Organization : GITAM Institute Of Management
Exam : GOT Aptitude Test
Document Type : Sample Question Paper
Subject : GOT Sample Paper1 With Q&A
Website : https://gim.gitam.edu/
Download Model/Sample Question Paper :
GOT Sample Paper1 : https://www.pdfquestion.in/uploads/25421-paper-1.docx
GOT Sample Paper2 : https://www.pdfquestion.in/uploads/25421-paper-2.docx
GOT Sample Paper3 : https://www.pdfquestion.in/uploads/25421-paper-3.docx
GITAM GOT Aptitude Test Sample Question Paper
GITAM GOT Aptitude Test Sample Question Paper
Related / Similar Question Paper :
TimesPro Aptitude Test Sample Paper
Syllabus :
Structure of GOT – UG & PG Test is as given below
Section No | Section Name | GOT-UG | GOT-PG |
1 | English Language | 10 | 30 |
2 | Quantitative | 15 | 30 |
3 | Reasoning and Intelligence | 15 | 20 |
4 | General Knowledge | 10 | – |
5 | Data Interpretation | – | 20 |
Instruction
Note :
a. The total time for answering 50 questions is 60 minutes for GOT-UG Test . GOT PG candidates are required to answer 100 questions in 90 minutes.
b. GOT-PG is similar to MAT conducted by AIMA. The candidate may prepare for the exam using any MAT Preparatory book.
c. GOT-UG test is similar to UGAT conducted by AIMA. The candidate may prepare for the exam using any preparatory books on UGAT that is available in leading Book shops
Section – 1
1. Which of the following correctly constitutes the three organs of the government?
(a) Executive, democracy and judiciary
(b) Executive, legislature and judiciary
(c) Executive, bureaucracy and judiciary
(d) Legislature, bureaucracy and democracy
2. Which of the following sources yields the maximum revenue to the Union Government?
(a) Income tax
(b) Property tax
(c) Excise duty
(d) Customs duty
3. April 22 is observed every year as ___.
(a) Earth Day
(b) World Environment Day
(c) World Health Day
(d) World Haemophilia Day
4. Who is leading the LTTE delegation for the peace process with Sri Lanka?
(a) Vaiko
(b) V. Prabhakaran
(c) G. L. Peris
(d) Anton Balasingham
5. Who was the first UN Secretary General?
(a) Trygve Lie
(b) Dag Hammarskjold
(c) U. Thant
(d) Dr Boutros Boutros Ghali
6. The island of Perejil was recently in dispute between ___.
(a) Italy and Morocco
(b) Spain and Morocco
(c) Ghana and Morocco
(d) Spain and Ghana
7. NASDAQ is an acronym for
(a) The National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations.
(b) The National Association of Securities and Dealers Automatic Quotations.
(c) The National Association of Associated Securities and Dealers Quotations.
(d) The National Association of Securities Dealers and Accepted Quotations.
8. Which among the following countries does not have veto power in the UN Security Council?
(a) France
(b) England
(c) Germany
(d) Russia
9. India is not the member of which of the following organizations?
(a) NAM
(b) SAARC
(c) ASEAN
(d) Commonwealth
10. Where is the headquarters of Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) situated?
(a) Vienna
(b) New York
(c) Abu Dhabi
(d) Kuwait City
Section – 2
Direction for questions 41 to 45: Read the passage, and answer the questions following
Not only mathematics is dependent on us and our thoughts, but in another sense, we and the whole universe of existing things are dependent on mathematics. The apprehension of this purely ideal character is indispensable if we are to understand rightly the place of mathematics as one among the arts. It was formerly supposed that pure reason could decide in some respects as to the nature of the actual world: geometry, at least, was thought to deal with the space in which we live.
41. With which of the following would the author agree?
I. Mankind relies on mathematics for its very existence.
II. Geometry was believed to deal with space in which we live.
III. The world of reason has no control over the world of fact.
(a) Only I
(b) I and III
(c) Only III
(d) I and II
42. What does ‘indispensable’ mean?
(a) Cannot be cured
(b) Cannot be curtailed
(c) Cannot be evaded
(d) Cannot bear it
43. When the results of pure mathematics are applied to the universe of existing things,
(a) its findings no longer have complete certainty and preciseness.
(b) mathematics ceases to be a science.
(c) the abstract imagination of the mathematicians is free of restrictions.
(d) the nature of the actual world stands revealed.
44. According to Russell, ‘a reciprocal liberty’ must be obtained between
(a) mathematics and applied science.
(b) reason and facts.
(c) mathematical objects and objects created by abstract imagination.
(d) the study of pure mathematics and an application of its results.
45. The end-product of mathematics
(a) is a statement of what was previously unknown.
(b) is a creation of what did not exist earlier.
(c) is a discovery of previously unknown object.
(d) could possibly be either a creation or a discovery.
Direction for questions 46 to 50:
Read the passage, and answer the questions following it.
One of the greatest public speaking failures of my career took place last summer at Valparaiso University, Indiana where I addressed a convention of editors of college newspapers. I said many screamingly funny things but the applause was dismal at the end. During the evening, I asked one of my hosts in what way I had offended the audience. He replied that they had hoped I would moralize. They had hired me as a moralist. So now when I speak to students, I do moralize. I tell them not to take more than they need, not to be greedy
46. In this address at Valparaiso University, the author
(a) became the greatest public speaker of the summer.
(b) made the audience laugh a lot by screaming in a funny way.
(c) was dismayed by the audience at the end.
(d) felt that he did make a significant impression on the audience.
47. Moralists are
(a) young people who speak to themselves about water and atmospheric pollution.
(b) not fond of jokes made of sacrosanct things.
(c) opposed to taking up science as a career.
(d) concerned about hiring working to raid the public treasury.
48. The author’s perception is that young people
(a) like to hear lectures on morals.
(b) were so impressed by the Nuremberg trials that they gave up physics.
(c) would have been scientists but for the pollution created by science.
(d) do not like to kill even in self-defence.
49. The author regarded the inventor of napalm as
(a) morally reprehensible.
(b) someone who should have been attacked but was not.
(c) a person who was attacked by Harvard students.
(d) a moral curiosity.
50. It is implied from the author’s comments that the present-day students
(a) do not care much for scientific discoveries.
(b) prefer to be told what is right or wrong.
(c) lack a sense of discipline.
(d) lack a sense of humour.
Section – 3
Direction for questions 81 to 85: Answer the questions based on the following information available in the bar graph. The graph represents the annual supply and requirement of power in billion kWh in India in different years.
81. What was the percentage increase in the supply of power from the start to the end of the given period?
(a) 144
(b) 112
(c) 128
(d) None of these
82. The cumulative difference between the requirement and supply of power (kWh in billions) within a decade of 1974-75 to 1983-84 is
(a) 119
(b) 131
(c) 149
(d) 151
83. What is the ratio of the availability of supply in 1976-77 to the requirement in 1983-84?
(a) 0.57
(b) 0.63
(c) 0.51
(d) 0.36
84. The difference between the percentage increase of supply from 1976-77 to 1980-81 and the percentage increase in requirement from 1980-81 to 1984-85 is
(a) 12%
(b) 19%
(c) 16%
(d) None of these
85. How many years have registered a minimum of 10% increase in the requirement of power compared to the previous year?
(a) 1
(b) 2
(c) 3
(d) 0
Direction for questions 86 to 90: Answer the questions based on the following information provided in the tabular form, given below. A survey was conducted for monthly per capita consumer expenditure of different food and nonfood items (in per cent).
86. The percentage of per capita expenditure on food registered what percentage decrease between 1973 and 1983 (for urban consumers)?
(a) 9
(b) 10
(c) 10.5
(d) 8
87. If the total per capita expenditure in an urban household in 1973 was Rs. 531, approximately, how much of it was spent on sugar?
(a) Rs. 16.80
(b) Rs. 18.30
(c) Rs. 19.10
(d) Rs. 21.00
88. If the total per capita expenditure in 1978 in the rural areas was Rs. 580, how much of it was spent on clothing?
(a) Rs. 48.20
(b) Rs. 50.50
(c) Rs. 51.70
(d) Rs. 54.75
89. In 1983, if the rural and urban per capita expenditures were Rs. 665 and Rs. 765, respectively, what was the difference between their per capita expenditures on food items?
(a) Rs. 16
(b) Rs. 19
(c) Rs. 21
(d) Rs. 25
90. In 1973, in the rural areas, the per capita expenditure on oil formed what per cent of the per capita expenditure on vegetables?
(a) 97.2
(b) 99.4
(c) 102.5
(d) None of these
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