31-05-2012, 02:24 PM
THE PRINCETON REVIEW CAT SAMPLE PAPER 2 -Number of Questions
THE PRINCETON REVIEW CAT SAMPLE PAPER 2 -Number of Questions.pdf (Size: 145.36 KB / Downloads: 49)
1. Three airlines - IA, JA and SA - operate on the Delhi-Mumbai route. To increase the number of seats
sold, SA reduced its fares and this was emulated by IA and JA immediately. The general belief was that
the volume of air travel between Delhi and Mumbai would increase as a result.
Which of the following, if true, would add credence to the general belief?
[1] Increase in profitability of the three airlines.
[2] Extension of the discount scheme to other routes.
[3] A study that shows that air travellers in India are price-conscious.
[4] A study that shows that as much as 80% of air travel in India is company-sponsored.
2. According to McNeill, a Brahmin priest was expected to be able to recite at least one of the Vedas. The
practice was essential for several centuries when the Vedas had not yet been written down. It must have
had a selective effect, since priests would have been recruited from those able or willing to memorise
long passages. It must have helped in the dissemination of the work, since a memorised passage can be
duplicated many times.
Which one of the following can be inferred from the above passage?
[1] Reciting the Vedas was a Brahmin’s obligation
[2] The Vedic priest was like a recorded audio cassette
[3] McNeill studied the behaviour of Brahmin priests
[4] Vedic hymns had not been scripted
3. Developed countries have made adequate provisions for social security for senior citizens. State
insurers (as well as private ones) offer medicare and pension benefits to people who can no longer earn.
In India, with the collapse of the joint family system, the traditional shelter of the elderly has
disappeared. And a State faced with a financial crunch is not in a position to provide social security. So,
it is advisable that the working population give serious thought to building a financial base for itself.
Which one of the following, if it were to happen, weakens the conclusion drawn in the above passage
the most?
[1] The investible income of the working population, as a proportion of its total income, will grow in
the future.
[2] The insurance sector is underdeveloped and trends indicate that it will be extensively privatised in
the future.
[3] India is on a path of development that will take it to a developed country status, with all its positive
and negative implications.
[4] If the working population builds a stronger financial base, there will be a revival of the joint family
system.
4. Various studies have shown that our forested and hilly regions, and, in general, areas where biodiversity
-- as reflected in the variety of flora -- is high, are the places where poverty appears to be high. And
these same areas are also the ones where educational performance seems to be poor. Therefore, it may
be surmised that, even disregarding poverty status, richness in biodiversity goes hand in hand with
educational backwardness.
Which one of the following statements, if true, can be said to best provide supporting evidence for the
surmise mentioned in the passage?
[1] In regions where there is little variety in flora, educational performance is seen to be as good as in
regions with high variety in flora, when poverty levels are high.
[2] Regions which show high biodiversity also exhibit poor educational performance, at low levels of
poverty.
[3] Regions which show high biodiversity reveal high levels of poverty and poor educational
performance.
[4] In regions where there is low biodiversity, at all levels of poverty, educational performance is seen
to be good.