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(1) If the inference is "definitely true" i.e. it properly follows from the statement of facts given.
(2) If the inference is "probably true" though not "definitely true" in the light of the facts given.
(3) If the data are inadequate i.e. from the facts given you cannot say whether the inference is likely to be true or false.
(4) If the inference is "probably false" though not "definitely false" in the light of the facts given.
(5) If the inference is "definitely false". i.e. it cannot possibly be drawn from the facts
Note: Each of the five questions has only one distinct answer i.e. no two questions can have the same answer. If you get same answer for more than one question, consider both again and decide which one of the two would more definitely be that answer and same way review other also.)
  The first time I saw The Wizard of Oz, the story bewitched me the second time I saw The Wizard of Oz, the special effects amazed me.The third time I saw The Wizard of Oz, the photography dazzled me. Have you ever seen a movie twice, three times? You notice subtleties and hear sounds you completely missed the first time around. It's the same on the phone. Be-cause your business conversations are more consequential than movies, you should listen to them two, may be three times. Often we have no clear idea of what really happened in our phone conversation until we hear it again. You'll find shadings more significant than the colour of Toto's collar - and more scarecrows than you imagined who 'haven't got a brain!' How do you listen to your important business conversations again? Simply legally and ethically tape record them. I call the technique of recording and analyzing your business conversations for subtleties Instant Replay.
Directions (Qs. 69 – 73):
Below is given a passage followed by several possible inferences which can be drawn from the facts stated in the passage? You have to examine each inference separately in the context of the passage and decide upon its degree of truth or falsity. Mark answer (1) If the inference is "definitely true" i.e. it properly follows from the statement of facts given.
(2) If the inference is "probably true" though not "definitely true" in the light of the facts given.
(3) If the data are inadequate i.e. from the facts given you cannot say whether the inference is likely to be true or false.
(4) If the inference is "probably false" though not "definitely false" in the light of the facts given.
(5) If the inference is "definitely false". i.e. it cannot possibly be drawn from the facts
Note: Each of the five questions has only one distinct answer i.e. no two questions can have the same answer. If you get same answer for more than one question, consider both again and decide which one of the two would more definitely be that answer and same way review other also.)
  The first time I saw The Wizard of Oz, the story bewitched me the second time I saw The Wizard of Oz, the special effects amazed me.The third time I saw The Wizard of Oz, the photography dazzled me. Have you ever seen a movie twice, three times? You notice subtleties and hear sounds you completely missed the first time around. It's the same on the phone. Be-cause your business conversations are more consequential than movies, you should listen to them two, may be three times. Often we have no clear idea of what really happened in our phone conversation until we hear it again. You'll find shadings more significant than the colour of Toto's collar - and more scarecrows than you imagined who 'haven't got a brain!' How do you listen to your important business conversations again? Simply legally and ethically tape record them. I call the technique of recording and analyzing your business conversations for subtleties Instant Replay.
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