Directions (Next Five Questions) : Rearrange the following seven sentences (A), (B), (C), (D), (E), (F) and (G) in a proper sequence to form a meaningful paragraph, then answer the given questions.
(A) Furthermore, many cities in China and India are continually modernizing their retail and distribution infrastructures, many market entry less complex than it would be in rural areas.
(B) These companies feel that the capital base of these two countries isn’t sufficient for a credible entry or that their competitive environment is already too tough for new entrants.
(C) The juice market, for instance, will grow more than three times as fast in Shanghai, alone as in all of Malaysia.
(D) Instead, they should ascertain whether building a presence in only a few selected cities is feasible.
(E) But companies shouldn’t dismiss these markets outright.
(F) Once, this feasibility is ensured, for specific product categories with low minimum scale requirements, even a limited entry in China or India can yield returns equivalent to countrywide coverage in other emerging economies, or higher.
(G) Some companies have written off China and India as unrealistic expansion opportunities.
Directions (Next Five Questions) : In these questions, read the sentence to find out whether there is any grammatical mistake/error in it. The error, if any, will be in one part of the sentence. Mark the part with the error as your answer. If there is no error, mark ‘No error’ as your answer. If there is no error, mark ‘No error’ as your answer. (Ignore the errors of punctuations, if any)