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SSC: Reading Comprehension: 09.06.2020

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Question 1

Read the following passage and answer the questions given after it.

Older than the Himalayas and well known for its rich and unique flora and fauna, the Western Ghats has figured “2018 Best in Asia” list, a collection of 10 of the best destinations to visit in the continent for the year. One of the Hottest Biodiversity Hotspots and UNESCO World Heritage site, the Western Ghats has come fourth in the list of the Lonely Planet, considered a Bible by travellers worldwide.

Neelakurinji (Strobilanthes Kunthiana), which has started blooming after twelve years in the famed hill station of Munnar had found mention in report. India’s steamy southern highlands have never garnered the same column inches as the hill stations and Himalayan heights of North India. These rugged hills are UNESCO listed as one of the top spots for biodiversity in the world, protecting everything from wild elephants and tigers to the Neelakurinji flower, which blooms only once every twelve years and will be painting the hills in purple livery from August to October.

Visit now and you'll find coffee, tea and spice plantations, charmingly dated colonial outposts. The Western Ghats supports the life of 7,402 species of flowering plants, 1814 species of non-flowering plants, 139 mammal species, 508 bird species, 179 amphibian species, 6000 insect species and 290 freshwater fish species.
What is the position of Western Ghats in the list of the Lonely Planet?

Question 2

Read the following passage and answer the questions given after it.

Older than the Himalayas and well known for its rich and unique flora and fauna, the Western Ghats has figured “2018 Best in Asia” list, a collection of 10 of the best destinations to visit in the continent for the year. One of the Hottest Biodiversity Hotspots and UNESCO World Heritage site, the Western Ghats has come fourth in the list of the Lonely Planet, considered a Bible by travellers worldwide.

Neelakurinji (Strobilanthes Kunthiana), which has started blooming after twelve years in the famed hill station of Munnar had found mention in report. India’s steamy southern highlands have never garnered the same column inches as the hill stations and Himalayan heights of North India. These rugged hills are UNESCO listed as one of the top spots for biodiversity in the world, protecting everything from wild elephants and tigers to the Neelakurinji flower, which blooms only once every twelve years and will be painting the hills in purple livery from August to October.

Visit now and you'll find coffee, tea and spice plantations, charmingly dated colonial outposts. The Western Ghats supports the life of 7,402 species of flowering plants, 1814 species of non-flowering plants, 139 mammal species, 508 bird species, 179 amphibian species, 6000 insect species and 290 freshwater fish species.
What is the scientific name of Neelakurinji?

Question 3

Read the following passage and answer the questions given after it.

Older than the Himalayas and well known for its rich and unique flora and fauna, the Western Ghats has figured “2018 Best in Asia” list, a collection of 10 of the best destinations to visit in the continent for the year. One of the Hottest Biodiversity Hotspots and UNESCO World Heritage site, the Western Ghats has come fourth in the list of the Lonely Planet, considered a Bible by travellers worldwide.

Neelakurinji (Strobilanthes Kunthiana), which has started blooming after twelve years in the famed hill station of Munnar had found mention in report. India’s steamy southern highlands have never garnered the same column inches as the hill stations and Himalayan heights of North India. These rugged hills are UNESCO listed as one of the top spots for biodiversity in the world, protecting everything from wild elephants and tigers to the Neelakurinji flower, which blooms only once every twelve years and will be painting the hills in purple livery from August to October.

Visit now and you'll find coffee, tea and spice plantations, charmingly dated colonial outposts. The Western Ghats supports the life of 7,402 species of flowering plants, 1814 species of non-flowering plants, 139 mammal species, 508 bird species, 179 amphibian species, 6000 insect species and 290 freshwater fish species.
After how many years Neelakurinji flowers bloom and paint the hills in purple colour?

Question 4

Read the following passage and answer the questions given after it.

Older than the Himalayas and well known for its rich and unique flora and fauna, the Western Ghats has figured “2018 Best in Asia” list, a collection of 10 of the best destinations to visit in the continent for the year. One of the Hottest Biodiversity Hotspots and UNESCO World Heritage site, the Western Ghats has come fourth in the list of the Lonely Planet, considered a Bible by travellers worldwide.

Neelakurinji (Strobilanthes Kunthiana), which has started blooming after twelve years in the famed hill station of Munnar had found mention in report. India’s steamy southern highlands have never garnered the same column inches as the hill stations and Himalayan heights of North India. These rugged hills are UNESCO listed as one of the top spots for biodiversity in the world, protecting everything from wild elephants and tigers to the Neelakurinji flower, which blooms only once every twelve years and will be painting the hills in purple livery from August to October.

Visit now and you'll find coffee, tea and spice plantations, charmingly dated colonial outposts. The Western Ghats supports the life of 7,402 species of flowering plants, 1814 species of non-flowering plants, 139 mammal species, 508 bird species, 179 amphibian species, 6000 insect species and 290 freshwater fish species.
How many species of plants do the Western Ghats support?

Question 5

Read the following passage and answer the questions given after it.

Older than the Himalayas and well known for its rich and unique flora and fauna, the Western Ghats has figured “2018 Best in Asia” list, a collection of 10 of the best destinations to visit in the continent for the year. One of the Hottest Biodiversity Hotspots and UNESCO World Heritage site, the Western Ghats has come fourth in the list of the Lonely Planet, considered a Bible by travellers worldwide.

Neelakurinji (Strobilanthes Kunthiana), which has started blooming after twelve years in the famed hill station of Munnar had found mention in report. India’s steamy southern highlands have never garnered the same column inches as the hill stations and Himalayan heights of North India. These rugged hills are UNESCO listed as one of the top spots for biodiversity in the world, protecting everything from wild elephants and tigers to the Neelakurinji flower, which blooms only once every twelve years and will be painting the hills in purple livery from August to October.

Visit now and you'll find coffee, tea and spice plantations, charmingly dated colonial outposts. The Western Ghats supports the life of 7,402 species of flowering plants, 1814 species of non-flowering plants, 139 mammal species, 508 bird species, 179 amphibian species, 6000 insect species and 290 freshwater fish species.
What kind of plantations will we find at the Western Ghats?

Question 6

Read the following passage and answer the questions given after it.

The history of international relations in the late 19th and early 20th century’s has been inextricably bound with the origins of the First World War. The sheer scale of the war has led generations of academics to endow it with a sense of inevitability. However, we should pause briefly and consider some of the following observations and questions. If the international system was so militarized, why did a general European war not break out much earlier? After all, the 44 years of great power peace between 1871 and 1914 was the longest period of great power peace in Europe until the end of the Cold War. Why were so many crises, recited by generations of students as signs of weakness in the international system, resolved without recourse to war? Historians have, until very recently, largely ignored an alternative question: ‘Why was peace maintained for over four decades?’ Only by answering this question can we fully appreciate why war broke out in 1914. We should no longer view those like Stefan Zweig, the Austrian novelist, who saw the world before 1914 as a ‘golden age of security’, as complacent or naïve. Asking why great power peace was maintained for over four decades enables us to re-assess what might be called the ‘old reliable’ of the origins of the First World War – the alliances and diplomacy, imperial expansion, public opinion, the role of the military, and the international economy.
Points presented by the author in the passage are-

Question 7

Read the following passage and answer the questions given after it.

The history of international relations in the late 19th and early 20th century’s has been inextricably bound with the origins of the First World War. The sheer scale of the war has led generations of academics to endow it with a sense of inevitability. However, we should pause briefly and consider some of the following observations and questions. If the international system was so militarized, why did a general European war not break out much earlier? After all, the 44 years of great power peace between 1871 and 1914 was the longest period of great power peace in Europe until the end of the Cold War. Why were so many crises, recited by generations of students as signs of weakness in the international system, resolved without recourse to war? Historians have, until very recently, largely ignored an alternative question: ‘Why was peace maintained for over four decades?’ Only by answering this question can we fully appreciate why war broke out in 1914. We should no longer view those like Stefan Zweig, the Austrian novelist, who saw the world before 1914 as a ‘golden age of security’, as complacent or naïve. Asking why great power peace was maintained for over four decades enables us to re-assess what might be called the ‘old reliable’ of the origins of the First World War – the alliances and diplomacy, imperial expansion, public opinion, the role of the military, and the international economy.
Which of following is not mentioned as the reason for the war?

Question 8

Read the following passage and answer the questions given after it.

The history of international relations in the late 19th and early 20th century’s has been inextricably bound with the origins of the First World War. The sheer scale of the war has led generations of academics to endow it with a sense of inevitability. However, we should pause briefly and consider some of the following observations and questions. If the international system was so militarized, why did a general European war not break out much earlier? After all, the 44 years of great power peace between 1871 and 1914 was the longest period of great power peace in Europe until the end of the Cold War. Why were so many crises, recited by generations of students as signs of weakness in the international system, resolved without recourse to war? Historians have, until very recently, largely ignored an alternative question: ‘Why was peace maintained for over four decades?’ Only by answering this question can we fully appreciate why war broke out in 1914. We should no longer view those like Stefan Zweig, the Austrian novelist, who saw the world before 1914 as a ‘golden age of security’, as complacent or naïve. Asking why great power peace was maintained for over four decades enables us to re-assess what might be called the ‘old reliable’ of the origins of the First World War – the alliances and diplomacy, imperial expansion, public opinion, the role of the military, and the international economy.
Passage can be an extract from-

Question 9

Read the following passage and answer the questions given after it.

The history of international relations in the late 19th and early 20th century’s has been inextricably bound with the origins of the First World War. The sheer scale of the war has led generations of academics to endow it with a sense of inevitability. However, we should pause briefly and consider some of the following observations and questions. If the international system was so militarized, why did a general European war not break out much earlier? After all, the 44 years of great power peace between 1871 and 1914 was the longest period of great power peace in Europe until the end of the Cold War. Why were so many crises, recited by generations of students as signs of weakness in the international system, resolved without recourse to war? Historians have, until very recently, largely ignored an alternative question: ‘Why was peace maintained for over four decades?’ Only by answering this question can we fully appreciate why war broke out in 1914. We should no longer view those like Stefan Zweig, the Austrian novelist, who saw the world before 1914 as a ‘golden age of security’, as complacent or naïve. Asking why great power peace was maintained for over four decades enables us to re-assess what might be called the ‘old reliable’ of the origins of the First World War – the alliances and diplomacy, imperial expansion, public opinion, the role of the military, and the international economy.
What could be the period of First World War?

Question 10

Read the following passage and answer the questions given after it.

The history of international relations in the late 19th and early 20th century’s has been inextricably bound with the origins of the First World War. The sheer scale of the war has led generations of academics to endow it with a sense of inevitability. However, we should pause briefly and consider some of the following observations and questions. If the international system was so militarized, why did a general European war not break out much earlier? After all, the 44 years of great power peace between 1871 and 1914 was the longest period of great power peace in Europe until the end of the Cold War. Why were so many crises, recited by generations of students as signs of weakness in the international system, resolved without recourse to war? Historians have, until very recently, largely ignored an alternative question: ‘Why was peace maintained for over four decades?’ Only by answering this question can we fully appreciate why war broke out in 1914. We should no longer view those like Stefan Zweig, the Austrian novelist, who saw the world before 1914 as a ‘golden age of security’, as complacent or naïve. Asking why great power peace was maintained for over four decades enables us to re-assess what might be called the ‘old reliable’ of the origins of the First World War – the alliances and diplomacy, imperial expansion, public opinion, the role of the military, and the international economy.
It can be inferred that with militarization –
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