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English Language Quiz For IBPS | RBI | SBI | NABARD | 29-09-2022

Swati Mahendra's

 



Dear Readers,

Mahendras has started special quizzes for  IBPS  | RBI  | SBI  | NABARD   so that you can practice more and more to crack the examination. This  IBPS  | RBI  | SBI  | NABARD    Exam special quiz series will mold your preparations in the right direction and the regular practice of these quizzes will be really very helpful in scoring good marks in the Examination. Here we are providing you the important question of English Language for the  IBPS  | RBI  | SBI  | NABARD  .



1-10. Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions given below it. Certain words have been given in bold to help you locate them while answering some questions.

As per the 2011 Census, there are 6,40,930 villages in India, of which around 6,00,000 can be regarded as inhabited. The Census, though, treats rural or village population as a residual even as it has different categories of “urban”. If a settlement is under a municipality, corporation, cantonment board or a notified town area committee, it becomes a statutory town and is hence urban. Another definition of urban is linked to demographic characteristics: If in a population size of 5,000, 75 per cent of the male working population is engaged in non-agricultural pursuits and the population density exceeds 400 people per sq km, this becomes a Census town, regardless of whether it is a statutory town or not.

This reclassification — a deviation from the traditional notions of urbanisation, which we link to the natural rate of growth in urban areas or rural-urban migration — also results in urbanisation. In fact, between 2001 and 2011, a large chunk of increased urbanisation was because of Census towns and not statutory ones. There is also the matter of an urban outgrowth, when a village (or hamlet) is physically contiguous to a town and possesses urban features; it is then treated as an urban agglomeration. Therefore, anything other than a statutory town, Census town or urban agglomeration is a village. In that sense, the village is residual, regardless of its population size. The population can be 10,000 people or it can also be 100 people.

It’s odd that the 2011 Census showed 222 villages in the (National Capital Territory), though I understand the definitional issue. There is a process for transition to the “urban”, but that hasn’t yet occurred for these 222 villages. There is a notification, land is acquired by the DDA and during the transition from a panchayat to municipality, and there is understandable speculation on the land. You can thus find one side of a road that is “urban” and an opposite side still “rural”, like the area near Masoodpur village.

The major road from NH 8 to the Mehrauli-Gurgaon road is sometimes referred to as the Mahipalpur-Masoodpur Road, both Mahipalpur and Masoodpur being villages. Mahipalpur gets its name from Raja Mahipal Tomar, who established it, while Masoodpur is so named because some six centuries ago, the land was originally bought from Masood Khan. Subsequently, DDA acquired some of this land. Near Masoodpur, you will find malls, institutions and hotels, but you will also find a panchayat bhawan. Many people don’t know that JNU is built on Masoodpur land and that a land acquisition case is still going on, even though the acquisition was done in 1961 and 1965.

Throughout the country, we want citizens to have access to similar standards of public goods and services — the word “public good” not being used in the classic economist’s sense, but in terms of goods and services we want the government (across all three layers) to provide. We want a minimum threshold to be available everywhere: in the village with a population of 10,000, the village with a population of 100, Masoodpur-type villages, statutory towns and Census towns.

The 2001 Census contains a table, which provides size distribution of villages according to population. As per the 2001 data, 91,000 villages had population size less than 200, with almost 13,000 of them in Odisha and around 9,000 in HP and UP There were 1,27,000 villages with population sizes between 200 and 499, with their concentration in UP, Odisha, MP and even Maharashtra.

Delivering public goods and services in a village in every habitation within the village is very difficult. I forgot to mention that some villages with small population sizes are in difficult geographical terrain. How has this changed? The only decent answer we have seems to be from the ICE (income and consumption expenditure) 2014, undertaken by PRICE (People Research of India’s Consumer Economy). This tells us an expected story of greater integration of larger (population sizes more than 5,000) villages with the mainstream, primarily because of better transport connectivity. The radius of development, so to speak, is getting larger, but there are still the smaller villages.

1 What does the author mean by PRICE in the given passage?

01. Financial value of a commodity

02. Monetization of a commodity.

03. People research of India’s consumer economy

04. People’s research of international consumer economy

05. Expenditure assessment for goods

2 Which of the following sentences is/are true in context to villages as given in the passage?

01. Anything other than a statutory town, Census town or urban agglomeration is a village.

02. A village is residual, regardless of its population size.

03. The population of a village can be 10,000 people or it can also be 100 people.

04. 2011 Census showed 222 villages in the National Capital Territory

05. All of the above

3 When does a place become a census town according to the passage?

A. If in a population size of 5,000,

B. If 75 per cent of the male working population is engaged in non-agricultural pursuits

C. If the population density exceeds 400 people per sq km,

D. If it is a statutory town or not.

01. Only A

02. Both A and C

03. All except D

04. Only D

05. Both C and D

4 As per the data from the 2001 census all the sentences are correct EXCEPT-

01. 91,000 villages had population size less than 200.

02. There are 222 villages in the national capital territory

03. There are 13,000 villages in Odisha and

04. around 9,000 villages in HP and UP

05. There are 1,27,000 villages with population sizes between 200 and 499

5 How many inhabited villages are there in India according to the census 2001?

01. 1,00,000

02. 6,40,930

03. 6,00,000

04. 1,27,000

05. 91,000

6 JNU is built on the land of which of the following villages?

01. Gurgaon

02. Masoodpur

03. Mehrauli

04. Faizabad

05. Mahipalpur

7 Which of the following options is the most similar in meaning to the word ‘Inhabited’ as given in the passage?

01. abandoned

02. denizen

03. occupied

04. endured

05. tenant

8 Which of the following options is the most similar in meaning to the word ‘contiguous’ as given in the passage?

01. pestiferous

02. endemic

03. epidemic

04. adjoining

05. separated

9 Which of the following options is the most opposite in meaning to the word ‘agglomeration’ as given in the passage?

01. collection

02. proliferation

03. segregation

04. cluster

05. isolation

10 Which of the following options is the most opposite in meaning to the word ‘speculation’ as given in the passage?

01. conjecture

02. hypothesis

03. supposition

04. reality

05. measurement

Answers:-

Q.1 (3)

Q.2 (5)

Q.3 (3)

Q.4 (2)

Q.5 (4)

Q.6 (2)

Q.7 (3)

Q.8 (4)

Q.9 (3)

Q.10 (4)

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