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Whenever we come out of the examination hall, our mind is full of confusion, doubts, and questions. Most of the students have queries like what was the answer to that particular question asked in MPPSC Pre Exam 2023, did I opt for the right answer to that specific tricky question which was asked in MPPSC PCS 2023 Question Paper, etc. This article might be helpful to you, as we have compiled some of the questions asked in the MPPSC PCS Preliminary Examination and the detailed solutions for each subject. We are providing a valuable resource for those who aspire to take the MPPSC SSE in the coming years or have appeared in the MPPSC Prelim Exam 2023.
We, @Utkarsh Family have conducted the MPPSC Prelims Analysis 2023. As soon as the exam concluded, students shared their reviews, insights, and even some of the questions that were asked in the MPPSC Prelims 2023 with our team. As per the feedback received by the students who have appeared in the MPPSC PCS Exam 2023, the overall MPPSC Exam Difficulty Level was moderate.
Below, we have tabulated MPPSC Pre Subject wise Weightage 2023. This information is invaluable for aspiring candidates gearing up to take the examination next year, serving as an essential resource in their preparation. Have a look:-
The MPPSC PCS Prelims 2023 was a challenging examination, with a total of 100 questions to be attempted by the aspirants. To assist candidates in assessing their performance and understanding the difficulty of the examination, we have meticulously compiled a set of MPPSC 2023 prelims tricky questions with solutions.
We have selected some subject-wise MPPSC Pre-exam questions 2023 that were particularly tricky and could have posed challenges to many students during the examination. The inclusion of solutions alongside these challenging questions is a valuable tool for candidates, enabling them to assess their responses accurately and calculate their scores effectively. Let's delve into these MPPSC 2023 Prelims Tricky Questions and Answers, which can help clear doubts and enhance your understanding:-
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When I was a boy my parents told me the first cricket match I ever attended - between two English villages in Kent - was interrupted by a dogfight between Royal Air Force and Luftwaffe aircraft during the Battle of Britain. Later, when a college student in Baroda in Gujarat, I was told by my old teacher Chanchi Mehta that the first cricket played in India was along the shoreline near Surat.
Cricket has a store of stories, some told and retold, others never told. I am probably one of those who has spent a lifetime scribbling because as a boy it became clear I was incompetent at pretty well everything I tried: to adapt the old adage, those who can, do; those who can't, write.
Cricket, for example. I loved cricket but was so shortsighted I could not see the ball, my sole batting stroke a forward poke. At least using a pen I can manage a few late cuts. I had a good education in literary and historical studies, and those studies had originally been incorporated into the educational system at the same time as the rise of the detective story: Sherlock Holmes has a lot to answer for; even the Dr Watsons such as I cannot resist following the clues and trying to solve the putative mysteries.
So what about those two cricketings my elders told me about? What happened when the Luftwaffe interrupted the village match? Where was the first cricket played in India and by whom? My research into that 1721 game was by way of tribute to my old teacher in Baroda, and that into the 1940 match a similar tribute to my journalist father - as well, possibly, as a search for a fragment of my own irrecoverable childhood, being then little more than a small creature on my parents' shoulders.
Kent, 1940
At any time during my parents' lifetimes I could have asked them and many others about the match our village, Farningham, played at Shoreham in the Darent valley in August 1940, but 70 years on, all of them were dead. The story was lost. Almost.
My first piece of luck was finding the scorebook. Years before, I had seen it in the pub at Shoreham kept by four generations of a cricketing family named (happily) Summerfield. But they were long gone, somewhere down on the Weald, the original home of cricket. Several numbers into Summerfields in the telephone book, I found the fifth generation: they still had the scorebook.
Scores: Farningham (playing one short) 80 for 5 with one opening batsman retired. Shoreham, 106 for 9. The invaluable ball-by-ball record of the match included a unique thickly scored pencil line in the home side bowling analysis, denoting the air-raid interruption to the match, but there was no mention of a declaration to account for Farningham's foreshortened innings.
This curiosity of the scoresheet was explained by an item my cousin luckily discovered in the local newspaper for the following week. Under the heading "Raid Stopped Play" there was an anonymous censored report (all names eliminated) but clearly written by my father about this match.
The players, intent on the game, had not heard the air-raid siren nor the sounds of an aerial battle to the north that caused an umpire to halt proceedings at the end of an over. Retiring to the pavilion, four of the visiting Farningham players, including the captain, who was batting, declared that, as members of the newly formed Home Guard, they should return home to deal with the (usually incendiary) fallout from the raid. Shoreham lost only one player, a "special constable".
Having failed to invade England that summer, the Nazis were about to begin the Blitz of London. A fine day for cricket was also a fine day for 300 German planes to launch a raid up the Thames. Although Kent was littered with discarded bombs and crippled aircraft after such raids, the remainder of the depleted Farningham team obviously decided it was at least as important to see off Shoreham as the Germans. My father's article blamed Hitler for their eventual defeat.
Cambay, 1721
Details of a cricket match in 1940 are still within reach: to discover anything about cricket in India in 1721 is more difficult. No scorebook, no newspaper reports. No maps, few documents. The cricket receives only a mere mention in a book written by a rather unreliable able seaman, Clement Downing.
While Downing says nothing about the actual cricket in his book, A History of the Indian Wars - which details naval life on the west coast of India while the Marathas challenge Mughal power and the East India Company clings on to little Bombay - he says a lot about the circumstances of it.
Downing tells of a naval expedition in the Gulf of Cambay that, having missed the spring tides that would have taken them into Cambay, was forced to lay up for nearly a fortnight at a place where they diverted themselves with cricket and other exercises. Downing got many Indian names wrong and threw historians with his reference to a non-existent Gujarati place called Chimnah/w, about 30 miles from Cambay. The details of its hydrography, combined with two other references he makes to the place, determine that he can only be talking about the cotton-producing Jambusar pargana (sub-division) with its port at the Tankari bunder on the Dhadhar river.
Two country-built ships, the Company sloop the Emilia, on which Downing was serving as a lieutenant, and the Hunter galley, were sent in December 1721 to protect small merchant vessels from further attack by "pirates" - Kolis from Sultanpur and other local Kathiawar navies. The East India Company records from Surat (though incomplete) and Bombay support our guesswork.
But who was playing? We know from Company records the Emilia had a complement of 20, of which Downing tells us three were "white men". The Hunter had a complement of 80, and we might again expect a common ratio on the country craft of seven Indians to one European. Given that the two captains took some men up to Cambay in a gallivat, we might guess there remained on the riverside some 20 or so Europeans and 40 or more Indians.
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