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9th November 2017, 11:32 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2012
Re: GMAT Dummy Test

The Graduate Management Admission Test is a computer adaptive test intended to assess certain analytical, writing, quantitative, verbal, and reading skills in written English for use in admission to a graduate management program, such as an MBA.

Duration: 3.5 hours

[B]The Sample Question Paper of the GMAT Examination is given below

Sample Question Paper

Reasoning
[/B]
Question 1
In Los Angeles, a political candidate who buys saturation radio advertising will get
maximum name recognition. The statement above logically conveys which of the following?

A. Radio advertising is the most important factor in political campaigns in Los
Angeles.
B. Maximum name recognition in Los Angeles will help a candidate to win a
higher percentage of votes cast in the city.
C. Saturation radio advertising reaches every demographically distinct sector of
the voting population of Los Angeles.
D. For maximum name recognition a candidate need not spend on media
channels other than radio advertising.
E. A candidates record of achievement in the

Question 2
The rate of violent crime in this state is up 30 percent from last year. The fault lies
entirely in our court system: Recently our judges sentences have been so lenient
that criminals can now do almost anything without fear of a long prison term.
The argument above would be weakened if it were true that

A. 85 percent of the other states in the nation have lower crime rates than does
this state.
B. White collar crime in this state has also increased by over 25 percent in the
last year.
C. 35 percent of the police in this state have been laid off in the last year due to
budget cuts.
D. Polls show that 65 percent of the population in this state opposes capital
punishment.
E. The state has hired 25 new judges in the last year to compensate for deaths
and retirements

Question 3

3. The increase in the number of newspaper articles exposed as fabrications serves
to bolster the contention that publishers are more interested in boosting circulation
than in printing the truth. Even minor publications have staffs to check such obvious
fraud. The argument above assumes that
A. Newspaper stories exposed as fabrications are a recent phenomenon.
B. Everything a newspaper prints must be factually verifiable.
C. Fact checking is more comprehensive for minor publications than for major
ones.
D. Only recently have newspapers admitted to publishing intentionally fraudulent
stories.
E. The publishers of newspapers are the people who decide what to print in their
newspapers


Question 4
Time and again it has been shown that students who attend colleges with low
faculty/student ratios get the most well-rounded education. As a result, when my
children are ready to attend college, I ll be sure they attend a school with a very
small student population.
Which of the following, if true, identifies the greatest flaw in the reasoning above?
A. A low faculty/student ratio is the effect of a well-rounded education, not its
source.
B. Intelligence should be considered the result of childhood environment, not
advanced education.
C. A very small student population does not by itself, ensure a low
faculty/student ratio.
D. Parental desires and preferences rarely determine a child's choice of a college
or university.
E. Students must take advantage of the low faculty/student ratio by intentionally
choosing small classes

Question 5
All German philosophers, except for Marx, are idealists.
From which of the following can the statement above be most properly inferred?
A. Except for Marx, if someone is an idealist philosopher, then he or she is
German.
B. Marx is the only non-German philosopher who is an idealist.
C. If a German is an idealist, then he or she is a philosopher, as long as he or
she is not Marx.
D. Marx is not an idealist German philosopher.
E. Aside from the philosopher Marx, if someone is a German philosopher, then
he or she is an idealist.

GMAT Data Sufficiency Practice Questions

If R is an integer, is R evenly divisible by 3?
(1) 2R is evenly divisible by 3
(2) 3R is evenly divisible by 3

If he did not stop along the way, what speed did Bill average on his 3-hour trip? (1) He traveled a total of 120 miles. (2) He traveled half the distance at 30 miles per hour, and half the distance at 60 miles per hour.

Is x + y positive?
(1) x - y is positive.
(2) y - x is negative.

Rest of the Questions you may get from the below Attachement that is Free to Download
Attached Files
File Type: pdf Question Paper of the GMAT Examination.pdf (482.5 KB, 47 views)


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