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Mini Mock Test for IBPS Clerk Exam 2016 – 40

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Question 1

Direction: Study the following information carefully and answer the questions that follow.

Percentage of literate men, women and children in a state in various years is given-

What was the approximate average of literate men, women and children in the year 2007?

Question 2

Direction: Study the following information carefully and answer the questions that follow.

Percentage of literate men, women and children in a state in various years is given-

The number of literate men in the year 2009 was what percent of the illiterate men in the same year?

Question 3

Direction: Study the following information carefully and answer the questions that follow.

Percentage of literate men, women and children in a state in various years is given-

What was the respective ratio of literate women in the year 2006 to the literate men in the year 2008?

Question 4

Direction: Study the following information carefully and answer the questions that follow.

Percentage of literate men, women and children in a state in various years is given-

What was the difference between the number of literate women and literate children together in the year 2006 and the number of literate men in the same year?

Question 5

Direction: Study the following information carefully and answer the questions that follow.

Percentage of literate men, women and children in a state in various years is given-

What was the total number of illiterate children in the year 2004 and 2005 together?

Question 6

Direction: Each of the questions below consists of a question and two statements numbered I and II given below it. You have to decide whether the data provided in the statements are sufficient to answer the question.
Is X the wife of Y?

I. X's daughter M is the only sister of R. R is the son of Y.
II. The mother of Y has only one grandson R.

Question 7

Direction: The question below consists of a question and two statements numbered I and II given below it. You have to decide whether two data given in the statements are sufficient to answer the questions.
Five letters A, E, G, N and R are arranged left to right according to certain conditions. Which letter is placed third from the left end?

I. G is placed second to the right of A. E is to the immediate right of G. There are only two letters between R and G.
II. N is exactly between A and G, Neither A nor G is at the extreme end of the arrangement.

Question 8

Direction: Each of the questions below consists of a question and two statements numbered I and II given below it. You have to decide whether two data given in the statements are sufficient to answer the questions, Read both the statements.
Six people S, T, U, V, W and X are sitting around a circular table facing the centre. What is X's position with respect to T?

I. Only two people sit between U and W. X is second to the left of W. V and T are immediate neighbours of each other.
II. T is to the immediate right of V. There are only two people between T and S. X is an immediate neighbour of S but not of V.

Question 9

Among P, Q, R, S and T each having different weight. R is heavier than only P and S is lighter than Q and heavier than T. Who among them is the heaviest?

Question 10

Direction: The question given below has few statements along with it. You have to determine which of the statement/s is/are sufficient/necessary for answering the question and mark your answer accordingly:
What is the code for “writing paper”?

I. “Read a paper” is written as “817”. Thinking and writing” is coded as “624”.
II. “Writing with pen” is written as ‘’453’’. “Paper and pen” is written as ’’723”.

Question 11

Direction: 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.
Who owns the Internet? The answer is no one and everyone. The Internet is a network of networks. Each of the separate networks belongs to different companies and organizations, and they rely on physical servers in different countries with (11) laws and regulations. But without some common rules and norms, these networks cannot be linked effectively. (12) – meaning the end of the Internet – is a real threat. Some estimates put the Internet’s economic contribution to global GDP as high as $4.2 trillion in 2016. A fragmented “splinternet” would be very costly to the world, but that is one of the possible futures outlined last month in the report of the Global Commission on Internet Governance, chaired by former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt. The Internet now connects nearly half the world’s population, and another billion people – as well as some 20 billion devices – are forecast to be connected in the next five years. But further expansion is not (13). In the Commission’s worst-case scenario, the costs imposed by the malicious actions of criminals and the political controls imposed by governments would cause people to lose trust in the Internet and reduce their use of it. The cost of cybercrime in 2016 has been estimated to be as high as $445 billion, and it could grow rapidly. As more devices, (14) from automobiles to pacemakers, are placed online, malicious hackers could turn the “Internet of Things” (IOT) into “the weaponization of everything.” Massive privacy violations by companies and governments, and cyber attacks on civilian infrastructure such as power grids (as recently happened in Ukraine), could create insecurity that (15) the Internet’s potential.
Find out appropriate word in each case.

Question 12

Direction: 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.
Who owns the Internet? The answer is no one and everyone. The Internet is a network of networks. Each of the separate networks belongs to different companies and organizations, and they rely on physical servers in different countries with (11) laws and regulations. But without some common rules and norms, these networks cannot be linked effectively. (12) – meaning the end of the Internet – is a real threat. Some estimates put the Internet’s economic contribution to global GDP as high as $4.2 trillion in 2016. A fragmented “splinternet” would be very costly to the world, but that is one of the possible futures outlined last month in the report of the Global Commission on Internet Governance, chaired by former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt. The Internet now connects nearly half the world’s population, and another billion people – as well as some 20 billion devices – are forecast to be connected in the next five years. But further expansion is not (13). In the Commission’s worst-case scenario, the costs imposed by the malicious actions of criminals and the political controls imposed by governments would cause people to lose trust in the Internet and reduce their use of it. The cost of cybercrime in 2016 has been estimated to be as high as $445 billion, and it could grow rapidly. As more devices, (14) from automobiles to pacemakers, are placed online, malicious hackers could turn the “Internet of Things” (IOT) into “the weaponization of everything.” Massive privacy violations by companies and governments, and cyber attacks on civilian infrastructure such as power grids (as recently happened in Ukraine), could create insecurity that (15) the Internet’s potential.
Find out appropriate word in each case.

Question 13

Direction: 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.
Who owns the Internet? The answer is no one and everyone. The Internet is a network of networks. Each of the separate networks belongs to different companies and organizations, and they rely on physical servers in different countries with (11) laws and regulations. But without some common rules and norms, these networks cannot be linked effectively. (12) – meaning the end of the Internet – is a real threat. Some estimates put the Internet’s economic contribution to global GDP as high as $4.2 trillion in 2016. A fragmented “splinternet” would be very costly to the world, but that is one of the possible futures outlined last month in the report of the Global Commission on Internet Governance, chaired by former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt. The Internet now connects nearly half the world’s population, and another billion people – as well as some 20 billion devices – are forecast to be connected in the next five years. But further expansion is not (13). In the Commission’s worst-case scenario, the costs imposed by the malicious actions of criminals and the political controls imposed by governments would cause people to lose trust in the Internet and reduce their use of it. The cost of cybercrime in 2016 has been estimated to be as high as $445 billion, and it could grow rapidly. As more devices, (14) from automobiles to pacemakers, are placed online, malicious hackers could turn the “Internet of Things” (IOT) into “the weaponization of everything.” Massive privacy violations by companies and governments, and cyber attacks on civilian infrastructure such as power grids (as recently happened in Ukraine), could create insecurity that (15) the Internet’s potential.
Find out appropriate word in each case.

Question 14

Direction: 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.
Who owns the Internet? The answer is no one and everyone. The Internet is a network of networks. Each of the separate networks belongs to different companies and organizations, and they rely on physical servers in different countries with (11) laws and regulations. But without some common rules and norms, these networks cannot be linked effectively. (12) – meaning the end of the Internet – is a real threat. Some estimates put the Internet’s economic contribution to global GDP as high as $4.2 trillion in 2016. A fragmented “splinternet” would be very costly to the world, but that is one of the possible futures outlined last month in the report of the Global Commission on Internet Governance, chaired by former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt. The Internet now connects nearly half the world’s population, and another billion people – as well as some 20 billion devices – are forecast to be connected in the next five years. But further expansion is not (13). In the Commission’s worst-case scenario, the costs imposed by the malicious actions of criminals and the political controls imposed by governments would cause people to lose trust in the Internet and reduce their use of it. The cost of cybercrime in 2016 has been estimated to be as high as $445 billion, and it could grow rapidly. As more devices, (14) from automobiles to pacemakers, are placed online, malicious hackers could turn the “Internet of Things” (IOT) into “the weaponization of everything.” Massive privacy violations by companies and governments, and cyber attacks on civilian infrastructure such as power grids (as recently happened in Ukraine), could create insecurity that (15) the Internet’s potential.
Find out appropriate word in each case.

Question 15

Direction: 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.
Who owns the Internet? The answer is no one and everyone. The Internet is a network of networks. Each of the separate networks belongs to different companies and organizations, and they rely on physical servers in different countries with (11) laws and regulations. But without some common rules and norms, these networks cannot be linked effectively. (12) – meaning the end of the Internet – is a real threat. Some estimates put the Internet’s economic contribution to global GDP as high as $4.2 trillion in 2016. A fragmented “splinternet” would be very costly to the world, but that is one of the possible futures outlined last month in the report of the Global Commission on Internet Governance, chaired by former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt. The Internet now connects nearly half the world’s population, and another billion people – as well as some 20 billion devices – are forecast to be connected in the next five years. But further expansion is not (13). In the Commission’s worst-case scenario, the costs imposed by the malicious actions of criminals and the political controls imposed by governments would cause people to lose trust in the Internet and reduce their use of it. The cost of cybercrime in 2016 has been estimated to be as high as $445 billion, and it could grow rapidly. As more devices, (14) from automobiles to pacemakers, are placed online, malicious hackers could turn the “Internet of Things” (IOT) into “the weaponization of everything.” Massive privacy violations by companies and governments, and cyber attacks on civilian infrastructure such as power grids (as recently happened in Ukraine), could create insecurity that (15) the Internet’s potential.
Find out appropriate word in each case.
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Mar 9PO, Clerk, SO, Insurance