IBPS CLERK 2022: ENGLISH LANGUAGE QUIZ

Attempt now to get your rank among 79 students!

Question 1:

In the given question, four words are given, some of which may or may not share a synonyms or antonyms relationship. From the options given, choose the one that identifies correct pair/s of synonyms or antonyms.
(I) Contend
(II) Immolate
(III) Insist
(IV) Argue

Question 2:

In the given question, four words are given, some of which may or may not share a synonyms or antonyms relationship. From the options given, choose the one that identifies correct pair/s of synonyms or antonyms.
(I) Intrigue
(II) Incumbent
(III) Impede
(IV) Occupan

Question 3:

Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow:

Inflation in India continues on a worrying uptrend with the consumer price index­ based reading accelerating to an eight ­month high of 6.07% last month, while wholesale prices logged a double digit increase for the  eleventh straight month. February’s headline WPI inflation spurted to 13.11%. Retail inflation remained stuck above the RBI’s upper tolerance threshold of 6% for the second month, as food price inflation quickened to 5.85%. Households in the hinterland bore a bigger brunt of the burden as price gains measured by the consumer food price index for rural areas surged by 69 basis points from January’s level, to 5.87%. Price gains in the key protein source of meat and fish jumped by almost 200 basis points from the preceding month to 7.45%, while nutrient ­rich vegetables also logged inflation of 6.13% in February, belying the          central bank’s prognostication last month of an “expected easing of vegetable prices on fresh winter crop arrivals”. And even though inflation in oils and fats eased by more than 220 basis points to 16.44%, there is little room for cheer, given that one can expect a spike again this month in the wake of the abrupt disruption in the supply of edible oils from war­torn Ukraine, which is the largest source of sunflower oil imported into India. With price gains in clothing and footwear, fuel and light and transport and communication all running well above 8% levels, the overall trend in retail inflation is now clearly broad ­based across consumption categories and disconcertingly way above tolerance levels. Also, with the pump prices of fuels yet to reflect the recent upsurge in international oil prices in the wake of Russia’s invasion of its southwestern neighbour, transport sport and communication inflation is certain to climb sharply once state­run refiners reset prices to reflect crude costs. The price of India’s crude basket had already risen by over $20 a barrel since December to $94.07 last month and with global crude prices currently in uncharted territory on account of the war, and the       rupee having weakened by about 2.5% against the dollar since the start

of the conflict, it is hard to see any near­term relief on the fuel price front. A glance at last month’s producer prices of the energy basket shows inflation in the fuel and power category of the wholesale price index was at 31.5%. And in a sign that manufacturers are no longer able no longer able to keep absorbing cost pressures, inflation in manufactured products accelerated to 9.84% presaging more pain for consumers. RBI Deputy Governor Michael D. Patra had last week cited the headroom available for the Government to cut taxes on fuels as a source of comfort on the inflation front. With the RBI’s latest consumer confidence survey showing most households reporting further increases in overall spending on essentials and remaining far from sanguine on the prices outlook, policymakers need to act expeditiously to tame inflation or risk it undermining the very growth they are currently focused on supporting.

As per the passage what is/are the RBI’s latest consumer confidence survey showing about households report.
(a) surge in domestic products.
(b) imposing various tariffs on imports
(c) showing increasing demand and goods and services.
(d) showing that there is increases in overall spending on essentials and remaining far from sanguine on the prices outlook, policymakers need to act expeditiously to tame inflation.

Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow:

Inflation in India continues on a worrying uptrend with the consumer price index­ based reading accelerating to an eight ­month high of 6.07% last month, while wholesale prices logged a double digit increase for the  eleventh straight month. February’s headline WPI inflation spurted to 13.11%. Retail inflation remained stuck above the RBI’s upper tolerance threshold of 6% for the second month, as food price inflation quickened to 5.85%. Households in the hinterland bore a bigger brunt of the burden as price gains measured by the consumer food price index for rural areas surged by 69 basis points from January’s level, to 5.87%. Price gains in the key protein source of meat and fish jumped by almost 200 basis points from the preceding month to 7.45%, while nutrient ­rich vegetables also logged inflation of 6.13% in February, belying the          central bank’s prognostication last month of an “expected easing of vegetable prices on fresh winter crop arrivals”. And even though inflation in oils and fats eased by more than 220 basis points to 16.44%, there is little room for cheer, given that one can expect a spike again this month in the wake of the abrupt disruption in the supply of edible oils from war­torn Ukraine, which is the largest source of sunflower oil imported into India. With price gains in clothing and footwear, fuel and light and transport and communication all running well above 8% levels, the overall trend in retail inflation is now clearly broad ­based across consumption categories and disconcertingly way above tolerance levels. Also, with the pump prices of fuels yet to reflect the recent upsurge in international oil prices in the wake of Russia’s invasion of its southwestern neighbour, transport sport and communication inflation is certain to climb sharply once state­run refiners reset prices to reflect crude costs. The price of India’s crude basket had already risen by over $20 a barrel since December to $94.07 last month and with global crude prices currently in uncharted territory on account of the war, and the       rupee having weakened by about 2.5% against the dollar since the start

of the conflict, it is hard to see any near­term relief on the fuel price front. A glance at last month’s producer prices of the energy basket shows inflation in the fuel and power category of the wholesale price index was at 31.5%. And in a sign that manufacturers are no longer able no longer able to keep absorbing cost pressures, inflation in manufactured products accelerated to 9.84% presaging more pain for consumers. RBI Deputy Governor Michael D. Patra had last week cited the headroom available for the Government to cut taxes on fuels as a source of comfort on the inflation front. With the RBI’s latest consumer confidence survey showing most households reporting further increases in overall spending on essentials and remaining far from sanguine on the prices outlook, policymakers need to act expeditiously to tame inflation or risk it undermining the very growth they are currently focused on supporting.

Question 4:

Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow:

Inflation in India continues on a worrying uptrend with the consumer price index­ based reading accelerating to an eight ­month high of 6.07% last month, while wholesale prices logged a double digit increase for the  eleventh straight month. February’s headline WPI inflation spurted to 13.11%. Retail inflation remained stuck above the RBI’s upper tolerance threshold of 6% for the second month, as food price inflation quickened to 5.85%. Households in the hinterland bore a bigger brunt of the burden as price gains measured by the consumer food price index for rural areas surged by 69 basis points from January’s level, to 5.87%. Price gains in the key protein source of meat and fish jumped by almost 200 basis points from the preceding month to 7.45%, while nutrient ­rich vegetables also logged inflation of 6.13% in February, belying the          central bank’s prognostication last month of an “expected easing of vegetable prices on fresh winter crop arrivals”. And even though inflation in oils and fats eased by more than 220 basis points to 16.44%, there is little room for cheer, given that one can expect a spike again this month in the wake of the abrupt disruption in the supply of edible oils from war­torn Ukraine, which is the largest source of sunflower oil imported into India. With price gains in clothing and footwear, fuel and light and transport and communication all running well above 8% levels, the overall trend in retail inflation is now clearly broad ­based across consumption categories and disconcertingly way above tolerance levels. Also, with the pump prices of fuels yet to reflect the recent upsurge in international oil prices in the wake of Russia’s invasion of its southwestern neighbour, transport sport and communication inflation is certain to climb sharply once state­run refiners reset prices to reflect crude costs. The price of India’s crude basket had already risen by over $20 a barrel since December to $94.07 last month and with global crude prices currently in uncharted territory on account of the war, and the       rupee having weakened by about 2.5% against the dollar since the start

of the conflict, it is hard to see any near­term relief on the fuel price front. A glance at last month’s producer prices of the energy basket shows inflation in the fuel and power category of the wholesale price index was at 31.5%. And in a sign that manufacturers are no longer able no longer able to keep absorbing cost pressures, inflation in manufactured products accelerated to 9.84% presaging more pain for consumers. RBI Deputy Governor Michael D. Patra had last week cited the headroom available for the Government to cut taxes on fuels as a source of comfort on the inflation front. With the RBI’s latest consumer confidence survey showing most households reporting further increases in overall spending on essentials and remaining far from sanguine on the prices outlook, policymakers need to act expeditiously to tame inflation or risk it undermining the very growth they are currently focused on supporting.

Which of the following statement(s) is/are true as per the passage?
(a) Retail inflation remained stuck above the RBI’s upper tolerance threshold of 6% for the second month.
(b) February’s headline WPI inflation spurted to 6%.
(c) With price decline in clothing and footwear, fuel and light and transport and communication all running well below 8% levels, the overall trend in retail inflation is now clearly broad­based across consumption categories and disconcertingly way below tolerance levels

Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions that follow:

Inflation in India continues on a worrying uptrend with the consumer price index­ based reading accelerating to an eight ­month high of 6.07% last month, while wholesale prices logged a double digit increase for the  eleventh straight month. February’s headline WPI inflation spurted to 13.11%. Retail inflation remained stuck above the RBI’s upper tolerance threshold of 6% for the second month, as food price inflation quickened to 5.85%. Households in the hinterland bore a bigger brunt of the burden as price gains measured by the consumer food price index for rural areas surged by 69 basis points from January’s level, to 5.87%. Price gains in the key protein source of meat and fish jumped by almost 200 basis points from the preceding month to 7.45%, while nutrient ­rich vegetables also logged inflation of 6.13% in February, belying the          central bank’s prognostication last month of an “expected easing of vegetable prices on fresh winter crop arrivals”. And even though inflation in oils and fats eased by more than 220 basis points to 16.44%, there is little room for cheer, given that one can expect a spike again this month in the wake of the abrupt disruption in the supply of edible oils from war­torn Ukraine, which is the largest source of sunflower oil imported into India. With price gains in clothing and footwear, fuel and light and transport and communication all running well above 8% levels, the overall trend in retail inflation is now clearly broad ­based across consumption categories and disconcertingly way above tolerance levels. Also, with the pump prices of fuels yet to reflect the recent upsurge in international oil prices in the wake of Russia’s invasion of its southwestern neighbour, transport sport and communication inflation is certain to climb sharply once state­run refiners reset prices to reflect crude costs. The price of India’s crude basket had already risen by over $20 a barrel since December to $94.07 last month and with global crude prices currently in uncharted territory on account of the war, and the       rupee having weakened by about 2.5% against the dollar since the start

of the conflict, it is hard to see any near­term relief on the fuel price front. A glance at last month’s producer prices of the energy basket shows inflation in the fuel and power category of the wholesale price index was at 31.5%. And in a sign that manufacturers are no longer able no longer able to keep absorbing cost pressures, inflation in manufactured products accelerated to 9.84% presaging more pain for consumers. RBI Deputy Governor Michael D. Patra had last week cited the headroom available for the Government to cut taxes on fuels as a source of comfort on the inflation front. With the RBI’s latest consumer confidence survey showing most households reporting further increases in overall spending on essentials and remaining far from sanguine on the prices outlook, policymakers need to act expeditiously to tame inflation or risk it undermining the very growth they are currently focused on supporting.

Question 5:

Direction: Read the sentence given below and find out whether there is an error in it. Mark the option which contains error.
The handling and the launch (A) of any such missiles (B) is highly regulated with (C) checks and balances to avoid accident. (D)

Question 6:

Direction: Read the sentence given below and find out whether there is an error in it. Mark the option which contains error.
The Chargé d’affaires of the (A) Indian High Commission in (B) Islamabad were called twice (C) by Pakistan to convey its concerns.(D)

Question 7:

Direction: Read the sentence given below and find out whether there is an error in it. Mark the option which contains error.
Russia vetoed a draft UN Security (A)/ Council resolution that would have (B)/ deplored Moscow’s invasion (C)/ of Ukraine, while China abstained from the vote.(D)/

Question 8:

Direction: In the question given below, a sentence is given with one blank. Five options are provided. Select the most appropriate option, that can coherently fit into the given sentence.
The Ukraine crisis has _______ the weakness of international law in general and the hollowness of the principle of sovereign equality in particular.

Question 9:

Direction: In the question given below, a sentence is given with one blank. Five options are provided. Select the most appropriate option, that can coherently fit into the given sentence.
The tensions between Russia and Ukraine, had __________ a ‘massive turbulence in the global economy’ with prices of crude oil and other commodities shooting up and ‘escalating the cost of India’s import basket’.

Question 10:

Direction: In the question given below, a sentence is given with one blank. Five options are provided. Select the most appropriate option, that can coherently fit into the given sentence.
The 4G service __________ 99% to the country's total data consumption and is expected to continue as a broadband growth engine for the next few years even as 5G services are expected to be rolled out in India this year.