Odd One Out
Step 1: Identify the theme connecting most statements. Statements (A), (C), and (D) all discuss challenges faced by unconventional or revolutionary scientific ideas.
Step 2: Identify the statement that does not fit the theme. Option (B) discusses journal subscription fees, which is unrelated to resistance toward unconventional science.
Odd One Out: (B)
The given sentence is missing in the paragraph below. Decide where it best fits among the options 1, 2, 3, or 4 indicated in the paragraph.
Sentence: Productivity gains, once expected to feed through to broader living standards, now primarily serve to enhance returns to wealth.
Paragraph: Economists now argue that inequality is no longer a by-product of growth but a condition of it. ____ (1)____. Unlike wages, wealth reflects not just income but also access to assets, favourable institutional conditions—such as low interest rates—and public policies like low taxes and housing shortages. ____ (2)____. In other words, wealth depends on political choices in ways that income currently does not. It’s not just the inequality itself that is the issue but the erosion of mechanisms that once constrained it. ____ (3)____. Wealth and income inequality are linked, but where wages have stagnated and collective bargaining has weakened, capital income—derived from profits, rents and interest—has been boosted by design. ____ (4)____.
Para-Jumble Arrange the sentences in a coherent order:
Identify the sentence that does not fit with the others:
A. Curiosity drives scientific discovery by inspiring new lines of inquiry.
B. Funding for major scientific projects is usually provided by governments.
C. Breakthroughs often come from questioning established assumptions.
D. Many transformative ideas emerge from bold experimentation.
Question:
Which sentence is the odd one out?
A …. statement is an …. comparison; it does not compare things explicitly, but suggests, a likeness between them.