GK Analogy - Intermediate-Advanced Level: historical events INTERMEDIATE-ADVANCED

Ready to master gk analogy? This time-bound test features 20 intermediate-advanced-level challenges. Worksheet 22 of 30 sharpens your historical events skills. Master general knowledge, famous pairs, country-capital through guided practice. Perfect for advanced developing test preparation.

📝 Worksheet 22 of 30 • 20 questions • ⏱️ Estimated time: 20 minutes • 🎯 Intermediate-advanced level

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Worksheet 22 of 30 (73% complete)

Question 1

Yangtze : China :: Mississippi : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Relationship Identification: The Yangtze river flows through/is primarily associated with China. This establishes a river-country geographical relationship.

Geographical Context: Rivers are crucial geographical features that often define national boundaries, provide water resources, and shape civilizations. The Yangtze is one of the major rivers of China.

Pattern Application: Following the same relationship, we need to identify which country the Mississippi is primarily associated with.

Geographical Verification: The Mississippi flows through United States. It is one of the major rivers of this country/region.

Answer: United States

Important Note: Some rivers like the Danube, Rhine, and Mekong flow through multiple countries, so the answer represents the primary association or the countries through which the majority of the river flows.

Why This Is Medium Difficulty:
- Requires knowledge of international geography beyond just capitals
- Some rivers span multiple countries, adding complexity
- Tests understanding of geographical features and their national associations

Common Misconceptions:
- Rivers flowing through multiple countries may be associated with the wrong nation
- Confusion between rivers with similar names (e.g., Niger vs. Nile)
- Mixing up regional rivers with international ones

Memory Technique: Associate each continent's major rivers with their primary countries: Asia (Ganga-India, Yangtze-China, Mekong-Southeast Asia), Europe (Thames-UK, Seine-France, Danube-Multiple), Americas (Amazon-Brazil, Mississippi-USA), Africa (Nile-Egypt, Congo-DRC).

Exam Context: River-country analogies appear in SSC CGL Tier-II, Banking PO Mains, UPSC CSAT, and State PSC examinations where geographical awareness is tested.

Question 2

**Egypt** : **Pound** :: **Mexico** : **?**
The relationship is Country : Official Currency. Egypt uses the Pound as its official currency.

The missing term must be the official currency of Mexico.

The correct answer is Peso, which is the currency of Mexico.

Question 3

Thomas Edison : Electric Bulb :: Alexander Fleming : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Relationship Pattern: This analogy establishes a scientist-discovery/invention relationship. Thomas Edison is famous for discovering/inventing Electric Bulb.

Scientific Context: Thomas Edison's work on Electric Bulb revolutionized the field and is considered a landmark achievement in science/technology.

Pattern Application: Following the same relationship, we need to identify what Alexander Fleming discovered or invented.

Scientific Verification: Alexander Fleming is renowned for Penicillin.

Answer: Penicillin

Why This Discovery Was Important:
- Penicillin had a profound impact on science, technology, or human understanding
- It represents a breakthrough that changed the course of scientific development
- The discovery/invention continues to have applications in modern times

Memory Aid: Group scientists by fields - Physics (Newton, Einstein, Thomson), Chemistry (Curie, Mendeleev), Biology (Darwin, Mendel, Fleming), Inventors (Edison, Bell, Marconi).

Exam Relevance: Scientist-discovery analogies are standard questions in SSC, Railway, Banking, and all competitive exams. Focus on major 19th and 20th-century discoveries.

Question 4

NATO : Brussels, Belgium :: OPEC : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Complex International Relationship: This analogy tests knowledge of international organizations and their headquarters, which requires understanding of global governance, multilateral institutions, and diplomatic geography.

First Pair Analysis: The NATO has its headquarters in Brussels, Belgium. This establishes an organization-headquarters location relationship.

Organizational Context: International organizations choose headquarters based on various factors including neutrality, accessibility, historical reasons, and diplomatic considerations. The location of headquarters often reflects the organization's founding principles or major member states.

Pattern Recognition: Following the same relationship, we need to identify where OPEC has its headquarters.

International Verification: The headquarters of OPEC is located in Vienna, Austria.

Answer: Vienna, Austria

Why This Is Hard:
- Requires detailed knowledge of international organizations beyond UN and major bodies
- Many organizations have similar functions but different headquarters
- Some organizations have multiple offices, requiring identification of the MAIN headquarters
- Tests understanding of both organizational functions and geographical locations
- Requires current knowledge as some HQs have relocated or organizations restructured

Detailed Context:

About NATO:
- Function and purpose of the organization
- When it was established
- Why Brussels, Belgium was chosen as the headquarters location
- Major achievements and current relevance

About OPEC:
- Function and purpose of the organization
- When it was established
- Why Vienna, Austria was chosen as the headquarters location
- Major member countries and current relevance

Interesting Facts:
- Geneva, Switzerland hosts the most international organization headquarters due to its neutrality
- New York and Washington D.C. host many organizations due to US influence in post-WWII international order
- Some cities like Vienna, The Hague, and Paris are specifically chosen for historical or symbolic reasons
- Regional organizations typically have headquarters in member countries (ASEAN in Jakarta, SAARC in Kathmandu)

Common Mistakes:
- Confusing UN headquarters (New York) with various UN specialized agencies (WHO in Geneva, UNESCO in Paris, FAO in Rome)
- Mixing up organizations with similar names or functions
- Not knowing about regional organizations' headquarters
- Assuming all international organizations are in New York or Geneva
- Outdated information about headquarters that have relocated

Advanced Memory Strategy:

By City:
- Geneva: WHO, WTO, ILO, WMO, ITU, UNHCR (Switzerland's neutrality)
- New York: UN, UNICEF, UNDP (Global diplomatic center)
- Washington D.C.: World Bank, IMF (Financial institutions)
- Vienna: OPEC, IAEA, UNIDO (Central European location)
- Paris: UNESCO, OECD (Cultural and educational focus)
- The Hague: ICJ, ICC (International legal institutions)
- Rome: FAO, WFP (Food and agriculture focus)

By Organization Type:
- UN and Specialized Agencies: Spread across multiple cities
- Financial Institutions: Mainly Washington D.C.
- Regional Organizations: Within their respective regions
- Legal/Judicial Bodies: The Hague, Netherlands
- Economic Bodies: Various locations based on founding members

Exam Preparation Tips:
1. Focus on major UN agencies and their headquarters
2. Learn regional organizations' HQs (ASEAN, SAARC, AU, Arab League)
3. Remember financial institutions (World Bank, IMF, ADB, AIIB)
4. Know specialized bodies (OPEC, INTERPOL, ICC, ICJ)
5. Stay updated on newly formed organizations (AIIB, NDB)

Current Relevance (2024-25):
- Increased importance due to global cooperation on climate change (UNFCCC)
- Financial institutions' role in pandemic recovery and debt management
- Regional organizations' growing importance in geopolitics
- New multilateral institutions like AIIB challenging traditional order

Exam Context: Organization-headquarters analogies appear in:
- UPSC CSAT Paper-II (complex reasoning with current affairs)
- Banking PO/SO Mains examinations (especially for specialist officers)
- SSC CGL Tier-II (detailed general awareness)
- State PSC Mains (higher-level international affairs knowledge)
- Defense services exams (CDS, AFCAT) - geopolitical awareness
- MBA entrance exams (CAT, XAT) - if verbal reasoning includes GK
- International competitive exams for Indian students (GRE, GMAT)

Scoring Strategy:
- This is a scoring topic if prepared well, as questions are factual
- Create flashcards for top 30-40 international organizations
- Use mnemonic devices for cities hosting multiple organizations
- Regular revision is essential as this is pure memorization-based
- Connect with current affairs for better retention

Question 5

Isaac Newton : Law of Gravitation :: Albert Einstein : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Relationship Pattern: This analogy establishes a scientist-discovery/invention relationship. Isaac Newton is famous for discovering/inventing Law of Gravitation.

Scientific Context: Isaac Newton's work on Law of Gravitation revolutionized the field and is considered a landmark achievement in science/technology.

Pattern Application: Following the same relationship, we need to identify what Albert Einstein discovered or invented.

Scientific Verification: Albert Einstein is renowned for Theory of Relativity.

Answer: Theory of Relativity

Why This Discovery Was Important:
- Theory of Relativity had a profound impact on science, technology, or human understanding
- It represents a breakthrough that changed the course of scientific development
- The discovery/invention continues to have applications in modern times

Memory Aid: Group scientists by fields - Physics (Newton, Einstein, Thomson), Chemistry (Curie, Mendeleev), Biology (Darwin, Mendel, Fleming), Inventors (Edison, Bell, Marconi).

Exam Relevance: Scientist-discovery analogies are standard questions in SSC, Railway, Banking, and all competitive exams. Focus on major 19th and 20th-century discoveries.

Question 6

Bihu : Assam :: Garba : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Relationship Identification: Bihu is a traditional dance form that originated in Assam. This establishes a dance-origin relationship.

Cultural Context: Dance forms are integral to regional culture and reflect the artistic traditions, history, and social practices of their places of origin. Bihu represents the cultural heritage of Assam.

Pattern Application: We need to identify where the Garba dance form originated.

Cultural Verification: Garba is a traditional dance form from Gujarat.

Answer: Gujarat

Why This Is Medium Difficulty:
- Requires knowledge of regional Indian classical and folk dances
- Many states have multiple dance forms, requiring specific identification
- Tests understanding of both classical (Bharatanatyam, Kathak) and folk (Bihu, Garba) traditions
- Some dances are performed in multiple regions but have one primary origin

Cultural Significance:
- India has 8 classical dance forms recognized by the Sangeet Natak Akademi
- Each dance form has unique characteristics, costumes, and musical traditions
- Folk dances vary significantly across Indian states and reflect local festivals and traditions

Important Distinctions:
- Classical Dances: Bharatanatyam, Kathak, Kathakali, Kuchipudi, Manipuri, Mohiniyattam, Odissi, Sattriya
- Folk Dances: Bihu (Assam), Bhangra (Punjab), Garba (Gujarat), Ghoomar (Rajasthan), Lavani (Maharashtra)
- Some dances span multiple states (Chhau in Jharkhand/Odisha/West Bengal)

Memory Technique:
Create regional clusters:
- South: Bharatanatyam (TN), Kathakali/Mohiniyattam (Kerala), Kuchipudi (AP)
- East: Odissi (Odisha), Manipuri (Manipur), Sattriya (Assam), Bihu (Assam)
- North: Kathak (UP), Bhangra (Punjab), Ghoomar (Rajasthan)
- West: Garba (Gujarat), Lavani (Maharashtra)

Exam Context: Dance-origin analogies are asked in:
- SSC CGL (cultural awareness section)
- State PSC exams (especially in respective states)
- Railway NTPC and Group D
- Banking exams (general awareness)
- UPSC CSAT (occasionally in reasoning section)

Question 7

**Mexico** : **Peso** :: **Brazil** : **?**
The relationship is Country : Official Currency. Mexico uses the Peso as its official currency.

The missing term must be the official currency of Brazil.

The correct answer is Real, which is the currency of Brazil.

Question 8

Rabindranath Tagore : Gitanjali :: R.K. Narayan : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Relationship Pattern: This analogy establishes an author-literary work relationship. Rabindranath Tagore is the author of the famous work Gitanjali.

Literary Context: Gitanjali is one of the most renowned works by Rabindranath Tagore and represents their literary contribution.

Pattern Application: Following the same relationship, we need to identify a famous literary work by R.K. Narayan.

Literary Verification: R.K. Narayan is the author of Malgudi Days, which is one of their most celebrated works.

Answer: Malgudi Days

Additional Information:
- Both works are significant contributions to literature
- Gitanjali and Malgudi Days have received critical acclaim and popular recognition
- These works often appear in literature and general knowledge sections of exams

Memory Aid: Group authors by language/region - Indian English (Tagore, Narayan, Roy), Classical English (Shakespeare, Dickens), Hindi (Premchand), and Contemporary (Rushdie, Ghosh).

Exam Relevance: Author-book analogies are common in SSC, Railway, Banking exams and all competitive tests with a general awareness section.

Question 9

**Egypt** : **Pound** :: **Switzerland** : **?**
The relationship is Country : Official Currency. Egypt uses the Pound as its official currency.

The missing term must be the official currency of Switzerland.

The correct answer is Franc, which is the currency of Switzerland.

Question 10

**Article 32** : **Right to Constitutional Remedies** :: **Article 14** : **?**
The relationship is Constitutional Article : Subject/Provision. The subject matter of Article 32 is the Right to Constitutional Remedies (e.g., a Fundamental Right or DPSP).

Following this, the missing term is the provision contained within Article 14.

The correct answer is Equality before Law.

Question 11

Serena Williams : Tennis :: Simone Biles : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Relationship Pattern: This analogy establishes a player-sport relationship. Serena Williams is a famous Tennis player.

Sports Context: Serena Williams is one of the most renowned athletes in Tennis and has achieved significant success in this sport.

Pattern Application: Following the same relationship, we need to identify which sport Simone Biles plays.

Sports Verification: Simone Biles is a professional Gymnastics player.

Answer: Gymnastics

Additional Context:
- Both athletes are/were at the top of their respective sports
- They represent excellence in their fields and have won major championships/awards
- Knowledge of current sports personalities is essential for competitive exams

Memory Aid: Group athletes by sport - Cricket (Tendulkar, Kohli, Dhoni), Football (Messi, Ronaldo), Tennis (Federer, Nadal, Djokovic), Badminton (Sindhu, Nehwal).

Exam Relevance: Player-sport analogies are very common in SSC, Railway, Banking, and all competitive exams, especially with current Indian sports achievers.

Question 12

**Egypt** : **Pound** :: **Mexico** : **?**
The relationship is Country : Official Currency. Egypt uses the Pound as its official currency.

The missing term must be the official currency of Mexico.

The correct answer is Peso, which is the currency of Mexico.

Question 13

China : Yuan/Renminbi :: South Korea : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Relationship Identification: The official currency of China is Yuan/Renminbi. This establishes a country-currency economic relationship.

Economic Context: Currencies are official medium of exchange in countries and reflect national economic sovereignty. Understanding currency systems is essential for economic literacy.

Pattern Application: We need to identify the official currency of South Korea.

Economic Verification: The official currency of South Korea is Won.

Answer: Won

Why This Is Medium Difficulty:
- Requires knowledge of international currencies beyond major economies
- Some countries have unique currency names not derived from their country names
- The Euro is shared by multiple countries, adding complexity
- Currency names may have changed recently (e.g., Turkey's New Lira)

Important Notes:
- The Euro is used by 19+ European Union member states
- Some countries use another nation's currency (e.g., Ecuador uses US Dollar)
- Currency symbols are different from names ($ for Dollar, ₹ for Rupee, ¥ for Yen/Yuan)

Common Mistakes:
- Confusing similar currency names (Won vs. Yuan, Krone vs. Krona)
- Not knowing which European countries use Euro vs. their own currencies
- Outdated knowledge of currency reforms or name changes

Memory Technique:
Organize by regions:
- South Asia: India (Rupee), Pakistan (Rupee), Bangladesh (Taka), Sri Lanka (Rupee)
- East Asia: China (Yuan), Japan (Yen), South Korea (Won)
- Europe: UK (Pound), Switzerland (Franc), EU nations (Euro), Russia (Ruble)
- Americas: USA (Dollar), Canada (Dollar), Brazil (Real), Mexico (Peso)
- Middle East: Saudi Arabia (Riyal), UAE (Dirham), Kuwait (Dinar)

Current Relevance (2024-25): With global economic integration, cryptocurrency discussions, and forex markets gaining prominence, currency knowledge has become more important in banking and economic awareness sections.

Exam Context: Country-currency analogies are frequently asked in:
- Banking PO/Clerk exams (IBPS, SBI)
- SSC CGL Tier-I and Tier-II
- Railway NTPC and Group D
- State PSC preliminary exams
- UPSC CSAT (occasionally in reasoning section)

Question 14

**Article 32** : **Right to Constitutional Remedies** :: **Article 40** : **?**
The relationship is Constitutional Article : Subject/Provision. The subject matter of Article 32 is the Right to Constitutional Remedies (e.g., a Fundamental Right or DPSP).

Following this, the missing term is the provision contained within Article 40.

The correct answer is Organization of Village Panchayats.

Question 15

**Thailand** : **Baht** :: **Vietnam** : **?**
The relationship is Country : Official Currency. The Hard difficulty level uses currencies of less commonly tested nations. Thailand uses the Baht.

The missing term must be the official currency of Vietnam.

The correct answer is Dong. (e.g., Vietnam - Dong). These are often tested in highly competitive exams like UPSC/SSC.

Question 16

Flamenco : Spain :: Tango : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Relationship Identification: Flamenco is a traditional dance form that originated in Spain. This establishes a dance-origin relationship.

Cultural Context: Dance forms are integral to regional culture and reflect the artistic traditions, history, and social practices of their places of origin. Flamenco represents the cultural heritage of Spain.

Pattern Application: We need to identify where the Tango dance form originated.

Cultural Verification: Tango is a traditional dance form from Argentina.

Answer: Argentina

Why This Is Medium Difficulty:
- Requires knowledge of regional Indian classical and folk dances
- Many states have multiple dance forms, requiring specific identification
- Tests understanding of both classical (Bharatanatyam, Kathak) and folk (Bihu, Garba) traditions
- Some dances are performed in multiple regions but have one primary origin

Cultural Significance:
- India has 8 classical dance forms recognized by the Sangeet Natak Akademi
- Each dance form has unique characteristics, costumes, and musical traditions
- Folk dances vary significantly across Indian states and reflect local festivals and traditions

Important Distinctions:
- Classical Dances: Bharatanatyam, Kathak, Kathakali, Kuchipudi, Manipuri, Mohiniyattam, Odissi, Sattriya
- Folk Dances: Bihu (Assam), Bhangra (Punjab), Garba (Gujarat), Ghoomar (Rajasthan), Lavani (Maharashtra)
- Some dances span multiple states (Chhau in Jharkhand/Odisha/West Bengal)

Memory Technique:
Create regional clusters:
- South: Bharatanatyam (TN), Kathakali/Mohiniyattam (Kerala), Kuchipudi (AP)
- East: Odissi (Odisha), Manipuri (Manipur), Sattriya (Assam), Bihu (Assam)
- North: Kathak (UP), Bhangra (Punjab), Ghoomar (Rajasthan)
- West: Garba (Gujarat), Lavani (Maharashtra)

Exam Context: Dance-origin analogies are asked in:
- SSC CGL (cultural awareness section)
- State PSC exams (especially in respective states)
- Railway NTPC and Group D
- Banking exams (general awareness)
- UPSC CSAT (occasionally in reasoning section)

Question 17

Malaria : Chloroquine/Artemisinin :: Tuberculosis : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Relationship Identification: Chloroquine/Artemisinin is used to treat Malaria. This establishes a disease-treatment/medicine relationship.

Medical Context: Understanding disease-treatment relationships is crucial for health awareness and general knowledge. Chloroquine/Artemisinin represents the primary treatment approach or medication for Malaria.

Pattern Application: We need to identify the treatment or medicine used for Tuberculosis.

Medical Verification: Tuberculosis is treated with Rifampicin/Isoniazid.

Answer: Rifampicin/Isoniazid

Why This Is Medium Difficulty:
- Requires basic medical knowledge beyond common awareness
- Some diseases have multiple treatment options, requiring identification of primary treatment
- Tests understanding of both preventive (vaccination) and curative (medication) approaches
- Includes both specific drugs and treatment modalities

Important Medical Distinctions:
- Antibiotics: Used for bacterial infections (Tuberculosis, Typhoid)
- Antivirals: Used for viral infections (HIV, Hepatitis, COVID-19)
- Vaccines: Preventive measures for diseases (Polio, Smallpox, Measles)
- Hormone Therapy: Used for deficiency diseases (Insulin for Diabetes, Thyroxine for Thyroid)
- Supportive Treatment: Some diseases have no specific cure (Dengue, some viral fevers)

Key Medical Facts:
- Antibiotics don't work for viral diseases
- Many modern diseases require combination therapy
- Some diseases are prevented through vaccination rather than treated after infection
- Antimicrobial resistance is making some traditional treatments less effective

Common Mistakes:
- Thinking antibiotics work for all diseases (they don't work for viruses)
- Not distinguishing between preventive vaccines and curative treatments
- Confusing similar-sounding diseases or medicines
- Outdated knowledge about treatment protocols

Memory Technique:
Group by disease type:
- Bacterial Infections: Tuberculosis (Antibiotics), Typhoid (Antibiotics), Cholera (ORS + Antibiotics)
- Viral Infections: HIV (ART), COVID-19 (Antivirals), Dengue (Supportive care)
- Chronic Diseases: Diabetes (Insulin), Hypertension (Antihypertensives), Cancer (Chemotherapy)
- Vaccine-Preventable: Polio, Smallpox, Measles, Tetanus, Rabies

Current Relevance (2024-25):
- COVID-19 treatment protocols have evolved significantly
- Antimicrobial resistance is a major global health concern
- New cancer therapies and targeted treatments are emerging
- Vaccine development has accelerated post-pandemic

Exam Context: Disease-medicine analogies appear in:
- SSC CGL and CHSL (science and health awareness)
- Railway NTPC and Group D
- Banking exams (general awareness)
- State PSC examinations
- Current affairs sections often include new drug approvals or disease outbreaks

Question 18

Sudirman Cup : Badminton (Mixed) :: BWF World Championships : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Relationship Identification: The Sudirman Cup is a prestigious tournament/trophy associated with Badminton (Mixed). This establishes a trophy-sport relationship.

Sports Context: Tournaments and trophies are organized competitions in various sports. The Sudirman Cup is one of the major championships in Badminton (Mixed).

Pattern Application: We need to identify which sport the BWF World Championships is associated with.

Sports Verification: BWF World Championships is a tournament/championship in Badminton.

Answer: Badminton

Why This Is Medium Difficulty:
- Requires knowledge beyond just player names to tournament structures
- Some trophies have similar names but are for different sports
- Tests understanding of both international and domestic tournaments
- Includes less commonly known tournaments and cups

Important Distinctions:
- International Tournaments: FIFA World Cup, ICC World Cup, Olympics
- Continental Championships: UEFA Champions League, Copa America, Asian Cup
- Domestic Tournaments: Ranji Trophy (Indian cricket), Durand Cup (Indian football)
- Team Cups: Davis Cup (tennis), Thomas/Uber Cup (badminton), Sultan Azlan Shah Cup (hockey)

Common Confusions:
- Thomas Cup (Badminton-Men) vs. Uber Cup (Badminton-Women) vs. Sudirman Cup (Badminton-Mixed)
- Multiple football tournaments: FIFA World Cup vs. UEFA Champions League vs. Copa America
- Cricket trophies: Ranji Trophy (domestic) vs. ICC World Cup (international) vs. Ashes (bilateral)

Memory Technique:
Group by sport and level:
- Cricket: World Cup, Champions Trophy, T20 World Cup (International); Ranji Trophy, Irani Trophy (Domestic)
- Football: FIFA World Cup, UEFA Champions League (International); Durand Cup, Santosh Trophy (India)
- Tennis: Grand Slams (Wimbledon, US Open, French Open, Australian Open); Davis Cup (Team)
- Badminton: All England, World Championships (Individual); Thomas/Uber/Sudirman Cup (Team)
- Hockey: World Cup, Champions Trophy; Sultan Azlan Shah Cup

Exam Context: Trophy-sport analogies appear in:
- SSC CGL and CHSL
- Railway NTPC and Group D
- Banking PO/Clerk exams
- State PSC examinations
- Defense services exams (NDA, CDS)
- Current affairs-based questions often include recent tournament winners

Question 19

Thomas Edison : Electric Bulb :: Alexander Fleming : ?
Step-by-step solution:

Relationship Pattern: This analogy establishes a scientist-discovery/invention relationship. Thomas Edison is famous for discovering/inventing Electric Bulb.

Scientific Context: Thomas Edison's work on Electric Bulb revolutionized the field and is considered a landmark achievement in science/technology.

Pattern Application: Following the same relationship, we need to identify what Alexander Fleming discovered or invented.

Scientific Verification: Alexander Fleming is renowned for Penicillin.

Answer: Penicillin

Why This Discovery Was Important:
- Penicillin had a profound impact on science, technology, or human understanding
- It represents a breakthrough that changed the course of scientific development
- The discovery/invention continues to have applications in modern times

Memory Aid: Group scientists by fields - Physics (Newton, Einstein, Thomson), Chemistry (Curie, Mendeleev), Biology (Darwin, Mendel, Fleming), Inventors (Edison, Bell, Marconi).

Exam Relevance: Scientist-discovery analogies are standard questions in SSC, Railway, Banking, and all competitive exams. Focus on major 19th and 20th-century discoveries.

Question 20

Complete the analogy: **Vienna** : **Danube** :: **?** : **Blue Nile & White Nile**
The analogy establishes the relationship Major City : River it is situated on. The city of Vienna is located on the Danube River.

We must identify the city situated on the Blue Nile & White Nile.

The correct term is Khartoum. This question is challenging as it tests knowledge of less common global cities and uses a reverse analogy pattern.
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