SBI2004PO Related Question Answers

1. Study the following information carefully and answer the question given below A,B,C,D,E,F,G, and H are sitting around a circular table facing the centre not necessarily in the same order F is fourth to the left of A and second to the right of C. B is second to the left of A and A is to the immediate right of G E who is not an immediate neighbour of B is fourth to the left of D.Which of the following is correct ?
 





2. Which two of the following are not neighbours ?





3. P, Q, R, S, T, U, V & W are sitting round the circle and are facing the centre. (i) P is second to the right of T who is the neighbour of R & V. (ii) S is not the neighbour of P. (iii) V is the neighbour of U (iv) Q is not between S & W and W is not between U & S.What is the position of S ?
 





4. Manufacturing sector no longer depends on agricultural sector.






5. Weak monsoon have adverse effect on GDP even though non-agricultural sector activities may continue to be the same.






6. Non-industrial and non-agricultural sector activities have considerably grown over the past few years.






7. Study the following graph carefully to answer the questions: Details about the distribution of employees and expenditure of an organisation (distributed proportionately across the departments)Annual expenditure on different items. Total expenditure = Rs.12 croresDepartmentwise distribution of employees Total number of employees = 1200What was the total expenditure on Accounts Department ?
 






8. What wa per employee expenditure on Medical ?






9. What was the total expenditure on salary of employees in Marketing Department ?






10. What was the amount spent on Electricity ?






11. What was the expenditure on telephone for employees in Computer Department ?






12.






13. Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE in the context of the passage ?






14. Study the following table carefully to answer these question: What is the average percentage of marks obtained by all students in subject T ?
 






15. Study the following table carefully to answer these question: Marks obtained by ‘A’ in subject P, Q, & R together are approximately what percent of marks obtained by F in subjects S, T & U together ?
 






16. Study the following table carefully to answer these question: What is the overall percentage of marks obtained by ‘B’ in all subjects together (rounded off to two digits after decimal)?
 






17. Study the following table carefully to answer these question: What are the marks obtained by D in all the subjects together?
 






18. Study the following table carefully to answer these question: What are the average marks obtained by out of 80 by all the six students together in subject ‘Q’?
 






19. 216






20. 217






21. 218






22. 219






23. 220






24. Directions : In the following passage, there are blanks, each of which has been numbered. These numbers are printed below the passage and against each, five words are suggested, one of which fits the blank appropriately. Find out the appropriate word in each case. As the country embarks on planning (221
 ) the 12th Plan (2012-17) period, a key question mark (222) hangs over the process is on the energy requirements. Growth is energy-hungry and the aspirations of growing at 9-10% will (223) huge demands on the energy resources of the country. In this energy jigsaw, renewable energy will (224) like never before in the 12th Plan and the (225). By the rule of the thumb, India will (226) about 100 gigawatts (Gw)-100,000 megawatts of capacity addition in the next five years. Encouraging trends on energy efficiency and sustained (227) by some parts of the government—the Bureau of Energy Efficiency, in particular, needs to be complimented for this-have led to substantially lesser energy intensity of economic growth. However, even the tempered demand numbers are (228) to be below 80Gw. As against this need, the coal supply from domestic sources is unlikely to support more than 25 Gw equivalent capacity. Imported coal can add some more, but at a much (229) cost. Gas-based electricity generation is unlikely to contribute anything substantial in view of the unprecedented gas supply challenges. Nuclear will be (230) in the foreseeable future. Among imported coal, gas, large hydro and nuclear, no more than 15-20Gw equivalent can be (231) to be added in the five-year time block. (232) (233) this, capacity addition in the renewable energy based power generation as touched about 3Gw a year. In the coming five years, the overall capacity addition in the electricity grid (234) renewable energy is likely to range between 20Gw and 25Gw. Additionally, over and above the grid-based capacity, off-grid electricity applications are reaching remote places and (235) lives where grid-based electricity supply has miserably failed.221
 






25. 222






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