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SBI Clerk Main 2022 General English Test - 4
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  • Question 1/10
    1 / -0.25

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.
    Domesticated rice cultivation in the Bengal region began about 4,000 years ago. Over a long period, ancient farmers created thousands of rice landraces, each adapted to local land and climatic conditions – a process which Charles Darwin called “artificial selection” by early cultivators. The exact number of rice varieties grown in West Bengal and Bangladesh before the advent of the Green Revolution is not definitely known. However, scientists estimate that around 15,000 folk landraces were cultivated in undivided Bengal in the 1940s. Unpublished records of the West Bengal State Research Station suggest farmers used to grow around 5,500 landraces up until the late 1960s. With the advent of India’s Green Revolution in 1965, a handful of high-yielding varieties replaced, and continue to replace, thousands of traditional landraces.
    In short, most of the old landraces of Bengal, from both sides of the international border, are now available only in a few gene banks, not in the hands of farmers. My own collection of folk rice varieties at the Vrihi rice seed bank totals 576, which is perhaps the final number of extant rice landraces that were in cultivation in Bengal up until 2012 . Many of these have disappeared from farms, and several of them are critically endangered, surviving only in single farms.
    This loss of thousands of rice varieties means the erosion of a vast body of folk knowledge pertaining to the distinctive properties of different varieties. It also means food insecurity for poor and marginal farmers, who no longer have access to a stock of different rice landraces fine-tuned to local soil and climatic conditions. What I want to emphasise here, however, is the loss of unique characteristics in these forgotten rice varieties that shape local food cultures and celebrated Bengali delicacies.
    The drastic erosion of traditional rice diversity even tarnishes the visual aesthetics of Bengali landscapes. Increasingly, the roofs of its beautiful “bungalow” huts are no longer found to be thatched with paddy straw. A major reason is because the straw from new rice varieties is too short and not durable for thatching, unlike that from heirloom varieties. The altered material culture of Bengal is thus another unnoticed consequence of the loss of rice diversity of modern Bengal.
    When economists and geographers talk about land use change, they refer to a process by which human activities transform the natural landscape. The emphasis is on the functional role of land for economic activities. What we see in Bengal, however, is that the loss of genetic diversity of indigenous crops has additional consequences that are rarely discussed – namely, the alteration of local cultures associated to this diversity.
    Source: Every time Bengal loses a traditional rice variety, it loses a little bit of its culture

    ...view full instructions


    Given below is a possible inference that can be drawn from the facts stated in the last paragraph. You have to examine the inference in the context of the passage and decide upon its degree of truth or falsity.

    “The transformation of natural landscape by human activities doesn’t impact the loss of genetic diversity of indigenous crops.”

  • Question 2/10
    1 / -0.25

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.

    Domesticated rice cultivation in the Bengal region began about 4,000 years ago. Over a long period, ancient farmers created thousands of rice landraces, each adapted to local land and climatic conditions – a process which Charles Darwin called “artificial selection” by early cultivators. The exact number of rice varieties grown in West Bengal and Bangladesh before the advent of the Green Revolution is not definitely known. However, scientists estimate that around 15,000 folk landraces were cultivated in undivided Bengal in the 1940s. Unpublished records of the West Bengal State Research Station suggest farmers used to grow around 5,500 landraces up until the late 1960s. With the advent of India’s Green Revolution in 1965, a handful of high-yielding varieties replaced, and continue to replace, thousands of traditional landraces.
    In short, most of the old landraces of Bengal, from both sides of the international border, are now available only in a few gene banks, not in the hands of farmers. My own collection of folk rice varieties at the Vrihi rice seed bank totals 576, which is perhaps the final number of extant rice landraces that were in cultivation in Bengal up until 2012 . Many of these have disappeared from farms, and several of them are critically endangered, surviving only in single farms.
    This loss of thousands of rice varieties means the erosion of a vast body of folk knowledge pertaining to the distinctive properties of different varieties. It also means food insecurity for poor and marginal farmers, who no longer have access to a stock of different rice landraces fine-tuned to local soil and climatic conditions. What I want to emphasise here, however, is the loss of unique characteristics in these forgotten rice varieties that shape local food cultures and celebrated Bengali delicacies.
    The drastic erosion of traditional rice diversity even tarnishes the visual aesthetics of Bengali landscapes. Increasingly, the roofs of its beautiful “bungalow” huts are no longer found to be thatched with paddy straw. A major reason is because the straw from new rice varieties is too short and not durable for thatching, unlike that from heirloom varieties. The altered material culture of Bengal is thus another unnoticed consequence of the loss of rice diversity of modern Bengal.
    When economists and geographers talk about land use change, they refer to a process by which human activities transform the natural landscape. The emphasis is on the functional role of land for economic activities. What we see in Bengal, however, is that the loss of genetic diversity of indigenous crops has additional consequences that are rarely discussed – namely, the alteration of local cultures associated to this diversity.
    Source: Every time Bengal loses a traditional rice variety, it loses a little bit of its culture

    ...view full instructions


    In this line, “My own collection of folk rice varieties at the Vrihi rice seed bank totals 576, which is perhaps the final number of extant rice landraces that were in cultivation in Bengal up until 2012” the author assumes that:

  • Question 3/10
    1 / -0.25

    In each of the following questions four words are given, of which two are most nearly the same or opposite in meaning. Find the two words which are most nearly the same or opposite in meaning and mark the number of the correct letter combination as your answer.

    A) Damaged

    B) Hurried

    C) Condemned

    D) Measured

  • Question 4/10
    1 / -0.25

    In each of the following questions four words are given, of which two are most nearly the same or opposite in meaning. Find the two words which are most nearly the same or opposite in meaning and mark the number of the correct letter combination as your answer.

    A) Consent

    B) Nascent

    C) Emerging

    D) Insecure

  • Question 5/10
    1 / -0.25

    In each of the following questions four words are given, of which two are most nearly the same or opposite in meaning. Find the two words which are most nearly the same or opposite in meaning and mark the number of the correct letter combination as your answer.

    A) Enormous

    B) Malign

    C) Absorb

    D) Slander

  • Question 6/10
    1 / -0.25

    In each of the following questions four words are given, of which two are most nearly the same or opposite in meaning. Find the two words which are most nearly the same or opposite in meaning and mark the number of the correct letter combination as your answer.

    A) Focus

    B) Trivial

    C) Vital

    D) Site

  • Question 7/10
    1 / -0.25

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.

    UEFA on Thursday approved new licensing regulations to replace its existing Financial Fair Play rules, allowing European clubs to make bigger losses than before but limiting spending on wages and transfers. As expected, European football’s governing body decided to overhaul the FFP rules that were introduced in 2010 in order to reduce spiralling debts among clubs across the continent. FFP’s limitations had been exposed by the emergence of state-held superpowers like Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain.

    “The biggest innovation will be the introduction of a squad cost rule to bring better cost control in relation to player wages and transfer costs,” UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin announced at a press conference in Nyon, Switzerland following a meeting of the body’s executive committee.

    UEFA will now allow clubs to report losses of 60 million euros ($65.5m) over three years rather than 30 million euros previously, and the permitted figure will even reach 90 million euros for a club “in good financial health”. However, that relaxation of the rules is combined with the new ceilings on wage spending.

    There was never any possibility of bringing in a specific salary cap like those used in North American sports because UEFA has 55 member countries with well over 1,000 clubs and must contend with European Union and national labour and competition laws.

    Yet under UEFA’s new regulations clubs will be forced to limit spending on player and staff wages, transfers and agents’ fees to 70 percent of total revenues by the 2025/26 season. The ceiling will drop as current contracts expire: 90 percent of club income in 2023/24, followed by 80 percent the season after and then to 70 percent.

    “Breaches will result in predefined financial penalties and sporting measures,” said Ceferin.

    Clubs who break the rules could be hit with transfer bans, loan restrictions, demotions from one European competition to another and points deductions in the Champions League.

    ...view full instructions


    As per the passage, the introduction of a squad cost rule will control ___________.

    I. Player wages

    II. Transfer costs

    III. Staff wages

    IV. Agents' fee

  • Question 8/10
    1 / -0.25

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.

    UEFA on Thursday approved new licensing regulations to replace its existing Financial Fair Play rules, allowing European clubs to make bigger losses than before but limiting spending on wages and transfers. As expected, European football’s governing body decided to overhaul the FFP rules that were introduced in 2010 in order to reduce spiralling debts among clubs across the continent. FFP’s limitations had been exposed by the emergence of state-held superpowers like Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain.

    “The biggest innovation will be the introduction of a squad cost rule to bring better cost control in relation to player wages and transfer costs,” UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin announced at a press conference in Nyon, Switzerland following a meeting of the body’s executive committee.

    UEFA will now allow clubs to report losses of 60 million euros ($65.5m) over three years rather than 30 million euros previously, and the permitted figure will even reach 90 million euros for a club “in good financial health”. However, that relaxation of the rules is combined with the new ceilings on wage spending.

    There was never any possibility of bringing in a specific salary cap like those used in North American sports because UEFA has 55 member countries with well over 1,000 clubs and must contend with European Union and national labour and competition laws.

    Yet under UEFA’s new regulations clubs will be forced to limit spending on player and staff wages, transfers and agents’ fees to 70 percent of total revenues by the 2025/26 season. The ceiling will drop as current contracts expire: 90 percent of club income in 2023/24, followed by 80 percent the season after and then to 70 percent.

    “Breaches will result in predefined financial penalties and sporting measures,” said Ceferin.

    Clubs who break the rules could be hit with transfer bans, loan restrictions, demotions from one European competition to another and points deductions in the Champions League.

    ...view full instructions


    Which of the following is not an assumption that supports the arguments presented in the fourth paragraph?

  • Question 9/10
    1 / -0.25

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.

    UEFA on Thursday approved new licensing regulations to replace its existing Financial Fair Play rules, allowing European clubs to make bigger losses than before but limiting spending on wages and transfers. As expected, European football’s governing body decided to overhaul the FFP rules that were introduced in 2010 in order to reduce spiralling debts among clubs across the continent. FFP’s limitations had been exposed by the emergence of state-held superpowers like Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain.

    “The biggest innovation will be the introduction of a squad cost rule to bring better cost control in relation to player wages and transfer costs,” UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin announced at a press conference in Nyon, Switzerland following a meeting of the body’s executive committee.

    UEFA will now allow clubs to report losses of 60 million euros ($65.5m) over three years rather than 30 million euros previously, and the permitted figure will even reach 90 million euros for a club “in good financial health”. However, that relaxation of the rules is combined with the new ceilings on wage spending.

    There was never any possibility of bringing in a specific salary cap like those used in North American sports because UEFA has 55 member countries with well over 1,000 clubs and must contend with European Union and national labour and competition laws.

    Yet under UEFA’s new regulations clubs will be forced to limit spending on player and staff wages, transfers and agents’ fees to 70 percent of total revenues by the 2025/26 season. The ceiling will drop as current contracts expire: 90 percent of club income in 2023/24, followed by 80 percent the season after and then to 70 percent.

    “Breaches will result in predefined financial penalties and sporting measures,” said Ceferin.

    Clubs who break the rules could be hit with transfer bans, loan restrictions, demotions from one European competition to another and points deductions in the Champions League.

    ...view full instructions


    Which of the following statements is true about the new FFP rules with reference to the given passage?

  • Question 10/10
    1 / -0.25

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.

    UEFA on Thursday approved new licensing regulations to replace its existing Financial Fair Play rules, allowing European clubs to make bigger losses than before but limiting spending on wages and transfers. As expected, European football’s governing body decided to overhaul the FFP rules that were introduced in 2010 in order to reduce spiralling debts among clubs across the continent. FFP’s limitations had been exposed by the emergence of state-held superpowers like Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain.

    “The biggest innovation will be the introduction of a squad cost rule to bring better cost control in relation to player wages and transfer costs,” UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin announced at a press conference in Nyon, Switzerland following a meeting of the body’s executive committee.

    UEFA will now allow clubs to report losses of 60 million euros ($65.5m) over three years rather than 30 million euros previously, and the permitted figure will even reach 90 million euros for a club “in good financial health”. However, that relaxation of the rules is combined with the new ceilings on wage spending.

    There was never any possibility of bringing in a specific salary cap like those used in North American sports because UEFA has 55 member countries with well over 1,000 clubs and must contend with European Union and national labour and competition laws.

    Yet under UEFA’s new regulations clubs will be forced to limit spending on player and staff wages, transfers and agents’ fees to 70 percent of total revenues by the 2025/26 season. The ceiling will drop as current contracts expire: 90 percent of club income in 2023/24, followed by 80 percent the season after and then to 70 percent.

    “Breaches will result in predefined financial penalties and sporting measures,” said Ceferin.

    Clubs who break the rules could be hit with transfer bans, loan restrictions, demotions from one European competition to another and points deductions in the Champions League.

    ...view full instructions


    Which of the following correctly describes the tone of the last paragraph?

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