1. " Suave"
2. "Desperate"
3. "Awkward"
4. "Eclectic"
Awkward
"1. "Imbalanced"
2. " Ventricle "
3. "Insane"
4. "Trusting"
Trusting
"1. "i and ii"
2. "ii only"
3. "ii and iii"
4. "i, ii and iii"
i and ii
"1. "in their approach to life in general and business in particular."
2. "in their approach to the planning process for the journey."
3. "in their inherent character with the carefully planned approach of the Chinese to the recklessaggression of the Turki driver."
4. "in the nature of markets they service, which dictates their basic approach to transportmanagement styles."
in their inherent character with the carefully planned approach of the Chinese to the recklessaggression of the Turki driver.
"1. "the Chinese believe that the principles of ta-suan can be applied all spheres of civilized life."
2. "the reason for the success of the Chinese in conquering foreign lands was the practice ofta-suan."
3. "if ta-suan is applied, then the journey across the desert for the Turki driver would be financiallymore profitable."
4. "professional bankers apply ta-suan learning and benefit from the wisdom of the Chinesegeneral."
the Chinese believe that the principles of ta-suan can be applied all spheres of civilized life.
"1. "Modern historians disagree on terming the changes in English industrial landscape in theeighteenth century as “an industrial revolution”."
2. "For the people living between 1760 and 1830, the changing industrial landscape far outpacedtheir expectations."
3. "The handloom weavers benefited immensely from the mechanization of weaving and spinning."
4. "Modern historians are incorrect in their interpretation of the importance of the years ofindustrial revolution."
For the people living between 1760 and 1830, the changing industrial landscape far outpacedtheir expectations.
"1. "was borrowed as an analogy to juxtapose the industrial changes in England to the politicalchanges in France."
2. "was used to demonstrate the increasing command of man on forces of nature."
3. "was coined by magazines to amplify the leaps that Britain was making in inventions ofmachines and development of processes."
4. "was a misnomer as no “real” industrial revolution was actually recorded till the invention ofsteam engines"
was borrowed as an analogy to juxtapose the industrial changes in England to the politicalchanges in France.
"1. "Darwin believed that the invention of steam would result in a better quality of life for thecommon man."
2. "Napoleon could not defeat England as the later could finance the war and its allies by profitsfrom trade in iron and cotton."
3. "Cotton and iron trade acted as a catalyst to the British economy during the American war."
4. "The eighteenth century people lived in complete oblivion of the baneful effects of industrial revolution."
Napoleon could not defeat England as the later could finance the war and its allies by profitsfrom trade in iron and cotton.
"1. "the fishing analogy did not leave scope for creative problem solving."
2. "the fishing analogy involved a search procedure for fitting something into some specific setting."
3. "the circumstances around the recruitment problem were significantly different from thosementioned in the fishing analogy."
4. "other analogies like looking for antiques or buying a new suit were better fits than the fishinganalogy, to solve the problem."
the fishing analogy did not leave scope for creative problem solving.
"1. "in problem solving using vehicles of lateral thinking, the process of thinking is set free from theshackles that pre-conceived notions may create."
2. "having patience is an integral virtue of any problem solving or creative thinking exercise."
3. "a conclusion reached by the process of lateral thinking cannot be proved logically correct byquoting the analogy through which it was created."
4. "analogies are similar to mathematical induction in all respects."
a conclusion reached by the process of lateral thinking cannot be proved logically correct byquoting the analogy through which it was created.
"