obligations, the WTO package was acceptable as a means to discipline the resort to unilateral measures by the United States. Countries like Canada and other middle and smaller trading partners were attracted by the expansion of a rules-based system and by the symbolic value of a trade Organisation, both of which inherently support the weak against the strong. The developing countries were attracted due to the provisions banning unilateral measures. 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