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Old May 10th, 2014, 12:31 PM
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Default Re: Canara Bank PO question papers of previous years

As you want to get the Canara Bank PO question papers of previous years so here is the information of the same for you:

26. Swaroop and Simple want to attend a seminar together between 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday. Simple cannot leave till after her lunch break which begins at 1.30 p.m. Swaroop is free after her meeting which ends at noon. For how many hours can the two of them attend the seminar?

(1) 3 ½ hours (2) 2 ½ hours (3) 4 ½ hours (4) Cannot be determined (5) None of these


27. How many pairs of letters are there in the word ANSWER each of which has as many letters between them in the word as there are in the English language?

(1) One (2) Two (3) Four (4) Three (5) None of these

28. Find the odd one out

(1) 2 (2) 7 (3) 11 (4) 13 (5) 9

29. If all the letters in the word MERCIFUL are rearranged in alphabetical order and substituted by the alphabet preceding them in the English alphabet what will be the new arrangement of letters?

(1) BDHEKLQT (2) BDEHKLQT (3) BDEHLKQT (4) BDEJMLQT (5) NONE OF THESE

30. Out of 38 families in a housing society 5 subscribe to Hindi news-papers alone, 12 subscribe to both Hindi and Marathi newspapers. Find the number of Maranthi news-paper subscribers.

(1) 9 (2) 21 (3) 17 (4) Cannot be determined (5) None of these

Directions (31-35): Below are given letters and their numeric codes. Below that are given some conditions to be followed while codifying the given letter groups in each question. Study them and find out the correct numeric coded form of the given letter group in each question. If none of the coded forms is correct, your answer will be (5) i.e. ‘None of these’. Conditions:

(i) If the first and last letters are vowels both are to be coded as Ś.

(ii) If the second letter is a vowel and the third letter is a consonant a single code is to be used and both are to be coded jointly as %.

(iii) If the first letter is a consonant and the last letter is a vowel both are to be coded as?

31. ENIMY

(1) 1%28 (2) ?732? (3) 17328 (4) ?7328 (5) None of these

32. GENIR

(1) ?173? (2) 6%39 (3) 6%79 (4) 61739 (5) None of these

33. QUERI

(1) 5%93 (2) ?413? (3) ?4139 (4) ?419? (5) None of these

34. EINUM

(1) 1%72 (2) 0%42 (3) 1374? (4) 1%43 (5) None of these

35. UNGRE

(1) Ś769 Ś (2) 4769 Ś (3) 47691 (4) Ś7691 (5) None of these

Canara Bank probationary officer exam question paper 2 question No. 36 to 50

Directions (36-40): In each question below are two statements followed by two conclusions numbered I and II. You have to take the two 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 follows from the two statements disregarding commonly known facts.

Give answer (1) if only conclusion I follows.


Give answer (2) if only conclusion II follows.

Give answer (3) if either conclusion I or II follows.

Give answer (4) if neither conclusion I nor II follows.

Give answer (5) if both conclusions I or II follow.

36. Statements: Some ovens are refrigerator. Some refrigerators are ACs.

Conclusions:I. Some ACs are ovens.II. No. AC is oven.

38. Statements: All planes are birds. All birds are clouds.

Conclusions:I. Some planes are clouds. II. Some clouds are birds.

39. Statements: Some sweets are salt. No salt in spice.

Conclusions:I.. Some sweets are spice.II. No spice is salt.

40. Statements: Some papers are plastics. All papers are clothes.

Conclusions:I. Some plastics are clothes.II. Some plastics are papers.

Directions (41-45): Each of the following questions below consists a question and two statements numbered I and II given below it. You have to decide if the data provided in the statements are sufficient to answer the question. Read both statements and:

Give answer (1) if the data in statements I alone is sufficient to answer the question while the data in statement II is not sufficient to answer the question.

Give answer (2) if the data in statement II alone is sufficient to answer the question, while the data in statement I alone is not sufficient to answer the question.

Give answer (3) if the data either in statement I alone or in statement II alone is sufficient to answer the question.

Give answer (4) if the data in both the statements I and II are not sufficient to answer the question.

Give answer (5) if the data in both the statements I and II together are necessary to answer the question.

41. How is ‘cricket’ written in a code language?

I. ‘Dinesh play cricket’ is written as ‘do si ha’.

II. ‘play cricket now’ is written as ‘ha si ma’.

42. Who is the oldest among L, M, N, O,P?

I. P is older than M and N but not O.

II. L is older than O.


43. When is Rahul’s birthday?

I. Rahul and Shivani are twins.

II. Rahul was born on the last day of February in a leap year.

44. What is the strength of the class?

I. Shekhar stood 28 ranks below the top ranker and Mahesh who stood 5 ranks below him stood last.

II. Jayesh was 9 ranks below Ramesh who stood 27th from the top.

45. How far does Shruti live from the school?

I. Shruti has to cycle 3 kms. To her friend Mina’s house which is 4 kms. From thee school.

II. Gitanjali lives exactly opposite the school and walks 2 kms. to reach Shruti’s house.

Directions (46-50): The following questions are based on the five three digit numbers given below:

972 526 487 359 251

46. If the positions of the firs and second digits are interchanged which of the following will be third if they are arranged in ascending order?

(1) 359 (2) 972 (3) 526 (4) 487 (5) 251

47. If 2 is added to the sum of the digits of each of the above numbers how many will be multiples of 5?

(1) None (2) One (3) Two (4) Three (5) None of these

48. If 1 is subtracted from the last digit of each of the above numbers the sum of the digits of how many of them are prime numbers?

(1) None (2) Two (3) One (4) Three (5) All five

49. If the digits in each of the above numbers are written in reverse order which will be the second highest number?

(1) 251 (2) 359 (3) 487 (4) 526 (5) 972

50. If the positions of the digits of each of the numbers are interchanged such that the first becomes second, second becomes third and third becomes firs, which, of the following will be the highest?

(1) 972 (2) 526 (3) 487 (4) 251 (5) 359

Contact Details:
Canara Bank
Desh Bandhu Gupta Rd,
Aram Bagh,
Chuna Mandi,
Paharganj,
New Delhi,
Delhi 110055 ‎
1800 425 0018
India

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  #3  
Old December 13th, 2014, 03:51 PM
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Default Re: Canara Bank PO question papers of previous years

Below I am providing you some questions of from question paper of Canara Bank PO (Probationary Officer) and attaching a PDF attachment which has detail information regarding this that you can down load for free:

Read the following passage carefully and answer all questions given below it.
John Maynard Keynes, the trendiest dead economist of this apocalyptic moment, was the godfather
of government stimulus. Keynes had the radical idea that throwing money at recessions through
aggressive deficit spending would resuscitate flatlined economies- and he wasn’t too particular
about where the money was thrown. In the depths of the Depression, he suggested that the
Treasury could “fill old bottles with banknotes, bury them at suitable depths in disused coal mines”
then sit back and watch a money-mining boom create jobs and prosperity. “It would, indeed, be
more sensible to build houses and the like, “he wrote, but “the above would be better than
nothing.”
As President-elect Barack Obama prepares to throw money at the current downturn-a stimulus
package starting at about $800 billion, plus the second $350 billion chunk of the financial bailoutwe
all really do seem to be Keynesians now. Just about every expert agrees that pumping $1 trillion
into a moribund economy will rev up the ethereal goods-and-services engine that Keynes called
“aggregate demand” and stimulate at least some shortterm activity, even if it is all wasted on
money pits. But Keynes was also right that there would be more sensible ways to spend it. There
would also be less sensible ways to spend it. A trillion dollars’ worth of bad ideas-sprawl-inducing
highways and bridges to nowhere, ethanol plants and pipelines that accelerate global warming, tax
breaks for overleveraged McMansion builders and burdensome new long-term federal entitlementswould
be worse than mere waste. It would be smarter to buy every American an iPod, a set of
Ginsu knives and 600 Subway foot-longs.
It would be smarter still to throw all that money at things we need to do anyway, which is the goal
of Obama’s upcoming American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan. It will include a mix of tax
cuts, aid to beleaguered state and local governments; and spending to address needs ranging from
food stamps to computerized health records to bridge repairs to broadband network to energyefficiency
retrofits, all designed to save or create 3 million to 4 million jobs by the end of 2010.
Obama has said speed is his top priority because the faster Washington injects cash into the
financial bloodstream, the better it stands to help avert a multiyear slump with double-digit
unemployment and deflation. But he also wants to use the stimulus to advance his long-term
priorities : reducing energy use and carbon emissions, cutting middle-class taxes, upgrading
neglected infrastructure, reining in health-care costs and eventually reducing the budget deficits
that exploded under George W. Bush. Obama’s goal is to exploit this crisis in the best sense of the
word to start pursuing his vision of a greener, father, more competitive, more sustainable economy.
Unfortunately, while 21st century Washington has demonstrated an impressive ability to spend
money quickly, it has yet to prove that it can spend money wisely. And the chum of a 1 with 12
zeros is already creating a feeding frenzy for the ages. Lobbyists for shoe companies, zoos, catfish
farmers, mall owners, airlines, public broadcasters, car dealers and everyone else who can afford
their retainers are lining up for a piece of the stimulus. States that embarked on raucous spending
and tax cuttng sprees when they were flush are begging for bailouts now that they’re broke. And
politicians are dusting off their unfunded mobster museums, waterslides and other pet projects for
rebranding as shovel-ready infrastructure investments. As Obama’s aides scramble to assemble
something effective and transformative as well as politically achievable, they acknowledge the
tension between his desires for speed and reform.

1. What, according to Keynes, is the “aggregate demand” ?
(a) Stimulation of a short-term activity
(b) Goods and Services Sector
(c) Attempting to rev up the sluggish economy
(d) Pumping one trillion dollars into economy
Answer: (b) Goods and Services Sector

2. Which of the following is/are corrective measure(s) as part of the long term priorities of
Obama that was an outcome of his predecessor’s regime ?
(1) Countering recession through immediate rescue operations.
(2) Reining the budget deficit.
(3) Creating a more sustainable economy.
(a) (1) & (2) only
(b) (2) & (3) only
(c) (1) & (3) only
(d) None of these
Answer: (d) None of these

3. John M. Keynes was advocate of which of the following suggestions ?
(a) Spending money recklessly during recessions is suicidal
(b) Government stimulus to economy may not help because of red-tapism
(c) Aggressive deficit spending is likely to be fatal for economic meltdown
(d) Exorbitant spending during recessions is likely to boost economy
Answer: (d) Exorbitant spending during recessions is likely to boost economy

4. The author of the passage calls Barack Obama and his team as “Keynesians” because .
(a) Barack Obama and his team have decided to fil old bottles with banknotes
(b) His team is advising Barack to refrain from Keynes’ philosophy
(c) Barack Obama has been reluctant to follow Keynes’ philosophy
(d) Building houses has been under the active consideration of Barack Obama and his team
Answer: (a) Barack Obama and his team have decided to fil old bottles with banknotes

5. Which of the following is TRUE about Keynes’ philosophy ?
(a) Actual spending money during meltdown is more important than where and on what it is spent
(b) Filling old bottles with banknotes and burying them is an atrocious proposal
(c) Government should be selective in approach for spending money during recession
(d) Creating jobs and prosparity during recessions is almost an impracticable proposal
Answer: (c) Government should be selective in approach for spending money during recession

6. According to the author of the passage, food stamps, bridge repairs, etc. are the projects
that .
(a) Do not warrant urgent spending as they have a lower utility value
(b) Need the least investment and priority as compared to building houses for the needy
(c) May not have any favourable impact on attempts to counter recession
(d) None of these
Answer : (d) None of these

7. Obama desires to accelerate the process of pumping money with utmost rapidity as he
believes that it would .
(1) Help create reasonably high employment opportunities
(2) Avoid deflation
(3) Inject cash into the already troubled economy
(a) (1) and (2) only
(b) (2) and (3) only
(c) (1) and (3) only
(d) All (1) (2) and (3)
Answer: (d) None of these

8. Obama’s upcoming American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan focuses on which of the
following ?
(1) Recovery of all debts from the debtors in a phased manner.
(2) Pumping money very liberally in projects that are mandatory.
(3) Investing money recklessly in any project regardless of its utility.
(a) (1) only
(b) (2) only
(c) (3) only
(d) (2) and (3) only
Answer: (d) (2) and (3) only

9. Highways, bridges, ethanol plants, etc. are considered by the author as .
(a) Reasonably appropriate propositions to spend money on
(b) Tax saving schemes bestowed on builders
(c) Imprudent proposals to waste money on
(d) Measures that affect the environment adversely
Answer: (d) Measures that affect the environment adversely
Choose the word which is most OPPOSITE in meaning of the word printed in bold as used
in the passage.

10. Moribund
(a) Declining
(b) Thriving
(c) Waning
(d) Pessimistic

11. Beleaguered
(a) Stressful
(b) Harassed
(c) Carefree
(d) Uneventful

12. Raucous
(a) Strident
(b) Soft
(c) Rough
(d) Unprecedented
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