Statement:
I. All parrots are crows.
II. All crows are robins.
III. All robin are swan.
Conclusions:
I. All parrots are swans.
II. All Swans are crows.
III. All robins are parrots.
IV. All crows are swans.
Statements:
1. All Students like excursions.
2.Some Students like laboratory experiments.
Conclusion:
I. Students who like Laboratory experiments also like excursions.
II. Some students do not like Laboratory experiments but like excursion.
Statement:
1. All fishes are birds.
2. Some chickens are fishes.
Conclusion:
I. Some chickens are birds.
II. No bird is a chicken.
Read the statements and select a conclusion from the given alternatives:
Statements:
Money plays a vital role in politics.
Conclusions:
I. The poor can never become politicians.
II. All the rich men take part in politics.
Two statements are given followed by two conclusions I and II. You have to consider these statements to be true, even if they seem at variance form commonly known facts. Choose which of the given conclusions logically follows from the given statement.
Statement:
I. All chairs are wood.
II. No wood is furniture.
Conclusions:
I. All chairs are furniture.
II. Some furniture are wood.
In each of the following questions one/two statements are given followed by two conclusions (I) and (II). You have to consider the two statements to be true even if they seem to be at variance from commonly known facts. You have to decide which of the given conclusions, if any, follow from the given statements.
Statement: Some books are Magazines
Some magazines are Novels
Conclusion
(I) Some books are Novels
(II) Some Novels are Magazines
Statements:
I. All T is P.
II. Some P is Q.
Conclusion:
I. Some Q is P.
II. Some P is T.
Direction: In each question given below two/three statements are followed by two conclusions numbered I and II. You have to take the all given statements to be true even if they seem to be at variance from the commonly known facts. Read the conclusions and decide which logically follows from the two given statements disregarding commonly known facts:
A. If only conclusion I follows.
B. If only conclusion II follows.
C. If either conclusion I or II follows.
D. If neither conclusion I nor II follows.
E. If both conclusions I and II follow.
Statements:
All ships are airplanes.
All buses are ships.
All cars are buses.
Conclusions:
(I) All buses which are ships will necessarily be airplanes.
(II) Very few cars are ships.