R. Gupta Solutions for Chapter: Reordering Sentences, Exercise 10: SET-10
R. Gupta English Solutions for Exercise - R. Gupta Solutions for Chapter: Reordering Sentences, Exercise 10: SET-10
Attempt the free practice questions on Chapter 8: Reordering Sentences, Exercise 10: SET-10 with hints and solutions to strengthen your understanding. NABARD Officers Assistant Manager (Grade A) & Manager (Grade B) Phase I - English solutions are prepared by Experienced Embibe Experts.
Questions from R. Gupta Solutions for Chapter: Reordering Sentences, Exercise 10: SET-10 with Hints & Solutions
1. The facts speak for themselves so, they need exposition only, not demonstration.
2. At the present moment, it is widely recognised that India holds the balance in the worldwide competition between rival ideologies.
3. It is not, of course, only in geographical sense that India is in a key position.
4. India's key position simply needs pointing out.

1. But categorisation schemes are not always helpful in determining what one can do with or about organisational culture.
2. Much of the literature on organisational culture is focused on categorising types of cultures. ·
3. It has taken the understanding of corporate culture far beyond what used to be called 'the informal organisation'.
4. This literature is both interesting and informative.

1. Finally, the bureaucratic organisation took over from the pioneering enterprise.
2. The nineteenth century was the age of entrepreneur, the self-made man.
3. Thoughtful business administration took over from action-centred business entrepreneurship.
4. In the twentieth century the rational executive took command.

1. It also gives rise to a feeling of animosity among the different sections of society.
2. In a democratic system, frequent use of power is never desirable, it on the part of government or the people.
3. Therefore, citizens should never resort to violent ways and means in democracy, though they have the right to oppose the government.
4. It destroys the stability and security in public life.

1. The Puritans went much farther; during the commonwealth they actually abolished all the festivals, including even Christmas.
2. They lost many of their maypoles; but there were ugly scenes when the magistrate's man tramped into Church to pull down the Christmas holly.
3. Leisure began to diminish at about the time of the Reformation.
4. That was more than the people of England would endure.
5. The leaders of the Church approved the festivals decently kept, with many sports, and with dancing in the Churchyard ·after Evensong; but they drastically reduced the old calendar - and with every saint omitted; a holiday vanished as well.

1. He was so busy with them that he did not get time to eat.
2. Thousands of people came to him and asked different types of questions.
3. No one cared to see that he had his food or rest that night.
4. Swami Vivekanand once stayed in a small village.

1. Learn a kind of tenderness towards the vanity of others.
2. And indeed towards all their prejudices.
3. Who make a cult of sincerity.
4. Men accustomed to difficult negotiations.
5. Which is infinitely shocking to those.

. It buys programmes and services from many sources, which are then put on the system's channels
. The early cable supermarkets had only a dozen channels on which to display their goods, but new systems boast more than channels.
. A cable system is like a supermarket.
. By the end of the s cable television will offer as many as different channels of entertainment and services.
. For a monthly fee, individual subscribers order the programmes and services that suit them.
. Extra fees are charge for some programmes· (including movies) brought in by satellite.
. The cable system deliver all local television programming, television programming from nearby cities, and programming from distant networks whose signals are sent by satellite.
