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This section includes InterviewSolutions, each offering curated multiple-choice questions to sharpen your knowledge and support exam preparation. Choose a topic below to get started.
| 1701. |
Agla prime minister kon banega? |
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Answer» Saico bnega Usko shauk bhi h Dhruv bnega shayd |
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| 1702. |
What is auestralopoticus? |
| Answer» The name Australopithecus africanus literally means \'southern ape of Africa. | |
| 1703. |
Which source helps us to understand the history of early humans? |
| Answer» The history of human kind is ancient and many research still going on.There are a lot of historical things, artifacts, monuments and archaeological sites which tell us about the history of early humans.Some of them are:• The paintings and writings in caves• Tools made up of stone• Food and lifestyle• The ancient monuments• Invention of fire | |
| 1704. |
Write a note on animal herders of mari |
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| 1705. |
Describe the development of art writing. |
| Answer» The development of writing:(i) The first Mesopotamian tablets, written around 3200 BCE, contained picture-like signs and numbers. These were about 5,000 lists of oxen, fish, bread loaves, etc. - lists of goods that were brought into or distributed from the temples of Uruk, a city in the south.Clearly, writing began when society needed to keep records of transactions -because in city life transactions occurred at different times, and involved many people and\xa0a involved\xa0many people and a variety of goods.\xa0(ii) Mesopotamians wrote on tablets of clay. A scribe would wet clay and pat it into a size he could hold comfortably in one hand. He would carefully smoothen its surfaces.With the sharp end of a reed cut obliquely, he would press wedge-shaped (‘cuneiform) signs on to the smoothened surface while it was still moist. Once dried in the sun, the clay would harden and tablets would be almost as indestructible as pottery. When a written record of, say, the delivery of pieces of metal had ceased to be relevant, the tablet was thrown away.(iii) Once the surface dried, signs could not be pressed onto a tablet : so each transaction, however minor, required a separate written tablet.This is why tablets occur by the hundreds at Mesopotamian sites. And it is because of this wealth of sources that we know so much more about Mesopotamia than we do about contemporary India.(iv) By 2600 BCE or so, the letters became cuneiform, and the language was Sumerian. Writing was now used not only for keeping records, but also for making dictionaries, giving legal validity to land transfers, narrating the deeds of kings, and announcing the changes a king had made in the customary laws of the land.Sumerian, the earliest known language of Mesopotamia, was gradually replaced after 2400 BCE by the Akkadian language. Cuneiform writing in the Akkadian language continued in use until the first century CE, that is, for more than 2,000 years. | |
| 1706. |
Describe briefly the features of early cities. From the beginning of time |
| Answer» Features of early cities:•They were larger in scale as compared to the other human settlements, present at those times. Also, development happened at these places only when there was an increase in food supplies, which made it possible to support a wide range of non-food producers.•They supported various social groups like artisans, merchants and priests and acted as centres of political power, administrative network, trade and industry, religious institutions, and intellectual activity.•They could vary greatly in size and complexity. Thus, they could easily be densely settled modern-day metropolises, which combined political and economic functions for an entire region, and supported very large populations, or could be smaller urban centres with limited functions.\xa0 | |
| 1707. |
Explain the meaning of city. |
| Answer» A city is a large human settlement. It can be defined as a permanent and densely settled place with administratively defined boundaries whose members work primarily on non-agricultural tasks. Cities generally have extensive systems for housing, transportation, sanitation, utilities, land use and communication. | |
| 1708. |
How did the villages come into existence. Writing and city life - chapter |
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| 1709. |
Making and Unmaking of Mesopotamia |
| Answer» Mesopotamia is a\xa0historical region of\xa0Western Asia situated within the Tigris–Euphrates river system, in the northern part of the , in modern days roughly corresponding to most of Iraq,\xa0Kuwait, the eastern parts of Syria, Southeastern TurkeyTurkish–Syrian ,\xa0Iran–Iraq borders | |
| 1710. |
Who defeated harsh vardhan in the north -east civilization during the 600A.D? |
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| 1711. |
Changing pattern of Human |
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| 1712. |
Which animals were seen first and how there were helpful for human beings? (History) |
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Answer» The use of oxen and horses allowed people to sow crops over a much larger area than they were originally able to do by hand. The\xa0domestication\xa0of dogs and cats protected\xa0humans\xa0from attack and protected their food from rodents.\xa0Animals\xa0are used for transportation, for sport, for recreation, and for companionship.\xa0Animals\xa0are also used to learn more about living things and about the illnesses that afflict human beings and other\xa0animals. By studying\xa0animals, it is possible to obtain information that cannot be learned in any other way. Animals\xa0are used for transportation, for sport, for recreation, and for companionship.\xa0Animals\xa0are also used to learn more about living things and about the illnesses that afflict human beings and other\xa0animals. By studying\xa0animals, it is possible to obtain information that cannot be learned in any other way.\xa0The use of oxen and horses allowed people to sow crops over a much larger area than they were originally able to do by hand. The\xa0domestication\xa0of dogs and cats protected\xa0humans\xa0from attack and protected their food from rodents. The use of oxen and horses allowed people to sow crops over a much larger area than they were originally able to do by hand. The\xa0domestication\xa0of dogs and cats protected\xa0humans\xa0from attack and protected their food from rodents.\xa0Human uses of animals\xa0include both practical\xa0uses, such as the production of food and clothing, and symbolic\xa0uses, such as in art, literature, mythology, and religion. All of these are elements of culture, broadly understood.\xa0Animals\xa0used in these ways include fish, crustaceans, insects, molluscs, mammals and birds. |
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| 1713. |
Prophet Mohammed leads down the foundation of a new political structure justify |
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| 1714. |
Briefly describe the use of ancient metal in Mesopotamia |
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| 1715. |
What do you mean by Path of Modernisation???❓ |
| Answer» \tThe histories of Japan and China show how different historical conditions led them on widely divergent paths to building independent and modern nations.\tJapan was successful in retaining its independence and using traditional skills and practices in new ways.\tIn the Sino-Japanese War (1894-95) China faced a humiliating defeat.\xa0On 17 April 1895, Treaty of Shimonseki was signed between China and Japan,\xa0ending the First Sino-Japanese War.\tThe Chinese became vulnerable after their defeat and declared that both China and Japan needed reforms for modernisation.\tSino-Japanese war served the basis for the Anglo-Japanese alliance in 1902.\tThe Chinese path to modernisation was very different.\tForeign imperialism, both Western and Japanese, combined with a hesitant and unsure Qing dynasty to weaken government control.\tThe nineteenth and twentieth centuries saw a rejection of traditions and a search for ways to build national unity and strength. | |
| 1716. |
Where is Altamira? What is its importance? Who discovered Altamira |
| Answer» Pls help me.????? | |
| 1717. |
Write a short note on mesopotamian city of UR. |
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| 1718. |
Who was Olympiodorus ? Pls help .?????? |
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Answer» Thanks Olympiodorus was a writer, an historian and an ambassador in the early fifth century Olympiodorus the Younger was a Neoplatonist philosopher, astrologer and teacher |
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| 1719. |
Give two main features of ancient Roman religion |
| Answer» Early forms of the Roman religion were animistic in nature, believing that spirits inhabited everything around them, people included. The first citizens of Rome also believed they were watched over by the spirits of their ancestors. | |
| 1720. |
What are the various opinions regarding the development of language |
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| 1721. |
How did the early big villages developed into cities? |
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| 1722. |
How did the villages come into existence? |
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| 1723. |
Write a note on early societies. |
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| 1724. |
Explain the meaning of city . |
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| 1725. |
Describe the methods of the reconstruction of human evolution. |
| Answer» The genetic information for this work came from a very large collection of gene frequencies for "classical" (non-DNA) polymorphisms of the world aborigines. The data were grouped in 42 populations studied for 120 alleles. The reconstruction of human evolutionary history thus generated was checked with statistical techniques such as "boot-strapping". It changes some earlier conclusions and is in agreement with more recent ones, including published and unpublished DNA-marker results. The first split in the phylogenetic tree separates Africans from non-Africans, and the second separates two major clusters, one corresponding to Caucasoids, East Asians, Arctic populations, and American natives, and the other to Southeast Asians (mainland and insular), Pacific islanders, and New Guineans and Australians. Average genetic distances between the most important clusters are proportional to archaeological separation times. Linguistic families correspond to groups of populations with very few, easily understood overlaps, and their origin can be given a time frame. Linguistic superfamilies show remarkable correspondence with the two major clusters, indicating considerable parallelism between genetic and linguistic evolution.\xa0 | |
| 1726. |
Discuss the development of skull size and distinctive jaws were associated with the tool making? |
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| 1727. |
Write an essay on the life of the homosapiens. |
| Answer» Homo\xa0is\xa0the Latin word for \'human\' or \'man\' and sapiens\xa0is\xa0derived from a Latin word that means \'wise\' or \'astute\'.\xa0The\xa0evolution\xa0of modern\xa0humans\xa0from our hominid ancestor is commonly considered as having involved four major steps: evolving terrestriality, bipedalism, a large brain (encephalization) and civilization.\xa0Cro Magnon is the\xa0first example\xa0of class Homo\xa0sapiens. | |
| 1728. |
How was early men transformed to food gatherer to food producer ? |
| Answer» in palaeolithic age man was a food gatherer. but after many years when the mesolithic age began and now it was warm and there was plenty of food . then man saw how seeds grew into new plants . he then started farming and also reared animals like dog. this was how man changed from a food gatherer to a food producer. | |
| 1729. |
Describe the theories regarding the origin of human beings. |
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| 1730. |
Describe the methods of reconstruction of human evolution. |
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| 1731. |
What are the differences between modern human and hunter human |
| Answer» The main difference between Neanderthal and Homo sapiens is that Neanderthals were hunter-gatherers whereas Homo sapiens spend a settled life, producing food through agriculture and domestication. ... The modern human belongs to Homo sapiens sapiens while the other is an extinct subspecies. | |
| 1732. |
Explain about the Hadza |
| Answer» The Hadza, or Hadzabe, are an indigenous ethnic group in north-central Tanzania, living around Lake Eyasi in the central Rift Valley and in the neighboring Serengeti Plateau. | |
| 1733. |
City life of ealry human being |
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Answer» Plz Mcq question bhej dijiye |
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| 1734. |
150 arabic words with meaning from 2nd chapter |
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| 1735. |
What is hunter - gatherer society in Africa |
| Answer» The earliest\xa0hunter-gatherers\xa0in southern\xa0Africa\xa0were the San people. Hunter-gatherer societies hunt, fish and gather wild plants to survive. They also move around from place to place, following a nomadic way of life.\xa0A\xa0hunter-gatherer\xa0is a human living in a\xa0society\xa0in which most or all food is obtained by foraging (collecting wild plants and pursuing wild animals).\xa0Following the invention of agriculture,\xa0hunter-gatherers\xa0who did not change have been displaced or conquered by farming or pastoralist groups in most parts of the world. | |
| 1736. |
What do u mean by nasty movement? |
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Answer» You are seraj sis Or bro jo bhi ho... # sareef balak The movement of a plant in response to an external stimulus in which the direction of response is not determined by the direction of stimulus is called nastic movement. |
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| 1737. |
What is History❓❓❓ |
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Answer» History is way to learn about past of worldThat how the world started, what happened in the centuries of the world, etc. The series of events that took place in past... |
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| 1738. |
What do you understand by the term \'settler\'? |
| Answer» The word "settler" is used for the Dutch in South Africa, the British in Ireland, New Zealand and Australia, and the Europeans in America. The official language in these colonies was English (except in Canada, where French is also an official language). | |
| 1739. |
Differentiate between the replacement and regional continuity model |
| Answer» According to regional continuity model:\u200b\u200b1) homo sapiens were distributed in different parts of the world.2) the rate of evolution was different in different regions.3) this created difference in physical appearanceAccording to replacement model:1) all the forms of older man was replaced by modern man.2) originated in Africa.3) changes in physical appearance due to adaptation. | |
| 1740. |
Give the main differences between the lives of the paleolithic men and neolithic men. |
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| 1741. |
Describe the main features of the life of Neolithic age men. |
| Answer» The main features of the life of man in Neolithic Age are as below :1. Discovery of the Better Tools : In this period, the man had invented more beautiful, smooth and polished tools. These tools were more useful as compared to the earlier ones.2. Beginning of the Cultivation : In this period man had become food producer instead of food gatherer. That man developed his farming during this period. The work made him\xa0to lead a settled life ultimately.3.\xa0Domestication of Animals : Man started domestication of those animals that were useful to him. He started the use of animals of farming and for riding. He also started getting milk and often meat from them.4.\xa0Invention\xa0of the Wheel : It was a great achievement of this age. The invention made the carriage and transport easier. It also helped in the making of the spinning wheel. | |
| 1742. |
Describe the way of life of homoerectus. |
| Answer» "Homo erectus spanned a large [temporal] and geographic range," said Adam Van Arsdale, an anthropologist at Wellesley College in Massachusetts, explaining the significance of H. erectus. "It is also important because it\'s the first fossil ancestral to modern humans that, in many ways, shares a lot of its ecology."In particular, H. erectus had a similar range of body sizes to modern humans, and it is the first human ancestor to have similar limb and torso proportions to those seen in modern humans. This suggests it had adapted to walking on two feet in a more open, grassland environment, rather than swinging from tree branch to branch. | |
| 1743. |
How far is Darwin\'s theory of origin of man acceptable? |
| Answer» In 1859, Charles Darwin set out his theory of evolution by natural selection as an explanation for adaptation and speciation. The concept was simple but powerful: individuals best adapted to their environments are more likely to survive and reproduce.Darwin\'s theory of evolution is known as \'The Theory of Natural Selection\'. It can be described as follows:(i) Within any population there is natural variation. Some individuals have more favourable variations than others.(ii) Even though all species produce a large number of offspring\'s, populations remain fairly constant naturally.(iii) This is due to the struggle between members of the same species and different species for food, space and mate.(iv) The struggle for survival within populations eliminates the unfit individuals. The fit individuals possessing favourable variations survive and reproduce. This is called natural selection.(v) The individuals having favourable variations pass on these variations to their progeny from generation to generation.(vi) These variations when accumulated over a long period of time, lead to the origin of a new species. | |
| 1744. |
Write a note on human habilis. |
| Answer» Homo habilis is regarded as the first human and the first species of the genus Homo. Homo habilis means “handy human.” Members of this species were apparently able to use tools, build shelters, and fashion protective clothing.\xa0Homo habilis is an archaic species of Stone Age human which lived between roughly 2.3 and 1.5 million years ago (mya), during the Early Pleistocene.\xa0The species was first discovered by anthropologists Mary and Louis Leakey at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania in 1955, associated with the Oldowan stone tool industry.H. habilis is considered to be intermediate between Australopithecus afarensis and H. erectus. It has been suggested reclassifying the species as Australopithecus habilis, as one of the main arguments for its classification into Homo was the now outdated idea that it was the earliest human ancestor to use stone tools. H. habilis likely used tools for butchering meat which it scavenged from more fearsome carnivores. | |
| 1745. |
Describe charle darwin\'s theory of evolution. |
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| 1746. |
How do the archaeologists make discoveries of the ancient artefacts? |
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| 1747. |
What are the sorces to understand the beginning of human existence? |
| Answer» The sources which enable us understand the history of early humans are stone tools, fossils, etc. | |
| 1748. |
Mesopotamians valued citt life. Explain |
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| 1749. |
Ecplain how kharoshthi was deciphered |
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| 1750. |
Earliest stone tools |
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