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Directions: In the given sentence, four words, given in bold are marked as (A), (B), (C) and (D). These words may or may not be placed in their right places. Four options with different arrangements of these words are given below, mark the option with the correct arrangement as your answer. If no change is required mark 'No rearrangement required' as your answer.
Pandemics, economic succession (A) and rapid (B) weather events were once tail-end risks, but all three have hit South Asia in extreme (C) slumps (D) since 2020.
DBCA
ACBD
DCBA
BADC
No rearrangement required
Let's look at the words and see if they fit correctly in the sentence:
- The sentence is talking about things that have had an impact on South Asia since 2020.
- "Extreme slumps" doesn't make sense because "slumps" are not events, they are consequences.
- The word "slumps" should be replaced with something like "events."
- By replacing "slumps" with "extreme," we get "extreme slumps," which makes more sense regarding economic conditions.
- "Succession" typically refers to a sequence or series, not what is implied here. "Weather succession" doesn't work, but "extreme weather" does.
Now, let's explore the options:
- Option 1: DBCA – "Rapid slumps" doesn't really work.
- Option 2: ACBD – It says "economic extreme," which doesn't make sense.
- Option 3: DCBA – This changes "succession" to "extreme events," forming meaningful units like "extreme weather."
- Option 4: BADC – This says "rapid extreme weather," which isn't quite right.
Upon reviewing, the correct answer for the revised sentence is Option 3: DCBA, which rearranges the words to make a sensible sentence.
By: Parvesh Mehta ProfileResourcesReport error
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