Question for 18th May, 2020
Day 48
Question for 18th May, 2020
Day 48
Hi Guys,
I am doing a free live session on DILR : How to approach and select Sets and How to tackle intermediate level Sets. It will be a two hour session with a break of half an hour. (19th May : 6.30pm-7.30pm & 8pm-9pm).
This is mainly because a lot of aspirants have been asking me to conduct DILR sessions. So I thought of trying to assauge some of your fears regarding this section.
The link to the first session is : https://unacademy.com/class/data-interpretation-how-to-approach-and-select-sets/12CYVDY4
The link to the second session is : https://unacademy.com/class/data-interpretation-how-to-solve-intermediate-level-sets/4U6FIDY3
Please feel free to join,solve some sets(hands on), and get some of your doubts clarified.
Question for 19th May
Day 49
Question for 20th May.
DAY 50(I am really proud and happy I have not missed a day so far. Hopefullly this series will go on till day 250)
Question for 21st May, 2020
Day 51
Question for 22nd May, 2020
Day 52
Question for 23rd May, 2020
Day 53
Question for 24th May, 2020
Day 54
Looking for online resources available freely for brushing up Quant basics and practise questions. Any suggestion?
Can someone give some reviews on Elites Grid paid courses?
Thank you.
Question for 25th May, 2020
Day 55
@Shankarji, can u help me with an easy approach for this question?
Question for 26th May, 2020
Day 56
The passage given below is followed by four alternative summaries. Choose the option that best captures the essence of the passage.
Who of us, prior to our first chemistry class, would have thought that all the multifarious materials we find around us are made up of a mere 100 different kinds of atoms in various arrangements? Yet the chemists tell us it is so. There is a similar surprise lurking in the less familiar study of languages. Some 6,000 languages are spoken in the world today, and for the most part they seem very different from each other. Mohawk, for example, is quite a different thing from Japanese or English or Welsh or Swahili or Navajo or Warlpiri or Hixkaryana. Nevertheless, linguists are discovering that the differences among these languages are created by a small number of discrete factors, called parameters. These parameters combine and interact with each other in interesting ways to create the wide variety of languages that we can observe around us.
1. The differences in languages are the result of a small number of discrete factors, called parameters, which are comparable to atoms in chemistry.
2. Chemistry and languages are surprisingly similar, as both of them involve a wide variety of differences which can be explained by a small number of discrete factors.
3. Just like widely different materials are made up of a small number of different kinds of atoms, languages are made up of parameters.
4. Despite their differences, all languages are made up of the same small number of discrete factors, called parameters, which have a similar role in chemistry.
Question for 27th May, 2020
Day 57
Question for 28th May, 2020
Day 58
Question for 29th May, 2020
Day 59
Question for 30th May, 2020
Day 60
Question for 31st May, 2020
Day 61
Question for 1st June, 2020
Day 62