-
- 69
- 70
- 71
- 73
According to the Indian Councils Act, 1909, the Governor General’s Council was to consist of 69 numbers out of which member of non-officials was _____.
-
- 25
- 28
- 30
- 32
The Indian Councils Act, 1909 raised the number of members of Executive Council from _____.
-
- 2 to 4
- 3 to 5
- 7 to 9
- 9 to 11
As a result of the Minto-Morley Reforms, 1909, an Indian was made member of Governor General’s Executive Council. His name was _____.
-
- Motilal Nehru
- C. K. Nydu
- S. P. Sinha
- V. Patel
For the first time the Muslim demand of separate electorate system was conceded in the _____.
-
- Mon-Ford Reforms, 1919
- Minto-Morley Reforms, 1909
- Indian Councils Act, 1892
- Indian Councils Act, 1861
Montagu-Chelmsford introduced the Bill of Reforms in the House of Commons in June 1919 which was given Royal assent in _____.
-
- October, 1919
- August, 1919
- December, 1919
- September, 1919
The Government of India Act, 1919 provided that the salary of the Secretary of State would be paid by _____.
-
- the Viceroy in India
- the Sindh Government
- the Punjab Government
- the British Exchequer
The Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms, 1919 introduced a bicameral legislature at Centre. It consisted of a Council of State and Central Legislative Assembly. The former comprised of _____.
-
- 30 members
- 40 members
- 50 members
- 60 members
According to the Government of India Act, 1919, the Central Legislature comprised of _____.
-
- 145 members
- 150 members
- 155 members
- 160 members
According to the Government of India Act, 1919, the Central Legislature comprised of 145 members. Out of these 145 members of Central Legislature, the number of elected members was _____.
-
- 102
- 103
- 104
- 105
The above Multiple Choice Question (MCQ) has been selected from Sub-Continent Affairs Category. Sub-Continent Affairs MCQs are sometimes called Indo-Pak MCQs. We try our level best to provide you with error-free questions/MCQs. However, in case you find any mistake in the MCQs, feel free to contact us for its correction. It is pertinent to mention here that the Subcontinent Affairs MCQs have their own importance and are repeatedly included in different examinations. Some leading testing agencies / organizations such as Central Superior Service (CSS), Federal Public Service Commission (FPSC), Punjab Public Service Commission (PPSC), Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Public Service Commission (KPPSC), Balochistan Public Service Commission (BPSC), Sindh Public Service Commission (SPSC), National Testing Services (NTS), Open Testing Services (OTS), Universal Testing Services (UTS), Pakistan Testing Services (PTS), Central Testing Services (CTS), Allied Testing Services (ATS), Educational Testing and Evaluation Agency (ETEA) etc. used to include MCQs from Sub-Continent Affairs category. The SubContinent Affairs MCQs are not only beneficial for the Job seekers (Jobs MCQs) but also helpful for the students who are trying to seek admissions in educational institutions / universities of their choice preceded by appearing in their Entry Test Exams (Entry Test MCQs). These tests include UET ECAT (is a test based on Physics, Mathematics, Chemistry and English), MDCAT (is a mandatory admission test for medical and dental college), SAT (include SAT-I “a reasoning test” and SAT-II “a subject test”), GRE (it is also known as Graduate Record Examination comprises two types of tests, the GRE subject (subjects include Physics, Biology, Chemistry, Psychology and English Literature) and the GRE general test (Analytical Writing Assessment, Verbal Reasoning and Quantitative Reasoning), LCAT (LUMS common admissions test is mandatory for candidates seeking admission at LUMS), NUST Entry Test, COMSATS-NTS Test, LAT (Law Admissions Test is a mandatory pre-admission test to get admission in LLB 5 years program) etc. In addition, the information contained in MCQs is equally beneficial for the those who are fond of gathering and enhancing their knowledge.