Sunday 16 July 2017

Daily GK Update 16th July 2017



i. The government has launched a GST training programme to skill around two lakh youths in six months to handle tax compliance issues like invoice making. The people would be trained under the Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY).

ii. The new training course would cater to the need of GST trained professionals to help businesses in areas such as registration and calculation of tax liability under the new tax regime.

Important Takeaways from the above News:
  • Rajiv Pratap Rudy is Union Minister of State for Skill Development and Entrepreneurship (Independent Charge).
  • Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY) is the flagship scheme of the Ministry of Skill Development & Entrepreneurship (MSDE).
  • GST is a single tax on the supply of goods and services, right from the manufacturer to the consumer.

i. UNICEF appointed Indian- origin Canadian YouTube star Lilly Singh as its newest Global Goodwill Ambassador at a special event in New Delhi.

ii. Lilly was in the capital to support UNICEF’s Youth4Change initiative, a programme for youth that brings them together to support their peers and communities in taking action on issues such as health, hygiene, child labour and gender equality.

Important Takeaways from the above News:
  • UNICEF stands for United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund.
  • The Head office of UNICEF is in New York, US.

i. Senior advocate K K Venugopal’s name has been cleared for appointment as the Attorney General for India following the decision of Mukul Rohatgi to step down as the top law officer.

ii. The Law Ministry had recently referred the file relating to the appointment of Venugopal as the Attorney General.

i. The 18th edition of the International Indian Film Academy Awards was held in New York. Sonam Kapoor’s film Neerja won the best film award. Actor Shahid Kapoor earned the Best Actor award for his role in Udta Punjab, while Alia Bhatt won the Best Actor (Female) award for the same film.

ii. Here’s the complete list of the IIFA 2017 winners:
  • Best Film- Neerja
  • Best Director- AnirudhRoy Chaudhary for Pink
  • Best Actor (Male)- Shahid Kapoor for Udta Punjab
  • Best Actor (Female)- Alia Bhatt for Udta Punjab
  • Best Actor in Supporting Role (Female)- Shabana Azmi for Neerja
  • Best Actor in Supporting Role (Male)- Anupam Kher for MS Dhoni: The Untold Story
  • Best Debutant (Female): Disha Patani for M.S. Dhoni: The Untold Story
  • Best Debut (Male)- Diljit Dosanjh for Udta Punjab
  • Best Lyricist- Amitabh Bhattacharya for the song Channa Mere Ya from Ae Dil Hai Mushkil
  • Best Playback Singer (Male)- Amit Mishra for Ae Dil Hai Mushkil
  • Best Playback Singer (Female)- Kanika Kapoor for Udta Punjab and Tulsi Kumar for Airlift
  • Best Music Direction- Pritam for Ae Dil Hai Mushkil
  • Best Actor In Comic Role- Varun Dhawan for Dishoom
  • Myntra Style Icon Award- Alia Bhatt
  • IIFA Woman Of The Year- Tapsee Pannu

i. Central Railway has taken a step towards women empowerment by appointing an all-female work staff at the suburban Matunga station. Matunga station has now become the first such ladies special station.

ii. According to the official, women have been manning this station, which falls on the Central Railway, since the past two weeks. A total of 30 women staffers, including 11 booking clerks, five RPF personnel, seven ticket checkers are working under the supervision of station manager Mamta Kulkarni since last two weeks.

i. Garbine Muguruza of Spain came out with the spectacular performance as she defeated seven-time Grand Slam Champion Venus Williams in straight sets to clinch her maiden Wimbledon title.

ii. The 14th-seeded Spaniard defeated Williams 7-5, 6-0 in what eventually turned out to be a one-sided contest lasting one hour and 23 minutes on the Centre court.

Quant Quiz


Quant Quiz

Directions—(1–5) Study the following table carefully to answer the questions that follow—
The following table gives number of people in different villages and percentage of Men, Women and Children in these villages.










1. Which village has the least number of children?
(1) L 
(2) N
(3) Q 
(4) O
(5) None of these

2. What is the respective ratio of the number of women in Villages L and P together to the number of men in the same villages together?
(1) 617:664
(2) 629:691
(3) 664 : 617
(4) 691 :629
(5) None of these

3. What is the total number of women and children together in Village Q?
(1) 995
(2) 1184
(3) 1086
(4) 988
(5) None of these

4. The total number of people from Village O is approximately what per cent of the total number of people from all the Villages together ?
(1) 16 
(2) 21
(3) 11 
(4) 25
(5) 9

5. What is the total number of children from Villages M and N together ?
(1) 785
(2) 825
(3) 855
(4) 795
(5) None of these

Directions—(Q. 6–10) Study the following Pie-chart carefully to answer these questions.
The following pie-chart gives the expenditure of funds by university for various purposes.

Total expenditure is 60 lac.



















6. What is the total sum of expenditure on Research work, Purchase of overhead projectors for Ph.D. Classes and Purchase of books for Library together ?

(1) Rs. 22•6 lac
(2) Rs. 22•8 lac
(3) Rs. 23•4 lac
(4) Rs. 20•8 lac
(5) None of these

7. What is the difference between the expenditure made by university for Publication of Journals and Psychology Laboratory ?
(1) Rs. 4 lac
(2) Rs. 3 lac
(3) Rs. 4•2 lac
(4) Rs. 3•8 lac
(5) None of these

8. What is the respective ratio between the expenditure made by university on research work and purchase of books for library ?
(1) 4 : 5 
(2) 5 : 4
(3) 8 : 3 
(4) 8 : 5
(5) None of these

9. If the expenditure on purchase of overhead projectors for Ph.D. Students is decreased by 7%, what will be the expenditure on the same after the decrease ?
(1) Rs. 1,33,920
(2) Rs. 13,39,200
(3) Rs. 1,02,000
(4) Rs. 1,08,000
(5) None of these

10. Which of the following is definitely true ?
(1) Ratio between expenditure of university for the purchase of library books and expenditure on computer laboratory is 3 : 1 respectively
(2) Expenditure on medical facilities for students is Rs. 4•6 lac
(3) Difference between the expenditure on research work and medical facilities for student is Rs. 60,000
(4) All are true
(5) None of these



ANSWERS
Solutions (1-5)
Village
Total number of people
Number of men
Number of women
Number of children
L
1240
434
558
248
M
2140
963
642
535
N
1450
725
435
290
O
1680
1092
336
252
P
2060
824
824
412
Q
1990
796
995
199
Total
10560
4834
3790
1936

1. (3) According  to the table.

2. (4)
Required ratio = (558 + 824) : (434 + 824) = 691 : 629

3. (5)
Required sum = 995 + 199 = 1194.

4. (1)
Required percentage = 1680/10560 * 100 = 16%.

5. (2)
Required sum = 535 + 290 = 825


Solutions (6-10)
6. (2)
Required sum = (8 +24 + 6)% of 60 = 22.8 lac

7. (2)
Required difference = (15 – 10)% of 60 = 3 lac.

8. (5)
Required ratio = 8 : 6 = 4 : 3

9. (2) The expenditure of overhead & projector for PHD= 24% of 60lakh= 14.40lakhs.
According to the qs. 7% of 14.40 = 1.008 lakhs

The Expenditure after the decrease = 14.40 – 1.008 = 13.392 = 1339200

10. (3)
In option (1), the ratio is 1 : 3 not 3 : 1, so (1) is not true.
In option (2), the expenditure on medical facilities = 7% of 60 = 4.2 lacs, hence (2) is not true.
In option (3) the difference = (8 – 7) % of 60 lac = 60000. Hence (3) is true.

Average


Average

An average or an arithmetic mean of given data is the sum of the given observations divided by number of observations.

Important Formulae Related to Average of numbers

1. Average of first n natural number=(n+1)/2

2. Average of first n even number= (n+1)

3. Average of first n odd number= n

4. Average of consecutive number= (Firtst number+Last number)/2

5. Average of 1 to n odd numbers=  (Last odd number+1)/2

6. Average of 1 to n even numbers=  (Last even number+2)/2

7. Average of squares of first n natural numbers=[(n+1)(2n+1)]/6

8. Average of the cubes of first n natural number=[n(n+1)^2]/4

9. Average of n multiples of any number=[Number*(n+1)]/2


Concept 1 
If the average of n_1 observations is a_1; the average of n_2 observations is a_2 and so on, then
Average of all the observations=(n_1* a_1+n_2 *a_2+......)/(n_1+n_2+........)

Concept 2 
If the average of m observations is a and the average of n observations taken out of  is b, then
Average of rest of the observations=(ma-nb)/(m-n)

Example 1 : A man bought 20 cows in RS. 200000. If the average cost of 12 cows is Rs. 12500, then what will be the average cot of remaining cows?

Here m = 20 , n = 12 , a = 10000 , b = 12500 

average cost of remaining cows ( 20-8) cows = (20*10000 - 12*12500)/(20-8) =Rs  6250

Concept 3 
If the average of n students in a class is a, where average of passed students is x and average of failed students is y, then
Number of students passed=[Total Students (Total average-Average of failed students)]/(Average of passed students-Average of failed students)
=[n(a-y)]/(x-y)

Example 2: In a class, there are 75 students are their average marks in the annual examination is 35. If the average marks of passed students is 55 and average marks of failed students is 30, then find out the number of students who failed.

Here , n = 75 , a = 35 , x = 55 , y = 30 
Number of students who passed = 75(35- 30)/(55- 30) = 15
Number of students who failed  = 75- 15 = 60

Concept 4
If the average of total components in a group is a, where average of n components (1st part) is b and average of remaining components (2nd part) is c, then Number of remaining components (2nd part)=[n(a-b)]/(c-a)

Example 3 : The average salary of the entire staff in an offfice is Rs. 200 per day. The average salary of officers is Rs. 550 and that of non-officers is Rs. 120. If the number of officers is 16, then find the numbers of non-officers in the office.

Here n= 16 , a = 200 , b = 550 , c = 120 


Number of non - officer = 16(200- 550)/(120- 200) = 70 

Average Speed
Average speed is defined as total distance travelled divided by total time taken. 
Average speed=Total distance travelled/ Total time taken

Case 1
If a person covers a certain distance at a speed of A km/h and again covers the same distance at a speed of B km/h, then the average speed during the whole journey 
will be 
2AB/A+B

Case II
If a person covers three equal distances at the speed of A km/h, B km/h and C km/h respectively, then the average speed during the whole Journey will be 
3ABC/(AB+BC+CA)

Case III
If distance P is covered with speed x, distance Q is covered with speed y and distance R is covered with speed z, then for the whole journey,
Average speed=(P+Q+R+.....)/(P/x+Q/y+R/z+...)

Example 4 : A person covers 20 km distance with a speed of 5 km/h, then he covers the next 15 km with a speed of 3 km/h and the last 10 km is covered by him with a speed of 2 km/h. Find out his average speed for the whole journey. 

 Average speed  =  ( 20 +15 +10)/(20/5+15/3+10/2) = 3(3/14)

Case IV
If a person covers P part of his total distance with speed of x, Q part of total distance with speed of y and R part of total distance with speed of z,then
Average speed=1/(P/x+Q/y+R/z+......)



If you have missed the "Quant Handy Concepts and tricks on Percentages"Click here

To do the Quizzes based on "Average", click on the below links -
1. Quiz 1
2. Quiz 2
3. Quiz 3
4. Quiz 4
5. Quiz 5
6. Quiz 6

New Pattern English


Directions (1-9): In the following paragraph questions, four sentences have been given, out of these four sentences one sentence is out of the context of the paragraph. Find out the Irrelevant Sentences and mark it as your correct answer.

Q1. (1) The MOEF projects itself as a professional ministry where executive decision making with regard to environmental clearances is exercised.
(2) The Ministry of Environment and Forests has brought back the quota licensing regime.
(3) Projects have to be cleared or refused on the basis of an objective criteria and not ministerial discretions.
(4) It is time heads of government took it upon themselves to establish in effective grievances redressal system.
(a) 1
(b) 2
(c) 3
(d) 4
(e) All sentences are relevant.

Q2. (1) Even London’s latest pet project – proving that Russia cannot host an Olympics as successfully as Beijing or London – could easily backfire.
(2) For more than two decades, August has been the most cruel month for Russian leaders.
(3) The August 1991 coup led to the departure of President Mikhail Gorbachev and the end of the Soviet Union.
(4) The August 1998 debt default and ruble collapse laid waste to President Boris Yeltsin’s free-market reforms and resulted in the sacking of his prime minister, Sergei Kiriyenko.
(a) 1
(b) 2
(c) 3
(d) 4
(e) All sentences are relevant.

Q3. (1) Commercial use of drones is banned by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), although it makes some exceptions such as for hobbyists’ flights in unpopulated areas where the aircraft stays in sight of a human operator.
(2) These sites will help the FAA understand how to integrate UAS into American airspace, which Congress has told it to do by September 2015.
(3) It is believed that Amazon’s new project will pose a new challenge to the FAA operations.
(4) But the skies are opening up: by the end of December the FAA will select six UAS testing sites from a list of 25 applicants in 24 states.
(a) 1
(b) 2
(c) 3
(d) 4
(e) All sentences are relevant.

Q4. (1) The Assad regime depends on its patrons in Iran and the Iranian-backed Hezbollahmilitia in neighbouring Lebanon.
(2) The Sunni-led oppositions is similarly turning to its regional patrons.
(3) These regional players, with their own agendas, will keep pulling Syria apart until a functioning national government can be re-established.
(4) Syrian society is considered fractured and dissonant.
(a) 1
(b) 2
(c) 3
(d) 4
(e) All sentences are relevant.

Q5. (1) It has become something of a cliché to predict that Asia will dominate the twenty-first century.
(2) It is a safe prediction, given that Asia is already home to nearly 60% of the world’s population and accounts for roughly 25% of global economic output.
(3) Asia is also the region where many of this century’s most influential countries – including China, India, Japan, Russia, South Korea, Indonesia, and the United States – interact.
(4) These developments both reflect and reinforce heightened nationalism throughout the region.
(a) 1
(b) 2
(c) 3
(d) 4
(e) All sentences are relevant.

Q6. (1) This indicates a deep lack of concern for citizens on the part of the administrators.
(2) Before this year will have ended, the French parliament will have enacted a comprehensive pension overhaul, which is essential not only to putting France’s public finances on a sound and sustainable footing, but also to shoring up confidence in the Eurozone in 2014 and beyond.
(3) This effort has gained broad public acceptance because it was fair: both retirees and working people will contribute, as will companies and households.
(4) For the first time, pension reform has been carried out in France in continuous consultation with employers’ associations and trade unions.
(a) 1
(b) 2
(c) 3
(d) 4
(e) All sentences are relevant.

Q7. (1) The concept of “sustainable harmony” can be promoted by publishing indices of personal well-being and environmental preservation, alongside standard GDP data.
(2) The desire to help others without consideration for ourselves is not just a noble ideal.
(3) Selflessness raises the quality and elevates the meaning of our lives, and that of our descendants; in fact, our very survival may even depend on it.
(4) Studies have shown that individuals and societies can learn to be more altruistic.
(a) 1
(b) 2
(c) 3
(d) 4
(e) All sentences are relevant.

Q8. (1) The problem with charities is that they have little incentive to become more efficient.
(2) Yet the real value is in training people to deliver for themselves, at a local scale – empowered rather than controlled, creative rather than rehearsed, and working by choice rather than in desperation.
(3) There is no simple way to monitor the quality and efficiency of a charity – especially one devoted to long-term changes (that is, investments) rather than daily delivery of services.
(4) Since starting my own non-profit organization, I look at other nonprofits with new eyes.
(a) 1
(b) 2
(c) 3
(d) 4
(e) All sentences are relevant.

Q9. (1) Nowadays, many people seem to be more relaxed than ever about nationality, with the Internet enabling them to forge close connections with distant cultures and people.
(2) But states remain extremely sensitive about their borders’ inviolability.
(3) A great game is beginning among Asia’s great powers, and there are scant rules in place to manage how it will be played.
(4) After all, territory – including land, oceans, air space, rivers, and seabeds – is central to a country’s identity, and shapes its security and foreign policy.
(a) 1
(b) 2
(c) 3
(d) 4
(e) All sentences are relevant.

Directions (10): In each question, there are five sentences or parts of sentences that form a paragraph. Identify the sentence(s) or part(s) of sentence(s) that is/are correct in terms of grammar and usage (including spelling, punctuation and logical consistency). Then, choose the most appropriate option.


Q10. A. Maragadavalli was running her father’s household ever since her mother had died when she was 13.
B. It took a long time for her family to settle down after that, and she was 26 by the time she had got married.
C. With 13 years of running a household under her belt, she married into a family meticulously run by mother-in-law.
D. She liked the fact that there were servant maids to help with the housework.
E. She had very less to do around the house except cut vegetable and wait for her husband to come back from work.
(a) A only
(b) A and D
(c) A and E
(d) D only
(e) A, C and E

Directions (11-15): In the following, there are sentences or parts of sentence labelled A, B, C, D and E. Choose for your answer the fragment that carries an Error. Ignore punctuation error, if any.

Q11. A. And its equally important to spread the news about companies that treat working parents
B. with fairness and respect, so that we all can try to work at these companies,
C. and send a message to others treating working parents
D. justly is a valuable employee recruitment and retention advantage.
E. No error
(a) A
(b) B
(c) C
(d) D
(e) E

Q12. A. I’ve been in Delhi for four days now
B. and so far the stay had been uneventful,
C. barring a stray incident
D. where I walked into a lamppost and then walked around Connaught Place
E. with a bloody nose.
(a) A
(b) B
(c) C
(d) D
(e) E

Q13. A. To be a citizen is to possess the rights
B. enshrined in our constitution,
C. and equally, the obligation of duty.
D. When one citizen upholds an individual right for another,
E. he enacts his duty to himself.
(a) A
(b) B
(c) C
(d) D
(e) E

Q14. A. This study takes its place alongside earlier research showing
B. that kids who are allowed to serve their own food
C. take smaller portions that they would typically be served
D. and ate 25 percentage less, and that kids tend to eat more
E. when the portions on their plates have been double.
(a) A
(b) B
(c) C
(d) D
(e) E

Q15. A. Sixty years is too small a period to acquire new civilizational traits.
B. and to mould our DNA. When that happens, we will automatically
C. realize the importance of the rule of law, the true meaning of freedom and democracy
D. and then we will behave like citizens who will not allow anyone
E. to sell their votes, and MPs will not be on sold.
(a) A
(b) B
(c) C
(d) D
(e) E



Solutions

S1. Ans.(d)
Sol. The fourth sentence talks of grievance redressal mechanisms, whereas the rest of the sentences refer to the decision-making process of the government, with special reference to quota licensing. Thus option (d) is the irrelevant sentence.

S2. Ans.(a)
Sol. Sentence-A addresses London’s attempt at proving that Russia cannot host the Olympics. This is unlike the other three sentences that make direct references to the bad luck that the month of August brings to Russia in particular. Thus sentence (a) is irrelevant to the rest of the passage.

S3. Ans.(c)
Sol. Option (c) is the answer as it speaks of Amazon, which is unaddressed in the other three sentences that deal with the operations of the FAA in the American airspace. Thus (c) is the irrelevant sentence.

S4. Ans.(d)
Sol. While options (a), (b) and (c) describe the political regime in Syria, option (d) makes a remark about Syrian society, which is not in line with the theme followed by the rest of the sentences. Thus, it is the irrelevant sentence.

S5. Ans.(d)
Sol. First, option (d) is unspecific in the region it speaks of. Second, it brings up nationalism which has no continuity with the rest of the sentences’ ideas. Thus, it is the irrelevant sentence.

S6. Ans.(a)
Sol. Option (a) directly contrasts what has been said in the other options, which is appreciative and laudatory of the French parliament’s efforts at implementing a comprehensive pension overhaul. Thus, it is irrelevant in the given context.

S7. Ans.(a)
Sol. While option (a) does seem connected to the rest of the sentences, it is still the most irrelevant from among the options present. It is an extension of the concept of altruism in discussion in the question, in that it discusses ‘sustainable harmony’. Options (b), (c) and (d) hover around the same premise and thus constitute a consistent thought.

S8. Ans.(b)
Sol. Option (b) is the answer because it diverges into a different direction from the one author takes in the other three sentences in his/her assessment of charities. It does not express an idea similar to these other sentences. It is thus the irrelevant sentence.

S9. Ans.(c)
Sol. Option (a), (b) and (d) talk of interconnectedness and territorial concerns of countries across the world, in a broad way.  There is no specific mention of any particular region or country. The mention of Asia’s power games and focus on it is what makes option C the irrelevant sentence.

S10. Ans.(d)
Sol. D only. A has a tense error – when since is used as conjunction to show the time the perfect tense is a must. The sentence should read “Maragadavalli had been running her father’s household ever since …”. Also there is ambiguity in “ … mother had died when she was 13.” B also has a tense error. “By the time she got married” rather than “she had got married” – the unnecessary shift in tense makes the sentence meaningless. E is incorrect. The intensifier ‘very’ is used incorrectly with the comparative less, it should read very little rather than very less.

S11. Ans.(a)
Sol. It’s should be used instead of its in the first part of the sentence.

S12. Ans.(d)
Sol. D should read as ‘in which I walked into …’ or ‘when I walked into …’

S13. Ans.(d)
Sol. the preposition ‘for’ should be corrected to ‘of’ – ‘right of another’, rather than ‘right for another’

S14. Ans.(d)
Sol. 25 percentage less is erroneous – 25 percent less is correct usage. Use the word “percent” with number; use “percentage” without using a number.
For example: 50 percent children, and a considerable percentage of children.

S15. Ans.(e)
Sol. We will not allow anyone to sell their votes has a problem in pronoun agreement, anyone is singular hence he or she should be used rather than the plural their. Sixty years as period is singular, hence the singular verb is correct.