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English Questions For SBI Clerk and Syndicate Bank PO | 02 - 02 - 18

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English Questions For SBI Clerk and Syndicate Bank PO | 02 - 02 - 18
Developing a solid foundation in English will not only help you to increase your knowledge but will also help you to score better in the exam. English is a major section in exams which candidate fears a lot. To boost your preparation,MahendraGuru is providing English Quiz for SBI Clerk, RBI Assistant, IBPS Clerk and IBPS SO Exams exams.

With Mahendra Guru, be the first to know the changes in Grammar which keep you updated through its Practice sets.These practice sets will give you power in building your bright career.

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 have been suggested, one of which fits the blanks appropriately. Find out the appropriate word in each case.

The Supreme Court has grappled with the question _1_ a provision in electoral law that makes it a corrupt _2_ to use religion, race, caste or language as a ground for canvassing votes in an election is a bar limited to the groups to which candidates or their rivals belong, or whether it is a general prohibition on sectarian appeals. Section 123(3) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, as amended in 1961, gave rise to this doubt. By a four-three majority, a seven-member Bench has ruled that it is a general prohibition on the use of religion or any other communal or _3_ value in the electoral arena. The minority favoured limiting the ambit of the sub-section to cover only candidates who sought votes on such grounds, or the rivals they wanted the voters not to back on similar grounds. That secularism is the _4_ of our democracy is undisputed. That the electoral process ought not to permit appeals to the electorate on these narrow grounds is equally beyond doubt. Against this backdrop, it is only logical that the Supreme Court should decide that it is a “corrupt practice” for candidates to use any caste or communal _5_ to canvass for votes or to discredit a rival, regardless of whether the candidates themselves belong to such religious, communal or linguistic groups.

It is interesting that the dispute turned on a single pronoun, ‘his’, that was introduced in the 1961 amendment. The majority opinion favours a ‘purposive interpretation’, holding that it covered the candidates as well as the voter. It finds support in legislative history and our constitutional _6_. The purpose of the amendment was to widen the scope of the particular corrupt practice. Given that secularism is a basic feature of the Constitution, it has been interpreted in the light of Parliament’s intention to prohibit any religious or sectarian appeal for votes. There is a justifiable worry that a wider _7_ may lead to eliminating from the poll discourse political issues that turn on religion, caste or language. After all, this is a country in which sections of society suffer _8_ and historical injustices based on religious or caste identity. But the overall message is clear. It is left to the wisdom of judges dealing with election cases to draw the line between what is permissible and what is not, and look at the context in which some statements are made before deciding whether they constitute a corrupt practice.. The minority view nuances this with a reminder that legal issues need to be seen in their social _9_. The _10_ verdict will find resonance with all those who swear by the primacy of secularism in the public domain


Choose the correct option for (1)

(1)  If

(2)   whether

(3)   on

(4)   among

(5)   at

Choose the correct option for (2)

(1) procedure

(2)  use

(3)  practice

(4)  process

(5)  rule

Choose the correct option for (3)

(1)  sectarian

(2)   factional

(3)   narrow

(4)   bigoted

(5)   parochial
 
Choose the correct option for (4)

(1) basis

(2)  base

(3)  ground

(4)  substratum

(5)  bedrock
 
Choose the correct option for (5)

(1)  limit

(2)   criterion

(3)   parameter

(4)   restriction

(5)   constant
 
Choose the correct option for (6)

(1)  ethics

(2)   ethos

(3)   right

(4)   culture

(5)   values

Choose the correct option for (7)

(1)  Interpretation

(2)   comprehension

(3)   clarification

(4)   perception

(5)   awareness
 
Choose the correct option for (8)

(1)  Need

(2)   loss

(3)   want

(4)   deprivation

(5)   seizure

Choose the correct option for (9)

(1)  Index

(2)   context

(3)   connection

(4)   circumstances

(5)   relation.
 
Choose the correct option for (10)

(1)  minority

(2)   schedule

(3)   majority

(4)   righteous

(5)   major

Answer- 1. (2)   2. (3)      3. (1)      4. (5)      5. (3)      6. (2)      7. (1)      8. (4)      9. (2)      10. (3)   

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