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Fillers (Single/Double Fillers)

Master the art of solving filler questions in banking exams with strategies and practice sets.

Mastering Fillers in Banking Exams

Fillers (also known as Fill in the Blanks) appear in almost every major banking and insurance exam — IBPS PO, SBI PO, RBI Grade B, NABARD, RRB PO, and others. They test your vocabulary, grammar, and reading comprehension skills at the same time.

In these questions, a sentence is given with one or two blanks. You must choose the word or words from the options that fit the blank(s) both grammatically and contextually.

Types of Fillers

  1. Single Fillers: One blank in the sentence.
  2. Double Fillers: Two blanks in the sentence.
  3. Triple/Multiple Fillers: Three or more blanks (less common but possible in Mains).

Strategies to Solve Fillers

1. Read the Sentence Carefully

Understand the context and tone of the sentence. Is it positive, negative, critical, or informative?

  • Example: "Despite her consistent efforts, the project ______." (The blank must be negative because of "Despite".)

2. Identify the Part of Speech

Decide whether the blank requires a Noun, Verb, Adjective, or Adverb.

  • Example: "The RBI governor made a ______ statement on interest rates." (Adjective needed.)

3. Use the Elimination Method

Rule out options that are:

  • Grammatically incorrect (wrong part of speech, tense mismatch).
  • Contextually irrelevant (meaning doesn't fit the sentence's theme).
  • Semantically redundant (if two options mean the same thing, neither is likely the intended answer — unless the question type asks you to pick both).

4. Check for Collocations

Certain words naturally appear together. Learning collocations dramatically speeds up filler-solving.

  • Example: "impose a fine," "bridge the gap," "raise funds," "pose a risk."

5. Use Vocabulary Clues

Look for signpost words:

  • Contrast cluesalthough, but, however, despite → blank is opposite in meaning to what came before.
  • Continuation cluesand, moreover, also, furthermore → blank continues the same idea.
  • Cause-effect cluesbecause, therefore, so, hence → blank is logically connected.

Practice Set 1: Single Fillers

Directions: In each of the following questions, a sentence is given with a blank. Choose the most appropriate word or words to fill in the blank.


Q1. The Reserve Bank of India has been ______ monetary policy to rein in inflation without stifling economic growth.

(a) tightening (b) abandoning (c) ignoring (d) reversing (e) celebrating

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (a) tightening**

"Tighten monetary policy" is a fixed collocation meaning to raise interest rates or reduce money supply to control inflation. It directly addresses "rein in inflation."

  • (b) abandoning — gives up policy, contradicts the intent
  • (c) ignoring — not taking action, contradicts the premise
  • (d) reversing — means making policy looser, opposite of controlling inflation
  • (e) celebrating — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Tighten/ease monetary policy" are the two standard phrases — tighten = restrictive, ease = accommodative.


Q2. NABARD's Rural Infrastructure Development Fund has helped ______ rural roads, irrigation channels, and storage facilities across the country.

(a) demolish (b) construct (c) prohibit (d) undermine (e) relocate

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) construct**

The list that follows — roads, irrigation, storage — are all physical infrastructure items that need to be built. "Construct" is the precise verb.

  • (a) demolish — opposite meaning
  • (c) prohibit — no sense in context
  • (d) undermine — means weaken
  • (e) relocate — does not suit infrastructure creation

Vocabulary Tip: Collocations — construct infrastructure, build capacity, develop facilities.


Q3. The government's decision to ______ the Minimum Support Price for paddy was welcomed by farmer unions across the country.

(a) withdraw (b) freeze (c) revise upward (d) abolish (e) conceal

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) revise upward**

Farmer unions welcome an increase in MSP — the blank must mean raising it. "Revise upward" captures this precisely.

  • (a) withdraw — farmers would oppose this
  • (b) freeze — keeping it the same; neither welcomed strongly
  • (d) abolish — farmers would protest
  • (e) conceal — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Revise upward / revise downward" — standard policy language for adjusting prices.


Q4. Banks are increasingly using artificial intelligence to ______ loan applications faster and reduce the burden on relationship managers.

(a) reject (b) process (c) destroy (d) lose (e) plagiarise

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) process**

"Process loan applications" is a standard banking phrase. AI speeds up the processing, not any of the other actions.

  • (a) reject — AI may reject some but "faster rejection" is not the intended meaning
  • (c) destroy — wrong meaning
  • (d) lose — wrong meaning
  • (e) plagiarise — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: Collocations — process applications, evaluate eligibility, assess creditworthiness.


Q5. Organic farmers can ______ a premium price in export markets because their produce is certified free of synthetic chemicals.

(a) command (b) borrow (c) donate (d) surrender (e) ignore

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (a) command**

"Command a premium price" means to be able to charge or receive a higher price. It is a fixed collocation in business English.

  • (b) borrow — no sense in this context
  • (c) donate — gives money away, opposite
  • (d) surrender — gives up, wrong meaning
  • (e) ignore — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Command a price / command respect / command attention" — all use "command" to mean "naturally earn or deserve."


Q6. Self-Help Groups empower rural women by giving them access to small loans and ______ their confidence to run micro-enterprises.

(a) draining (b) building (c) suppressing (d) questioning (e) reducing

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) building**

"Build confidence" is a natural collocation. SHGs are described positively — the blank must have a positive meaning.

  • (a) draining — opposite; draining confidence weakens people
  • (c) suppressing — negative
  • (d) questioning — undermines confidence, negative
  • (e) reducing — negative

Vocabulary Tip: "Build confidence / boost confidence / instil confidence" — three natural collocations.


Q7. The Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi transfers ₹6,000 annually directly into the bank accounts of ______ farmers across India.

(a) wealthy (b) corporate (c) eligible (d) urban (e) foreign

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) eligible**

PM-KISAN targets small and marginal farmers who meet specific criteria. "Eligible" is the technically accurate word in the context of a government scheme with selection criteria.

  • (a) wealthy — wrong; the scheme targets small and marginal farmers
  • (b) corporate — wrong category
  • (d) urban — wrong; PM-KISAN targets rural agricultural households
  • (e) foreign — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: In government scheme contexts — eligible, beneficiary, enrolled, targeted.


Q8. Drip irrigation helps ______ water consumption in agriculture while maintaining crop yields at near-normal levels.

(a) escalate (b) inflate (c) eliminate (d) curtail (e) celebrate

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (d) curtail**

Drip irrigation reduces water use. "Curtail" means to sharply reduce. The context also says "while maintaining yields," implying water is saved but production is not harmed.

  • (a) escalate — increase, wrong
  • (b) inflate — increase, wrong
  • (c) eliminate — too extreme; drip irrigation reduces but does not eliminate water use
  • (e) celebrate — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Curtail" synonyms — reduce, minimise, cut, limit. Antonyms — escalate, inflate, amplify.


Q9. The cooperative society was found to have ______ the accounts of its members, leading to a government-ordered audit.

(a) accurately reported (b) falsified (c) improved (d) praised (e) highlighted

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) falsified**

The clue is "government-ordered audit" — this is triggered by wrongdoing. "Falsified the accounts" means manipulated financial records.

  • (a) accurately reported — would not trigger an audit
  • (c) improved — positive; would not trigger an audit
  • (d) praised — irrelevant
  • (e) highlighted — positive, irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Falsify accounts" — also: manipulate, fudge, doctor, misreport financial records.


Q10. Climate scientists warn that the increasing ______ of the monsoon is making it harder for farmers to plan their sowing schedules.

(a) predictability (b) reliability (c) unpredictability (d) uniformity (e) abundance

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) unpredictability**

The sentence says farmers find it "harder to plan" — this implies the monsoon has become less predictable, i.e., more unpredictable.

  • (a) predictability — would make planning easier, contradicts the difficulty
  • (b) reliability — same issue as predictability
  • (d) uniformity — a regular monsoon would not make planning harder
  • (e) abundance — too much rain is a different problem; doesn't fit "harder to plan sowing"

Vocabulary Tip: "Unpredictability" synonyms — erratic nature, variability, inconsistency.


Q11. The government has ______ subsidies on chemical fertilisers to encourage farmers to shift toward organic inputs and biofertilisers.

(a) increased (b) rationalised (c) hidden (d) invented (e) exaggerated

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) rationalised**

"Rationalise subsidies" is a policy term meaning to restructure or reduce them in a systematic way. The context — shifting toward organic inputs — implies a reduction in chemical fertiliser support.

  • (a) increased — would discourage the shift to organic
  • (c) hidden — no sense in this context
  • (d) invented — subsidies already exist; they are not invented
  • (e) exaggerated — no sense in this context

Vocabulary Tip: "Rationalise" in policy = restructure or reduce in a planned, reasoned way.


Q12. The Food Corporation of India (FCI) has been criticised for its inability to ______ food grains efficiently, leading to large-scale wastage in government warehouses.

(a) procure (b) store (c) distribute (d) photograph (e) rename

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) distribute**

The clue is "wastage in government warehouses" — grain sitting in warehouses means it is not reaching people, i.e., distribution is the bottleneck.

  • (a) procure — FCI is responsible for procurement; if anything, it procures too much
  • (b) store — poor storage could cause wastage but "distribute efficiently" is the more standard criticism paired with warehousing problems
  • (d) photograph — irrelevant
  • (e) rename — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: FCI functions — procurement, storage, distribution of foodgrains under PDS.


Q13. Rural households enrolled under the PM Ujjwala Yojana received free LPG connections to ______ their dependence on firewood and reduce indoor air pollution.

(a) increase (b) intensify (c) reduce (d) celebrate (e) deny

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) reduce**

The scheme provides clean cooking fuel to replace firewood — the goal is to reduce dependence on biomass.

  • (a) increase — opposite
  • (b) intensify — stronger negative than "increase"
  • (d) celebrate — irrelevant
  • (e) deny — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Reduce dependence" / "wean off dependence" / "phase out reliance on" — all describe transitioning away from a harmful input.


Q14. The RBI has been ______ of the rapid growth of unsecured personal loans, warning banks to exercise caution in their lending practices.

(a) dismissive (b) supportive (c) wary (d) celebratory (e) ignorant

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) wary**

"Be wary of" means to be cautious about potential risks. The RBI is issuing a warning — wary is the exact tone.

  • (a) dismissive — means treating something as unimportant; wrong tone for a warning
  • (b) supportive — positive; opposite of a warning
  • (d) celebratory — positive; opposite of concern
  • (e) ignorant — means unaware; RBI is clearly aware and warning

Vocabulary Tip: "Wary of" collocations — wary of risks, wary of excess, wary of speculation.


Q15. The PMFBY scheme has helped ______ the financial burden on farmers hit by unseasonal rains, floods, and pest attacks.

(a) increase (b) ignore (c) alleviate (d) create (e) extend

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) alleviate**

"Alleviate the burden" is a fixed collocation meaning to make a difficulty less severe. Crop insurance reduces financial pressure after losses.

  • (a) increase — opposite
  • (b) ignore — does not describe insurance's function
  • (d) create — wrong direction
  • (e) extend — wrong meaning in this context

Vocabulary Tip: "Alleviate" synonyms — ease, relieve, mitigate, lessen, lighten.


Q16. India's food processing sector has the ______ to significantly reduce post-harvest losses and add value to agricultural produce before it reaches consumers.

(a) inability (b) potential (c) history (d) failure (e) excuse

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) potential**

"Has the potential to" is a standard phrase describing capability that has not yet been fully used. The positive framing of the sentence requires a positive noun.

  • (a) inability — negative, contradicts the "can significantly reduce" implication
  • (c) history — "has the history to" is not a natural phrase
  • (d) failure — negative
  • (e) excuse — irrelevant and negative

Vocabulary Tip: "Has the potential to" — also: "is capable of," "has the capacity to," "has the scope to."


Q17. Banks are required to ______ a certain percentage of their loans to the priority sector, which includes agriculture, micro-enterprises, and education.

(a) withdraw (b) divert away from (c) direct (d) conceal (e) borrow from

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) direct**

Priority Sector Lending (PSL) norms require banks to direct a fixed percentage of credit toward designated sectors. "Direct loans to the priority sector" is the natural phrasing.

  • (a) withdraw — opposite
  • (b) divert away from — opposite of PSL norms
  • (d) conceal — irrelevant
  • (e) borrow from — reverses the direction of lending

Vocabulary Tip: PSL-related collocations — direct/route/allocate/channel credit.


Q18. The Soil Health Card scheme was introduced to ______ farmers with information about the nutrient levels in their soil and recommend appropriate fertiliser usage.

(a) confuse (b) deprive (c) equip (d) distract (e) threaten

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) equip**

"Equip with information" means to provide someone with what they need — a natural collocation for an awareness scheme.

  • (a) confuse — negative; the scheme aims for clarity
  • (b) deprive — takes away; opposite
  • (d) distract — no sense in context
  • (e) threaten — clearly wrong

Vocabulary Tip: "Equip with" collocations — equip with knowledge, equip with skills, equip with tools.


Q19. Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) have ______ the balance sheets of several public sector banks, forcing the government to inject capital through recapitalisation.

(a) improved (b) strengthened (c) strained (d) stabilised (e) rebuilt

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) strained**

NPAs are bad loans that put pressure on banks. "Strained the balance sheets" means caused financial stress. The consequence — government recapitalisation — confirms this is a problem, not a benefit.

  • (a) improved — positive; contradicts recapitalisation need
  • (b) strengthened — positive; same issue
  • (d) stabilised — positive; same issue
  • (e) rebuilt — positive; same issue

Vocabulary Tip: "Strained balance sheets" — also: burdened, weakened, impaired, eroded.


Q20. The introduction of e-NAM (National Agriculture Market) was intended to ______ a unified online trading platform for agricultural commodities across India.

(a) dismantle (b) create (c) restrict (d) conceal (e) outsource

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) create**

e-NAM was launched to build a national digital marketplace — "create a unified platform" is the direct description of this intent.

  • (a) dismantle — destroy; opposite
  • (c) restrict — limit; opposite
  • (d) conceal — hide; opposite of a public marketplace
  • (e) outsource — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Create a platform" — also: establish, set up, build, launch.


Q21. India's cooperative banks must ______ their governance structures if they are to compete effectively with modern commercial banks and fintech players.

(a) weaken (b) overhaul (c) replicate (d) abandon (e) conceal

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) overhaul**

"Overhaul governance structures" means to thoroughly reform or restructure them — the appropriate word when referring to deep institutional reform.

  • (a) weaken — negative; opposite of what is needed
  • (c) replicate — copy; doesn't mean improve
  • (d) abandon — give up; opposite
  • (e) conceal — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Overhaul" synonyms — revamp, reform, restructure, redesign, modernise.


Q22. The sharp rise in global crude oil prices has the ______ to widen India's current account deficit and put downward pressure on the rupee.

(a) inability (b) failure (c) potential (d) excuse (e) history

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) potential**

"Has the potential to" expresses capability or likelihood of a future outcome — standard in economic risk analysis.

  • (a) inability — would mean it cannot widen the deficit, contradicts the context
  • (b) failure — wrong part of speech usage here
  • (d) excuse — irrelevant
  • (e) history — "has the history to widen the deficit" is not a natural or meaningful phrase

Vocabulary Tip: Economic risk phrases — "poses a risk to," "has the potential to," "threatens to."


Q23. Farmers who switch to organic methods must ______ a transition period of two to three years during which yields may fall before certification can be obtained.

(a) avoid (b) deny (c) navigate (d) celebrate (e) bypass

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) navigate**

"Navigate a transition period" means to manage through a difficult phase — a common metaphorical use of navigate.

  • (a) avoid — cannot avoid the transition; it is inherent to organic farming
  • (b) deny — irrelevant
  • (d) celebrate — wrong tone
  • (e) bypass — implies skipping it, which is not possible

Vocabulary Tip: "Navigate" metaphorical uses — navigate challenges, navigate uncertainty, navigate the process.


Q24. The government is considering raising the ______ limit for farm loans under Kisan Credit Cards to enable farmers to meet higher input costs.

(a) repayment (b) interest (c) credit (d) insurance (e) penalty

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) credit**

Kisan Credit Cards have a credit limit — the amount a farmer can borrow. Raising this limit helps them afford more inputs.

  • (a) repayment limit — not a standard phrase in this context
  • (b) interest limit — not the right phrase; interest rates are set separately
  • (d) insurance limit — unrelated to KCC functionality
  • (e) penalty limit — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Credit limit" — also: borrowing limit, loan ceiling, sanctioned amount.


Q25. Excessive dependence on a single crop makes farmers ______ to price shocks and weather uncertainties, which is why crop diversification is encouraged.

(a) immune (b) resistant (c) vulnerable (d) indifferent (e) superior

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) vulnerable**

"Vulnerable to shocks" means exposed to risk and likely to be harmed. The second clause — "which is why diversification is encouraged" — confirms the problem.

  • (a) immune — means protected; would remove the reason to diversify
  • (b) resistant — also protective; contradicts the need for diversification
  • (d) indifferent — means unconcerned; illogical
  • (e) superior — wrong meaning entirely

Vocabulary Tip: "Vulnerable to" — also: exposed to, susceptible to, at risk from.


Q26. The Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency (MUDRA) provides ______ loans to small entrepreneurs who lack the collateral required by traditional banks.

(a) collateral-backed (b) collateral-free (c) large-scale (d) foreign (e) interest-free

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) collateral-free**

MUDRA's defining feature is providing loans without collateral to micro-enterprises — "collateral-free" is the precise term.

  • (a) collateral-backed — contradicts MUDRA's purpose
  • (c) large-scale — MUDRA targets micro loans, not large amounts
  • (d) foreign — irrelevant
  • (e) interest-free — MUDRA loans carry interest; they are not free

Vocabulary Tip: "Collateral-free" — also: unsecured, without security, no-collateral.


Q27. The introduction of Unified Payments Interface (UPI) has ______ the way Indians send and receive money, making instant transfers available to anyone with a smartphone.

(a) complicated (b) restricted (c) transformed (d) eliminated (e) confused

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) transformed**

"Transformed the way" is a standard phrase for a fundamental change in how something works. UPI's impact on payments in India is described as revolutionary.

  • (a) complicated — negative; UPI simplifies
  • (b) restricted — negative; UPI broadens access
  • (d) eliminated — too extreme; UPI hasn't eliminated other payment methods
  • (e) confused — negative; UPI is praised for simplicity

Vocabulary Tip: "Transform the way" — also: revolutionise, reshape, redefine, reinvent.


Q28. Green bonds issued by Indian companies allow investors to ______ projects related to renewable energy, water conservation, and sustainable agriculture.

(a) avoid (b) fund (c) audit (d) shut down (e) outsource

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) fund**

Green bonds are financial instruments where investor money goes toward environmentally beneficial projects. "Fund projects" is the precise verb.

  • (a) avoid — opposite of investing
  • (c) audit — checks accounts; not what bond investors do
  • (d) shut down — negative; wrong meaning
  • (e) outsource — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Fund / finance / bankroll / back projects" — verbs used when money is directed toward a cause.


Q29. Indian state governments are required to ______ a portion of their annual borrowings toward capital expenditure rather than revenue expenditure to improve long-term asset creation.

(a) divert (b) conceal (c) waste (d) deny (e) earmark

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (e) earmark**

"Earmark funds for" is the standard government budgeting term meaning to designate money for a specific purpose.

  • (a) divert — can work but carries a negative connotation of redirecting away from the intended use
  • (b) conceal — hide; clearly wrong
  • (c) waste — negative; opposite
  • (d) deny — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Earmark" synonyms in finance — designate, set aside, allocate, ring-fence.


Q30. India's nitrogen use efficiency in agriculture is among the lowest in the world, meaning a large portion of applied fertiliser ______ without benefiting crops.

(a) is absorbed (b) is stored (c) is wasted (d) is created (e) is doubled

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) is wasted**

Low efficiency means inputs don't reach their target. Fertiliser that does not benefit crops is, by definition, wasted.

  • (a) is absorbed — if it were absorbed, efficiency would be high
  • (b) is stored — fertiliser does not get stored in this context
  • (d) is created — wrong; fertiliser is applied, not created
  • (e) is doubled — irrelevant and illogical

Vocabulary Tip: "Wasted" in agriculture — leached, volatilised, runoff, lost — all describe unused fertiliser.


Q31. Small and marginal farmers who lack the financial ______ are often unable to invest in quality seeds, machinery, or modern irrigation systems.

(a) liabilities (b) debts (c) resources (d) losses (e) burdens

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) resources**

"Financial resources" means available money and assets. The sentence describes farmers who cannot afford investments — they lack resources.

  • (a) liabilities — debts owed; having liabilities does not prevent investment directly
  • (b) debts — similar to liabilities; negative framing that doesn't fit "lack of"
  • (d) losses — losses are outcomes, not preconditions for investment
  • (e) burdens — negative; one doesn't "lack burdens"

Vocabulary Tip: "Financial resources" — also: capital, funds, means, wherewithal.


Q32. The government has set an ambitious ______ of doubling farmers' income by ensuring better prices, reduced input costs, and improved market access.

(a) obstacle (b) failure (c) controversy (d) target (e) complaint

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (d) target**

"Set a target of" is the standard phrase for announcing a measurable policy goal. "Doubling farmers' income" is a specific, quantifiable aim.

  • (a) obstacle — one doesn't set obstacles as policy goals
  • (b) failure — negative; clearly wrong
  • (c) controversy — not a policy goal
  • (e) complaint — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Target / goal / objective / benchmark / milestone" — words for measurable policy aims.


Q33. The RBI's Financial Stability Report highlighted that rising household debt could ______ consumer spending and slow the pace of economic recovery.

(a) accelerate (b) boost (c) dampen (d) guarantee (e) double

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) dampen**

"Dampen consumer spending" means reduce it, especially enthusiasm for spending. The context is a warning in a stability report — a negative consequence.

  • (a) accelerate — positive; contradicts a warning
  • (b) boost — positive; contradicts a warning
  • (d) guarantee — irrelevant
  • (e) double — positive; contradicts rising debt concern

Vocabulary Tip: "Dampen" collocations — dampen demand, dampen enthusiasm, dampen growth.


Q34. Farmers in rain-shadow regions of India struggle to produce enough food because the soil is ______ and water is scarce year-round.

(a) fertile (b) productive (c) arid (d) nutrient-rich (e) well-irrigated

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) arid**

Rain-shadow regions receive little rainfall, resulting in dry, arid soil. The conjunction "and water is scarce" reinforces the dry conditions.

  • (a) fertile — would not cause food production struggles
  • (b) productive — positive; contradicts the struggle
  • (d) nutrient-rich — positive; contradicts the struggle
  • (e) well-irrigated — would reduce the scarcity problem

Vocabulary Tip: "Arid" related terms — semi-arid, drought-prone, parched, desiccated.


Q35. The Central government's announcement of a new agricultural export policy is expected to ______ Indian farmers' access to international markets and boost their income.

(a) restrict (b) broaden (c) complicate (d) delay (e) eliminate

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) broaden**

An export policy announcement is designed to open up or expand market access. "Broaden access" means to widen or increase it.

  • (a) restrict — negative; opposite of an export promotion policy
  • (c) complicate — negative; contradicts the positive intent
  • (d) delay — negative; contradicts immediate announcement
  • (e) eliminate — would end access; opposite

Vocabulary Tip: "Broaden access" synonyms — expand access, widen reach, open up markets.


Q36. India's grain storage capacity needs to be ______ significantly to prevent the enormous wastage that occurs between harvest and distribution.

(a) reduced (b) curtailed (c) expanded (d) abandoned (e) concealed

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) expanded**

The problem is insufficient storage causing wastage. The solution must be to increase storage capacity — "expanded" is the right word.

  • (a) reduced — makes the problem worse
  • (b) curtailed — also makes it worse
  • (d) abandoned — gives up storage altogether
  • (e) concealed — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Expand capacity" — also: scale up, augment, increase, build out.


Q37. The PM Gati Shakti scheme aims to ______ the development of infrastructure by integrating planning across multiple ministries and departments.

(a) obstruct (b) accelerate (c) abandon (d) reverse (e) conceal

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) accelerate**

PM Gati Shakti is a national infrastructure master plan designed to speed up project execution through coordination. "Accelerate development" captures this.

  • (a) obstruct — opposite
  • (c) abandon — opposite
  • (d) reverse — opposite
  • (e) conceal — irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Accelerate development" — also: fast-track, expedite, hasten, propel.


Q38. Urban cooperative banks must ______ stringent capital adequacy norms to protect depositors and maintain public confidence in the banking system.

(a) violate (b) ignore (c) adhere to (d) bypass (e) question

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) adhere to**

"Adhere to norms" means to follow or comply with them. Regulatory compliance is the expectation described in the sentence.

  • (a) violate — break the norms; clearly wrong
  • (b) ignore — not follow; clearly wrong
  • (d) bypass — circumvent; clearly wrong
  • (e) question — doubt; not what regulators expect

Vocabulary Tip: "Adhere to" synonyms — comply with, conform to, abide by, follow.


Q39. The sharp ______ in rural wages over the past decade has helped lift millions of agricultural households above the poverty line.

(a) decline (b) deterioration (c) increase (d) stagnation (e) volatility

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) increase**

The outcome — lifting households above the poverty line — is a positive result that must follow from higher (not lower) wages. "Sharp increase in rural wages" fits perfectly.

  • (a) decline — negative; would worsen poverty
  • (b) deterioration — negative; same issue
  • (d) stagnation — flat wages; would not lift people above poverty
  • (e) volatility — instability; doesn't explain poverty reduction

Vocabulary Tip: "Sharp increase" synonyms — steep rise, significant jump, marked improvement.


Q40. Solar-powered micro irrigation systems are helping remote villages ______ their dependence on diesel pumps and reduce the cost of farming.

(a) increase (b) celebrate (c) reduce (d) defend (e) extend

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) reduce**

Solar systems replace diesel — the whole point is to reduce reliance on expensive, polluting diesel pumps.

  • (a) increase — opposite
  • (b) celebrate — irrelevant
  • (d) defend — irrelevant
  • (e) extend — makes the dependence longer, opposite

Vocabulary Tip: "Reduce dependence" — also: wean off, phase out, move away from, cut reliance on.


Practice Set 2: Double Fillers

Directions: In each of the following questions, a sentence is given with two blanks. Choose the most appropriate pair of words to fill in the blanks. The same word may fill both blanks, or each blank may require a different word.


Q41. The ______ of farm credit has been a persistent challenge; without adequate ______, small farmers cannot buy quality seeds or pay for irrigation.

(a) availability — finance (b) shortage — funding (c) excess — borrowing (d) celebration — support (e) history — loss

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) shortage — funding**

"Shortage of farm credit" is the problem. "Without adequate funding" describes what farmers lack. Both words are negative/neutral and fit the context of financial constraint.

  • (a) availability — finance: "availability" is not a "persistent challenge"; this contradicts the sentence's framing
  • (c) excess — borrowing: excess credit is the opposite of a challenge
  • (d) celebration — support: "celebration of farm credit" makes no sense
  • (e) history — loss: does not fit grammatically or contextually

Vocabulary Tip: "Funding / finance / credit / capital" are near-synonyms in banking contexts.


Q42. Farmers who adopt precision agriculture techniques can ______ their input costs while simultaneously ______ their yield per acre.

(a) increase — reducing (b) reduce — increasing (c) ignore — doubling (d) celebrate — lowering (e) eliminate — destroying

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) reduce — increasing**

Precision agriculture is designed to do exactly this: lower costs and raise output. "Reduce costs / increase yield" is the standard benefit statement.

  • (a) increase — reducing: higher costs and lower yield is the opposite of precision ag benefits
  • (c) ignore — doubling: ignoring costs is not an agricultural technique
  • (d) celebrate — lowering: celebrate costs while lowering yield makes no sense
  • (e) eliminate — destroying: extreme and contradictory

Vocabulary Tip: Precision farming benefits — reduce wastage, optimise inputs, improve yield, cut costs.


Q43. The government's ______ toward digital payments has been ______ by the rapid adoption of UPI among both urban and rural consumers.

(a) opposition — supported (b) push — validated (c) reluctance — confirmed (d) indifference — questioned (e) hostility — encouraged

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) push — validated**

"Push toward digital payments" describes active government promotion. "Validated by rapid adoption" means the adoption has confirmed the push was correct.

  • (a) opposition — contradicts government support for digital payments
  • (c) reluctance — supported: if the government was reluctant, adoption does not simply "confirm" it
  • (d) indifference — questioned: no evidence of government indifference to UPI
  • (e) hostility — encouraged: government was not hostile; UPI was a government initiative

Vocabulary Tip: "Validated by" — also: borne out by, confirmed by, evidenced by, justified by.


Q44. Climate ______ strategies in agriculture include switching to drought-resistant crops and ______ rainwater through farm ponds and check dams.

(a) adaptation — harvesting (b) destruction — wasting (c) ignorance — avoiding (d) promotion — selling (e) resistance — releasing

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (a) adaptation — harvesting**

"Climate adaptation strategies" is the standard policy term. "Harvesting rainwater" through farm ponds and check dams is a common adaptation measure.

  • (b) destruction — wasting: opposite of beneficial strategies
  • (c) ignorance — avoiding: ignoring climate is not a strategy
  • (d) promotion — selling: no sense in this agricultural context
  • (e) resistance — releasing: releasing rainwater defeats the purpose of storage

Vocabulary Tip: "Climate adaptation" vs "climate mitigation" — adaptation = adjusting to change; mitigation = reducing its cause.


Q45. The ______ of SHGs as financial and social institutions has empowered millions of women to ______ the cycle of poverty in rural India.

(a) failure — perpetuate (b) collapse — maintain (c) emergence — break (d) decline — extend (e) history — celebrate

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) emergence — break**

"Emergence of SHGs" describes their growth and rise as institutions. "Break the cycle of poverty" is a fixed phrase meaning to end the generational trap of poverty.

  • (a) failure — perpetuate: makes poverty worse; contradicts empowerment
  • (b) collapse — maintain: same issue
  • (d) decline — extend: extends poverty; wrong
  • (e) history — celebrate: "history of SHGs to celebrate poverty" is nonsensical

Vocabulary Tip: "Break the cycle of poverty" — a fixed expression meaning to end generational poverty through opportunity.


Q46. A ______ credit rating allows a company to ______ funds from the market at lower interest rates.

(a) poor — borrow (b) strong — raise (c) weak — attract (d) declining — secure (e) hidden — obtain

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) strong — raise**

A strong (high) credit rating signals low default risk, allowing companies to "raise funds at lower interest rates" — the reward for creditworthiness.

  • (a) poor — borrow: a poor rating leads to higher rates, not lower
  • (c) weak — attract: a weak rating is unattractive to investors; higher cost of funds
  • (d) declining — secure: a declining rating worsens borrowing conditions
  • (e) hidden — obtain: "hidden credit rating" is not a thing

Vocabulary Tip: "Raise funds" = "mobilise capital" — borrow from market through bonds or equity.


Q47. Post-harvest ______ in fruits and vegetables remain high because cold chain infrastructure is ______ across most rural districts.

(a) gains — excellent (b) profits — abundant (c) losses — inadequate (d) prices — overbuilt (e) exports — restricted

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (c) losses — inadequate**

"Post-harvest losses" are the standard term for food wasted after harvest. "Cold chain infrastructure is inadequate" is why the losses are high — a direct cause-and-effect.

  • (a) gains — excellent: positive pair; would not explain any problem
  • (b) profits — abundant: contradicts high wastage
  • (d) prices — overbuilt: no logical connection
  • (e) exports — restricted: the sentence is about infrastructure, not trade policy

Vocabulary Tip: "Post-harvest losses" — caused by poor storage, transport, and cold chain gaps.


Q48. A well-functioning agricultural ______ system ensures that farmers receive ______ prices for their produce without being exploited by middlemen.

(a) marketing — fair (b) taxation — arbitrary (c) subsidy — unfair (d) insurance — inflated (e) export — foreign

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (a) marketing — fair**

An "agricultural marketing system" connects farmers to buyers. Its goal is ensuring "fair prices" — remunerative to farmers and not distorted by intermediaries.

  • (b) taxation — arbitrary: tax system is separate from price realisation; arbitrary prices harm farmers
  • (c) subsidy — unfair: subsidies are a different mechanism; unfair prices contradict farmer welfare
  • (d) insurance — inflated: insurance doesn't determine prices
  • (e) export — foreign: the sentence talks about all produce, not just exports; "foreign prices" is irrelevant

Vocabulary Tip: "Fair price / remunerative price / market price" — terms used for farmer payment in agri-marketing.


Q49. The banking sector's ______ to lend to agriculture stems from ______ repayment rates and the perceived risk of crop failure.

(a) eagerness — excellent (b) reluctance — poor (c) enthusiasm — strong (d) willingness — reliable (e) commitment — consistent

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) reluctance — poor**

Banks are "reluctant to lend" because of "poor repayment rates" and crop risk. Reluctance (negative) + poor repayment (negative) = consistent pair.

  • (a) eagerness — excellent: eagerness would be the opposite of a lending problem
  • (c) enthusiasm — strong: strong repayment would make banks more willing, not less
  • (d) willingness — reliable: reliable repayment would encourage more lending
  • (e) commitment — consistent: consistent repayment would not cause reluctance

Vocabulary Tip: "Reluctance to lend" — also: hesitance, unwillingness, aversion.


Q50. India's push toward food ______ through modern processing and value addition can reduce import ______ on edible oils and processed foods.

(a) insecurity — surplus (b) self-sufficiency — dependence (c) wastage — revenue (d) inflation — subsidy (e) scarcity — revenue

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) self-sufficiency — dependence**

"Food self-sufficiency" means producing enough domestically. Achieving it would "reduce import dependence" — a logical and well-established policy argument.

  • (a) insecurity — surplus: food insecurity leads to more imports, not less; "import surplus" is not standard
  • (c) wastage — revenue: reducing food wastage doesn't directly reduce import revenue
  • (d) inflation — subsidy: inflation and subsidies are different mechanisms
  • (e) scarcity — revenue: "push toward scarcity" contradicts the policy framing

Vocabulary Tip: "Self-sufficiency" in trade context — also: import substitution, domestic production, food sovereignty.


Q51. A farmer's ability to ______ risk through crop diversification and insurance greatly ______ the chances of financial distress after a poor harvest.

(a) ignore — increases (b) manage — reduces (c) celebrate — improves (d) avoid — escalates (e) deny — eliminates

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) manage — reduces**

"Manage risk" is the correct collocation — diversification and insurance are risk management tools. Managing risk "reduces" the chances of distress.

  • (a) ignore — increases: ignoring risk makes distress more likely
  • (c) celebrate — improves: "celebrate risk" makes no sense
  • (d) avoid — escalates: escalates distress contradicts using protective tools
  • (e) deny — eliminates: "deny risk" is not a management strategy

Vocabulary Tip: "Manage / mitigate / hedge / offset risk" — standard financial risk phrases.


Q52. The Reserve Bank of India uses the ______ rate as a tool to ______ the amount of money circulating in the economy.

(a) exchange — restrict (b) interest — control (c) tax — increase (d) penalty — reduce (e) savings — monitor

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) interest — control**

The "interest rate" (specifically repo rate) is the RBI's primary monetary policy instrument to "control" money supply and inflation.

  • (a) exchange — restrict: exchange rate is not the main instrument for controlling money supply
  • (c) tax — increase: tax policy is fiscal, not monetary; the RBI does not set taxes
  • (d) penalty — reduce: penalty rates are not standard RBI policy instruments
  • (e) savings — monitor: monitoring is not the same as active management

Vocabulary Tip: RBI monetary tools — repo rate, reverse repo rate, CRR, SLR. The interest rate (repo) is the primary instrument.


Q53. The government's ______ in the agricultural sector through minimum support prices and subsidised inputs aims to ______ farming viable for small landholders.

(a) neglect — make (b) intervention — keep (c) withdrawal — ensure (d) disinterest — render (e) hostility — prove

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) intervention — keep**

"Government intervention" refers to active policy measures. The aim is to "keep farming viable" — maintain its economic viability for small farmers.

  • (a) neglect — make: if the government neglects farming, MSPs and subsidies wouldn't exist
  • (c) withdrawal — ensure: government withdrawal would undermine rather than ensure viability
  • (d) disinterest — render: contradicts the existence of MSPs and subsidies
  • (e) hostility — prove: the government is supportive here, not hostile

Vocabulary Tip: "Government intervention" — also: support, backstop, policy support, public investment.


Q54. The ______ of rural post offices as banking ______ has brought basic financial services within reach of even the most isolated communities.

(a) failure — offices (b) repurposing — outlets (c) demolition — buildings (d) relocation — hubs (e) closure — branches

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) repurposing — outlets**

India Post Payments Bank uses post offices as financial service points. "Repurposing of rural post offices as banking outlets" accurately describes this.

  • (a) failure — offices: failure would reduce services, not expand reach
  • (c) demolition — buildings: closing post offices would do the opposite
  • (d) relocation — hubs: relocating post offices doesn't bring services to isolated communities
  • (e) closure — branches: closure reduces access entirely

Vocabulary Tip: "Repurpose" — to use something for a new purpose. Common in infrastructure repurposing discussions.


Q55. Soil ______ caused by overuse of chemical fertilisers reduces agricultural ______ and forces farmers to apply ever-larger quantities of inputs to maintain yields.

(a) enrichment — waste (b) degradation — productivity (c) improvement — costs (d) conservation — output (e) formation — diversity

Answer & Explanation **Answer: (b) degradation — productivity**

"Soil degradation" from overuse of chemicals is a well-established agronomic problem. It reduces soil "productivity," requiring more inputs to achieve the same yield — a vicious cycle.

  • (a) enrichment — waste: soil enrichment would increase productivity, not cause problems
  • (c) improvement — costs: soil improvement reduces costs; contradicts the premise
  • (d) conservation — output: soil conservation preserves productivity; not caused by overuse
  • (e) formation — diversity: soil formation is a geological process; unrelated to fertiliser overuse

Vocabulary Tip: "Soil degradation" related — soil health, nutrient depletion, organic matter loss, pH imbalance.


Summary Cheat Sheet

Strategy Quick Application
Tone check Positive/negative context → positive/negative word
Part of speech Does the blank need a noun, verb, adjective, or adverb?
Contrast clue But / Although / Despite → blank is opposite to what came before
Continuation clue And / Moreover / Furthermore → blank extends the same idea
Cause-effect clue Because / So / Therefore → blank is logically connected
Collocation test Does the word "belong" with its neighbours?
Elimination Remove grammatically wrong or contextually absurd options first
Double fillers Ensure both words are consistent with each other and the sentence's theme

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