Open navigation menu
Close suggestions
Search
Search
en
Change Language
Upload
Sign in
Sign in
Download free for days
0 ratings
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
86 views
6 pages
QP CISF 21 EssayPrcWritComprshn - 0
Uploaded by
Basheer Ahmed
AI-enhanced title
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content,
claim it here
.
Available Formats
Download as PDF or read online on Scribd
Download now
Download
Save QP-CISF-21-EssayPrcWritComprshn_0 For Later
Download
Save
Save QP-CISF-21-EssayPrcWritComprshn_0 For Later
0%
0% found this document useful, undefined
0%
, undefined
Embed
Share
Print
Report
0 ratings
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
86 views
6 pages
QP CISF 21 EssayPrcWritComprshn - 0
Uploaded by
Basheer Ahmed
AI-enhanced title
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content,
claim it here
.
Available Formats
Download as PDF or read online on Scribd
Download now
Download
Save QP-CISF-21-EssayPrcWritComprshn_0 For Later
Carousel Previous
Carousel Next
Download
Save
Save QP-CISF-21-EssayPrcWritComprshn_0 For Later
0%
0% found this document useful, undefined
0%
, undefined
Embed
Share
Print
Report
Download now
Download
You are on page 1
/ 6
Search
Fullscreen
CIS AC (EXE) LDCE.2021 feratwr DETACHABLE Frera, ARAGA ae seleot ESSAY, PRECIS WRITING AND COMPREHENSION Prather are : Se fA 5 : 100 Time Allowed : Two Hours Maximum Marks : 100 wea-aa wert fade saga weit & aac 3 Buea Prafeterd wee ager at gem caret Ue | wet wet ftard & 1 wer der 1 aii stk feed Sat aresit H om 21 wer den Lar ar sa wiftiga area (afte ar feed) 4 frat ar wafee, fren ote wae-7T % fran aan @ ott ga Area ar ee sete weT-ae-seK Yferer & aye x ffee er x fear ‘rar after | arfirget area & srfetftes ater fase arene # fore ave sae oe aE sies aeT AeA | wer Wem 2, 3 Us 4 sitet ore F wT EI we TET 2, 3 wa 4 HTK aint H fra oA fee | feat oft wet & ah anit/soarit & sex ara-ara fereat sar % | wets we /aet & aftrean sie sah art fram a 1 set oft weit aeq-aten fafitée @, seen ret ser rae @ 1 we-ae-TR Gear FH are GI 7 ye a ye H ari aw awe a are Sr afer oma fat sft sox ar oitaa wae a Afra | QUESTION PAPER SPECIFIC INSTRUCTIONS Please read each of the following instructions carefully before attempting questions. Al questions are compulsory. Question No. 1 is printed both in ENGLISH and in HINDI Answer to Question No. 1 should be written in medium (English or Hindi) as authorized in the Admission Certificate and this medium must be stated clearly on the cover of the QCA Booklet in the space provided. No marks will be given for Answers written in medium other than the authorized one. Questions No. 2, 3 and 4 are printed in English only. Answer to Questions No. 2, 3 and 4 must be written in English only. Al parts/sub-parts of a question shall be written together. The number of marks carried by a question/part is indicated against it. Word limit in questions, wherever specified, should be adhered to. ‘Any page or portion of the page left blank in the QCA Booklet must be clearly struck off. You must not disclose your identity in any of your answers. 1 SQLH-B-EPC1. Preah 3 Pah a we aE S00 art Pre fr: 40 Write an essay in about 500 words on any one of the following topics : @) states aan aa Ba AH walt a ale & fed meal e 1 Internal security forces are vital to the progress and prosperity of a country. (o) eft & yee aa: VR aT aT aaa | From the Margins to the Mainstream: Empowering the Transgender Community. (©) Seta wear agra Hoare A iar | Role of India in promoting regional co-operation, (@) Feae Re after & fat ova fara | Sustainable Development for a greener future. (© seafrika sera at afta acct 21 Self-reliance fosters self-respect. 2 Write a Précis of the following passage by reducing it to one-third of its length. Failure to adhere to the word limit may result in deduction of marks. Do not suggest any title. The Précis must be written on the space provided for it : 20 All living things, from cabbages and cockroaches to kings, are adjusted, or ‘tuned’, to a 24-hour day. Our bodies follow a certain rhythm : there are periods of great activity, when every cell seems to be working busily, followed by periods of rest. These ‘cycles’ seem to follow the cycle of day and night. For example, the temperature of the body rises and falls at regular hours, as if controlled by an alarm clock. It is highest by about 10.00 a.m., but comes down to its lowest point a few hours after midnight — which is why you reach, in your sleep, for that extra sheet or blanket at 4.00 a.m. Similarly, our kidneys seem to be controlled by the clock. They are busy throughout the day, but ‘go to sleep’ at night, producing very little urine. Imagine how uncomfortable you would be if your kidneys-were not ‘switched off’ at night ! All our activities — our habits of sleep, work and hunger — follow the ‘biological clock’ which controls the rhythms of the body. If these rhythms are disturbed, there is trouble. High speed travel, which is one of the gifts of modern science, seems to be one of the greatest enemies of these natural rhythms. In the old days, when people SQLH-B-EPC 2travelled from one place to another at gentle speeds, the body was able to adjust itself to changes in ‘local’ time; but jet planes which travel almost as fast as the sun give the body no time to re-set its biological clock. Today, as more and more people travel round the world at high speeds, the problem of jet lag is receiving a great deal of attention. The people who suffer from it most are jet pilots, who are constantly on the move, from one ‘time zone’ to another, but even an ordinary traveller, who may have to fly not more than once in a fortnight, can suffer the effects of jet lag. An experiment was conducted in England, a few years ago, to study what happens to the bodies and minds of people travelling at high speeds. Eight men and six women were chosen for this experiment. They were first kept under observation for ‘a week in London and given different kinds of biological and psychological tests. Then they were flown to San Francisco (in California, USA). The flight took 14 hours and had to pass through nine different time zones. Throughout the flight, the passengers were given different tests. They were kept in California for a week, to observe how their bodies adjusted to the change, and then flown back to London for another series of tests. Tt was found that as they travelled from one time zone to another, their body temperature, heart rate, blood pressure and respiration (rate of breathing) moved away from the normal. In California, they required about seven days to come back to normal, but only five days when they returned to London. Travelling also had an effect on the minds of these people. Psychological tests showed that their powers of concentration and ability to make decisions quickly decreased by 15 to 25 per cent. Emotional disturbances were common : for no reason at all, the men would become short-tempered and the women nervous and easily moved to tears. What was the lesson from these tests ? Chiefly, it was shown that the body requires at least 24 hours to adjust itself to local conditions, on arriving at a place in a different time zone. People who have to make important decisions — e.g., political leaders — should not make these decisions immediately on arriving at a new place. About a hundred and fifty years ago, when the first railways were being built in England, many people were against the idea of travelling in steam-driven carriages, at speeds of more than 35 kilometres an hour. ‘Nature never wanted us to travel so fast,’ they said, Perhaps they were right; if we had listened to them, there certainly would have been no problem of jet-lag. (666 words) 2) SQLH-B-EPC3 Read the following passage and write short and precise answers to the questions that follow in your own words : 4x5=20 ‘The cinema is the only art invented by science. It was born and bred in the West in a technological environment, and so its manifestations in predominantly agricultural countries are a somewhat curious phenomenon of more sociological than aesthetic interest. What is remarkable is that with political independence and the rise of a national awareness of technology, a new minority cinema appears in many of these societies and quickly acquires compelling aesthetic and humanist values. Their content is increasingly charged with aspirations for a better life, and their form with delight in a new medium. In many of these countries, television is limited in its spread and its creative abilities, either by the lack of resources or by the constrictions of governmental ownership or both. The cinema, on the other hand, reflects a more vital and spontaneous expression of the secret hopes and fears, ideals and enthusiasms, of a country’s people. A small, serious-creative cinema grows alongside the larger, more conventional product and begins to engage the attention of a select national and international audience. Examples of this can be seen in Sri Lanka, the Philippines, Hongkong, Thailand, Korea — and that is by no means an exhaustive list. But nowhere is this more true than in India, the largest producer of full-length feature films in the world. 833 films were made in 1984, as against 249 in the United States (in 1983), Over 12 million people go to the movies everyday in 13000 theatres. A thousand-odd of these are travelling cinemas in the countryside that would remind the film buff of the nickelodeons of the United States rubbing shoulders with vaudeville and circus shows in the early years of the century. The number of cinema theatres is going up by about 500 every year. Television is still limited by the cost of a set and is, along with video, largely an extension of the cinema, Both wings of Indian cinema — the popular, commercial blockbuster (song-dance- fight-nightclub formula) and the serious-creative minority product (Satyajit Ray, Mrinal Sen, Shyam Benegal et al) — are full of a restless vitality. Film stars have a massive following; in two large states, they have been catapulted into political leadership, becoming Chief Ministers of their respective states. Three others are members of Parliament, and two leading stars have given notice of their political intentions. ‘Answer the following questions in your own words : (a) Why is cinema called an art invented by science ? 4 (b) How is cinema in third-world countries of more sociological than aesthetic interest ? 4 SQLH-B-EPC 4(©) How are television and cinema contrasted ? 4 (@)_ What are the two kinds of cinema to be seen in developing countries? 4 (©) What does the writer mean when he says that both wings of Indian cinema have a restless vitality ? 4 4. Read the following passage and write short and precise answers to the questions that follow in your own words : 4x5=20 Every year in the town of Silkeborg, in Denmark, thousands of visitors walk past a murder victim lying in a glass case. No one will ever know his name. It is enough to know that 2000 years ago he was as human as ourselves. That face has moved men and women to poetry, and to tears. Last year, I visited this Danish town surrounded by lakes and, looking at that face ina small museum, I felt a deep respect for it, for every wrinkle on that face tells a wonderful and terrible tale from Denmark’s distant past. The rope which cut off the man’s breath is still around his neck. Yet it is a surprisingly peaceful face, difficult to understand, arid one that you cannot forget. This strange and ancient murder mystery began 28 years ago, on 8 May, 1950, when two brothers, Emil and Viggo Hojgaard, were digging in Tollund Fen (or Bog), near Silkeborg, for peat to be used as fuel for cooking, and to keep their homes warm in the winter to come. It was a peaceful task on a sunny moming. Birds sang in the trees near the bog, where only bushes and thick grass grew. Then, at a depth of 2.75 metres, their spades suddenly struck something. They were gazing, with fear and wonder, at a human face under the soil. The body was naked except for a cap; it was resting on its side as if asleep, arms and legs bent. ‘The face was gentle, with eyes and lips closed. There was a short growth of hair on the chin. The brothers, who did not know what to do, called the Silkeborg police. Arriving on the scene, the police did not recognize the man as anyone reported to be missing. Cleverly guessing that the brothers might have discovered an unknown page from Europe's past, the police called in some archaeologists. Enter Professor Peter Glob, a famous archaeologist from nearby Aarhus University. Professor Glob carefully removed a /ump of peat beside the dead man’s head. 5 SQLH-B-EPC‘A rope made of leather hung round his neck. He had either been strangled to death or hanged. But when, and by whom ? Professor Glob ordered a box to be built around the dead body and the peat in which it lay so that nothing would be disturbed. Next day, the box, weighing nearly a ton, was lifted out of the bog on to a horse-drawn cart, on its way for examination at Copenhagen’s National Museum. One of Professor Glob’s helpers fell down and died with the huge effort. It seemed to be a sign of bad luck, as if some old god wanted the life of a modem man in place of a man from the past. Bodies found in the bog were nothing new. So far, Denmark’s bogs have produced no fewer than 400 of them, all in excellent condition because of the humic acid present in peat, which preserves the bodies. But not until the nineteenth century did scientists and historians begin to understand that the bodies belonged to some dark, unknown comers of European pre-history. Once the bodies were dug up, they crumbled quickly, after being exposed to the sunlight and air. Some of them were buried again. When peat-digging was started again during and after the Second World War, many more bodies were found in the bogs — first, in 1942, at Store Arden and then in 1946, 1947 and 1948 at Borre Fen. The tools and other objects found beside them showed that they were people from Denmark’s Early Iron Age (400 B.C. to A.D: 400). None of the bodies, therefore, was less than 1500 years old, and some were probably much older. The first of the bodies discovered in Borre Fen — a full-grown male — became specially important now. This man, too, had died violently, with a rope around his neck, strangled or hanged. And his last meal had been of grain. Answer the following questions in your own words : (a) Why do thousands of visitors go to Silkeborg to see the murdered man? 4 (b) How did people know that the man was murdered ? 4 (©) Why did the people call in some archaeologist when the murdered man was found? 4 (@)_ How did the people come to know that none of the bodies were less than 1500 years old ? 4 (©) Make sentences with the following words used in the passage to bring out their meaning : 4 (i) wrinkle (ii). mystery (iii) strangled (iv) exposed SQLH-B-EPC 6
You might also like
ACER Hast Sample Question Booklet 2023
PDF
89% (37)
ACER Hast Sample Question Booklet 2023
56 pages
OceanofPDF - Com How To Be A Billionaire - Martin S Fridson
PDF
No ratings yet
OceanofPDF - Com How To Be A Billionaire - Martin S Fridson
11 pages
CAE 1 - 4 Examination Papers-74-89
PDF
50% (2)
CAE 1 - 4 Examination Papers-74-89
16 pages
Reading Revision HO
PDF
No ratings yet
Reading Revision HO
15 pages
VH Cbse-Gr-8 English Sample QP Half-Yearly
PDF
No ratings yet
VH Cbse-Gr-8 English Sample QP Half-Yearly
10 pages
Practice Test 5
PDF
No ratings yet
Practice Test 5
7 pages
Subiect X B
PDF
No ratings yet
Subiect X B
6 pages
2019 FY9 FEEnglish QP
PDF
No ratings yet
2019 FY9 FEEnglish QP
15 pages
Class X English Second Preliminary Examination QP Set C 2019
PDF
No ratings yet
Class X English Second Preliminary Examination QP Set C 2019
6 pages
EnglishB
PDF
No ratings yet
EnglishB
4 pages
Sol 2018 and 2017 Arts Eng
PDF
No ratings yet
Sol 2018 and 2017 Arts Eng
5 pages
CBSE Class 10 English Language and Literature Question Paper Solved 2019 Set H
PDF
No ratings yet
CBSE Class 10 English Language and Literature Question Paper Solved 2019 Set H
16 pages
logse 7 new
PDF
No ratings yet
logse 7 new
47 pages
CĐ Tìm Lỗi Sai vs Sửa Lại
PDF
No ratings yet
CĐ Tìm Lỗi Sai vs Sửa Lại
7 pages
TEST PRZYKŁADOWY. University of Warsaw Language Certificate Examination English Language C1
PDF
No ratings yet
TEST PRZYKŁADOWY. University of Warsaw Language Certificate Examination English Language C1
14 pages
GCSE English Language Paper 2 Booklet 2025
PDF
No ratings yet
GCSE English Language Paper 2 Booklet 2025
16 pages
Manipal Institute of Technolog: Reg. No
PDF
No ratings yet
Manipal Institute of Technolog: Reg. No
4 pages
English Language: University Entrance Examination
PDF
No ratings yet
English Language: University Entrance Examination
5 pages
Mock Test 3 - Key
PDF
No ratings yet
Mock Test 3 - Key
6 pages
Tsa Oxford 2016 Section 1
PDF
No ratings yet
Tsa Oxford 2016 Section 1
40 pages
English Language and Literature
PDF
No ratings yet
English Language and Literature
16 pages
55-ENGLISH PA 1
PDF
No ratings yet
55-ENGLISH PA 1
5 pages
SP DE THI GK ENGLISH 3B
PDF
No ratings yet
SP DE THI GK ENGLISH 3B
13 pages
650283-2018-08-08-model-question-paper-std-xii_0 (1)
PDF
No ratings yet
650283-2018-08-08-model-question-paper-std-xii_0 (1)
8 pages
Cae Paper 3
PDF
No ratings yet
Cae Paper 3
6 pages
1 2 1 English Communicative
PDF
No ratings yet
1 2 1 English Communicative
7 pages
ĐỀ VIP 09
PDF
No ratings yet
ĐỀ VIP 09
8 pages
Ingles Extra-2
PDF
No ratings yet
Ingles Extra-2
4 pages
CBSE Sample Question Papers For Class 10 English Language & Literature - Mock Paper 1
PDF
No ratings yet
CBSE Sample Question Papers For Class 10 English Language & Literature - Mock Paper 1
10 pages
Test 1: Reading and Use of English
PDF
No ratings yet
Test 1: Reading and Use of English
8 pages
CBSE Class X English 2020 Sample Question Paper1
PDF
No ratings yet
CBSE Class X English 2020 Sample Question Paper1
5 pages
Precis & Composition Past Paper 2018 - Shahzeb Khalil
PDF
No ratings yet
Precis & Composition Past Paper 2018 - Shahzeb Khalil
3 pages
Đề Thi Thử THPT 2021 - Tiếng Anh - GV Vũ Thị Mai Phương - Đề 15 - Có Lời Giải
PDF
100% (1)
Đề Thi Thử THPT 2021 - Tiếng Anh - GV Vũ Thị Mai Phương - Đề 15 - Có Lời Giải
16 pages
Online b6
PDF
No ratings yet
Online b6
9 pages
2 4 1 (English L&L)
PDF
No ratings yet
2 4 1 (English L&L)
8 pages
Aa PDF
PDF
No ratings yet
Aa PDF
39 pages
Inggris 301
PDF
No ratings yet
Inggris 301
5 pages
PDF 2
PDF
No ratings yet
PDF 2
8 pages
9BCE4E3FBFC039FDE813D80A1DBFB1B8
PDF
No ratings yet
9BCE4E3FBFC039FDE813D80A1DBFB1B8
4 pages
Modul 4 B.ing P3KL - Xi - Pce Mipa Ips - 82022
PDF
No ratings yet
Modul 4 B.ing P3KL - Xi - Pce Mipa Ips - 82022
6 pages
Parte 1 Preguntas 1 - 5 ¿Dónde Puede Ver Estos Avisos?
PDF
No ratings yet
Parte 1 Preguntas 1 - 5 ¿Dónde Puede Ver Estos Avisos?
14 pages
V3T5
PDF
No ratings yet
V3T5
17 pages
MT - 23
PDF
No ratings yet
MT - 23
6 pages
Key 21
PDF
No ratings yet
Key 21
6 pages
Nepal Open University: Faculty of Management and Law Office of The Dean Final Examination
PDF
No ratings yet
Nepal Open University: Faculty of Management and Law Office of The Dean Final Examination
4 pages
English Code 2 4 1
PDF
No ratings yet
English Code 2 4 1
8 pages
STAT Sample Questions
PDF
No ratings yet
STAT Sample Questions
19 pages
English Form 4 Pre Mock
PDF
No ratings yet
English Form 4 Pre Mock
8 pages
Ingles+ (Julio) Cyl 2020 Ebau
PDF
No ratings yet
Ingles+ (Julio) Cyl 2020 Ebau
4 pages
Model Set English
PDF
No ratings yet
Model Set English
4 pages
QP 1
PDF
No ratings yet
QP 1
6 pages
2 5 2 (English L&L)
PDF
No ratings yet
2 5 2 (English L&L)
8 pages
Đáp Án
PDF
No ratings yet
Đáp Án
6 pages
Texts Pau 2013 201412
PDF
No ratings yet
Texts Pau 2013 201412
19 pages
e 2023oleng Complete Answer Sheet Aceenexam
PDF
No ratings yet
e 2023oleng Complete Answer Sheet Aceenexam
27 pages
RD
PDF
No ratings yet
RD
14 pages
Examen Ingles Ciencias Ebau Junio 2021
PDF
No ratings yet
Examen Ingles Ciencias Ebau Junio 2021
4 pages
82 Social Changes Importanceand Need of Ijtihad Maryam Qasim
PDF
No ratings yet
82 Social Changes Importanceand Need of Ijtihad Maryam Qasim
9 pages
Output
PDF
No ratings yet
Output
2 pages
SSRN Id2326545
PDF
No ratings yet
SSRN Id2326545
11 pages
c864d855-66d1-4e97-a660-81c9f95a0956
PDF
No ratings yet
c864d855-66d1-4e97-a660-81c9f95a0956
6 pages
Press Note: Federal Public Service Commission Aga Khan Road, F-5/1
PDF
No ratings yet
Press Note: Federal Public Service Commission Aga Khan Road, F-5/1
5 pages
Thesis Statements: Drafting The Paper
PDF
No ratings yet
Thesis Statements: Drafting The Paper
2 pages
Intermediate: Pre-Engineering - 2010: Board of Intermediate & Sec. Education, Sukkur
PDF
No ratings yet
Intermediate: Pre-Engineering - 2010: Board of Intermediate & Sec. Education, Sukkur
1 page
Complete Road Map For CSS Pakistan Affairs by Syed Noor Hussain
PDF
83% (6)
Complete Road Map For CSS Pakistan Affairs by Syed Noor Hussain
4 pages
GR Phase 1 2021-Circular Change Centre
PDF
No ratings yet
GR Phase 1 2021-Circular Change Centre
1 page
My CSS Experience by DR Asif Nawaz (PAS)
PDF
No ratings yet
My CSS Experience by DR Asif Nawaz (PAS)
8 pages
Town Planning & Urban Management: Part-Ii
PDF
No ratings yet
Town Planning & Urban Management: Part-Ii
1 page
The Environmental Movement and Environmental Politics: - Nikita S. Khrushchev
PDF
No ratings yet
The Environmental Movement and Environmental Politics: - Nikita S. Khrushchev
41 pages
Federal Public Service Commission: Roll Number
PDF
No ratings yet
Federal Public Service Commission: Roll Number
1 page
Environmental Movements From The Local To The Global
PDF
No ratings yet
Environmental Movements From The Local To The Global
13 pages
Today in Chemistry History: 16 February - The Kyoto Protocol (2005)
PDF
No ratings yet
Today in Chemistry History: 16 February - The Kyoto Protocol (2005)
1 page