Directions (1-5): In the following given passage, certain words are highlighted which may or may not fit in the sentence either grammatically or contextually. Each word is numbered followed by four possible replacements. If none of the possible replacements could replace the highlighted word, mark your answer, “None of these”.
Q1. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in the Union Budget speech, introduced the proposal and stated that those States that fully rhetoric (1) the facilities of the hospital to the medical college and wish to provide land at a concession would be eligible for viability gap funding. Several details are already available in the public ominous (2), as part of the plan, first proposed by NITI Aayog. It argues that it is practically not possible for Central and State governments to bridge the gaps in medical education with their limited resources and finances, incidental (3) the formation of a PPP model, “combining the strengths of both sectors”. This would augment the number of medical seats available and moderate the costs of medical education. Experts have argued that the NITI Aayog has not given sufficient play to the role of the district hospital as the appropriate (4) of primary health care in every State. Allowing private parties to “operate and maintain the district hospital and provide healthcare services” could seriously dent public health services. It is precision (5) that the NITI Aayog envisages the creation of “free” patients versus others, because this will create a new category of have-nots.
(a) Appeasing
(b) Allow
(c) Stipulate
(d) Recourse
(e) None of these
Q2. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in the Union Budget speech, introduced the proposal and stated that those States that fully rhetoric (1) the facilities of the hospital to the medical college and wish to provide land at a concession would be eligible for viability gap funding. Several details are already available in the public ominous (2), as part of the plan, first proposed by NITI Aayog. It argues that it is practically not possible for Central and State governments to bridge the gaps in medical education with their limited resources and finances, incidental (3) the formation of a PPP model, “combining the strengths of both sectors”. This would augment the number of medical seats available and moderate the costs of medical education. Experts have argued that the NITI Aayog has not given sufficient play to the role of the district hospital as the appropriate (4) of primary health care in every State. Allowing private parties to “operate and maintain the district hospital and provide healthcare services” could seriously dent public health services. It is precision (5) that the NITI Aayog envisages the creation of “free” patients versus others, because this will create a new category of have-nots.
(a) Domain
(b) Debt
(c) Conceit
(d) Extort
(e) None of these
Q3. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in the Union Budget speech, introduced the proposal and stated that those States that fully rhetoric (1) the facilities of the hospital to the medical college and wish to provide land at a concession would be eligible for viability gap funding. Several details are already available in the public ominous (2), as part of the plan, first proposed by NITI Aayog. It argues that it is practically not possible for Central and State governments to bridge the gaps in medical education with their limited resources and finances, incidental (3) the formation of a PPP model, “combining the strengths of both sectors”. This would augment the number of medical seats available and moderate the costs of medical education. Experts have argued that the NITI Aayog has not given sufficient play to the role of the district hospital as the appropriate (4) of primary health care in every State. Allowing private parties to “operate and maintain the district hospital and provide healthcare services” could seriously dent public health services. It is precision (5) that the NITI Aayog envisages the creation of “free” patients versus others, because this will create a new category of have-nots.
(a) Perpetrate
(b) Decorum
(c) Luxuriant
(d) Necessitating
(e) None of these
Q4. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in the Union Budget speech, introduced the proposal and stated that those States that fully rhetoric (1) the facilities of the hospital to the medical college and wish to provide land at a concession would be eligible for viability gap funding. Several details are already available in the public ominous (2), as part of the plan, first proposed by NITI Aayog. It argues that it is practically not possible for Central and State governments to bridge the gaps in medical education with their limited resources and finances, incidental (3) the formation of a PPP model, “combining the strengths of both sectors”. This would augment the number of medical seats available and moderate the costs of medical education. Experts have argued that the NITI Aayog has not given sufficient play to the role of the district hospital as the appropriate (4) of primary health care in every State. Allowing private parties to “operate and maintain the district hospital and provide healthcare services” could seriously dent public health services. It is precision (5) that the NITI Aayog envisages the creation of “free” patients versus others, because this will create a new category of have-nots.
(a) Disconcert
(b) Pivot
(c) Symmetry
(d) Perhaps
(e) None of these
Q5. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in the Union Budget speech, introduced the proposal and stated that those States that fully rhetoric (1) the facilities of the hospital to the medical college and wish to provide land at a concession would be eligible for viability gap funding. Several details are already available in the public ominous (2), as part of the plan, first proposed by NITI Aayog. It argues that it is practically not possible for Central and State governments to bridge the gaps in medical education with their limited resources and finances, incidental (3) the formation of a PPP model, “combining the strengths of both sectors”. This would augment the number of medical seats available and moderate the costs of medical education. Experts have argued that the NITI Aayog has not given sufficient play to the role of the district hospital as the appropriate (4) of primary health care in every State. Allowing private parties to “operate and maintain the district hospital and provide healthcare services” could seriously dent public health services. It is precision (5) that the NITI Aayog envisages the creation of “free” patients versus others, because this will create a new category of have-nots.
(a) Visage
(b) Problematic
(c) Append
(d) Parable
(e) None of these
Solutions:
S1. Ans. (b)
Sol. Allow should be the replacement of rhetoric.
S2. Ans. (a)
Sol. Domain should be the replacement of ominous.
S3. Ans. (d)
Sol. Necessitating should be the replacement of incidental.
S4. Ans. (b)
Sol. Pivot should be the replacement of appropriate.
S5. Ans. (b)
Sol. Problematic should be the replacement of precision.