S1: | Venice is a strange and beautiful city in the north of Italy. | P : | There are about four hundred old stone bridges joining the island of Venice. | Q : | In this city there are no motor cars, no horses, no buses. | R : | These small islands are near one another. | S : | It is not an island but a hundred and seventeen islands. | S6: | This is because Venice has no streets. | The Proper sequence should be:
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S1: | Ants eat worms, centipedes and spiders. | P : | They are usually much quicker than the ant itself. | Q : | Nevertheless, these animals do not make easy game for ants. | R : | Besides, they have an extraordinary number of ways of escaping. | S : | They also eat larvae and insect adults such as flies, moths and spring tails. | S6: | Some jump, and some give out a pungent repellent substance. | The Proper sequence should be:
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S1: | Hungary, with a population of about 10 million, lies between Czechoslovakia to the north and Yugoslavia to the south. | P : | Here a great deal of grain is grown. | Q : | In recent years, however, progress has been made also in the field of industrialisation. | R : | Most of this country consists of an extremely fertile plain, through which the river Danube flows. | S : | In addition to grain, the plain produces potatoes, sugar, wine and livestock. | S6: | The new industries derive mainly from agricultural production. | The Proper sequence should be:
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S1: | We speak today of self-determination in politics. | P : | So long as one is conscious of a restraint, it is possible to resist it or to near it as a necessary evil and to keep free in spirit. | Q : | Slavery begins when one ceases to feel that restraint and it depends on if the evil is accepted as good. | R : | There is, however, a subtler domination exercised in the sphere of ideas by one culture to another. | S : | Political subjection primarily means restraint on the outer life of people. | S6: | Cultural subjection is ordinarily of an unconscious character and it implies slavery from the very start. | The Proper sequence should be:
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S1: | And then Gandhi came. | P : | Get off the backs of these peasants and workers, he told us, all you who live by their exploitation. | Q : | He was like a powerful current of fresh air, like a beam of light, like a whirlwind that upset many things. | R : | He spoke their language and constantly dre their attention to their appalling conditions. | S : | He didn t descent from the top, he seemed to emerge from the masses of India. | S6: | Political freedom took new shape and then acquired a new content. | The Proper sequence should be:
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S1: | On vacation in Tangier, Morocco, my friend and I sat down at a street cafe. | P : | At one point, he bent over with a big smile, showing me, a single gold tooth and a dingy fez. | Q : | soon I felt the presence of someone standing alongside me. | R : | But this one wouldn t budge. | S : | We had been cautioned about beggars and were told to ignore them. | S6: | Finally a man walked over to me and whispered, "Hey buddy this guy is your waiter and he wants your order" | The Proper sequence should be:
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S1: | The Bhagavadgita recognises the nature of man and the needs of man. | P : | All these three aspects constitute the nature of man. | Q : | It shows how the human being is rational one, an ethical one and a spiritual one. | R : | More than all, it must be a spiritual experience. | S : | Nothing can give him fulfilment unless it satisfies his reason, his ethical conscience. | S6: | A man whom does not harmonise them, is not truly human. | The Proper sequence should be:
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S1: | Metals are today being replaced by polymers in many applications. | P : | Above all, they are cheaper and easier to process making them a viable alternative to metals. | Q : | Polymers are essentially a long chains of hydrocarbon molecules. | R : | Today polymers as strong as metals have been developed. | S : | These have replaced the traditional chromium-plated metallic bumpers in cars. | S6: | Many Indian Institutes of science and Technology run special programmes on polymer science. | The Proper sequence should be:
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S1: | In 1934, William Golding published a small volume of poems. | P : | During the World War II(1939-45) he joined the Royal Navy and was present at the sinking of the Bismarck. | Q : | He returned to teaching in 1945 and gave it up in 1962, and is now a full time writer. | R : | In 1939, he married and started teaching at Vishop Wordsworth school in Salisbury. | S : | At first his novels were not accepted. | S6: | But the Lord of the files which came out in 1954 was welcomed as "a most absorbing and instructive tale". | The Proper sequence should be:
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S1: | A man can be physically confined within stone walls. | P : | But his mind and spirit will still be free. | Q : | Thus his freedom of action may be restricted. | R : | His hopes and aspiration still remain with him. | S : | Hence, he will be free spiritually if not physically. | S6: | No tyranny can intimidate a lover of liberty. | The Proper sequence should be:
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