CAT 2024 November 21 Daily Practice Questions with Answers:
As the CAT 2024 exam approaches, the candidates need to make use of the practice questions that are available here. These include the questions from the Quantitative Aptitude and Verbal Ability sections, allowing candidates to sharpen their skills and time management. By regularly attempting these questions and reviewing the provided solutions, candidates can significantly improve their preparation for the upcoming exams.
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CAT 2024 November 20 Daily Practice Questions with Answers
CAT 2024 November 21 Daily Practice Questions with Answers: Quantitative Aptitude
Here are the daily practice questions with answers for CAT 2024 November 21 for the quantitative aptitude section:
Question 1: The number of quadratic equations which are unchanged by squaring their roots is
[1] 2
[2] 4
[3] 6
[4] None of these.
Answer: [4] None of these
Question 2:
A quadratic function f(x) attains a maximum of 3 at x = 1. The value of the function at x = 0 is 1. What is the value of f (x) at x = 10?
[1] -105
[2] -119
[3] -159
[4] -110
Answer: [3] -159
Question 3: Three consecutive positive integers are raised to the first, second and third powers respectively and then added. The sum so obtained is a perfect square whose square root equals the total of the three original integers. Which of the following best describes the minimum, say m, of these three integers?
[1] 1 ≤ m ≤ 3
[2] 4 ≤ m ≤ 6
[3] 7 ≤ m ≤ 9
[4] 10 ≤ m ≤ 12
Answer: [1] 1 ≤ m ≤ 3
Question 4: The price of Darjeeling tea (in rupees per kilogram) is 100 + 0.10 n, on the nth day of 2007 (n = 1, 2, ..., 100), and then remains constant. On the other hand, the price of Ooty tea (in rupees per kilogram) is 89 + 0.15n, on the nth day of 2007 (n = 1, 2, ..., 365). On which date in 2007 will the prices of these two varieties of tea be equal?
[1] May 21
[2] April 11
[3] May 20
[4] April 10
Answer: [3] May 20
Question 5: Two sides of a triangle have lengths 10 and 20. How many integers can take the value of the third side length:
[1] 18
[2] 19
[3] 20
[4] 21
Answer: [2] 19
CAT 2024 November 21 Daily Practice Questions with Answers: VARC
Five sentences related to a topic are given below. Properly arrange those sentences to form a meaningful paragraph. Choose the correct sequence for the below questions.
- The eventual diagnosis was skin cancer and after treatment all seemed well.
- The viola player didn’t know what it was; nor did her GP.
- Then a routine scan showed it had come back and spread to her lungs.
- It started with a lump on Cathy Perkins’ index finger..
Answer: 4213
- Self-management is thus defined as the ‘individual’s ability to manage the symptoms, treatment, physical and psychosocial consequences and lifestyle changes inherent in living with a chronic condition’.
- Most people with progressive diseases like dementia prefer to have control over their own lives and health-care for as long as possible.
- Having control means, among other things, that patients themselves perform self-management activities.
- Supporting people in decisions and actions that promote self-management is called self-management support requiring a cooperative relationship between the patient, the family, and the professionals.
Answer: 2314
- It was his taxpayers who had to shell out as much as $1.6bn over 10 years to employees of failed companies.
- Companies in many countries routinely engage in such activities which means that the employees are left with unpaid entitlements
- Deliberate and systematic liquidation of a company to avoid liabilities and then restarting the business is called phoenixing.
- The Australian Minister for Revenue and Services discovered in an audit that phoenixing had cost the Australian economy between 2.9bnand2.9bnand5.1bn last year..
Answer: 3241
- In the era of smart world, however, ‘Universal Basic Income’ is an ineffective instrument which cannot address the potential breakdown of the social contract when large swathes of the population would effectively be unemployed.
- In the era of industrial revolution, the abolition of child labour, poor laws and the growth of trade unions helped families cope with the pressures of mechanised work.
- Growing inequality could be matched by a creeping authoritarianism that is bolstered by technology that is increasingly able to peer into the deepest vestiges of our lives.
- New institutions emerge which recognise ways in which workers could contribute to and benefit by economic growth when, rather than if, their jobs are automated.
Answer: 4213
- They would rather do virtuous side projects assiduously as long as these would not compel them into doing their day jobs more honourably or reduce the profit margins.
- They would fund a million of the buzzwordy programs rather than fundamentally question the rules of their game or alter their own behavior to reduce the harm of the existing distorted, inefficient and unfair rules.
- Like the dieter who would rather do anything to lose weight than actually eat less, the business elite would save the world through social-impact-investing and philanthro-capitalism.
- Doing the right thing — and moving away from their win-win mentality — would involve real sacrifice; instead, it’s easier to focus on their pet projects and initiatives.
Answer: 3241