Jumbled Sentence Questions and Answers updated daily – English
Jumbled Sentence Questions
(A) It is not enough for imagining a teddy bear that one has an image as of a teddy bear.
(B) If a hallucinogenic drug causes me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear, since my having the image as of a teddy bear is something that has happened to me, rather than an action of mine
(C) Not all actions are bodily movements, and the causal theory of action also applies to mental actions such as imagining and calculating.
(D) Having an image is an action of mine only if it is preceded by my having an appropriate intention. And if, as a matter of complete coincidence, I intended to imagine a toy just before a hallucinogenic drug caused me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear.
(E) A mental event is an action only if it is caused by an appropriate intention of the subject's.
Refer the above for the Questions 81 to 80
(A) It is not enough for imagining a teddy bear that one has an image as of a teddy bear.
(B) If a hallucinogenic drug causes me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear, since my having the image as of a teddy bear is something that has happened to me, rather than an action of mine.
(C) Not all actions are bodily movements, and the causal theory of action also applies to mental actions such as imagining and calculating.
(D) Having an image is an action of mine only if it is preceded by my having an appropriate intention. And if, as a matter of complete coincidence, I intended to imagine a toy just before a hallucinogenic drug caused me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear.
(E) A mental event is an action only if it is caused by an appropriate intention of the subject's.
Which of the following should be the Second sentence of the given paragraph?










(A) It is not enough for imagining a teddy bear that one has an image as of a teddy bear.
(B) If a hallucinogenic drug causes me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear, since my having the image as of a teddy bear is something that has happened to me, rather than an action of mine
(C) Not all actions are bodily movements, and the causal theory of action also applies to mental actions such as imagining and calculating.
(D) Having an image is an action of mine only if it is preceded by my having an appropriate intention. And if, as a matter of complete coincidence, I intended to imagine a toy just before a hallucinogenic drug caused me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear.
(E) A mental event is an action only if it is caused by an appropriate intention of the subject's.
Refer the above for the Questions 82 to 81
(A) It is not enough for imagining a teddy bear that one has an image as of a teddy bear.
(B) If a hallucinogenic drug causes me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear, since my having the image as of a teddy bear is something that has happened to me, rather than an action of mine.
(C) Not all actions are bodily movements, and the causal theory of action also applies to mental actions such as imagining and calculating.
(D) Having an image is an action of mine only if it is preceded by my having an appropriate intention. And if, as a matter of complete coincidence, I intended to imagine a toy just before a hallucinogenic drug caused me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear.
(E) A mental event is an action only if it is caused by an appropriate intention of the subject's.
Which of the following should be the Fourth sentence of the given paragraph?










(A) It is not enough for imagining a teddy bear that one has an image as of a teddy bear.
(B) If a hallucinogenic drug causes me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear, since my having the image as of a teddy bear is something that has happened to me, rather than an action of mine
(C) Not all actions are bodily movements, and the causal theory of action also applies to mental actions such as imagining and calculating.
(D) Having an image is an action of mine only if it is preceded by my having an appropriate intention. And if, as a matter of complete coincidence, I intended to imagine a toy just before a hallucinogenic drug caused me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear.
(E) A mental event is an action only if it is caused by an appropriate intention of the subject's.
Refer the above for the Questions 83 to 82
(A) It is not enough for imagining a teddy bear that one has an image as of a teddy bear.
(B) If a hallucinogenic drug causes me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear, since my having the image as of a teddy bear is something that has happened to me, rather than an action of mine.
(C) Not all actions are bodily movements, and the causal theory of action also applies to mental actions such as imagining and calculating.
(D) Having an image is an action of mine only if it is preceded by my having an appropriate intention. And if, as a matter of complete coincidence, I intended to imagine a toy just before a hallucinogenic drug caused me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear.
(E) A mental event is an action only if it is caused by an appropriate intention of the subject's.
Which of the following should be the First sentence of the given paragraph?










(A) It is not enough for imagining a teddy bear that one has an image as of a teddy bear.
(B) If a hallucinogenic drug causes me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear, since my having the image as of a teddy bear is something that has happened to me, rather than an action of mine
(C) Not all actions are bodily movements, and the causal theory of action also applies to mental actions such as imagining and calculating.
(D) Having an image is an action of mine only if it is preceded by my having an appropriate intention. And if, as a matter of complete coincidence, I intended to imagine a toy just before a hallucinogenic drug caused me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear.
(E) A mental event is an action only if it is caused by an appropriate intention of the subject's.
Refer the above for the Questions 84 to 83
(A) It is not enough for imagining a teddy bear that one has an image as of a teddy bear.
(B) If a hallucinogenic drug causes me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear, since my having the image as of a teddy bear is something that has happened to me, rather than an action of mine.
(C) Not all actions are bodily movements, and the causal theory of action also applies to mental actions such as imagining and calculating.
(D) Having an image is an action of mine only if it is preceded by my having an appropriate intention. And if, as a matter of complete coincidence, I intended to imagine a toy just before a hallucinogenic drug caused me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear.
(E) A mental event is an action only if it is caused by an appropriate intention of the subject's.
Which of the following should be the Third sentence of the given paragraph?










(A) It is not enough for imagining a teddy bear that one has an image as of a teddy bear.
(B) If a hallucinogenic drug causes me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear, since my having the image as of a teddy bear is something that has happened to me, rather than an action of mine
(C) Not all actions are bodily movements, and the causal theory of action also applies to mental actions such as imagining and calculating.
(D) Having an image is an action of mine only if it is preceded by my having an appropriate intention. And if, as a matter of complete coincidence, I intended to imagine a toy just before a hallucinogenic drug caused me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear.
(E) A mental event is an action only if it is caused by an appropriate intention of the subject's.
Refer the above for the Questions 85 to 84
(A) It is not enough for imagining a teddy bear that one has an image as of a teddy bear.
(B) If a hallucinogenic drug causes me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear, since my having the image as of a teddy bear is something that has happened to me, rather than an action of mine.
(C) Not all actions are bodily movements, and the causal theory of action also applies to mental actions such as imagining and calculating.
(D) Having an image is an action of mine only if it is preceded by my having an appropriate intention. And if, as a matter of complete coincidence, I intended to imagine a toy just before a hallucinogenic drug caused me to have an image as of a teddy bear, then I have not imagined a teddy bear.
(E) A mental event is an action only if it is caused by an appropriate intention of the subject's.
Which of the following should be the Last sentence of the given paragraph?










Rearrange the following sentences (A), (B), (C), (D) and (E) in the proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the questions given below.
A. In his order dated November 2, Information Commissioner M. Sridhar Acharyulu has come down heavily on the RBI and its chief for failing to uphold the interest of the public at large and not fulfilling its statutory duty to the depositors, the economy and the banking sector, by privileging individual banks' interests over its obligation to ensure transparency.
B. While the central bank has repeatedly acknowledged the gravity of the problem it faces, including in ensuring more accountability from the more numerous public sector banks over which it wants greater control, it has consistently invoked both the risk to the country's "economic interest" and its "fiduciary" relationship with lenders to avoid sharing information on the largest defaulters with RTI applicants.
C. The Reserve Bank of India finds itself in the midst of another tangle.
D. The Central Information Commission (CIC) has directed RBI Governor Urjit Patel to show cause "why the maximum penalty should not be imposed on him for" the central bank's ostensible "defiance" of Supreme Court orders on disclosing the names of willful defaulters on bank loans worth hundreds of crores of rupees.
E. At the heart of the matter is the issue of burgeoning bad loans at the country's commercial banks, which by the RBI's own admission had, at the gross level, surged to 11.6% of all advances as on March 31, 2018, from September 2017's 10.2% level.
Refer the above for the Questions 86 to 85










Rearrange the following sentences (A), (B), (C), (D) and (E) in the proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the questions given below.
A. In his order dated November 2, Information Commissioner M. Sridhar Acharyulu has come down heavily on the RBI and its chief for failing to uphold the interest of the public at large and not fulfilling its statutory duty to the depositors, the economy and the banking sector, by privileging individual banks' interests over its obligation to ensure transparency.
B. While the central bank has repeatedly acknowledged the gravity of the problem it faces, including in ensuring more accountability from the more numerous public sector banks over which it wants greater control, it has consistently invoked both the risk to the country's "economic interest" and its "fiduciary" relationship with lenders to avoid sharing information on the largest defaulters with RTI applicants.
C. The Reserve Bank of India finds itself in the midst of another tangle.
D. The Central Information Commission (CIC) has directed RBI Governor Urjit Patel to show cause "why the maximum penalty should not be imposed on him for" the central bank's ostensible "defiance" of Supreme Court orders on disclosing the names of willful defaulters on bank loans worth hundreds of crores of rupees.
E. At the heart of the matter is the issue of burgeoning bad loans at the country's commercial banks, which by the RBI's own admission had, at the gross level, surged to 11.6% of all advances as on March 31, 2018, from September 2017's 10.2% level.
Refer the above for the Questions 87 to 86










Rearrange the following sentences (A), (B), (C), (D) and (E) in the proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the questions given below.
A. In his order dated November 2, Information Commissioner M. Sridhar Acharyulu has come down heavily on the RBI and its chief for failing to uphold the interest of the public at large and not fulfilling its statutory duty to the depositors, the economy and the banking sector, by privileging individual banks' interests over its obligation to ensure transparency.
B. While the central bank has repeatedly acknowledged the gravity of the problem it faces, including in ensuring more accountability from the more numerous public sector banks over which it wants greater control, it has consistently invoked both the risk to the country's "economic interest" and its "fiduciary" relationship with lenders to avoid sharing information on the largest defaulters with RTI applicants.
C. The Reserve Bank of India finds itself in the midst of another tangle.
D. The Central Information Commission (CIC) has directed RBI Governor Urjit Patel to show cause "why the maximum penalty should not be imposed on him for" the central bank's ostensible "defiance" of Supreme Court orders on disclosing the names of willful defaulters on bank loans worth hundreds of crores of rupees.
E. At the heart of the matter is the issue of burgeoning bad loans at the country's commercial banks, which by the RBI's own admission had, at the gross level, surged to 11.6% of all advances as on March 31, 2018, from September 2017's 10.2% level.
Refer the above for the Questions 88 to 87










Rearrange the following sentences (A), (B), (C), (D) and (E) in the proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the questions given below.
A. In his order dated November 2, Information Commissioner M. Sridhar Acharyulu has come down heavily on the RBI and its chief for failing to uphold the interest of the public at large and not fulfilling its statutory duty to the depositors, the economy and the banking sector, by privileging individual banks' interests over its obligation to ensure transparency.
B. While the central bank has repeatedly acknowledged the gravity of the problem it faces, including in ensuring more accountability from the more numerous public sector banks over which it wants greater control, it has consistently invoked both the risk to the country's "economic interest" and its "fiduciary" relationship with lenders to avoid sharing information on the largest defaulters with RTI applicants.
C. The Reserve Bank of India finds itself in the midst of another tangle.
D. The Central Information Commission (CIC) has directed RBI Governor Urjit Patel to show cause "why the maximum penalty should not be imposed on him for" the central bank's ostensible "defiance" of Supreme Court orders on disclosing the names of willful defaulters on bank loans worth hundreds of crores of rupees.
E. At the heart of the matter is the issue of burgeoning bad loans at the country's commercial banks, which by the RBI's own admission had, at the gross level, surged to 11.6% of all advances as on March 31, 2018, from September 2017's 10.2% level.
Refer the above for the Questions 89 to 88










Rearrange the following sentences (A), (B), (C), (D) and (E) in the proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the questions given below.
A. In his order dated November 2, Information Commissioner M. Sridhar Acharyulu has come down heavily on the RBI and its chief for failing to uphold the interest of the public at large and not fulfilling its statutory duty to the depositors, the economy and the banking sector, by privileging individual banks' interests over its obligation to ensure transparency.
B. While the central bank has repeatedly acknowledged the gravity of the problem it faces, including in ensuring more accountability from the more numerous public sector banks over which it wants greater control, it has consistently invoked both the risk to the country's "economic interest" and its "fiduciary" relationship with lenders to avoid sharing information on the largest defaulters with RTI applicants.
C. The Reserve Bank of India finds itself in the midst of another tangle.
D. The Central Information Commission (CIC) has directed RBI Governor Urjit Patel to show cause "why the maximum penalty should not be imposed on him for" the central bank's ostensible "defiance" of Supreme Court orders on disclosing the names of willful defaulters on bank loans worth hundreds of crores of rupees.
E. At the heart of the matter is the issue of burgeoning bad loans at the country's commercial banks, which by the RBI's own admission had, at the gross level, surged to 11.6% of all advances as on March 31, 2018, from September 2017's 10.2% level.
Refer the above for the Questions 90 to 89










A) Thus begins the search for relief: painkillers, ice, yoga, herbs, even surgery
B) Most computer users develop disorders because they ignore warnings like tingling fingers, a numb hand or a sore shoulder
C) They keep pointing and dragging until tendons chafe and scar tissue forms, along with bad habits that are almost impossible to change
D) But cures are elusive , because repetitive stress injuries present a bag of ills that often defy easy diagnosis.










(A) In pure price discrimination, the seller charges each customer the maximum price he or she can pay.
(B) Price discrimination is most valuable when the profit from separating the markets is greater than profit from keeping the markets combined.
(C) Price discrimination is a pricing strategy that charges customers different prices for the same product or service. (D) In more common forms of price discrimination, the seller places customers in groups based on certain attributes and charges each group a different price.
(E) The company identifies different market segments, such as domestic and industrial users, with different price elasticities.










A. Unless economic growth improves social and human development, it cannot be sustained.
B. Equally, economic growth itself is impeded by low levels of productivity in an undernourished and malnourished population.
C. Nutrition is complex, and therefore its delivery must be simplified through greater awareness and actions.
D. The delivery models must be collaborative across domains, with clear decision rights and hard-wired processes, enabled by technology and a significant investment in strengthening people competencies.










1) As a Syrian migrant arriving in Berlin, Munzer Khattab could barely say a word in German, let alone fill out a pile of forms in the language.
A) So, over the past year Khattab has not only learned German but also worked with five other Syrian refugees or asylum seekers to design a smartphone app to make forms less daunting.
B) It will also provide them with a map with Berlin offices that all newcomers need to navigate and deal with other questions about red tape that can leave asylum seekers in knots.
C) The developers believe it will help migrants fleeing violence and poverty, more than a million of which have entered Germany in the past year.
D) The app, called 'Bureaucrazy', to be launched in January, will translate various forms into Arabic and English for newcomers facing a pile of paperwork ranging from registering with authorities to opening a bank account.










(A) apart from the potential for upholding human values, is our ability to make choices, to take control of our destiny.
(B) Unless we go with nature, we won"™t be able to survive any longer, in Stephen Hawking"™s words, "œthe next thousand years" on this fragile planet".
(C) It all comes down to karma, what goes around comes around. Humans have committed mass deforestation, nature has rewarded us with climate change, unexpected storms, wildfires and sea levels.
(D) That"™s not just why we must be careful in terms of the lifestyle we choose. What differentiates us humans from other species,
(E) Today it all comes down to our lifestyle choices, each of which, corporations have ensured have strong repercussions on nature.










He would often
P: Brahmacharya if his protests were not functioning the way
Q: he expected
R: critique his own life of










1.In the first years of his reign, Ashoka was an autocrat.
P. The effect over the slaughter on his mind was profound.
Q He was successful but thousands were slain in the battle.
R. About the ninth year he decided to conquer Kalinga.
S. This caused a sudden change of his heart
6. And joined the Buddhist community and became a monk.










1. The majority of children world-wide who are out of school are girls
P. She marries much later in life and has fewer children
Q. A working woman spends 903', of her income in the family
R. An educated woman acquires self-respect and confidence
S. Child mortality drops and fewer cases of mothers die in child-birth
6. So when you educate a woman she benefits cascade across the society.










Although no convincing
P: arguments were made against
Q: was commotion in the House
R: the amendment, there










This too, is a classic
P: "stock versus flow" problem, where
Q: focusing only on the latter
R: completely distorts the picture









