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Last Island Sunday, January 13, 2013 01:28 AM

English Precis and Composition KPK 2008
 
[CENTER][CENTER][FONT=Verdana][B]KHYBER PUKHTOON KHWA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION,PESHAWAR
SUBJECT:- COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION FOR THE POST OF PROVINCIAL MANAGEMENT SERVICE (BPS-17) 2008

[/B][/FONT][/CENTER]
[B]English Precis and Composition[/B][/CENTER]
[FONT=&quot][FONT=Verdana]
Time allowed: 3 hours
Max marks:100[/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Verdana]


[/FONT]Note: i) Attempt All questions. Marks will be deducted for incorrect use of the English language.
ii) Candidate must draw two straight lines at the end to separate each question attempted in answer book

[B]Q.1. Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow:[/B]

[CENTER][B]Hidden Persuasion?[/B]
[/CENTER]

Advertising is art with ulterior motives. It is used to attract consumers' attention and make them believe that one brand is better than another or that they need something that they really do not. Advertising indirectly sets many cultural norms. It plays on many common beliefs, hoping to relate to the majority of the consumers. There are many popular methods for getting such message across

We are subject to a continual barrage of advertisements on the television, the print media and the internet. The average internet surfer comes across at least an ad or two per page surfed.

Over the years, advertising has become a important economical means through which the demand for a product is controlled. The need for advertisement has been reflected by a continual increase in demand for market analysts, strategists and psychologists.

In Pakistan, even our utility companies have resorted to the rather tasteless printing of advertisement all over the phone and gas bills! Our roads are lined not with tree but with huge hoarding advertising everything from food to vacations.

Subliminal Advertising

Subliminal means, according to Webster's New World Dictionary, "below the threshold of consciousness or apprehension". So, what are subliminal adverts?

They are covertly embedded imaged or 'message' that 'speak' to the subconscious and not to be conscious mind. Subliminal adverts are used as tools of persuasion by our media manipulators. They are embedded in advertising material for a variety of reason, usually to stimulate consumption, alter our mods and enhance associations.

We 'react' to images and symbols in a powerful way and media persuaders know how to use this fact to their advantage. In other words, depending on the intended effect, specific works or images can trigger unconscious thought which may lead to subsequent action.

The whole point of a subliminal ad is that you can't see it.

The public first became aware of subliminal advertising in the 1950's with a movie theater experiment. Short clips of the phrases 'Hungry? Eat popcorn" and "Drink Coca Cola" were inserted by advertiser James Vicary in the movie being shown.

This supposedly boosted sales at the refreshment stands, but later it was found to be hoax. Vicary admitted that the original "study" was fabrication (Skeptical Inquirer, Spring 1992), intended only to increase customer for his marketing business.

Belief subliminal messaging reached surreal height in USA in 1980 with the publication of The Clam-Plate Orgy and Other Subliminal the Media use to Manipulate Your Behavior by Dr. Wilson Bryan Key.

USA has its own set of extremists of all kinds. Americans see a hidden hand in many area. In the September 2000 election campaign in USA, there was a subliminal message scare. A Republican ad flushed the segment "RATS" from the word "Bureaucrats" for 1/30 of a second over a picture of the Democratic candidate. Al-Gore Complaints were make but the Republican's ad agency denied that this was intentional (Subliminal).

Detractors claim that subliminal messages have also been detected in radio advertisements, print and media ads for cigarettes (Camels), Soft drinks (Coke and Pepsi cans), clothes and perfumes, several Disney movies (the Lion King), and popular rock and roll songs. However, the effectiveness of these messages in modifying behavior has yet to be proven.

As though subliminal messaging in ads isn't enough, there are companies researching the possibility that auditory stimuli may induce people to go on a spending spree. The New Scientist talks about ads which are geared to stimulate our sense of smell and persuade us to buy expensive perfumes, coffee, bread etc

Should there be laws to limit what ad companies can do?
Do ad companies have the right to employ psychology to induce us to buy their product?
Is this an Orwellian nightmare?

[B]Attempt any 4 questions.[/B]
[LIST=1][*]Why can't we see subliminal ads?[*]What is the writer's opinion of subliminal advertising? Do you agree with the views of the writer?[*]What does the writer means by an "Orwellian nightmare"?[*]In your opinion are subliminal ads an ethical practice?[*]After reading the above passage, do you think the writer has exaggerated the situation, or is it possible that this is already being practiced?[/LIST][B]
Q.2 Write a precis of 169 words of the following passage. Give it a suitable title.[/B]

Hydroponics, an unconventional growing technique, is the cultivation of plants in water. Revolutionary as it may sound, plants do not need soil as such - they need only the nutrients and moisture contained in the soil, and these can be supplied through gravel that contains water, as well as through soil.

Hydroponic is not a new process. As long ago as the 1690's, an English physician tried growing plants in a laboratory experiment, and in the 1880's German researchers used the method to develop many of the formulas for plant nutrient still in use today.

About a generation ago, hydroponics moved out of the research laboratory into commercial use. A California physiologist, W.F. Gerick, published guidelines for hydroponics agriculture in 1936. Use was made of hydroponics in some military operations during World War II. Since then research projects and commercial ventures in hydroponics have gone forward in a number of countries, including areas where water is in short supply and temperature are too extreme for ordinary agriculture.

One of the leading companies in the field of hydroponics, in Arizona, which operates about 200 greenhouses on 48 hectare section of land. Hydroponic produces more than 2.7 million kilograms of vegetables and fruit each year - mostly tomatoes, but also cucumbers, lettuces and melons. Crop yields are excellent. Each nature tomato plant produces an average of 12.1 kilos of fruit a year of two growing cycles. This compares with about 9 kilos for two crops of the average soil grown plant.

Hydroculture's greenhouse measure 8 by 39 meters and consist of steel frames converted with reinforced plastic film that is resistant to weather and lets in maximum amount of light. The plants are fed by inorganic nutrients dissolved in water which is supplied by a plastic pipeline. The feeling and watering system is automate. Electric sensing devices (sensors) determine when the plants are hungry or thirsty. The sensors send impulse messages that automatically activate the water and nutrient delivery system. When the sensors 'know' that the plants have had enough, they automatically shut off the system.

Temperature, humidity and air circulation are carefully controlled. Air conditioning and heating keep the temperature at 29 Celsius by day and 18 by night. No entry is given to wind, frost, drought, weeds or insects.

Despite the development, soil-less agriculture still remains only a minor competitor to the traditional open field way of growing crops. Hydrponics accounts for only a small fraction of world output of food and fiber, and its potential is primarily in arid - region agriculture where is in short supply, or in the production of high priced specially crops which reward costly investment and intensive care.

[B]Q.3. Explain the meaning of any five of the following.[/B]
[LIST=1][*]Activate[*]Arid[*]Humidity[*]Automated[*]Sensors[*]Resistant[*]Unconventional[*]Inorganic[/LIST]
[B]Q.4. (a) Choose the world nearest in meaning to the word in capitals. (Attempt only 5)[/B]

1) Domestic
a) To turn native
b) Be exclusive
c) Tame
d) Cut leaves

2) Antics
a) Expectation
b) Absurd
c) Temper
d) Place where ants live

3) Data
a) Belief
b) Point of origin
c) Date line
d) Information

4) Trait
a) Narrow Enclosure
b) Strong Point
c) Distinguishing feature
d) Footprint

5) Era
a) Curious event
b) Disaster
c) Period of history
d) Cycle

6) Sacrosanct
a) Peaceful
b) Sacred
c) Mundane
d) Painful

[B]Q.4 (b) Use only five of the following in sentences which illustrate the meaning of the idiom.[/B]
[LIST=1][*]Have your cake and eat it too.[*]Like two peas in a pod.[*]Burn one's boats.[*]Take something with a pinch of salt[*]To read between the lines[*]To stick to one's guns[/LIST]
[B]Q.5. (a) Change the following into reported speech. Attempt only 5. Any extra attempt will not be considered.[/B]
[LIST=1][*]Amir said, "I haven't seen you for a long time'.[*]I asked my sister, "Why did you do that?"[*]She asked him, "Wh don't you love me any more?"[*]Amir asked Junaid, "When are we going to leave?"[*]She said, "I had an infection".[*]Junaid said, "I don't like to stay in be".[*]Akbar said, "I bought a new car".[/LIST]
[B]Q.5 (b) Make up five groups of three words which are similar in meaning or area of usage:[/B]
[LIST=1][*]Barge[*]Barrel[*]Bucket[*]Can[*]Cane[*]Canoe[*]Flask[*]Hive[*]Nest[*]Raft[*]Rod[*]Stick[*]Tin[*]Vat[*]Warren[/LIST]Q.6. Write about 250 words on one of the following:
[LIST=1][*]The advantages of living alone[*]A night spent out in the open[*]Your first visit to a large city[*]Children should be seen and not heard.[/LIST]

shehlaa Sunday, January 13, 2013 04:06 PM

Can anybody answer Q.no.04 (b)
Thanks in advance

Dorian Gray Wednesday, September 11, 2013 07:42 PM

[B]Have your cake and eat it too[/B]
To have in one's possession something and be able to use or exploit it; to have it both ways. (Usually stated in the negative.)

Tom wants to have his cake and eat it too. It can't be done.
OR
Don't buy a car if you want to walk and stay healthy. You can't eat your cake and have it too.


[B]Like two peas in a pod.[/B]
To be very similar

You can tell they're brothers at a glance - they're like two peas in a pod.


[B]Burn one's boats.[/B]
To do something that makes it impossible for you to change your plans and go back to the situation you were in before

She didn't want to burn her boats by asking for a divorce, so she suggested a trial separation instead.


[B]Take something with a pinch of salt[/B]
To listen to a story or an explanation with considerable doubt.

You must take anything she says with a grain of salt. She doesn't always tell the truth.


[B]To read between the lines[/B]
To infer something (from something else); to try to understand what is meant by something that is not written explicitly or openly.

Don't believe every thing you read literally. Learn to read between the lines.


[B]To stick to one's guns[/B]
To remain firm in one's convictions; to stand up for one's rights.

I'll stick to my guns on this matter. I'm sure I'm right.


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