English Quiz for IBPS Clerk 2015 – Set 3



Hello and welcome to ExamPundit. Here is a set of English Quiz for IBPS Clerical 2015.

Directions (Q. 1-10):
Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions given below it.
Certain words/phrases in the passage are printed in bold to help you locate
them while answering some of the questions.
Over the past thousands of years,
we have generated an enormous amount of wealth. Living standards have improved
dramatically. It is clear that the key driver behind all of this wealth is
technological innovation that started with the ability to use tools. There are
three broad steps in wealth creation: invent a new method, perfect it, apply
it. Indian businesses and industry in general have generated most of their
wealth from the last step, a little from the second and almost nothing from the
first. We tend to go backwards and end up with severely limited opportunities
compared with those who start from the first step. That is a fundamental
difference between Indian businesses and businesses of the highly developed
world. Many of the things that define modern life were invented by Europeans
and Americans. They created wealth not only from the first step, they also
established first claim on the second and third steps. Unsurprisingly, then,
their share dominates the global wealth. The Chinese, Japanese and Koreans
excelled in perfecting production techniques; as a result they have managed to
corner a substantial chunk of the
wealth. Once things like roads, electricity, televisions, cars, malls,
toasters, soaps and so on have been invented and their use or implementation
defined, it is possible to create wealth simply by making more of them and
selling them to the population neglected by the inventors and the improvisers.
That has largely been the market for Indian companies. But they have just not
focused on innovation. In terms of valuation, India’s largest companies are in
the region of about $40-45 billion depending upon the stock market. Those
companies took generations to get there, and not to forget, many of them were
generously helped by what is euphemistically called crony capitalism. On the other hand, a 17-year-old student in the
US named Mark Zuckerberg built a company in 10 years that had an IPO valued at
$100 billion! (Facebook, in spite of a lower valuation now, is still bigger
than Reliance or DLF.) Consider Google, founded barely 15 years ago by two students. It now stands at a whopping
$300 billion. Then there are more mature companies such as Apple that are worth
over $400 billion. These achievements are entirely to the credit of the
founders. Many Indian ‘experts’ in business and finance tend to dismiss these
companies as vaporware, paper money, mere websites, luck or even as companies
that do no real work. However, if we examine our daily living standards, it
would be hard to find any contribution from Indian companies. Virtually
everything around us, from the internet to lighting to healthcare, was invented
by the developed countries. If they had not been, we would have still been
living in the Stone Age; on the other hand, if Indian industry had not been
there, no one would have noticed. While this comparison may seem odious, it highlights the one-way
relationship as far as innovation is concerned. Government at various levels
periodically exhorts scientists and
engineers to push the boundaries. But focusing on technologists is like putting
the cart before the horse. Innovation is not the domain of technologists. They
are one link in the chain. US companies such as Intel, IBM and Google routinely
outsource the development of their latest technologies to Indian engineers; yet
these cannot be called Indian innovations. In the same way if an Indian company
were to innovate and if the work related to technology were outsourced to
American engineers, that would still be Indian innovation. The most crucial
element of innovation is building a business case, funding it and commercializing
it. That is the domain of businessmen and finance experts; it is also the
weakest link in India. There is little knowledge of how to assess the risks and
rewards of innovation.
1. How have Indian
businesses generated most of their wealth?
1) By selling their products at low margin
2) By applying new methods
3) By inventing new methods
4) By setting up industries in foreign countries
5) All the above
2. What is the basic
difference between Indian businesses and businesses of the highly developed

world?
(A) Indian businesses depend mostly on following the methods
invented by the highly developed world whereas the highly developed world believes
in inventing a new method.
(B) Indian businesses are mostly agriculture-based whereas
businesses of the highly developed world depend mostly on technological innovation.
(C) Indian businesses are still in a primitive stage whereas
businesses of the highly developed world are in an advanced stage.
1) Only (A)
2) Only (B)
3) Only (C)
4) Only (A) and (C)
5) Only (A) and (B)
3. Find the incorrect
statement on the basis of the given passage.
1) The Chinese, the Japanese and the Koreans have excelled
in perfecting production techniques.
2) A lot of things used in modern life were invented by
Americans and Europeans.
3) Europeans and Americans not only created wealth by
inventing new methods but also established claim on perfecting and applying
these methods.
4) Despite technical excellence, China, Japan and Korea have
failed to accumulate a substantial chunk of the wealth.
5) Europeans and Americans share a major part of the global
wealth.
4. Which of the following
is not based on the facts mentioned in the given passage?
1) The net worth of India’s largest companies is not more
than USD 45 billion.
2) In monetary terms Facebook is bigger than DLF or Reliance.
3) As per the latest valuation, Apple is smaller than Google.
4) Had the developed countries not invented what they have,
we would have still been living in the Stone Age.
5) None of these
5. What is the main
intention of the writer behind writing the given passage?
1) To show that Indian industries are in a developed stage
2) To establish that India’s businesses are based on applications,
not on innovations
3) To prove that we don’t have brain to innovate anything
4) To establish that only foreign companies know how to
commercialise innovations
5) To prove that America and European countries together are
wealthier than all other countries of the world
Directions (Q. 6-8):
Choose the word/group of words which is MOST SIMILAR in meaning to the
word/group of words printed in bold as used
in the passage.
6. Chunk
1) record
2) package
3) heap
4) part
5) size
7. Exhorts
1) discharges
2) advises
3) orders
4) rebukes
5) overlooks
8. Barely
1) lastly
2) hardly
3) strongly
4) frequently
5) openly
Directions (Q. 9-10):
Choose the word/group of words which is MOST OPPOSITE in meaning of the
word/ group of words printed in bold as
used in the passage.
9. Crony
1) friendly
2) hypothetical
3) helping
4) real
5) rival
10. Odious
1) dull
2) natural
3) attractive
4) pungent
5) repulsive










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