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University of Hyderabad (UoH) 2005 Entrance Exams Other Entrance Exams NALSAR University of Law Hyderabad ENTRANCE TEST - Question Paper

Tuesday, 11 June 2013 06:31Web

123. The accused was ______________ of the offence of criminal breach of trust.
(A) convinced (B) convicted (C) bereft (D) negligent

124. I must surely ______________ him for his trouble.
(A) recompense (B) reckon (C) credit (D) reimburse

125. I can testify ______________ his good behaviour.
(A) to (B) of (C) for (D) into

126. I obtain it impossible to subscribe ______________ your view.
(A) to (B) of (C) for (D) on

127. He trespassed ______________ forbidden territory.
(A) into (B) of (C) on (D) against

128. He trespassed ______________ my time.
(A) on (B) against (C) into (D) of

129. To attack unarmed nations is an offence ______________ humanity.
(A) against (B) to (C) of (D) for

130. The accused was acquitted ______________ the charge of murder.
(A) of (B) for (C) from (D) to

131. He was angry ______________ the world because no 1 would provide him food.
(A) with (B) on (C) at (D) against

132. He was no rival ______________ statesmanship.
(A) to (B) in (C) for (D) none of these

133. I request you not to take offence ______________ my son’s rudeness.
(A) at (B) against (C) to (D) for

134. She sat ______________ her pet dog.
(A) besides (B) beside
(C) both A & B are correct (D) both A & B are incorrect

Directions: Q.135-145. In the subsequent phrases 3 parts are underlined. Only 1 of the underlined parts is unacceptable in standard written English. Which is that part? If none of the parts is incorrect, then mark D?

135. The tidings comes too late.
i ii iii
(A) i (B) ii (C) iii (D) No fault

136. Each of those boys play tennis.
i ii iii
(A) i (B) ii (C) iii (D) No fault

137. He is growing strong.
i ii iii
(A) i (B) ii (C) iii (D) No fault

138. He is superior than that man.
i ii iii
(A) i (B) ii (C) iii (D) No fault

139. I have an urgent business at home.
i ii iii
(A) i (B) ii (C) iii (D) No fault

140. We do not know his view as to this affair.
i ii iii
(A) i (B) ii (C) iii (D) No fault

141. We have a option of exercising our franchise today.
i ii iii
(A) i (B) ii (C) iii (D) No fault

142. We will be missing you badly.
I ii iii
(A) i (B) ii (C) iii (D) No fault

143. My friend disposed of all his property in his village.
i ii iii
(A) i (B) ii (C) iii (D) No fault

144. His dad educated his for the Bar
i ii iii
(A) i (B) ii (C) iii (D) No fault

145. I accompanied with him to the tourist spots of India.
i ii iii
(A) i (B) ii (C) iii (D) No fault

Directions: Q.146-150. learn the passage to ans these ques..

He was a deeply subtle man, I know by now. With such natures it is usually a waste of efforts to fence: the only was to speak face-to-face is to be direct. I stated that I had been waiting for news of the Nobel Prize, and that I was very sorry. He stared at me, and nodded. He didn’t pretend not to mind. He stated something to the effect that it would be good to have. Then, quite suddenly, he gave a grim chuckle, and launched into an anecdote, possibly apocryphal and certainly slanderous, about a different unsuccessful candidate—not English-speaking-who had been ‘bucking for’ the prize for years and years. He had left nothing to chance. He had known all the right boys (in Frost’s demonology, this probably meant a few of the ‘enemies’). He had been told that it was in the bag. The day of the election, he was sitting with a horde of supporters. He had the champagne out on the table. He was waiting for the telephone to ring. There was a long wait. A longer wait. At last the telephone did ring. He hadn’t got it. He was told the name of the winner. It is impossible, he cried. It is impossible. That was all he could think of, Frost said, cheering himself up with malice. But had happened.

After that, he was quite gay. He talked about England. He was sensitive to his audience. So that I was left under the impression that he had been a lifelong Anglophie. When I learn his letters and his remarks about ‘the British’ (a term he wouldn’t have used to me) I wasn’t surprised about a few thing, but I was by those. May be, as I have suggested, he had come to think better of us. He was enthusiastic about the common language-that was essential thing. Then he spoke about what he called ‘the locative’ in art. Art which meant anything to him was locative, rooted in a place, in the singularities of a place. We had a bit of an argument. Temperamentally, I said, I was no his side. But locative art needs knowledge and patience and patience to understand: that was why cosmopolitan art, abstract art, traveled further and faster. 1 didn’t have to know anything to read, say Kafka or Hemingway. They had traveled round the world to an extent that Jane Austen or Forster never would. Frost wouldn’t have it. The greatest locative art transcended every thing. It was organic, and no other art could be. He still had immense stamina for argument, or rather for his oblique interpretation of ideas. He would have gone on talking long after our hosts returned.

146. The writer was very sorry that
(A) The news of the Nobel Prize never reached Frost
(B) Frost rejected the Nobel Prize
(C) Frost did not get the Nobel Prize
(D) None of the above.

147. “He didn’t pretend not to mind”, the means
(A) He did mind (B) He did not mind
(C) He had mixed feelings (D) He showed no feeling

148. “That was all he could think of, Frost said, cheering up with malice,” Here “he” refers to
(A) Frost (B) the writer
(C) the unsuccessful (D) none of these

149. The writer was left under the impression that Frost had been
(A) a great admirer of English (B) detested English
(C) an avid learner of English works (D) collecting English works
150. “The greatest locative art transcended everything”. We can infer from the passage that
(A) Kafka’s or Hemingway’s was locative art
(B) Jane Austen’s was locative art
(C) Frost’s was locative art
(D) Frost believed that none of these was locative art.

Short ans Questions: 151-160 (50 Words each)

151. Money laundering
152. VAT
153. National Human Rights Commission
154. Personal Liberty
155. Lok Adalat
156. Voluntarism
157. Social Justice
158. Affirmative Action
159. Legal Aid
160 Finance commission

ESSAYS 20 MARKS
Attempt any 1 of the subsequent is not more than 300 words:
1. National Security concerns
2. Mass Disasters
3. Communal riots
4. Coalition Governments
















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