SOLVED PAPER 2020 (CDS) (II) (English)

Total Questions: 120

1. (Questions 1-5) In this section you have two short passages. After each passage, you will find some items based on the passage. Read the passages and answer the items based on them. You are required to select your answers based on the content of the passage and opinion of the author only.

PASSAGE - I

Post colonial cultural analysis has been concerned with the elaboration of theoretical structures that contest the previous dominant western ways of seeing things. A simple analogy would be with feminism, which has involved a comparable kind of project: there was a time when any book you might read, any speech you might hear, any film that you saw, was always told from the point of view of male.

The woman was there, but she was, always an object, never a subject. From what you would read, or the films you would see, the woman was always the one who was looked at. She was never the observing eye. For centuries it was assumed that women were less intelligent than men and that they did not merit the same degree of education. They were not allowed a vote in the political system.

By the same token, any kind of knowledge developed by women was regarded as non-serious, trivial, gossip or alternatively as knowledge that had been discredited by science, such as superstition or traditional practices of childbirth or healing. All these attitudes were part of a larger system in which women were dominated, exploited, and physically abused by men. Slowly, but increasingly, from the end of 18th century, feminists began to contest this situation. The more they contested it, the more it became increasingly obvious that these attitudes extended into the whole of the culture; social relations, politics, law, medicine, the arts, popular and academic knowledge.

Post colonialism is

Correct Answer: (a) a contestation of the then existing dominant western practices
Solution:Post colonialism as defined in the passage is ‘that contest the previous dominant western ways of seeing things’. Accordingly, option (a) is the correct answer.

2. What does ‘........... she was always an object, never a subject’ mean ?

Correct Answer: (b) Women were not given any right equal to men
Solution:The given phrase refers to the inequality that was meted out against women wherein she was never given any right as equal to men. Hence, option (b) correctly elucidates this fact and thus is the correct answer.

3. Why was ‘she never the observing eye’?

Correct Answer: (b) She liked to be observed by men
Solution:The word ‘observing eye’ in the phrase refers to the qualities of wit and intelligence. Then the statement that women were never the observing eye indicates that women were assumed to be less intelligent than men.

4. The contestation to dominance of the male resulted in

Correct Answer: (a) participation of women in social relations, politics, law, medicine, the arts, popular and academic knowledge
Solution:The given passage clearly states that to contradict or fight against the male dominance, women began coming out of their homes and started participating in social relations, politics, law, medicine, the arts, popular and academic knowledge.

5. Which word in the passage is opposite of ‘contrast’?

Correct Answer: (d) Analogy
Solution:The word contrast means different. Its opposite is analogy which means similarity.

6. (Questions 6-10) Read the passages and answer the items based on them. You are required to select your answers based on the content of the passage and opinion of the author only.

PASSAGE - II

How wonderful is the living world! The wide range of the living types is amazing. The extraordinary habitats in which we find living organisms, be it cold mountains, deciduous forests, oceans, fresh water lakes; deserts or hot springs, leave us speechless. The beauty of a galloping horse, or a migrating bird, the valley of flowers or the attacking shark evokes awe and a deep sense of wonder.

The ecological conflict and cooperation among members of a population and among populations of a community or even a molecular traffic inside a cell make us deeply reflect on - what indeed is life? This question has two implicit questions within it. The first is a technical one and seeks answer to what living is as opposed to the non-living, and the second is the philosophical one, and seeks answer to what the purpose of life is.

What is living? When we try to define 'living', we conventionally look for distinctive characteristics exhibited by living organisms. Growth, reproduction, ability to sense environment and mount a suitable response come to our mind immediately as unique features of living organisms. One can add a few more features like metabolism, ability to self-replicate, self-organise, interact and emergence to this list.

Why are the living types amazing? 

Correct Answer: (a) The extraordinary diversity of habitats makes it amazing
Solution:The given passage states “The wide range of the living types is amazing”. This indicates that the diversity of organism and habitats makes the living types amazing.

7. Why does the author say, ‘ecological conflict and cooperation’ ?

Correct Answer: (d) Because living organisms sometimes fight and sometimes live together

8. Which of the following statements is true of the passage?

Correct Answer: (a) Meaning of life could be reflected as to what living is as opposed to the non-living and what the purpose of life is
Solution:The given passage states that the meaning of life could be reflected as to what living is as opposed to the non-living and what the purpose of life is.

9. Distinctive characteristics exhibited by organisms indicate that

Correct Answer: (a) they are living organisms
Solution:According to the given passage, the distinctive characteristics indicate that an organism is a living being.

10. Which word in the passage means ‘unique’?

Correct Answer: (c) distinctive
Solution:The synonym of unique is distinctive.