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GK 5

This document contains a series of general knowledge questions and answers covering various topics such as geography, history, literature, and international organizations. It includes information about notable figures, significant events, and important locations. The format consists of multiple-choice questions followed by brief explanations or additional facts related to the answers.

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Hammad Sultan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
45 views10 pages

GK 5

This document contains a series of general knowledge questions and answers covering various topics such as geography, history, literature, and international organizations. It includes information about notable figures, significant events, and important locations. The format consists of multiple-choice questions followed by brief explanations or additional facts related to the answers.

Uploaded by

Hammad Sultan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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General Knowledge

Lecture No. 5
621. Which of the following countries has the largest area in the world?
(a) Canada (b) China (c) USA (d) Russia
 Canada has second largest country area wise.
622. "Kitab Ash Shifa" was written by:
(a) Col Steve (b) Ibne Sina (c) Mushtaq (d) None of them
 Also wrote ‘Qanon fi Tib’
623. 'Latakia' is the seaport of:
(a) Syria (b) Libya (c) Jordan (d) Egypt
 Capital: Damascus
 Currency: Syrian Pound
624. The Secretary-General of UNO who died in an air crash was:
(a) Trygve Lie (b) Dag Hammarskjold
(c) U. Thant (d) None of these
 Belonged to Sweden
625. Who is the author of "India Wins Freedom"?
(a) I.H. Qureshi (b) Munshi Lala Gee
(c) Fazal Muqeem (d) Maulana Abul Kalam Azad
 First Education Minister of India
626. The Sultan of Delhi who is reputed to have built the biggest network of canals in India was:
(a) Iltutmish (b) Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq
(c) Firoz Shah Tughlaq (d) None of these
 Last ruler of Tughluq dyansty
627. Which is the largest sea in the world?
(a) South China Sea (b) Mediterranean Sea (c) Black Sea (d) Red Sea
 Largest Ocean is Pacific Ocean
628. When French -built Agosta 90B was inducted in Pakistan Navy:
(a) September 06, 1999 (b) September 13, 1999
(c) September 25, 1999 (d) September 14, 1999
629. "NIKKEI" is a stock exchange index of:
(a) New York (b) Tokyo (c) Hong Kong (d) London
 Capital of Japan
630. Sabena is the name of an airline of:
(a) America (b) UK (c) Belgium (d) None of these
 Capital: Brussels
 Currency: Euro
631. Ronald Amundsen belonged to:
(a) England (b) Norway (c) Magellan (d) USA
 Roald Engelbregt Gravning Amundsen was a Norwegian explorer of Polar Regions.
632. Which one of the following gases was used as a chemical weapon in the First World War?
(a) Carbon monoxide (b) Hydrogen cyanide (c) Mustard gas (d) None of these
 Also used in Iran-Iraq war
633. What was the immediate cause for the outbreak of the First World War?
(a) The imprisonment of Lenin (b) The sudden death of Lloyd George
(c) The assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand
(d) None of these
 Archduke Francis Ferdinand was an Archduke of Austria-Este, Austro-Hungarian and Royal Prince of
Hungary.
634. Taj Mahal is situated on the bank of River:
(a) Brahmaputra (b) Ganges (c) Yamuna (d) None of these
 In city of Agra, built by Shah Jahan
635. International organization 'Human Rights Watch' is based in:
(a) New York (b) Geneva (c) Paris (d) Rome
 Founded: 1978
636. World Tourism Day is observed on:
(a) 15th November (b) 5th November (c) 27th September (d) 17th September
637. 'Ottawa Convention 1997' is related to:
(a) Environment protection (b) Preserving wild life
(c) Banning landmines (d) Banning chemical weapons
638. Big Ben, a huge clock, was installed at British Parliament in:
(a) 1940 (b) 1859 (c) 1875 (d) 1872
 In West Minister area of London
639. UNO's 'Oil for Food' Program is associated with which country?
(a) Sudan (b) North Korea (c) Iran (d) Iraq
 After First Guld War (1990-91)
640. Who was the first Asian to have received the Nobel Prize?
(a) C.V. Raman (b) R.N. Tagore (c) Mother Teresa (d) I.A. Bunin
 1913 in Literature.
641. When Pakistan won the Cricket World Cup?
(a) 1992 (b) 1996 (c) 1999 (d) 2003
 Defeating England
642. Who was the President of USA during World War I?
(a) Woodrow Wilson (b) George Truman (c) George Adams (d) Abraham Lincoln
 Belonged to Democratic party
643. Who discovered the 'First Law of Thermodynamics'?
(a) James Prescott Joule (b) Frederick Benling
(c) Marie Pierre (d) None of these
644. Which river forms the Grand Canyon in the United States?
(a) Mississippi (b) Hudson (c) Colorado (d) Columbia
 The Colorado River, which flows through the canyon, touches seven states.
645. "Decline of the West" was written by German philosopher:
(a) Herbert Spencer (b) Spengler (c) Spinoza (d) None of these
 Herbert Spencer was British Philosopher
646. Nobel Peace Prize 2004 was awarded to ‘Wangari Maathai’ of:
(a) Uganda (b) Kenya (c) South Africa (d) Nigeria
 Kenyan political activist.
647. "Bristol" is a seaport of:
(a) UK (b) Germany (c) Netherlands (d) Australia
 Liverpool is also seaport of UK
648. Feminism" is a:
(a) System of government which projects equal distribution of wealth in society
(b) Set of beliefs put forward by the Tibetan Community
(c) Belief that women's subordination to men should end
(d) None of these
649. The distance of a place south or north of Equator is called:
(a) Altitude (b) Longitude (c) Latitude (d) Multitude
650. Which part of the world is called “The Land of Free People”?
(a) Switzerland (b) Thailand (c) West Indies (d) UK
 Capital: Bangkok
 Currency: Bhat
651. 'Asia Watch' is a:
(a) Human rights organization
(b) A big time clock in Japan's parliament building
(c) News agency of Taiwan (d) None of these
 Established in 1985
652. The World-famous bridge 'Golden Gate" is located in:
(a) New York (b) Sydney (c) Mexico (d) San Francisco
 San Francisco is city of California, USA
653. Abul Qasim Al-Zahrawi, was a great Muslim:
(a) Philosopher (b) Poet (c) Surgeon (d) Warrior
 Lived in Spain
654. Pakistan is separated from Tajikistan by:
(a) Pamir Knot (b) Wakhan Corridor(c) Durand Line (d) Baltistan
655. Taiwan was separated from the People's Republic of China in:
(a) 1943 (b) 1949 (c) 1952 (d) 1956
 After Communist Revolution on 1st October 1949
656. "Dead Sea' is lying between:
(a) Iraq and Sudan (b) Israel and Jordan (c) Russia and Japan (d) Greece and Turkey
 It is lowest point of world
657. Appointed in 2013, Governor of Bank of England Mark Carney is a citizen of:
(a) United States (b) Canada (c) United Kingdom (d) Australia
 Capital: Ottawa
 Currency: Canadian Dollar
658. The phenomenon of 'Arab Spring' was sparked by the self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi, a
fruit-vendor in:
(a) Egypt (b) Tunisia (c) Morocco (d) Syria
 In 2011
659. The imaginary line of zero degree longitude which passes through Greenwich is called:
(a) Meridian (b) Equator
(c) Tropic of Cancer (d) Tropic of Capricorn
 Greenwich is in UK
660. Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) is headed by:
(a) British monarch (b) Russian President
(c) Host nation's head of state (d) None of these
 Established in 1991 by Russia
661. Recently, the United Nations granted the Palestinians with the status of:
(a) Non-state Observer (b) Non-member Observer State
(c) Member State (d) Non-member State
 In 2012
662. The new status of Palestinians at the United Nations will make them equal in diplomatic status to:
(a) Israel (b) Switzerland (c) Holy See (d) Cook Islands
 Holy See is also called Vatican City.
663. The capital city of Libya is:
(a) Benghazi (b) Misrata (c) Sirte (d) Tripoli
 Currency: dinar
664. The Secretary-General of the United Nations at the time of invasion of Iraq in 2003 was:
(a) Boutros-Boutros Ghali (b) Ban Ki-moon
(c) Kofi Annan (d) Mohmmad el-Baradi
 Belonged to Ghana
665. Which is the largest archipelago of the world?
(a) Indonesia (b) Malaysia (c) West Indies (d) Japan
 Archipelago means Cluster of Islands.
666. The legendary African city of Timbuktu is located in:
(a) Niger (c) Mali (b) Ivory Coast (d) Mauritania
 Capital: Bamako
 Currency: CFA Franc
667. The capital of Myanmar is:
(a) Ho Chi Minh City (b) Saigon (c) Yangon (d) Naypyidaw
 Currency: Kyat
668. The next winter Olympic Games will take place in 2018 at:
(a) Pyeong Chang (South Korea) (b) Vancouver
(c) Torino (d) Salt Lake City, Utah
 Capital: Seoul
 Currency: Won
669. An ordinary mobile phone communicates by using:
(a) Sound waves (b) Microwaves (c) Radio waves (d) UV waves
670. The capital city of Uzbekistan is:
(a) Tashkent (b) Samarkand (c) Bokhara (d) Dushanbe
 Currency: Som
671. The United Nations Special Representative on Syria is:
(a) Kofi Annan (b) Staffan de Mistura (31 May 2014 – 31 October 2018)
(c) Navanethem Pillay (d) Juan Mendez
Current:United Nations Special Envoy for Syria Mr. Geir O. Pedersen's Remarks to the Brussels V
Conference “Supporting the future of Syria and the region. (Since 31 Oct. 2018)
672. The World Snooker Championship at Sofia (Bulgaria), held in 2012 was won by:
(a) Muhammad Yousuf (b) Wael Talaat (c) Asjad Iqbal (d) Muhammad Asif
 Belongs to Faisalabad
673. Which country used to be called the "Sick Man of Europe" during the late 19th and early 20th
century?
(a) France (b) Portugal (c) Turkey (d) Iran
 Called Ottoman Empire at that time
674. Which out of them is a Nobel Peace Prize winner?
(a) Gamal Abdel Nasser (b) King Hussain of Jordan
(c) Raza Shah Pahalvi (d) Yasser Arafat
 He was Palestinian leader and first President
675. Which is the largest (area _ wise) airport of the world?
(a) J.F Kennedy Airport, New York (b) Heathrow Airport, London
(c) Schiphol Airport, Amsterdam (d) King Fahd Airport, Dammam
 King Fahd was king of Saudi Arabia (13 June 1982 – 1 August 2005)
676. "Olive Branch" is the symbol of:
(a) Prosperity (b) Strength (c) Peace (d) Success
677. NPT is the abbreviation of:
(a) Non-Proliferation Treaty (b) Neo-Proliferated Treaty
(c) Non-Proliferation Trust (d) None of these
 Signed on 1st July 1968.
678. Who was the first Secretary General of OIC?
(a) Hassan Al-Touhami (b) Tunku Abdul Rahman
(c) Syed Sharifud Din Pirzada (d) Habib Chatty
 Tunku Abdul Rehman belongs to Malaysia.
679. Which country exercised veto power the most in Security Council of the UNO?
(a) USSR/Russia (b) USA (c) UK (d) China
 Veto has been used 263 times since birth of UN
680. Which country is the largest producer of wheat?
(a) America (b) China (c) Russia (d) India
 Also largest producer of Rice
681. Warsaw is the capital of:
(a) Romania (b) Bulgaria (c) Hungary (d) Poland
 Currency: Euro
682. Shashi Tharoor is the latest biographer of:
(a) Jawaharlal Nehru (b) M.K Gandhi
(c) Sheikh Mujib-ur-Rehman (d) Indra Gandhi
 Shashi Tharoor is member of Indian Parliament
683. Industrial Revolution started with the invention of:
(a) Wheel (b) Steam engine (c) Spinning Jenny (d) Aeroplane
 Invented by James Watt
684. The Greek epics "Iliad" and "Odyssey" were written by:
(a) Homer (b) Euclid (c) Aristotle (d) Plato
 Homer was a Greek Poet.
685. "Dhyan Chand" was a legend of:
(a) Cricket (b) Hockey (c) Football (d) Athletics
686. The capital of Belgium is:
(a) Brussels (b) Manchester (c) Zurich (d) Bonn
 Headquarters of EU are in Brussels
687. "Interpol" is the:
(a) UNO’s global uplift plan (b) International Criminal Police
(c) Agency for environmental protection (d) Forum to settle inter-country water disputes
 Established in 1923
688. Which river is most often mentioned in the Bible?
(a) Colorado (b) Ganges (c) Darling (d) Jordan
 Considered holy by Christians
689. "Good consists in creating the greatest happiness for the largest number of people". This theory is
termed as:
(a) Utilitarianism (b) Aristotelianism (c) Humanism (d) Pragmatism
 Concept given by Jeremy Bentham
690. "Burj al Khalifa the tallest standing structure at present is located in:
(a) Jaddah (b) Cairo (c) Doha (d) Dubai
 Built in 2008
691. "Magna Carta" that was signed by King John of England in 1215 declared that:
(a) England is the greatest country of Europe (b) The King is subject to law
(c) London will be England's capital (d) The English Crown will remain forever
 King John was a Norman King
692. "Pravda" is the most important newspaper of which country?
(a) Iran (b) Canada (c) Germany (d) Russia
693. Which out of the following is not a novel by Thomas Hardy?
(a) The Return of the Native (b) Tess of the d'Urbervilles
(c) The Winner Stands Alone (d) Under the Greenwood Tree
 The Winner Stands Alone written by Paulo Coelho
694. "Lingua Franca" means:
(a) A beautiful girl (b) A difficult exam
(c) An unknown person (d) A common language
 Its a Latin phrase
695. Ethiopia was earlier known as:
(a) Christina (b) Formosa (c) Abyssinia (d) Persia
 Capital: Addis Ababa
 Currency: Birr
696. Al-Azhar University is situated in:
(a) Tehran (b) Cairo (c) Kuwait (d) Tunisia
 Established in 970 AD
697. Boxing Day is celebrated in Australia on:
(a) December 25 (b) December 26 (c) December 27 (d) January 1
698. The currency unit of Indonesia' is:
(a) Yen (b) Dollar
(c) Pound (d) Rupiah
 Capital: Jakarta
699. The "Old Man and the Sea" is written by:
(a) John Steinbeck (b) Jane Austen
(c) Ernest Hemingway (d) Agatha Christie
 The old man and the sea is written by ernest hemingway was published on 1 Sep 1952
700. Longest glacier of the world is Lambert situated in Antarctica, what is its length?
(a) 320 miles (b) 390 miles (c) 370 miles (d) 248 miles
701. In an Island near Alexandria an ancient wonder "The Pharaohs of Alexandria" is situated. What
is it?
(a) A Light house (b) Hanging Gardens (c) Great Wall (d) A wall
 Alexandria was built by Alexander the Great
702. Which sea has no coastline?
(a) Japan Sea (b) Sargasso Sea (c) Tasmanian Sea (d) White Sea
 Located in Atlantic Ocean
703. In which country is the port of Jaffna?
(a) India (b) Pakistan (c) Sri Lanka (d) China
 Capital: Colombo
 Currency: Sri Lankan Rupee
704. Sea of Marmara and Aegean Sea are connected by the:
(a) Davis Strait (b) Mozambique Strait
(c) Dardanelles Strait (d) Malacca Strait
 Istanbul is located on that strait
705. Kyzyl-Kum Desert is located in:
(a) Uzbekistan & Kazakhstan (b) China
(c) Kazakhstan (d) Morocco
 Uzbek Currency: Som
 Kazakhstan Currency: Tenge
706. Which one of the following is a Great Circle?
(a) The Arctic Circle (b) The Tropic of Cancer
(c) The Equator (d) The Tropic of Capricorn
 It divides earth into two spheres
707. The foreign phrase Charge d'affaires means:
(a) Deputy Ambassador (b) An affair of the heart
(c) An awkward situation (d) None of these
 Vienna Convention (1961) classify different ranks in diplomatic mission
708. Calcutta is situated on the bank of:
(a) Indus River (b) Hooghly River (c) Spree River (d) None of these
 Kolkata has rightly been called the 'City of Joy' by French author Dominique Lapierre.
709. Name the person who discovered Florida, Georgia and Mississippi in 1539:
(a) Sir James Clark (b) Hernando De Soto
(c) Capt John Speke (d) None of these
 All three are American states
710. FSB is the Intelligence agency of:
(a) USA (b) Russia (c) China (d) None of these
 It was called KGB in past
711. Which is the country to have won the most Olympic titles?
(a) China (b) USA (c) Russia (d) France
 The Summer Olympic Games in 2020 will be held in Tokyo
712. What is the height of the wickets used in the game of cricket in inches?
(a) 26 inches (b) 27 inches (c) 28 inches (d) 29 inches
713. The winner of the 2003 Nobel Prize for Literature John Maxwell Coetzee belongs to which of the
following countries?
(a) Germany (b) USA (c) South Africa (d) Belgium
 He won Booker Prize two times
714. Which American industrialist was praised by Adolf Hitler in his autobiography, Mein Kampf. In
fact, he was the only American to be praised by Hitler.
(a) Henry Ford (b) Gerald Ford (c) Thomas Edison (d) Henry Ford
 Due to Anti-Semitism of Ford
715. Headquarters of International Atomic Energy Agency is located in:
(a) Vienna (b) New York (c) Washington De (d) None of these
 Since 1957
716. 1st Conference of NAM was held in September 1961 in:
(a) Havana (Cuba) (b) Cairo (Egypt)
(c) Belgrade (Yugoslavia) (d) None of these
 In era of Joseph Tito
717. 2nd Conference of NAM was held in October 1964 in :
(a) Cairo (Egypt) (b) Havana (Cuba)
(c) Colombo (Sri Lanka) (d) None of these
 In era of Jamal Abdul Nasser
718. Largest airport of the world is:
(a) New York Airport (b) Chicago Airport
(c) King Fahd Airport (d) None of these
 In Dammam, Saudi Arabia
719. What is the name of Belgium's news Agency?
(a) SANA (b) DPA (c) Belga (d) AGI
 Belgium news agency Belga was founded in 1920. (20th August, 1920)
720. The contemporary of Shakespeare was:
(a) Akbar the great (b) Elizabeth I (c) Louis XIII (d) All of these
 Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbár, also known as Akbarthe Great (Akbar-e-Azam) (October 15, 1542 –
October 27, 1605) was the ruler of the Moghul Empire from the time of his accession in 1556 until 1605.
 Elizabeth I ruled from 1558 to 1603.
 Louis XIII was a monarch of the House of Bourbon who ruled as King of France from 1610 to 1643 and
King of Navarre from 1610 to 1620, when the crown of Navarre was merged with the French crown.
721. The world's most famous painting 'The Last Supper' was created by:
(a) Leonardo da Vinci (b) Pablo Picasso (c) Rembrandt (d) Guljee
 He was Italian
722. Napoleon Bonaparte, who conquered half of the Europe was, afraid of:
(a) Dogs (b) Monkeys (c) Cats (d) Rats
 Emperor of France
723. What is a Stripka?
(a) Mountain Pass of Russia (b) Mountain Pass of Nepal
(c) Mountain Pass of Bulgaria (d) Mountain Pass of Spain
724. Brenner is a Mountain Pass (4508 ft high) situated in:
(a) Italy-France (b) Italy-Austria (c) France-Germany (d) Italy-Britain
 In Alps mountain range
725. The largest railway station of the world is located in:
(a) New York (b) Pakistan (c) Russia (d) None of these
 The world's largest station by number of platforms is Grand Central Terminal in New York with 44
Platforms.
726. Who is the oldest person so far to have been awarded Nobel Prize and what was his age at that
time?
(a) Prof William Lawrence Bragg, 88 years (b) Prof Francis Peyton Rous, 87 years
(c) Leonid Hurwicz, 90 years (d) Sir John Bardeen, 89 years
 Nobel Prize in Economics: 2007
727. Febriphobia is the fear of:
(a) Fever (b) Fire (c) Wealth (d) None of these
728. Liverpool & Bristol is the seaport of:
(a) USA (b) Russia (c) UK (d) Brazil
 Capital: London
 Currency: Pound
729. Which place is called the "City of Mosques"?
(a) Dhaka (b) Lahore (c) Islamabad (d) Baghdad
 Istanbul is also called City of Mosques
730. 'Island of Cloves' is the nickname of:
(a) Sweden (b) Madagascar (c) Cuba (d) Iraq
 Old name: Malagasi
731. Which of the following is the Parliament of Japan?
(a) Folketing (b) Yuan (c) Knesset (d) Diet
 Knesset is parliament of Israel
732. "Antwerp" is the seaport of:
(a) Belgium (b) Pakistan (c) Italy (d) Canada
733. The German scientist who discovered X-rays was:
(a) Roentgen (b) H. Morgan (c) G. Mendel (d) C. B. Bridges
 Given First Nobel Prize in 1901
734. Which of the following South Asian countries is landlocked?
(a) Sri Lanka (b) Bangladesh (c) Bhutan (d) Maldives
 Largest landlocked country by area in the world is Kazakhstan.
 Largest landlocked country by population is Ethiopia.
735. 'Abu Gharib' is a:
(a) Leader of PLO (b) President of Lebanon
(c) Secretary General of Arab League (d) Prison in Iraq
 In Baghdad
736. Silk airways is an airline of:
(a) Singapore (b) Hong Kong (c) Malaysia (d) France
 Capital: Singapore city
 Currency: Singapore dollar
737. 1 nautical mile is equal to:
(a) 1,005 metres (b) 1,250 metres (c) 1,575 metres (d) 1,852 metres
 Territorial Sea of a state: 12 Nautical miles
738. Bandaranaike is the name of an airport in:
(a) Sri Lanka (b) Iran (c) Italy (d) USA
 Bandaranaike was first female PM of the world
739. Which of the following battles was fought in 1192 A.D?
(a) First Battle of Tarain (b) Second Battle of Tarain
(c) Battle of Talikota (d) None of These
 First Battle of Tarain was fought in 1191 A.D
 The Battles of Tarain, also known as the Battles of Taraori, were fought in 1191 and 1192 near the
town of Tarain (Taraori), near Thanesar in present-day Haryana, approximately 150 kilometres north of
Delhi, India, between a Ghurid force led by Mu'izz al-Din and a Chauhan Rajput army led
by Prithviraj Chauhan.
740. What do you understand by in Toto?
(a) On the whole (b) In the eyes of law (c) In parts (d) None of these
741. Who was the last ruler of Lodhi Dynasty?
(a) Bahlol Lodhi (b) Daulat Khan Lodhi (c) Ibrahim Lodhi (d) Isikander Lodhi
 The Lodhi dynasty was a Pashtun dynasty that ruled the Delhi Sultanate from 1451 to 1526.
 First Ruler of Lodhi dynasty was Bahlol Lodhi
742. Which Country is called the land of Milk and Honey:
(a) Cuba (b) India (c) Lebanon (d) Nigeria
 Capital: Beriut
 Currency: Lebanese pound
743. "Al-Jabr-Wal-Muqabla" was written by:
(a) Al-Khawrizmi (b) Abu Zakaria Misre (c) Imam Gazali (d) Ibn-i-Hazm
 Belonged to Central Asia (Persia)
744. Who authored the book 'Al-Iqtisad fil Itiqad'?
(a) Ibnal-Haitham (b) Imam Ghazali (c) Abu Zahr (d) Ibn-i-Athar
 Also wrote ‘Iheya-ul-Uloom’
745. "Trillion" stands for:
(a) One hundred million (b) One thousand million
(c) One hundred billion (d) One thousand billion
746. "Majlis" is the parliament of:
(a) Saudi Arabia (b) UAE (c) Kuwait (d) Iran
 Capital: Tehran
 Currency: Rial
747. Abdullah Hussain is a famous Urdu:
(a) Novelist (b) Poet (c) Short story writer (d) Critic
 Wrote ‘Udas Naslain’
748. In which year Pakistan won the T-20 Cricket World Cup?
(a) 2009 (b) 2010 (c) 2007 (d) 2012
749. "Heathrow International Airport" is in:
(a) New York (b) London (c) Paris (d) Rome
 Second busiest airport of the world
750. Alexander the Great invaded India in:
(a) 527 BC (b) 424 BC (c) 326 BC (d) 261 BC
 Born in Macedonia (Pella), Greece
751. The capital of Morocco is:
(a) Khartoum (b) Rabat (c) Alexandria (d) Ismailia
 The largest city of Morocco is Casablanca
752. During Bush Jr.’s presidency, Dick Cheney was America's:
(a) Chairman (b) Vice-President
(c) Secretary of Defense (d) Attorney General
 Colin Powel was Bush’s Secretary of State
753. "Shakira" is famous for:
(a) Singing (b) Acting (c) Athletics (d) TV hosting
 Belongs to Coloumbia
754. "Think and Grow Rich" was written by:
(a) Dale Carnegie (b) Stephen Covey (c) Anthony Robbins (d) Napoleon Hill
 The Think and Grow Rich" was written in 1937
755. Which of the following is a Human Rights Organization?
(a) Amnesty International (b) The Arab League
(c) The Organization of African Unity (d) Gulf Cooperation Council
 Headquarters:
i. Arab League: Tunis
ii. OAU: Addis Ababa
iii. GCC: Riyadh
756. Captain Cook was a famous:
(a) British navigator (b) American military commander
(c) Italian pilot (d) English scientist
 Lived: 1728-1779
757. "People's Republic of China" was founded in:
(a) 1947 (b) 1948 (c) 1949 (d) None of these
 Capital of China is Beijing
758. A movie on Quaid-e-Azam's life titled "JINNAH" was produced by:
(a) Ikram Sehgal (b) Faiz Ahmed Faiz (c) Suhrab Moodi (d) Akbar S. Ahmed
 Akbar S. Ahmed is a civil servant
759. "KGB" was the intelligence agency of:
(a) Russia (b) France (c) Germany (d) England
 KGB stand for Komitet gosudarstvennoy bezopasnosti
760. The "Law of Gravitation" was discovered by:
(a) Isaac Newton (b) Thomas Alva Edison
(c) Hugo Chavez (d) Guglielmo Marconi
 Laws were given his book ‘Prinicpia Mathematica’

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