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19 December, 2014

icon-date3 Friday, December 19, 2014     icon-folder2 ,   icon-comment2 1 comment



Jumbled ( or Rearrangement) Sentences Practice Exercises:

Jumbled ( or Rearrangement)  sentences are one sort of language proficiency test question. These type of questions are asked in all competitive exams to test the students ability- how they understand and construct the sentences in English.


►Jumbled Sentences are generally asked in sets of 5 questions. A paragraph is broken up in 5 parts (or sentences) and these are then arranged in random order. You need to arrange the sentences in the most logical and correct order. The five questions require you to identify the first sentence, third sentence, last sentence etc. 


►If solved correctly, this can be a very high-scoring area as you can get full marks. Even if you go wrong, you may be able to arrange some of the sentences in order and get marks for those. Therefore, practice and master this question type as far as possible.

►Good reading skills help you solve these questions accurately. 

►Pronouns (he/she/they etc.) and conjunctions (and, but etc.) can also be used to identify the correct order.

Here are practice Exercises for Jumbled Sentences:

Jumbled (Rearrangement of) Sentences Practice Exercise-1

Jumbled (Rearrangement of) Sentences Practice Exercise-2

Jumbled (Rearrangement of) Sentences Practice Exercise-3

Jumbled (Rearrangement of) Sentences Practice Exercise-4

Jumbled (Rearrangement of) Sentences Practice Exercise-5

Jumbled Sentences are very simple to solve, just you need to follow some of the grammatical rules. 

Sentence Rearrangement is considered one of the most difficult areas in the question that has already caused so much pain to you while preparing for Bank Entrance Exams. No need to worry!! Help is at hand and the Sentence Rearrangement (also called as parajumbles) which is so jumbling your mind is actually a cake walk!!



The myths associated with Sentence Rearrangement:


1. This question cannot be solved without the help of options- Well the answer is NO. These questions can be very easily solved without options.

2. You have to give a lot of time to solve them- The answer is again NO. Each question needs a certain time to be solved and sentence rearrangement is no different.

3. Sentence rearrangement is the most difficult portion of English Section.

4. You don’t need to be good in vocabulary to solve a sentence rearrangement. I beg to differ. You need to be good in vocabulary to solve any question type in English and sentence rearrangement is no different.

So let us now see what it takes to be a good sentence rearrangement:

1. You need to understand the idea behind the paragraph. If you can understand the idea/theme of the paragraph it is easy to put the sentences in order then.

2. You should look out for the starting or the concluding sentences in the question. Sometimes they are clearly visible and can help you immensely in identifying the correct sequence.

3. You need to know the relationships between different sentences to put them in the right sequence. 

4. You should 1st fix the relationships of sentences, put them in order and then check the options.

5. Transition words and contrasting words also help in finding clean relationships between sentences of the sentence rearrangement.

6. Do not over depend on options, they only confuse you if you keep looking at them, use them as facilitators not as crutches.

7. The whole paragraph should have a coherent idea and flow when arranged in the correct order.

Let us look at this example to understand the above mentioned points further:

A) So in the agrarian era, if you need to destroy the enemy's productive capacity, what you want to do is bum his fields, or if you're really vicious, salt them.
B) Now in the information era, destroying the enemy's productive capacity means destroying the information infrastructure.
C) How do you do battle with your enemy?
D) With regard to defence, the purpose of the military is to defend the nation and be prepared to do battle with its enemy.
E) But in the industrial era destroying the enemy's productive capacity means bombing the factories which are located in the cities.
F) The idea is to destroy the enemy's productive capacity, and depending upon the economic foundation, that productive capacity is different in each case

1. FDEBAC 
2. DCFAEB
3. DEBACF 
4. DFEBAC

Solution:


If you look at the above question, you see clear links in transition being mentioned in the three eras in the statements A,E &B. Thus AEB has to be together. Statement D talks about ‘battle with the enemy’ and statement C talks about how do you battle with your enemy’, which is answered by statement F. Thus the correct sequence is DCFAEB, which is option 2.



Hence proved by the above example that the dependence on the options can be minimized if you are able to find the relation between the sentences, keeping the central idea in mind.

Hope this was helpful for you!!!
Keep solving and don’t let your mind be boggled by these questions.

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