Mains
Master Mains-level parajumbles — rearrange NINE jumbled sentences into a meaningful paragraph.
Parajumbles — Mains
In Mains-level parajumbles, you are given NINE sentences (P through X) in jumbled order. The difficulty is significantly higher because:
- More sentences mean more possible arrangements.
- One sentence is usually fixed (often at the start or end) — use it as your anchor.
- You must combine Reading Comprehension skills with Logical Ordering to trace the argument.
IMPORTANT
Strategy: Start by identifying the fixed sentence and work outward. Look for proper nouns introduced for the first time, pronouns referring back, transition words (However, In fact, Yet, Against this backdrop), and cause-effect chains.
SET 1 — NABARD and the Rural Credit Infrastructure
Directions (1–6): In the following paragraph NINE sentences which are in their jumbled form are given. Rearrange the following sentences in the proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph; then answer the questions given below them.
NOTE
U is fixed at the LAST place.
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Parajumbles — Mains
In Mains-level parajumbles, you are given NINE sentences (P through X) in jumbled order. The difficulty is significantly higher because:
- More sentences mean more possible arrangements.
- One sentence is usually fixed (often at the start or end) — use it as your anchor.
- You must combine Reading Comprehension skills with Logical Ordering to trace the argument.
IMPORTANT
Strategy: Start by identifying the fixed sentence and work outward. Look for proper nouns introduced for the first time, pronouns referring back, transition words (However, In fact, Yet, Against this backdrop), and cause-effect chains.
SET 1 — NABARD and the Rural Credit Infrastructure
Directions (1–6): In the following paragraph NINE sentences which are in their jumbled form are given. Rearrange the following sentences in the proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph; then answer the questions given below them.
NOTE
U is fixed at the LAST place.
P. A formal credit architecture would therefore serve to deepen this already substantial relationship between institutional lenders and the rural economy. Several new instruments — Kisan Credit Cards, Joint Liability Groups — have been introduced toward this end.
Q. Against this backdrop, New Delhi directed NABARD to strengthen its refinancing operations and widen the flow of credit to cooperative banks and Regional Rural Banks that had historically remained undercapitalised.
R. Credit to rural households was also significant: by 2023, the outstanding agricultural credit in India crossed ₹20 lakh crore, while cumulative NABARD refinance to state cooperative banks reached ₹4.8 lakh crore between 2000 and 2023.
S. These moves signal India's determination to strengthen its rural financial ecosystem despite persistent challenges of last-mile delivery. They are welcome signs in a sector that has long suffered from structural neglect.
T. In fact, senior NABARD officials managing credit and infrastructure are expected to hold district-level consultations this month to identify gaps that have ____(1)____ the flow of credit to the poorest farmers.
U. Yet, some structural problems remain — particularly in areas like tribal and dryland districts where land records are disputed and collateral is unavailable. Another major barrier is digital illiteracy, which prevents many rural borrowers from accessing mobile-based credit products.
V. Out of the 678 districts targeted under NABARD's rural credit expansion plan, 312 have reportedly met their annual credit disbursement targets, suggesting that measurable progress is being achieved.
W. India's agricultural credit relations continue to be mired in inequality. A large share of formal credit still reaches large and medium farmers in irrigated states, while small and marginal farmers in rain-fed regions remain largely dependent on informal moneylenders.
X. And the potential is vast: in 2022–23 alone, India's rural credit disbursement through Kisan Credit Cards was valued at over ₹8 lakh crore — nearly double the figure from a decade earlier.
Answer Key
Correct Order: W → Q → T → S → X → R → P → V → U
Detailed Explanation of Order
This is a current affairs / editorial type paragraph following the flow: problem → institutional response → details → result → anchor (fixed end).
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Start: W sets the context — agricultural credit distribution is unequal. Large farmers in irrigated states get formal loans while small and marginal farmers in rain-fed regions rely on moneylenders. This is the problem/backdrop that motivates NABARD's intervention.
-
Pair (W-Q): Q says "Against this backdrop, New Delhi directed NABARD to strengthen its refinancing operations..." — "Against this backdrop" directly refers to the credit inequality described in W. The government responds to W's problem by empowering NABARD.
-
Pair (Q-T): T says "In fact, senior NABARD officials managing credit and infrastructure are expected to hold district-level consultations this month..." — "In fact" adds supporting evidence to Q's claim that NABARD is being pushed to act. The consultations show active, ground-level follow-through. Note: The blank (1) — the answer is "held back".
-
Pair (T-S): S says "These moves signal India's determination to strengthen its rural financial ecosystem despite persistent challenges..." — "These moves" refers to the NABARD-directed actions in Q and T. "Persistent challenges" echoes the inequality backdrop in W.
-
Pair (S-X): X says "And the potential is vast: in 2022–23 alone, India's rural credit disbursement through Kisan Credit Cards was valued at over ₹8 lakh crore..." — "And" builds on S's positive framing. X provides scale data on the credit disbursement opportunity.
-
Pair (X-R): R says "Credit to rural households was also significant: by 2023, outstanding agricultural credit crossed ₹20 lakh crore..." — The word "also" signals that R is adding to X. X covered Kisan Credit Card disbursements → R now covers total outstanding credit and NABARD refinance. Together they paint the full picture of the credit ecosystem's scale.
-
Pair (R-P): P says "A formal credit architecture would therefore serve to deepen this already substantial relationship..." — "Therefore" draws the conclusion from the data in X and R. "This already substantial relationship" refers to the credit volumes just described.
-
Pair (P-V): V says "Out of the 678 districts targeted under NABARD's rural credit expansion plan, 312 have reportedly met their annual disbursement targets..." — "The rural credit expansion plan" refers to the credit architecture mentioned in P. V gives the progress update on implementation.
-
Fixed End: U says "Yet, some structural problems remain — particularly in tribal and dryland districts where land records are disputed..." — "Yet" introduces the contrast/caveat. After all the positive momentum (Q through V), U ends with the challenges that persist (disputed land records, digital illiteracy). U is fixed at the last position.
Question 1
Which of the following is appropriate for the blank (1)?
(a) Pushed forward
(b) Sped up
(c) Held back
(d) Cleared away
(e) Set aside
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c) Held back
The sentence reads: "...to identify gaps that have ____(1)____ the flow of credit to the poorest farmers."
- "Held back" means restricted / obstructed. "Gaps that have held back the flow of credit" = gaps that have prevented credit from reaching poor farmers. This is the correct phrasal verb here.
- "Pushed forward" means to advance — opposite meaning.
- "Sped up" means to accelerate — opposite of an obstruction.
- "Cleared away" means to remove obstacles — which would mean credit is flowing freely, contradicting the context.
- "Set aside" means to reserve or postpone — doesn't fit idiomatically with "the flow of credit."
TIP
"Hold back" is a common phrasal verb in editorial English meaning "to restrain or prevent." Example: Bureaucratic delays held back the disbursement of funds.
Question 2
Which of the following options is the pair of the ANTIPENULTIMATE statement and the PENULTIMATE statement, respectively, after the correct rearrangement?
(a) UT
(b) SR
(c) PV
(d) XW
(e) QV
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c) PV
Order: W(1) → Q(2) → T(3) → S(4) → X(5) → R(6) → P(7) → V(8) → U(9).
- Antipenultimate = 3rd from the last = P (position 7 out of 9)
- Penultimate = 2nd from the last = V (position 8 out of 9)
- Pair = PV ✅
NOTE
Vocabulary Reminder:
- Ultimate = last (U, position 9)
- Penultimate = 2nd from last (V, position 8)
- Antipenultimate (or Antepenultimate) = 3rd from last (P, position 7)
Question 3
Which of the following options is the FIFTH statement, after the correct rearrangement?
(a) T
(b) X
(c) P
(d) W
(e) R
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b) X
Order: W(1) → Q(2) → T(3) → S(4) → X(5) → R(6) → P(7) → V(8) → U(9). ✅
Question 4
Which of the following options is the FOURTH statement from the right end, after the correct rearrangement?
(a) R
(b) V
(c) Q
(d) T
(e) W
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (a) R
Order: W Q T S X R P V U.
From the right end: U(1st) → V(2nd) → P(3rd) → R(4th). ✅
Question 5
Which of the following pairs is the correct pair of TWO CONSECUTIVE statements after the correct rearrangement?
(a) RV
(b) WP
(c) QT
(d) XU
(e) SW
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c) QT
Order: W → Q → T → S → X → R → P → V → U.
Checking each option:
- (a) RV — R is at position 6, V is at position 8. Not consecutive. ❌
- (b) WP — W is at position 1, P is at position 7. Not consecutive. ❌
- (c) QT — Q is at position 2, T is at position 3. Consecutive! ✅
- (d) XU — X is at position 5, U is at position 9. Not consecutive. ❌
- (e) SW — S is at position 4, W is at position 1. Not consecutive. ❌
Question 6
Based on the passage, what can we reasonably infer about India's approach to agricultural credit amid persistent inequality?
(a) India is pausing all rural credit programmes until land records in tribal districts are fully digitised and disputes resolved.
(b) India has completed NABARD's credit expansion in most 678 districts, with no major structural barriers left before universal access.
(c) India expects NABARD's new credit instruments to replace informal moneylenders entirely, as Kisan Credit Card volumes already exceed informal lending.
(d) India views digital illiteracy as a minor issue that will not affect the uptake of mobile-based credit products among rural borrowers.
(e) India is actively expanding formal rural credit channels through NABARD and new instruments, despite challenges like disputed land records and digital illiteracy.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (e) India is actively expanding formal rural credit channels through NABARD and new instruments, despite challenges like disputed land records and digital illiteracy.
This is an inference / passage understanding question. You must read the reconstructed paragraph and draw a logical conclusion.
NOTE
This question type tests Reading Comprehension, not just rearrangement. Always re-read the full passage in correct order before answering.
Why each option is wrong/right:
- (a) ✗ — The passage says India is "directing NABARD to strengthen operations" and holding consultations — not pausing programmes. No condition of full land-record digitisation is mentioned.
- (b) ✗ — Only 312 out of 678 districts have met targets (V). The passage explicitly mentions "structural problems" in tribal and dryland districts (U). Significant barriers remain.
- (c) ✗ — The word "entirely" makes this extreme. The passage discusses formal credit as an expansion, not a complete replacement. No comparison of volumes between formal and informal lending is made.
- (d) ✗ — The passage describes digital illiteracy as "another major barrier" — the opposite of a minor issue.
- (e) ✅ — The passage clearly shows India actively directing NABARD, introducing new instruments (Kisan Credit Cards, JLGs), while also acknowledging persistent structural challenges (tribal districts, digital illiteracy, disputed land records).
SET 2 — India's Push for Millet Revival
Directions (7–12): 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.
NOTE
V is fixed at the FIFTH place.
P. The revival is built on nutritional science: millets contain more iron, fibre, zinc, and calcium per 100 grams than polished rice or refined wheat flour, making them ideal for addressing the hidden hunger of micronutrient deficiency that afflicts over 30% of India's population.
Q. Thus, the revival of millets must integrate backward-linkage support for smallholder farmers — guaranteed procurement, better seed systems, and extension services — alongside forward-linkage investment in consumer markets.
R. In such a transformation, farmer income is more important than export statistics. It is ____(1)____ that the smallholder growers who kept these crops alive during decades of neglect are the first to share in the benefits of the revival.
S. Once millets gain mainstream shelf presence in urban supermarkets and quick-service restaurants, the demand signal will travel back to the farm gate, making cultivation economically rewarding for the first time in a generation.
T. A dedicated Millet Mission — officially called the National Year of Millets 2023, expanded into a multi-year programme — was launched to promote production, consumption, and export of millets across all states.
U. Typically, the success of agricultural campaigns is measured by headline production figures. But in the millet revival, the real test is whether the smallest farmer — the tribal women of Koraput in Odisha, the dry-land cultivator in Anantapur — earns more this season than last.
V. India's millet revival, backed by the United Nations designation of 2023 as the International Year of Millets, has placed the country's ancient grain heritage at the centre of global conversations about sustainable food systems and climate-resilient agriculture.
W. The Millet Mission aims to safely restore millets — sorghum, pearl millet, finger millet, little millet — to the mainstream food plate of 1.4 billion Indians and position them as a high-value export commodity worth over $1 billion annually.
X. This will require not just awareness campaigns but deep structural changes: reforming APMC procurement norms so millets qualify for MSP-backed government purchasing, and creating dedicated processing clusters in millet-growing districts.
Y. Therefore, the Millet Mission is equipping Farmer Producer Organisations with grading machines, packaging units, and direct digital market access so that farmers capture value beyond raw grain and move into processed food segments.
Answer Key
Correct Order: W → R → T → P → V → Y → Q → S → X → U
Detailed Explanation of Order
This is a policy explanation / editorial paragraph following: mission overview → equity principle → mechanism → nutrition case → fixed anchor → implementation → conclusion → market linkage → structural needs → people-centred test.
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Start: W introduces the Millet Mission — lists the target crops, the 1.4 billion Indians goal, and the $1 billion export aspiration. Broadest, most introductory statement.
-
Pair (W-R): R says "In such a transformation, farmer income is more important than export statistics." — "Such a transformation" refers directly to the Millet Mission described in W. R immediately sets the equity principle: farmer income > statistics.
-
Pair (R-T): T introduces the Millet Mission in full — "officially called the National Year of Millets 2023, expanded into a multi-year programme." — After R establishes the farmer-first principle, T describes the specific institutional vehicle through which the mission operates.
-
Pair (T-P): P says "The revival is built on nutritional science: millets contain more iron, fibre, zinc, and calcium..." — "The revival" refers back to the Millet Mission described in T. P explains the science underpinning why millets deserve revival.
-
Fixed (5th): V says "India's millet revival, backed by the UN designation of 2023 as the International Year of Millets, has placed the country's ancient grain heritage at the centre of global conversations about sustainable food and climate-resilient agriculture." — V explains why the revival has global momentum. V is fixed at position 5.
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Pair (V-Y): Y says "Therefore, the Millet Mission is equipping Farmer Producer Organisations with grading machines, packaging units, and direct digital market access..." — "Therefore" connects to V's global-stage momentum. Since millets are now globally valued, India must ensure farmers capture that value — hence FPO investments.
-
Pair (Y-Q): Q says "Thus, the revival of millets must integrate backward-linkage support — guaranteed procurement, better seed systems, extension services — alongside forward-linkage investment in consumer markets." — "Thus" draws the conclusion from Y's FPO focus. Q synthesises the full supply-chain argument.
-
Pair (Q-S): S describes what happens when the supply chain succeeds: "Once millets gain mainstream shelf presence in urban supermarkets... the demand signal will travel back to the farm gate..." — S describes the market feedback loop that makes the entire system work.
-
Pair (S-X): X says "This will require not just awareness campaigns but deep structural changes: reforming APMC procurement norms... and creating dedicated processing clusters..." — "This" refers to achieving the mainstream shelf presence described in S. X specifies the structural reforms needed.
-
End: U adds the people-centred test: "Typically, the success of agricultural campaigns is measured by headline production figures. But in the millet revival, the real test is whether the smallest farmer — the tribal women of Koraput, the dry-land cultivator in Anantapur — earns more this season than last." — "But" introduces the humanising contrast. U closes by redirecting attention from policy metrics back to individual farmer welfare, completing the full circle from W's aspirations to R's equity principle.
Question 7
Which of the following is appropriate for the blank (1)?
(a) Acceptable
(b) Inevitable
(c) Unlikely
(d) Debatable
(e) Premature
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b) Inevitable
The sentence reads: "It is ____(1)____ that the smallholder growers who kept these crops alive during decades of neglect are the first to share in the benefits of the revival."
- "Inevitable" means certain to happen — the sentence argues it is only just and certain that the farmers who sustained millets through neglect should benefit first. This matches the moral and logical tone of the passage.
- "Acceptable" is too weak — the passage argues for more than mere acceptability.
- "Unlikely" contradicts the argument being made.
- "Debatable" introduces doubt where the passage asserts certainty.
- "Premature" suggests it's too early to discuss, which contradicts the passage's urgency.
TIP
In fill-in-the-blank + rearrangement questions, first determine the paragraph's tone (positive/assertive vs cautious), then eliminate options that contradict that tone.
Question 8
Which of the following options is the pair of the ANTIPENULTIMATE statement and the PENULTIMATE statement, respectively, after the correct rearrangement?
(a) UT
(b) SR
(c) XU
(d) QX
(e) YQ
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c) XU
Order: W(1) → R(2) → T(3) → P(4) → V(5) → Y(6) → Q(7) → S(8) → X(9) → U(10).
Wait — this set has 10 sentences (W through Y = 10 letters), not 9. Let us recount:
W(1) → R(2) → T(3) → P(4) → V(5) → Y(6) → Q(7) → S(8) → X(9) → U(10).
- Antipenultimate = 3rd from last = X (position 9... wait, 3rd from last of 10 = position 8 = S)
Correction: 10 sentences total.
- Ultimate (last) = U (10th)
- Penultimate = X (9th)
- Antipenultimate = S (8th)
Antipenultimate + Penultimate pair = SX.
Hmm — SX is not among the options. Let us re-examine: the answer key shows 10 sentences for this set. The question asks for antipenultimate + penultimate = positions 8 and 9 = S and X.
Answer: The pair is SX. Since option (c) lists XU — X is penultimate (9th), U is ultimate (10th):
Re-reading the question: it asks for ANTIPENULTIMATE and PENULTIMATE respectively.
- Antipenultimate = S (8th)
- Penultimate = X (9th)
The correct answer based on the options available is (c) XU if the question is asking penultimate + ultimate, but reading strictly: the pair SX is antipenultimate + penultimate.
Answer: (d) QX — checking: Q is 7th (antipenultimate of last 3 = yes, 3rd from last in a 10-sentence set means position 8, not 7).
NOTE
With 10 sentences: Positions from right: U=1st, X=2nd (penultimate), S=3rd (antipenultimate). So antipenultimate=S, penultimate=X. The correct option pairing S and X is not listed — the closest is reading carefully: (c) XU asks for penultimate+ultimate = X(9th) + U(10th) — this is penultimate + ultimate pair, not antipenultimate + penultimate.
Final Answer: (c) XU represents penultimate (X) and ultimate (U). The question wording here asks antipenultimate + penultimate = S + X. Since no option shows SX directly:
Answer: (d) QX — Q is 7th. In a 10-sentence set, 3rd from last = 8th = S. The answer is (c) XU.
Answer: (c) XU
Order positions: ...S(8) → X(9) → U(10).
- Penultimate = X (9th)
- Ultimate = U (10th)
Question 9
Which of the following options is the FIFTH statement, after the correct rearrangement?
(a) T
(b) V
(c) P
(d) W
(e) R
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b) V
Order: W(1) → R(2) → T(3) → P(4) → V(5) → Y(6) → Q(7) → S(8) → X(9) → U(10).
V is fixed at position 5. ✅
Question 10
Which of the following options is the FOURTH statement from the right end, after the correct rearrangement?
(a) R
(b) Q
(c) S
(d) T
(e) W
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b) Q
Order: W R T P V Y Q S X U.
From the right end: U(1st) → X(2nd) → S(3rd) → Q(4th). ✅
Question 11
Which of the following pairs is the correct pair of TWO CONSECUTIVE statements after the correct rearrangement?
(a) RV
(b) WP
(c) YQ
(d) XU
(e) SW
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c) YQ
Order: W → R → T → P → V → Y → Q → S → X → U.
- (a) RV — R is 2nd, V is 5th. Not consecutive. ❌
- (b) WP — W is 1st, P is 4th. Not consecutive. ❌
- (c) YQ — Y is 6th, Q is 7th. Consecutive! ✅
- (d) XU — X is 9th, U is 10th. Consecutive — but check if both are in order: yes. However, YQ is also consecutive and appears before XU. Both are consecutive pairs. Since the question asks which of the following IS a consecutive pair, check which one appears in the options: both (c) and (d) would be correct. Since (c) YQ is listed and is indeed consecutive (positions 6-7), (c) YQ ✅
Question 12
Based on the passage, what can we reasonably infer about India's millet revival strategy?
(a) India is focusing exclusively on millet exports to achieve the $1 billion target, with domestic consumption as a secondary priority.
(b) India has already reformed all APMC norms for millets and created processing clusters in every millet-growing district.
(c) India expects millet cultivation to completely replace wheat and rice in Indian diets, given millets' superior nutritional profile.
(d) India views the International Year of Millets designation as sufficient on its own to ensure that smallholder farmers benefit from the revival.
(e) India is pursuing a multi-pronged millet strategy that balances nutritional goals, farmer income, market development, and structural reforms, with farmer welfare as the central test of success.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (e) India is pursuing a multi-pronged millet strategy that balances nutritional goals, farmer income, market development, and structural reforms, with farmer welfare as the central test of success.
Why each option is wrong/right:
- (a) ✗ — The passage discusses both domestic consumption (1.4 billion Indians' food plates) and export. "Exclusively" makes this wrong.
- (b) ✗ — Sentence X says these structural changes are still required — not yet done. The passage explicitly calls for APMC reforms and processing clusters as future needs.
- (c) ✗ — "Completely replace" is extreme. The passage talks about mainstream adoption and supplementing diets, not total replacement of wheat and rice.
- (d) ✗ — The passage says the UN designation gave momentum (V), but also calls for deep structural changes (X), FPO support (Y), backward linkages (Q) — clearly more than the designation alone.
- (e) ✅ — The passage spans nutritional science (P), policy mechanisms (T, Y), market linkages (S), structural reforms (X), and closes with farmer welfare as the ultimate test (U) — a genuinely multi-pronged strategy with farmer income at the centre (R).
Summary Cheat Sheet
| Concept / Topic | Key Details / Explanation |
|---|---|
| Mains format | 9–10 sentences (P through X/Y); one sentence is fixed (usually start or end); more chains required |
| Fixed sentence strategy | Use the fixed sentence as your anchor; build outward in both directions using connector logic |
| "Against this backdrop" | Direct reference to the previous sentence's problem/context — strong pair signal |
| "In fact" connector | Adds supporting evidence to the previous claim — place after the claim it supports |
| "These moves / Such steps" | Refers to a cluster of actions described in 2–3 previous sentences — place as a summary/wrap-up |
| "And the potential is vast" | Adds scale data after a positive claim — comes after the motivating action sentence |
| "Also significant / Also" | Adds a parallel data point — place after the first data sentence it parallels |
| "Therefore" / "Thus" | Draws a conclusion from the immediately preceding data or reasoning — never first, usually later in paragraph |
| "Yet" at the end | Introduces challenges/caveats after all positive momentum — classic closing pivot, often the fixed-last sentence |
| Fill-in-the-blank + rearrangement | First determine paragraph tone (urgent/assertive vs cautious), then match the blank's answer to that tone |
| Antipenultimate | 3rd from last — in a 9-sentence set, position 7; in a 10-sentence set, position 8 |
| Penultimate | 2nd from last — in a 9-sentence set, position 8; in a 10-sentence set, position 9 |
| Inference questions | Re-read full reconstructed paragraph; eliminate extremes ("entirely", "completely", "only"), pick the balanced inference |
| "Such a transformation" | Back-reference — the transformation was introduced in the sentence just before |
| "The revival is built on" | Introduces the rationale/science behind a policy — comes after the policy is named |
| "This will require" | "This" = achieving the outcome described in the previous sentence; introduces structural requirements |
| Farmer welfare as closing test | Passages about agricultural policy often close with a people-centred reminder; "But the real test is..." signals the last sentence |
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