Statements and conclusions Questions and answers

  1. General Intellingence and Reasoning
    1. Classification
    2. Coding and Decoding
    3. Numerical Operations
    4. Series
    5. Relationship
    6. Statements and conclusions
    7. Seating Arrangement
    8. Questions based on Codes
    9. Seating Arrangement(Circular)
    10. Input Rearrangement
    11. Statements(Mathematical) and Conclusions
    12. Questions based on Information(Bank Exams)
    13. Relationship in Equations
    14. Analogy

In these questions, three statements followed by two conclusions numbered I and II have been given. You have to take the three given statements to be true even if they seem to be at variance from commonly known facts and then decide which of the given conclusions logically foIIows from the given statements disregarding commonly known facts.

Give answer :

  1. If both conclusions I and II are true
  2. If neither conclusion I nor II is true
  3. If either conclusion I or II is true
  4. If only conclusion I is true
  5. If only conclusion II is true 
11). Statements: No meeting is an argument. All debates are arguments. Some debates are fights.
Conclusions :
I. No fight is a meeting.
II. Some fights are meetings.

A). If both conclusions I and II are true
B). If neither conclusion I nor II is true
C). If either conclusion I or II is true
D). If only conclusion I is true
E). If only conclusion II is true
12). Statements : All hands are limbs. All' limbs are fingers. Some fingers are thumbs. Conclusions :
I. Some thumbs being limbs is a possibility.
II. All hands are fingers.

A). If both conclusions I and II are true
B). If neither conclusion I nor II is true
C). If either conclusion I or II is true
D). If only conclusion I is true
E). If only conclusion II is true
13). Statements : All teams are participants. All members are teams. No member is a captain.
Conclusions:
I. Atleast some participants are members.
II. All teams being captains is a possibilitv.

A). If both conclusions I and II are true
B). If neither conclusion I nor II is true
C). If either conclusion I or II is true
D). If only conclusion I is true
E). If only conclusion II is true
14). Statements : Some slopes are mountains. No mountain is a river. Some rivers are ponds.
Conclusions :
I. All ponds being mountains is a possibility.
II. All slopes being rivers is a possibility.

A). If both conclusions I and II are true
B). If neither conclusion I nor II is true
C). If either conclusion I or II is true
D). If only conclusion I is true
E). If only conclusion II is true
15). Statements : No gate is a door. All doors are walls. No. wall is a ceiling.
Conclusions :
I. At least some gates are ceilings.
II. No ceiling is a door.

A). If both conclusions I and II are true
B). If neither conclusion I nor II is true
C). If either conclusion I or II is true
D). If only conclusion I is true
E). If only conclusion II is true


>Directions (Q.18-23): In each of these questions two/three statements followed by two conclusions numbered I and II have been given. You have to take the given statemenet to be true even if they seem to be at variance with the commonly known facts and then decide which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statements disregarding commonly known facts. 

16). Statements: Some prices are costs. Some costs are amounts. All amounts are expenses.
Conclusions: I. At least some amounts are prices.
II. All amounts being prices is a possibility.

A). Either conclusion I or II is true.
B). Both conclusion I and II are true.
C). Neither conclusion I nor II is true.
D). Only conclusion II is true.
E). Only conclusion I is true.
17). Statements: All invitations are rejections. Some invitations are celebrations. No rejection is an attractions
Conclusions:
I. Some celebrations are rejections.
II. All celebrations are rejections.

A). Either conclusion I or II is true.
B). Both conclusion I and II are true.
C). Neither conclusion I nor II is true.
D). Only conclusion II is true.
E). Only conclusion I is true.
18). Statements: All grades are scales. All scales are categories.
Conclusions:
I. All grades are categories.
II. All categories are scales.

A). Either conclusion I or II is true.
B). Both conclusion I and II are true.
C). Neither conclusion I nor II is true.
D). Only conclusion II is true.
E). Only conclusion I is true.
19). Statements: Some metals are papers. All papers are alloys. No alloy is a wood. Conclusions:
I. All woods being metals is a possibility.
II. All metals being woods is a possibility.

A). Either conclusion I or II is true.
B). Both conclusion I and II are true.
C). Neither conclusion I nor II is true.
D). Only conclusion II is true.
E). Only conclusion I is true.
20). Statements: Some metals are papers. All papers are alloys. No alloy is a wood. Conclusions:
I. No paper is a wood.
II. At least some metals are alloys.

A). Either conclusion I or II is true.
B). Both conclusion I and II are true.
C). Neither conclusion I nor II is true.
D). Only conclusion II is true.
E). Only conclusion I is true.
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