Advance
Master sentence rearrangement with tricks to solve jumbled paragraph questions faster.
Advance Practice — Sentence Rearrangement
These sets are harder than the basics. They test your ability to follow scientific explanations, cause-effect reasoning chains, and multi-step arguments. Use the same 4-Step Method, but pay extra attention to connectors like "Similarly", "However", "Therefore", "Moreover", and analogy chains (observation → explanation → implication → conclusion).
Practice Set 1 — How Green Revolution Changed Indian Agriculture
Directions: Given below are SIX statements, given in a random order. When these statements are sequenced properly, they'll form a coherent and meaningful paragraph. Rearrange the sentences to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the questions that follow.
P. The most celebrated outcome of this transformation was national food self-sufficiency: by 1978, India had crossed the milestone of 100 million tonnes of foodgrain production and ceased to depend on food aid from the United States. Q. Scientists believe that while the high-yielding varieties revolutionised wheat and rice output, they simultaneously narrowed the genetic diversity of India's crop base, making agriculture more vulnerable to pest outbreaks and climate shocks. R. However, critics were already visible within a decade — the new varieties demanded heavy doses of chemical fertilisers, pesticides, and irrigation, making farming increasingly capital-intensive and indebting small landholders. S. India in the early 1960s was a hunger-stricken nation, importing millions of tonnes of wheat under the PL-480 scheme from the United States and unable to feed its own growing population. T. Similarly, the overuse of groundwater for irrigation in Punjab and Haryana has resulted in a drastic fall in water tables — a slow-motion crisis that threatens the very states that powered the food revolution. U. This crisis of food insecurity prompted the government to partner with agricultural scientist Norman Borlaug and introduce high-yielding varieties of wheat, launching what came to be known as the Green Revolution.
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Advance Practice — Sentence Rearrangement
These sets are harder than the basics. They test your ability to follow scientific explanations, cause-effect reasoning chains, and multi-step arguments. Use the same 4-Step Method, but pay extra attention to connectors like "Similarly", "However", "Therefore", "Moreover", and analogy chains (observation → explanation → implication → conclusion).
Practice Set 1 — How Green Revolution Changed Indian Agriculture
Directions: Given below are SIX statements, given in a random order. When these statements are sequenced properly, they'll form a coherent and meaningful paragraph. Rearrange the sentences to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the questions that follow.
P. The most celebrated outcome of this transformation was national food self-sufficiency: by 1978, India had crossed the milestone of 100 million tonnes of foodgrain production and ceased to depend on food aid from the United States. Q. Scientists believe that while the high-yielding varieties revolutionised wheat and rice output, they simultaneously narrowed the genetic diversity of India's crop base, making agriculture more vulnerable to pest outbreaks and climate shocks. R. However, critics were already visible within a decade — the new varieties demanded heavy doses of chemical fertilisers, pesticides, and irrigation, making farming increasingly capital-intensive and indebting small landholders. S. India in the early 1960s was a hunger-stricken nation, importing millions of tonnes of wheat under the PL-480 scheme from the United States and unable to feed its own growing population. T. Similarly, the overuse of groundwater for irrigation in Punjab and Haryana has resulted in a drastic fall in water tables — a slow-motion crisis that threatens the very states that powered the food revolution. U. This crisis of food insecurity prompted the government to partner with agricultural scientist Norman Borlaug and introduce high-yielding varieties of wheat, launching what came to be known as the Green Revolution.
Answer Key
Correct Order: S → U → P → R → T → Q
Detailed Explanation of Order
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Start: S introduces the problem — India in the 1960s importing wheat, unable to feed its population. This is the backdrop/crisis that motivates the entire paragraph. Uses no pronoun back-reference.
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Pair (S-U): U says "This crisis of food insecurity prompted the government to partner with Norman Borlaug and introduce high-yielding varieties..." — "This crisis" directly refers to the food insecurity described in S. U introduces the Green Revolution as the response to S's problem.
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Pair (U-P): P says "The most celebrated outcome of this transformation was national food self-sufficiency..." — "this transformation" refers to the Green Revolution introduced in U. P describes the positive result: 100 million tonnes by 1978, no more food aid dependence.
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Pair (P-R): R starts with "However, critics were already visible within a decade..." — "However" signals a contrast to P's positive outcome. The Green Revolution increased output (P) → but also created new problems like debt (R). The word "already" connects to the timeline established in P.
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Pair (R-T): T starts with "Similarly, the overuse of groundwater for irrigation in Punjab and Haryana has resulted in a drastic fall in water tables..." — "Similarly" draws a parallel with R's criticism. R identified one problem (chemicals, debt) → T presents another comparable problem (groundwater depletion) in the same Green Revolution states.
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Pair (T-Q): Q says "Scientists believe that while the high-yielding varieties revolutionised output, they simultaneously narrowed genetic diversity..." — Q adds the scientific conclusion to the chain of criticisms in R and T. "Scientists believe" is a concluding framing device, and "while...simultaneously" summarises the central paradox of the Green Revolution, making it the closing statement.
Question 1
Which of the following is the SECOND sentence from the right end, after the correct rearrangement?
(a) S (b) R (c) T (d) P (e) Q
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c) T
Order: S U P R T Q. From the right: Q (1st from right) → T (2nd from right) ✅
Question 2
Which of the following is the ANTEPENULTIMATE statement after the correct rearrangement?
(a) T (b) P (c) R (d) S (e) Q
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c) R
Order: S U P R T Q. Antepenultimate = 3rd from the last. Q (1st from right) → T (2nd) → R (3rd) ✅
Question 3
Which of the following is the correct pair of the INTRODUCTORY and the TERMINAL statements, respectively, after the correct rearrangement?
(a) QR (b) RS (c) TP (d) SQ (e) UR
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (d) SQ
Order: S U P R T Q.
- Introductory (first) = S
- Terminal (last) = Q
- Pair = SQ ✅
Question 4
Which of the following is the THIRD sentence after the correct rearrangement?
(a) T (b) P (c) U (d) R (e) Q
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b) P
Order: S (1) → U (2) → P (3) → R (4) → T (5) → Q (6). ✅
Question 5
Which of the following is the SECOND sentence after the correct rearrangement?
(a) U (b) S (c) T (d) P (e) Q
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (a) U
Order: S (1) → U (2) → P (3) → R (4) → T (5) → Q (6). ✅
Practice Set 2 — Cooperative Dairy: The Amul Model
Directions: Below is a set of seven statements given in random order. Six of them when sequenced properly will form a coherent and meaningful paragraph. One of them does not belong to the theme of the paragraph. Rearrange these sentences to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the questions that follow.
IMPORTANT
This is an advanced format: 7 statements, but only 6 form the paragraph. You must identify the odd one out that does not belong to the theme.
P. The first route is a farmer-owned structure: individual milk producers in a village form a primary dairy cooperative society that collects milk twice daily, tests fat and SNF content, and pays farmers according to quality. Q. India's Dairy Development Board launched Operation Flood in 1970, modelled on the Amul cooperative in Anand, Gujarat, with the explicit aim of replicating the three-tier cooperative structure across the country. R. The exact formula for procurement price — balancing farmer welfare with urban consumer affordability — differs from one state federation to another, and is a perennial source of political tension. S. The second tier is the district-level union, which collects milk from village cooperatives, processes it, manufactures value-added products like butter and cheese, and markets them under a shared brand. T. This "coming together" model — where the weakest individual actor (a marginal dairy farmer) becomes powerful through collective bargaining — is what distinguishes cooperative dairy from corporate contract farming. U. India's cooperative dairy sector, built on the "Amul model" of three-tier cooperatives, has transformed the country from a milk-deficit nation in the 1950s to the world's largest milk producer today. V. At the apex, a state federation like GCMMF — the Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation, which owns the Amul brand — handles national and international marketing, export, and large-scale procurement planning.
Answer Key
Correct Order: U → Q → P → S → V → T
Odd Statement Out: R (About the political tension over procurement price formula — a specific governance dispute, not about the structure or functioning of the three-tier cooperative model)
Detailed Explanation of Order
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Start: U introduces the topic broadly — India's cooperative dairy sector, the Amul model, transformation to world's largest milk producer. Broad introductory fact with no back-reference.
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Pair (U-Q): Q says "India's Dairy Development Board launched Operation Flood in 1970, modelled on the Amul cooperative in Anand..." — "modelled on the Amul cooperative" directly links to U's introduction of the "Amul model". Q explains how the model was scaled nationally.
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Pair (Q-P): Q mentioned the "three-tier cooperative structure". P describes "The first route..." — the village-level primary cooperative. Whenever a sentence mentions "first route/tier/type", it opens a numbered sequence.
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Pair (P-S): S says "The second tier is the district-level union..." — "second" follows "first" in P. S describes the middle tier of the three-tier structure.
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Pair (S-V): V says "At the apex, a state federation like GCMMF..." — "apex" = top/third tier. The paragraph has described first tier (P) → second tier (S) → now apex/third tier (V). Logical completion of the three-tier explanation.
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Pair (V-T): T says "This 'coming together' model — where the weakest individual actor becomes powerful through collective bargaining — is what distinguishes cooperative dairy from corporate contract farming." — "This model" refers to the entire three-tier structure just described in P, S, V. T provides the analytical conclusion about why this model works.
Why R is excluded: R discusses the "political tension" over procurement price formulas across state federations. While loosely related to dairy cooperatives, R's content is about an internal pricing dispute — not about how the three-tier structure is organised and why it works — which is the paragraph's core theme.
Question 6
Which of the following is the FOURTH sentence after the correct rearrangement?
(a) U (b) P (c) Q (d) S (e) V
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (d) S
Order (excluding R): U (1) → Q (2) → P (3) → S (4) → V (5) → T (6). ✅
Question 7
Which of the following is the FIFTH sentence after the correct rearrangement?
(a) S (b) T (c) V (d) U (e) Q
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c) V
Order: U (1) → Q (2) → P (3) → S (4) → V (5) → T (6). ✅
Question 8
Which of the following statements does not belong to the theme of the paragraph?
(a) V (b) P (c) T (d) U (e) R
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (e) R
R talks about the political tension surrounding the procurement price formula between farmer welfare and urban consumer affordability. The paragraph's theme is how the three-tier cooperative dairy structure is built and why it empowers farmers — not about price-setting disputes. R is the odd one out.
Question 9
Which of the following is the correct pair of the INTRODUCTORY and the TERMINAL statements, respectively, after the correct rearrangement?
(a) VS (b) TQ (c) UT (d) PU (e) QV
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c) UT
Order: U (1) → Q (2) → P (3) → S (4) → V (5) → T (6).
- Introductory = U
- Terminal = T
- Pair = UT ✅
Question 10
Which of the following is the THIRD sentence after the correct rearrangement?
(a) S (b) V (c) P (d) Q (e) U
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c) P
Order: U (1) → Q (2) → P (3) → S (4) → V (5) → T (6). ✅
Practice Set 3 — Solar Pumps for Farmers
Directions: Below is a set of statements given in random order. When these statements are sequenced properly, they will form a coherent and meaningful paragraph. Rearrange the sentences to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the questions that follow.
P. In fact, the PM-KUSUM scheme — Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthan Mahabhiyan — offers farmers up to 90% subsidy on solar pump installation, targeting 3.5 million pumps nationwide by 2026. Q. It was a regular season for Ramnath Yadav, a small farmer in Rajasthan's Barmer district, when his diesel pump failed mid-irrigation and he watched helplessly as his wheat crop wilted in the dry heat. R. Rural India runs on groundwater, and for decades the diesel pump has been its lifeline — noisy, polluting, expensive, and wholly dependent on the unpredictable supply of subsidised fuel from fair-price shops. S. Meanwhile, the surplus electricity generated by on-farm solar arrays can be sold back to the state grid, turning every participating farmer into a micro power producer and supplementing income beyond what the crop alone can provide. T. At an age when clean energy is transforming industries, India's smallholder farmers have rarely shared in those benefits — until the arrival of solar-powered irrigation pumps offered a way to decouple farming from diesel dependency. U. That was the moment Ramnath began researching solar pumps; within two growing seasons, aided by a state subsidy, he had installed a 5HP solar pump and eliminated his entire monthly diesel expenditure.
Answer Key
Correct Order: Q → U → T → R → P → S
Detailed Explanation of Order
This is a Narrative → Problem → Solution type paragraph.
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Start: Q introduces the main character by full name ("Ramnath Yadav") and sets the opening scene (diesel pump failure, wheat crop wilting). A concrete personal story makes the strongest opening.
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Pair (Q-U): U says "That was the moment Ramnath began researching solar pumps..." — "That" refers to the pump failure moment in Q. U narrates Ramnath's response and outcome (solar pump installed, diesel expenditure eliminated). Link: Q → U is an ironclad pronoun-event pair.
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Pair (U-T): T says "At an age when clean energy is transforming industries, India's smallholder farmers have rarely shared in those benefits — until the arrival of solar-powered irrigation pumps..." — T zooms out from Ramnath's individual story to make a broader observation. The word "until" frames the arrival of solar pumps as the turning point — the same technology Ramnath just adopted in U. T bridges the personal anecdote to the national picture.
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Pair (T-R): R says "Rural India runs on groundwater, and for decades the diesel pump has been its lifeline..." — R provides the background problem that explains why solar pumps matter. After T established the transformation, R grounds us in the old reality: diesel dependency, expense, pollution. This contrast deepens the reader's understanding.
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Pair (R-P): P says "In fact, the PM-KUSUM scheme offers farmers up to 90% subsidy on solar pump installation..." — "In fact" adds supporting evidence to the idea that the transition is real and government-backed. P introduces the specific policy mechanism driving the change described in T-R.
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Pair (P-S): S says "Meanwhile, the surplus electricity generated by on-farm solar arrays can be sold back to the grid, turning every farmer into a micro power producer..." — "Meanwhile" adds a simultaneous benefit beyond irrigation. S closes the paragraph with the additional economic upside, making it the conclusion.
Question 11
Which of the following options is the PENULTIMATE statement after the correct rearrangement?
(a) P (b) S (c) T (d) U (e) Q
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (a) P
Order: Q U T R P S. Penultimate = 2nd from the last. S is last → P is penultimate ✅
Question 12
Which of the following options is the SECOND LAST statement from the right end after the correct rearrangement?
(a) Q (b) R (c) T (d) U (e) P
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (e) P
Order: Q U T R P S. From the right end: S (1st from right) → P (2nd from right / second last) ✅
"Second last from right end" = penultimate = 2nd from the last position.
Question 13
Which of the following options is the FOURTH statement after the correct rearrangement?
(a) R (b) S (c) T (d) P (e) Q
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (a) R
Order: Q (1) → U (2) → T (3) → R (4) → P (5) → S (6). ✅
Practice Set 4 — Food Inflation and Its Causes
Directions: Below is a set of statements given in random order. When these statements are sequenced properly, they will form a meaningful paragraph. Rearrange the sentences to form a meaningful paragraph and then answer the questions that follow.
P. The transition is further complicated by India's fragmented cold-chain infrastructure: close to 40% of perishable produce — fruits, vegetables, milk — is lost between farm and consumer due to poor storage and transportation. Q. More than 2,000 mandis across India operate under the Agricultural Produce Market Committee framework, which was originally designed to protect farmers from exploitative traders, but which critics say now restricts price competition and traps farmers in low-earning arrangements. R. As a result, food inflation in India has historically run well above general inflation, squeezing urban household budgets and disproportionately hitting the rural poor who spend over 50% of their income on food. S. Second, immediate relief in food inflation requires a coordinated response — expanding cold storage under Pradhan Mantri Kisan Sampada Yojana, reforming APMC laws, and improving last-mile transport so that supply can actually meet demand. T. In the last 10 years, India's food supply chain has undergone partial modernisation — farm-gate digital payments, e-NAM (electronic National Agriculture Market), and gradual APMC reforms have all helped link producers to wider markets. U. Yet, structural bottlenecks remain entrenched. The first is the mandi system itself.
Answer Key
Correct Order: T → R → P → Q → U → S
Detailed Explanation of Order
This is an Editorial / Opinion type paragraph — it follows the achievements → structural gaps → suggestions flow.
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Start: T introduces the topic with a factual opening: "In the last 10 years, India's food supply chain has undergone partial modernisation..." — a broad, neutral, time-anchored fact. Uses "a" and no pronoun back-reference.
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Pair (T-R): R says "As a result, food inflation in India has historically run well above general inflation..." — "As a result" directly follows T's modernisation story — but wait, if modernisation happened, why is inflation still high? R captures the lingering consequence: incomplete modernisation → persistent food inflation. Cause (structural weakness in T's "partial") → Effect (high inflation in R).
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Pair (R-P): P says "The transition is further complicated by India's fragmented cold-chain infrastructure..." — "The transition" refers back to the modernisation described in T and the ongoing inflation problem in R. P identifies a specific reason (cold-chain loss) for the problem.
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Pair (P-Q): Q says "More than 2,000 mandis across India operate under the APMC framework..." — After P identifies cold-chain loss as one problem, Q introduces the mandi/APMC system as another structural issue. Together P and Q present the two main supply-side failures.
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Pair (Q-U): U says "Yet, structural bottlenecks remain entrenched. The first is the mandi system itself." — "Yet" signals a pivot from the partial reform narrative to what hasn't changed. "The first is the mandi system" directly references the APMC/mandi described in Q. This sentence also introduces a numbered sequence ("the first"), signalling that a "second" will follow.
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Pair (U-S): S says "Second, immediate relief in food inflation requires a coordinated response — expanding cold storage under PM Kisan Sampada Yojana, reforming APMC laws..." — "Second" follows U's "first". S closes with the solution section, listing remedies that directly address the bottlenecks named in P and Q.
Question 14
Which of the following options is the SECOND statement after the correct rearrangement?
(a) T (b) P (c) Q (d) R (e) S
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (d) R
Order: T (1) → R (2) → P (3) → Q (4) → U (5) → S (6). ✅
Question 15
Which of the following options is the FIFTH statement after the correct rearrangement?
(a) P (b) U (c) Q (d) S (e) T
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b) U
Order: T (1) → R (2) → P (3) → Q (4) → U (5) → S (6). ✅
Question 16
Which of the following options is the THIRD statement after the correct rearrangement?
(a) R (b) Q (c) S (d) T (e) P
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (e) P
Order: T (1) → R (2) → P (3) → Q (4) → U (5) → S (6). ✅
Summary Cheat Sheet
| Concept / Topic | Key Details / Explanation |
|---|---|
| Advanced sets — what's harder | Cause-effect reasoning chains, analogies, multi-step arguments; connectors carry more weight |
| "Similarly" in analytical passages | Draws parallel between two problems or examples; the first example must come before "Similarly" |
| "However" in analytical passages | Introduces a problem with or limitation of the previous idea |
| "So/Thus/Therefore" as conclusion | The concluding sentence of an argument — confirms or qualifies the finding |
| Cause-effect chain pattern | Backdrop/problem → Introduction of solution → Positive outcome → However (new problem) → Similarly (parallel problem) → Scientific/analytical conclusion |
| Green Revolution order | S (1960s hunger crisis) → U (Green Revolution launched, "This crisis") → P (self-sufficiency achieved) → R (However, new problems) → T (Similarly, groundwater crisis) → Q (Scientists believe, genetic diversity lost) |
| "First route / Second tier" pattern | Numbered tiers/types signal a sequence; always find "first" before "second" before "apex/third" |
| "This model" / "This transformation" | Demonstrative phrases → the sentence they refer to must immediately precede them |
| Odd-one-out format | One sentence is off-theme — check: does it talk about a different sub-topic or level of detail? |
| Narrative paragraph — full name = opening | Full name of person (e.g., "Ramnath Yadav, a small farmer in Rajasthan") signals the introductory sentence |
| "That was the moment" | "That" refers back to a specific event; place the event sentence immediately before |
| "Meanwhile / Other benefits" | "Meanwhile" introduces a simultaneous or parallel benefit — place after the main benefit is described |
| Editorial paragraph — achievement → gap → suggestion | T (achievement fact) → R (as a result) → P/Q (structural problem elaboration) → U (Yet/However, first bottleneck) → S (Second suggestion) |
| "As a result" = effect; "Yet" = pivot | Cause-effect pair first; "Yet" marks the shift from positive to problem/suggestion |
| "Second" priority sentence | "Second" means a "first" was already stated; locate the "first" sentence to place "second" correctly |
| Introductory vs Terminal pair question | Identify first and last sentences, then check if any option lists that exact pair |
| "Second from right end" | = Penultimate = 2nd from last position |
| "Antepenultimate" | = 3rd from last position — count backward from the end |
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