In this question, a statement is given followed by four conclusions. Choose the conclusion(s) which best fit(s) logically. Statement: Better pay the cook than the doctor. Conclusions: I. A cook can expect better payment for the delicious food he prepared. II. One who visits hotels regularly does not require to go the doctors. III. It is better to keep a good health by taking good food, than to visit a hospital. IV. Cooks are poorly paid than the doctors.

In this question, a statement is given followed by four conclusions. Choose the conclusion(s) which best fit(s) logically. Statement: Better pay the cook than the doctor. Conclusions: I. A cook can expect better payment for the delicious food he prepared. II. One who visits hotels regularly does not require to go the doctors. III. It is better to keep a good health by taking good food, than to visit a hospital. IV. Cooks are poorly paid than the doctors. Correct Answer Only conclusion III follows

According to the given statements,

Conclusion 1: This does not follow, because there is nothing mentioned about the food being delicious.

Conclusion 2: This does not follow, because there is nothing mentioned about hotels in the statement.

Conclusion 3: This follows, because by taking good food, there are less chances that you visit a hospital.

Conclusion 4: This does not follow, because there is nothing mentioned about payment of cooks and doctors.

Hence, “only conclusion 3” follow.

Related Questions

In the question below, are given a statement followed by three courses of actions numbered I, II and III. On the basis of the information given, you have to assume everything in the statement to be true, and then decide which of the suggested course of action logically follow (s) for pursuing. Statement: Cobble together a disparate collection of independently owned budget hotels. Implement quality standards in exchange for the right to carry a big-brand logo. Then offer them access to your booking platform for a cut of revenue. That sounds like a $5 billion business, and it’s what OYO Hotels has become. A $1 billion round from the likes of SoftBank Group Corp.’s Vision Fund, Sequioa Capital and Lightspeed Venture Partners puts OYO on the growing list of Indian unicorns. Founder Ritesh Agarwal has big plans for the startup, which already has 10,000 hotels in 160 Indian cities. Courses of action: I. The firm plans to rapidly scale our business in countries like Nepal, Malaysia, while continuing to invest further in technology and talent. II. While the firm will continue to focus on expansion, customer experience will remain a priority, and it’s also working to tighten quality and safety processes. III. Unfortunately, there are enough anecdotes around to suggest OYO’s management may be struggling to keep order among its franchisees while maintaining the focus on adding more.