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Bank PO Prelims Special Mini Mock-30 July 2020

Attempt now to get your rank among 2001 students!

Question 1

Direction: Given below are six statements A, B, C, D, E and F, which when arranged in the correct order, form a coherent and meaningful paragraph. The sentence marked D is fixed and would fit in the fourth position. Rearrange the other statements in a proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph, then answer the questions that follow.

A. Foreign banks were excluded for fear of a negative response and fourteen banks were identified.
B. Who were these banks and what was the manner in which the ownership was transferred? That, in itself, makes for an interesting tale.
C. The Mangalore-Udupi region was neither, yet it had two of the largest banks in India.
D. The 14 banks were spread across the country fairly evenly. Of them, four had origins in Bombay, three in Calcutta, two in Madras, two in South Canara, and one each in Pune, Baroda, and Delhi.
E. When Indira Gandhi decided to proceed with the nationalisation of banks in July 1969, the next question to ask was which banks and how.
F. Other than South Canara, most of the other regions were political or commercial hubs, where it was natural for large banks to emerge and grow.
Which of the following should be the FIFTH sentence in the rearrangement?

Question 2

Direction: Given below are six statements A, B, C, D, E and F, which when arranged in the correct order, form a coherent and meaningful paragraph. The sentence marked D is fixed and would fit in the fourth position. Rearrange the other statements in a proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph, then answer the questions that follow.

A. Foreign banks were excluded for fear of a negative response and fourteen banks were identified.
B. Who were these banks and what was the manner in which the ownership was transferred? That, in itself, makes for an interesting tale.
C. The Mangalore-Udupi region was neither, yet it had two of the largest banks in India.
D. The 14 banks were spread across the country fairly evenly. Of them, four had origins in Bombay, three in Calcutta, two in Madras, two in South Canara, and one each in Pune, Baroda, and Delhi.
E. When Indira Gandhi decided to proceed with the nationalisation of banks in July 1969, the next question to ask was which banks and how.
F. Other than South Canara, most of the other regions were political or commercial hubs, where it was natural for large banks to emerge and grow.
Which of the following should be the FIRST sentence in the rearrangement?

Question 3

Direction: Given below are six statements A, B, C, D, E and F, which when arranged in the correct order, form a coherent and meaningful paragraph. The sentence marked D is fixed and would fit in the fourth position. Rearrange the other statements in a proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph, then answer the questions that follow.

A. Foreign banks were excluded for fear of a negative response and fourteen banks were identified.
B. Who were these banks and what was the manner in which the ownership was transferred? That, in itself, makes for an interesting tale.
C. The Mangalore-Udupi region was neither, yet it had two of the largest banks in India.
D. The 14 banks were spread across the country fairly evenly. Of them, four had origins in Bombay, three in Calcutta, two in Madras, two in South Canara, and one each in Pune, Baroda, and Delhi.
E. When Indira Gandhi decided to proceed with the nationalisation of banks in July 1969, the next question to ask was which banks and how.
F. Other than South Canara, most of the other regions were political or commercial hubs, where it was natural for large banks to emerge and grow.
Which of the following should be the LAST (SIXTH) sentence in the rearrangement?

Question 4

Direction: Given below are six statements A, B, C, D, E and F, which when arranged in the correct order, form a coherent and meaningful paragraph. The sentence marked D is fixed and would fit in the fourth position. Rearrange the other statements in a proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph, then answer the questions that follow.

A. Foreign banks were excluded for fear of a negative response and fourteen banks were identified.
B. Who were these banks and what was the manner in which the ownership was transferred? That, in itself, makes for an interesting tale.
C. The Mangalore-Udupi region was neither, yet it had two of the largest banks in India.
D. The 14 banks were spread across the country fairly evenly. Of them, four had origins in Bombay, three in Calcutta, two in Madras, two in South Canara, and one each in Pune, Baroda, and Delhi.
E. When Indira Gandhi decided to proceed with the nationalisation of banks in July 1969, the next question to ask was which banks and how.
F. Other than South Canara, most of the other regions were political or commercial hubs, where it was natural for large banks to emerge and grow.
Which of the following should be the THIRD sentence in the rearrangement?

Question 5

Direction: Given below are six statements A, B, C, D, E and F, which when arranged in the correct order, form a coherent and meaningful paragraph. The sentence marked D is fixed and would fit in the fourth position. Rearrange the other statements in a proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph, then answer the questions that follow.

A. Foreign banks were excluded for fear of a negative response and fourteen banks were identified.
B. Who were these banks and what was the manner in which the ownership was transferred? That, in itself, makes for an interesting tale.
C. The Mangalore-Udupi region was neither, yet it had two of the largest banks in India.
D. The 14 banks were spread across the country fairly evenly. Of them, four had origins in Bombay, three in Calcutta, two in Madras, two in South Canara, and one each in Pune, Baroda, and Delhi.
E. When Indira Gandhi decided to proceed with the nationalisation of banks in July 1969, the next question to ask was which banks and how.
F. Other than South Canara, most of the other regions were political or commercial hubs, where it was natural for large banks to emerge and grow.
Which of the following should be the SECOND sentence in the rearrangement?

Question 6

Direction: Study the below graph and answer the following question-
Y Axis – Profit % and X axis – Year


Note :
Profit = Income –Expenditure
Profit % =(Income –Expenditure )*100/Expenditure 
If the profit for the Company B in the year 2011 was Rs. 2,00,000 then what is the expenditure in that year ?

Question 7

Direction: Study the below graph and answer the following question-
Y Axis – Profit % and X axis – Year

Note :
Profit = Income –Expenditure
Profit % =(Income –Expenditure )*100/Expenditure 
If the company A spends Rs. 80,000 in year 2011 then what is the income of Company A In that year?

Question 8

Direction: Study the below graph and answer the following question-
Y Axis – Profit % and X axis – Year

Note :
Profit = Income –Expenditure
Profit % =(Income –Expenditure )*100/Expenditure 
If the expenditure of both company in year 2012 were equal then the ratio of income of company A to Company B is?

Question 9

Direction: Study the below graph and answer the following question-
Y Axis – Profit % and X axis – Year

Note :
Profit = Income –Expenditure
Profit % =(Income –Expenditure )*100/Expenditure 
In which year the profit increase was maximum for the Company B with respect to the previous year ?(If the total income is same for every year)

Question 10

Direction: Study the below graph and answer the following question-
Y Axis – Profit % and X axis – Year

Note :
Profit = Income –Expenditure
Profit % =(Income –Expenditure )*100/Expenditure 
If the profit of the company A in year 2013 was Rs. 300000 then the expenditure in that year was?

Question 11

Directions: In each question below are given two or more statements followed by two conclusions numbered I and II. You have to take the given statements to be true even if they seem to be true even if they seem to be at variance with commonly known facts. Read all the conclusions and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statements disregarding commonly known facts.
Statements:
All triangles are squares.
No square is a rectangle.
Some circles are rectangles.
Conclusions:
I. At least some circles are not squares.
II. No rectangle is a square.

Question 12

Directions: In each question below are given two or more statements followed by two conclusions numbered I and II. You have to take the given statements to be true even if they seem to be true even if they seem to be at variance with commonly known facts. Read all the conclusions and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statements disregarding commonly known facts.
Statements:
All triangles are squares.
No square is a rectangle.
Some circles are rectangles.
Conclusions:
I. No triangle is a rectangle.
II. Some rectangles are not circles.

Question 13

Directions: In each question below are given two or more statements followed by two conclusions numbered I and II. You have to take the given statements to be true even if they seem to be true even if they seem to be at variance with commonly known facts. Read all the conclusions and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statements disregarding commonly known facts.
Statements:
All bottles are cups.
Some plates are cups.
No plate is a spoon.
Conclusions:
I. All spoons are not cups.
II. All cups being plates is a possibility.

Question 14

Direction: In each of the following questions two statements are given and these statements are followed by two conclusions numbered 1 and 2 You have to take the given two statements to be true even if they seem to be at variance from commonly known facts. Read the conclusions and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the two given statements, disregarding commonly known facts.
Statements:
Some classes are schools.
Some schools are colleges.
All colleges are universities.
Conclusions:
I. Some colleges are classes
II. No university being classes is a possibility.

Question 15

Direction: In each of the questions below are given four statements followed by three conclusions numbered I, II and III. You have to take the given statements to be true even if they seem to be at variance from commonly known facts. Read all the conclusions and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statements disregarding commonly known facts.
Statements:
All chairs are fire.
Some fires are winds.
All winds are nets.
Some nets are clocks.
Conclusions: 
I. Some clocks are winds.
II. Some nets are fires.
III. Some winds are chairs.
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Jul 30PO, Clerk, SO, Insurance