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Function Class 11th-Term Test

The document contains a series of mathematical problems involving set theory, relations, functions, and number theory. It includes questions about set operations, relations between sets, and properties of functions, along with multiple-choice answers. The problems are aimed at testing knowledge in discrete mathematics and logical reasoning.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
15 views9 pages

Function Class 11th-Term Test

The document contains a series of mathematical problems involving set theory, relations, functions, and number theory. It includes questions about set operations, relations between sets, and properties of functions, along with multiple-choice answers. The problems are aimed at testing knowledge in discrete mathematics and logical reasoning.

Uploaded by

hiddensoul2025
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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1. Let A be a set of even natural number less than 8.

If A = {1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7} and B = {2, 3, 4, 8, 9},


8 and B be a set of prime numbers less than 12, then n((A × B)  (B × A)) is equal to
then number of relations from A to B is
(1) 1 (2) 4
(1) 215 – 1 (2) 215
(3) 9 (4) 16
(3) 28 – 1 (4) 28
9. The relation R defined on the set A = {1, 2, 3, 4}
2. The set A has 5 elements and B has 7 elements.
If minimum of n (A  B) and maximum of n(A  by R = {(x, y): x 2 + y 2 < 12} is given by
B) are 1 and 2 respectively then 1 + 2 is (1) {(1, 1), (1, 2), (1, 3)}
equal to
(1) 5 (2) 7 (2) {(1, 1), (1, 2), (2, 1)}

(3) 12 (4) 18 (3) {(1, 1), (1, 2), (2, 1), (3, 1), (1, 3), (2, 3), (3,
3. A group of 123 workers went to a canteen for 2)}
cold drink, ice cream and tea. 42 workers took (4) {(1, 1), (1, 2), (1, 3), (3, 1), (2, 1), (2, 2)}
ice cream, 36 tea and 30 cold drink. 15 workers
purchased ice cream and tea, 10 ice cream and
cold drink, and 4 cold drink and tea but not ice  2
cream, 11 took ice cream and tea but not cold 10. The value of log5 82  log 2 5  log3 5  is equal
 5

drink. Then number of workers who did not
purchase anything are to Where [ . ] denotes the greatest integer
(1) 32 (2) 36 function.
(3) 40 (4) 44 (1) 4 (2) 5
4. If A and B are two sets such that n (A) = 9 and
(3) 6 (4) 7
n(B) = 7 and n(A  B)  . Then the minimum
value of n(A  B), is
11. The value of 49 7  is equal to
2log 5

(1) 0 (2) 1
(3) 2 (4) 16 1
(1) (2) 1
5. If A, B and C are three non-empty sets if A B 52
and B C, then which of the following is false? (3) 52 (4) 54
(1) A  B  C = C
1+ x  2x 
(2) A  B  C = A 12. If f(x) = log , where x  ±1 then f 
1– x  1+ x 2 
(3) A  B = B  C
(4) B – A = C – B is
6. 2–x,
If A = {(x, y); y = x, y  R} and B = {(x, y);
y = x, x, y  R }, then which of the following is 1
(1) f (x ) (2) 2 f ( x )
true? 2
(1) A  B is null set 1

(2) A  B is singleton set (3) (f(x))2 (4) (f ( x )) 2

(3) A  B is a set containing exactly two distinct


1
elements 13. The domain of f (x) = x –1+ is
5–x
(4) A  B is infinite set
(1) [1, 5] (2) (1, 5]
7. Let A and B be two disjoint subsets of a
universal set U. Then (A  B)  B = (3) [1, 5) (4) (1, 5)
(1) A  B (2) B 1
14. The range of f(x) = {x} + , where · denotes
(3) A – B (4)  x
fractional function, is
(1) [2, ) (2) (2, )
(3) (1, ) (4) R
22. The range of f(x) = 2
x 2 –3  27
3

is
1
15. The domain of the function f(x) = (1) (0, ) (2) (1, )
x – 1 – x2 (3) [1, ) (4) [2, )

 1   1  23. Let f(x) be a function such that f (x + y) = f (x)


(1)  –1, –   , 1 f (y); x, y  R ; and f(0) = 1, f(1) = 9.
 2  2 
(2) (–1, 1]  1
If 3g(x) = f(x) (1 – g(x)), then g   is equal to
 2
 1   1 
(3)  – , –    ,  (1) 4 (2) 2
 2 2 
1
 1  (3) 1 (4)
(4)  ,1 2
 2 
24. Let the least and the greatest positive integral
solutions of |x 2 – 4x + 3| + |2x – 5| = |x2 – 6x +
  
16. The range of f(x) =  x 2 + 1  +  x 2 + 1 + 2x  8| are m and n respectively then the value of m
+ 2 –x , [·] and {·} represent greatest integer + n is
function and fractional function, is (1) 2 (2) 3
(1) [2, ) (2) [3, ) (3) 4 (4) 5
(3) [4, ) (4) R 25. The number of solutions of |x – 2| + |x – 5| = 8
is
19
 r 
17. The value of  100 + 10  ; [·] denotes
(1) Zero (2) One
r = 10
(3) Two (4) Infinite
greatest integer function, is
1
(1) 1055 (2) 1010  x  2017
26. The domain of f(x) =  is
(3) 1000 (4) 1001  | x | – 1
(1) {–1, 1} (2) R ~ {–1, 1}
1
18. The domain of f (x) = where [·] (3) R (4) (–1, 1)
5[ x ] – [ x ]2 – 4
denotes greatest integer function, is 27. If f(x + 2) = x 3 + 8, then f(x) is equal to

(1) [2, 4] (2) [1, 4) (1) x 3 + 6x2 + 12x (2) x 3 – 6x2 + 12x
(3) (1, 4) (4) [2, 4) (3) x 3 – 6x2 – 12x (4) x 3 + 6x 2 – 12x
19. If f (2x + y, 2x – y) = 8xy, then value of f(x, y) +
f (y, x) is 28. The range of f(x) = 5– x 2 – 4 x  4 is

(1) 0 (2) 2 (1) [0, ) (2) [0, 4]


(3) 4 (4) 6
(3) 0, 5  (4) [2, 4]
1
log2 x 29. The non-integral solution of 2 [x] = x + {x}; where
20. The domain of f(x) = x is
[·] and {·} denotes greatest integer function and
(1) R ~ {1} (2) (0, 1)
fractional function, is
(3) (1, ) (4) (0, 1)  (1, )
1 3
 x 2 – x  1 (1) (2)
21. The range of f (x) = log 1  2 2 2
 , is
9
 x  x  1
5 7
(3) (4)
 1   1 1 2 2
(1)  – , 3 (2)  – , 
 3   2 2 30. The greatest integral value which satisfy
1 
(3)  , 1 (4) [–1, 1]
2 
( x – 2)( x – 5) 38. If A = {a, b, c}, B = {b, c, d}, C = {a, d, c} then
 0 is (A – B) × (B  C) is equal to
x–8
(1) 2 (2) 5 (1) {(a, c), (a, d)} (2) {(a, b), (c, d)}

(3) 7 (4) 8 (3) {(c, a), (d, a)} (4) {(a, c), (a, d), (c,
d)}
31. If P, Q and R are three sets such that P  Q
= P  R and P  Q = P  R, then 39. If n(A) denote the number of elements in the set
A and if n(A) = 4, n(B) = 5 and n(A  B) = 3, then
(1) P = R (2) Q = R
n[(A × B)  (B × A)] is equal to
(3) P  Q =  (4) P = Q
(1) 7 (2) 8
32. The shaded region in the figure represents
(3) 9 (4) 16
U
40. Universal set X = {x : x5 – 6x4 + 11x3 – 6x2 = 0}
A B and A = {x : x2 – 5x + 6 = 0}, B = {x : x2 – 3x + 2 =
0}, then (A  B)C is equal to
(1) {1, 3} (2) {1, 2, 3}
C (3) {0, 1, 3} (4) {0, 1, 2, 3}

(1) A B  C (2) (A  B)  C 41. Let P = {1, 2, 3, 4}, Q = {2, 4, 6}. Then the
number of sets R such that P  Q  R  P  Q
(3) A  B  C (4) (A  B)  C is
33. If S is a set with 10 elements and
(1) 6 (2) 8
A = {(x, y) : x, y  S, x  y}, then the number of
(3) 10 (4) 12
elements in A is
42. Let A and B be the sets of all positive divisors of
(1) 40 (2) 45
400 and 1000 respectively (including 1 and itself).
(3) 80 (4) 90 Then n(A  B) is equal to

 4x – 1  (1) 6 (2) 8
34. x  R : 3  R  equals
 x – 5 x  6x
2
 (3) 10 (4) 12
43. If n(A) = 4, n(B) = 3 and n(A × B × C) = 24, then
(1) R – {0} (2) R – {0, 2, 3}
n(C) is equal to
(3) R – {0, –2, –3} (4) R –  2,3 (1) 1 (2) 2

35. Let P and Q be two sets, then (P  Q)C  (PC  (3) 212 (4) 144
Q) is equal to 44. In a class of 30 students 12 take Civics, 16 take
Physics and 18 take Economics. If all 30
(1) PC (2) P
students take atleast one subject and no one
(3) Q C (4) Q takes all three, then the number of students
taking exactly 2 subjects is
36. If A = {x, y, z}, B = {r, z}, C = {r, s, t}, then
A  (B  C) is (1) 16 (2) 6
(1) {x, y} (2)  (3) 8 (4) 20
(3) {r, s} (4) {x, y, z, r} 45. Let A = {x, y, z}, B = {a, b, c, d}. Which one of
the following is not a relation from A to B?
37. Three sets A, B, C are such that A = B  C and
B = C  A, then (1) {(x, a), (x, c)} (2) {(y, c), (y, d)}
(1) A = C (2) A  B (3) {(z, a), (z, d)} (4) {(z, b), (y, b), (a,
(3) A = B (4) A  BC d)}
46. Let A = {1, 2, 3}, B = {2, 3, 4}, then which of the (4) [7, 8]
following relations is a function from A to B?
52. The largest possible set of real numbers which
(1) {(1, 2), (2, 3), (3, 4), (2, 2)}
1
(2) {(1, 2), (2, 3), (1, 3)} can be the domain of f ( x )  1– is
x
(3) {(1, 3), (2, 3), (3, 3)}
(1) (0, 1)  (0, )
(4) {(2, 3), (3, 4)}
(2) (–1, 0)  (1, )
47. The domain of the function f(x) = log2 (log3 (log4
x)) is (3) (–, –1)  (0, )
(1) (–, 4) (2) (4, )
(4) (– , 0)  1,  
(3) (0, 4) (4) (1, )
53. If f is a real valued function such that f(x + y)
48. If f : R  R is defined by f ( x )   2 x  – 2[ x ]  x  R
= f(x) + f(y)  x, y R and f(1) = 5, then the
(where [x] the greatest integer  x), then the
value of f(10) is
range of f is
(1) {x  R : 0  x  1} (2) {0, 1} (1) 50 (2) 25

(3) {x  R : x > 0} (4) {x  R : x  0} (3) 125 (4) 5

54. If Q denotes the set of all rational numbers and


49. The domain of the function f(x) = e 13 x –15– 2 x 2 is
 p p
f  p 2 – q 2 for any  Q , then observe
 –3  q q
(1)  – , (2)  – , 3 
 2   2  the following statements

 p p
3  f   is real for each  Q
(3) 5,   (4)  , 5 
(I)
q q
2 

1
50. If f : R  R is defined by f(x) = x – [x] –  p p
for (II) f   is non-real for each  Q , then
2 q q
x  R (where [ ] denotes the greatest integer which of the following is correct?
 1 (1) Both (I) and (II) are true
function), then  x  R : f ( x )   is equal to
 2
(2) (I) is true, (II) is false
(1) Z, the set of all integers (3) (I) is false, (II) is true
(2) N, the set of all natural numbers (4) Both (I) & (II) are false
(3) , the empty set 55. If [x] denotes the greatest integer  x, then

(4) R, the set of real numbers  2  2 1   2 2   2 98 


 3    3  99    3  99   .......   3  99 
       
 15 x – x 2  is equal to
51. The domain of f ( x )  log7   is
 56 
(1) 86

(1) [3, 5] (2) 66

(2) [4, 5] (3) 98

(3) [6, 7] (4) 76


(3) 4 (4) 3
 1 1
56. Let f  x    x  2 , |x|  2, then f(x)
2
 x  x 64. If An is the set of first n even natural numbers,
is equal to  11   9 
n   An   n   An   , then  is equal to
(1) x2 (2) x 2 – 1    
 n 5   n4 
(3) x2 – 2 (4) x 2 + 1
57. The function 'f' satisfies the equation (1) 15 (2) 12

 x  59  (3) 18 (4) 11
3f ( x )  2f    10 x  30 x  R – {1} .
 x –1  65. In a certain town 25% families own a two
The value of f(7) is wheeler, 15% families own a four wheeler and
(1) 4 (2) 8 65% families own neither a two wheeler nor a
four wheeler. If 500 families own both a two
(3) 11 (4) 44
wheeler and a four wheeler, then total number of
58. For any two sets, A – B is equivalent to families in the town is
(1) A  B (2) A  B
(1) 10000 (2) 20000
(3) A  B (4) A – B
(3) 30000 (4) 40000
59. The domain of the function g(x) = log3(x2 – 1) is
66. If A = {a}, P(A) denotes power set of A, then
(1) (–3, – 1)  (1,  ) number of subsets of P(P(P(A))) is

(2)  –3, – 1  1,   (1) 2 2 (2) 24


(3) 2 8 (4) 216
(3) (–, –1)  (1, )
67. If A = {a, b, 1, 2, 3} & B = {b, c, 2, 3, 5}, then
(4)  –3, – 2  (–2, – 1)  (1,  ) n((A × B)  (B × A)) is equal to
(1) 1 (2) 4
60. The range of the function f ( x )  ( x – 3)(8 – x )
is (3) 9 (4) 16

(1) [0, 3] (2) [0, 8] 68. A relation R defined on the set of whole numbers
as {(x, y) : x – y = 5}, is given by
 5 (1) {(6, 1), (2, 7), (8, 3) .......}
(3) [3, 8] (4) 0, 
 2 (2) {(5, 0), (6, 1), (7, 2) ..........}
61. Let X = the set of all letters in the word (3) {(0, 5), (1, 6), (2, 7) ..........}
"CLIFTON" and Y = the set of all letters in the (4) {(1, 6), (2, 7), (3, 8) .......}
word "CLINTON". Then which one is incorrect?
69. Let R be a relation on the set of whole numbers
(1) n(X) – n(Y) = 1 defined by R = {(x, y) : 2x + 4y = 12}. Then
(2) 6(n (X)) = 7(n (Y)) domain of R is
(1) {2, 4}
(3) (n (X))2 – (n (Y))2 = n(X) + n(Y)
(2) {0, 2, 4, 6}
(4) n(X  Y) = 1
(3) {0, 2, 4}
62. For any two sets X and Y, X' – Y is equal to
(4) {0, 1, 2, 3}
(1) Y' – X' (2) Y – X
70. Which one of the following represents function?
(3) (X  Y)' (4) (X  Y)'
(1) x2 + y = 5 (2) x + y2 = 9
63. If A and B are two sets such that n(A) = 9 and (3) x 4 + y2 = 11 (4) x3 + y 4 = 13
n(B) = 5 and A  B  . Then the number of
possible values that n(A  B) can have is 71. If a function f : N  R is defined by f ( x )  x,
(1) 6 (2) 5 f (49)
then is equal to
f (16)  f (9)
7 4 5–
(1) (2) –1 (3) (4)
4 5– 4
(3) 1 (4) Zero 80. The domain of function f(x) = log [x] (x – [x]);
(where [  ] = represents greatest integer
x–5 function), is
72. The domain of f(x) =  x – 4, is
x–4
(1) 2,   (2) (2,  )
(1)  4,   (2) (4,  )
(3) (2,  ) – {3, 4, 5....} (4) R ~ I
(3) 5,   (4) (5, )
x 1
81. If f ( x )  ; x  1, then f(2018x), is equal to
x –1
x –5
73. The domain of f ( x )  , is
8– x f ( x )  2018 f ( x )  2018
(1) (2)
f ( x ) – 2018 1  2018 f ( x )
(1) (–8, 8) (2)  – , – 5  5,  
2019 f ( x )  2017 2019 f ( x )  1
(3)  –8, – 5  5, 8 (4) R (3)
2017 f ( x )  2019
(4)
2018 f ( x ) – 1

1 82. If f(2017x + y, 2017x – y) = 8068xy, then the


74. The domain of f ( x )  , is value of f(x, y) + f(y, x) is equal to
x –x
(1) 0 (2) 2017
(1) R + (2) R –
(3) 4034 (4) 8068
(3) R (4) 
83. The number of solution(s) of x – 1 – x – 6   ,
2
x –1 when   (–5, 5) is/are
75. The range of f ( x )  2
; x  0, is
x (1) 0 (2) 1

(1)  – , 1 (2) 0,   (3) 2 (4) Infinite


84. The exhaustive range of x for which satisfies
(3)  –, 0 (4) (– , 1)
x 2 – 7 x  10  x  x 2 – 6 x  10 , is

1– 10 x
76. The range of f ( x )  , is (1) [2, 5] (2) 2,  
1  10 x
(4) [0, 2]   5,  
(1) R (2) 0,   (3) R

85. The values of a and b for which the identity f(x


(3) R + (4) (–1, 1)
+ 1) –f(x) = 6x + 5 is satisfied where f(x) = ax2 +
77. If log2 log1/2 log4 x > 0, then x belongs to bx + c, are
(1) (4,  ) (2) (1, 2) (1) a = 2, b = 3

(3) (0, 4) (4) (1, 4) (2) a = 3, b = 2


78. The value of log5 50  log4 5  log7 4 lies in (3) a = 2, b = 2
(1) (2, 3) (2) (3, 4) (4) a = 3, b = 3
(3) (4, 5) (4) (5, 6) 86. The number of integral values of x in the domain
79. If log6 24 = , then the value of log18 36, is of f ( x )  5[ x ] – [ x ]2 – 6 ; ([  ] is represents
greatest integer function); is/are
4 –5
(1) (2)
–5 4 (1) 0 (2) 1
(3) 2 (4) 3
94. The range of the function f(x) = x 2 is
2
–1) 1
2
87. The range of f ( x )  3( x is (1) (–, 0] (2) R

(1) 0,   (2) 1,   (3) R+ (4) [0, )


95. A, B, C are three finite sets such that A  B 
(3) 3,   (4) 9,   C has 10 elements. If the sets A  B, B  C and
C  A have 100, 150 and 200 elements,
88. The domain and range of
respectively. Then the number of elements in
f (x)  x – 4  2 x – 5 + x–4–2 x–5 , A  B  C is
(1) 325
are  1,   and   2 ,   respectively. Then 1 + 2
is (2) 352

(1) 5 (2) 2 (3) 235


(3) 3 (4) 7 (4) 253
96. Let A and B be two sets such that n(A – B)
 x2  = 60 + 3x, n(B – A) = 8x and n(A  B) = x – 4.
89. If function f : [–5, 5]  R is given by f ( x )    ,
   If n(A) = n(B), then value of x is
then the set of values of  for which (1) 12

f(x) = 0 x  [–5, 5] is (where [  ] denotes the (2) 5


greatest integer function) (3) 9

(1) 25,   (4) 8


97. There are 400 students in a class, who study one
(2) (25,  ) or more subjects, given that 250 students study
Mathematics, 150 study Physics and 100
(3) 5,   Chemistry, 100 of them study both Maths and
Physics, 60 study both Maths and Chemistry, 40
(4) (5,  ) study both Physics and Chemistry. It is also
known that 30 students study all three subjects
90. The range of f(x) = sgn (x2) is Maths, Physics and Chemistry. Then number of
students in the class who study some subject
(1) {0, 1} (2) {–1, 0, 1}
other than Maths, Physics and Chemistry.
(3) [0, 1] (4) R (1) 30 (2) 40
91. If A = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}, B = {1, 3, 5, 8}, C = {2, 5, 7, 8}, (3) 50 (4) 70
then the value of (A – B)  (A – C) is 98. If A be set of odd natural numbers less than 10
and B is set of prime numbers less than 12, then
(1) {2, 4} (2) {4}
the maximum number of possible relations from
(3) {3, 4} (4) {2, 3, 4} A to B is
92. If A, B, C are three sets and U is the universal (1) 230 (2) 225
set such that n(U) = 800, n(A) = 200, n(B) = 300 (3) 302 (4) 252
and n(A  B) = 100. Then n(A'  B') = 99. The range of function y = f(x) if 5x + 5 y = 5, is
(1) 300 (2) 500 (1) (– , – 1) (2) (– , 1)
(3) 400 (4) 100
(3)  – , 1 (4) (1,  )
93. If X = {m | m  Z and m2
= 4}, then total number
of possible subsets of X is 100. Let y = sgn (x), then which is not true?
(1) 2 (2) 4 (1) x  x sgn( x )
(3) 8 (4) 16
(2) sgn  sgn( x )  sgn( x )
(3) x  x sgn( x )
(3)  – , – 2  2, 5  (5, )
(4) x  x sgn  x  (4) (– , – 2)  (2, 5)  (5, )
101. The value of x if –1  [2x – 3]  3, where []
log3 ( x  5)
represents greatest integer function, belongs to 108. The domain of f ( x )  is
x2 – x – 6
 7  7
(1) 1,  (2) 1,  (1) (–5,  ) – {–2, 3} (2) (–5,  ) – {2, – 3}
 2  2
(3) (–5, – 2)  (3,  ) (4) (–5, )
 7  5
(3)  1,  (4)  –1,  109. Let A = {3, 4, 5, 6} and B = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,
 2  2
8, 9}. A relation defined from A to B is given by
102. The domain of the function f(x) = loge[x] (where R = {(a, b) : b = a + 2, a  A, b  B}. Then range
[·] denotes the greatest integer function) is of R is
(1) (0, ) (2) [1, )
(1) {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9}
(3) [2, ) (4) 
(2) {5, 6, 7, 8}
103. If S = {1, 2, 3, ............., 10}, K = {a, b, c, d},
G = {b, d, e, f } . The number of elements of (3) {3, 4, 5, 6}
(S × K)  (S × G), is (4) {5, 7, 8, 9}
(1) 40 (2) 100 110. If x  [–1, 1] then the value of
(3) 60 (4) 160
104. The value of f ( x )  x 2  2 x  1 – x 2 – 2x  1 is
 1   2  (1) –2 (2) 2
x   2    2    2
 100   100  (3) –2x (4) 2x
 99 
...   2   is equal to ([] represents 1
 100  111. The domain of f ( x )  is
greatest integer function) x – 2 – ( x – 2)
(1) 100 2 (2) 140
(3) 200 (4) 141
(1)  – , 2 (2)  –, 2

  (3) 2,   (4) (2,  )


105. If log2  log 1 log3 ( x )    0 then x belongs to
  112. If n(A × B) = 45, then n(A) cannot be
 2 

 – , 3 
(1) 15 (2) 9
(1) (1, 3) (2)
(3) 5 (4) 12
(3)  0, 3  (4) 1, 3  1 x2
106. Let f(x) = 3x2 + 6x + 5 and g(x) = (x + 1) then 113. The range of the function f(x) = is
1  x2
f
the value of (2)  (1) [–1, 1] (2) (–1, 0]
g
29 (3) [0, 1] (4) (–1, 1]
(1) 29 (2)
3 114. Let A = {x  R, –1  x  1} = B and
3 C = {x  R : x  0} and
(3) 10 (4)
29 Let P = {(x, y)  A × B : x2 + y2 = 1} and
2
x –4 Q = {(x, y)  A × C : x2 + y2 = 1}.Then
107. The domain of f ( x )  3
is
x –5 (1) P defines a function from A to B
(1)  – , – 2  2,   (2) Q defines a function from A to C
(3) Q defines a function from A to B
(2)  – , – 2  5,  
(4) P defines a function from A to C
x –1
115. If f(x) = , x  –1 then f(2x) is
x 1
f (x)  1 3f ( x )  1
(1) (2)
f (x)  3 f (x)  3
f (x)  3 f (x)  3
(3) (4)
f (x)  1 3f ( x )  1
116. If f(x) = a x , a > 0, a  1 then which of the
following does not hold?
(1) f(x + 2) – 2f(x + 1) + f(x) = (a – 1)2 f(x)
(2) f(–x)f(x) – 1 = 0
(3) f(x + y) = f(x)  f(y)
(4) f(x + 3) – 2f(x + 2) + f(x + 1) = (a – 2)2 f(x +
1)

 x 
117. The range of f ( x )    , where [  ]
1  x 2 
represents greatest integer function is
(1) {–1, 1} (2) {–1, 0}
(3) {0, 1} (4) {–1, 0, 1}
118. If a function satisfies the relation

 1– x 
2f ( x – 1) – f    x, x R ~ {0} . Then f(x)
 x 
=
2x 2 – 4 x  3 2x 2  4 x  3
(1) (2)
3( x  1) 3( x – 1)
2x 2  4 x  3 2x 2  4 x  3
(3) (4)
3( x  1) x 1
119. If f(x + 2y, 2x + y) = 2xy then f(x, y) =
2 2
(1) (2y – x )(2x – y ) (2) ( x – 2y )(2 x – y )
9 9
2 2
(3) ( x – y )( x – 2y ) (4) (2 x – y )( x – y )
9 9
120. Let A be a set represented by the squares of
natural numbers and x, y are any two elements
of A. Then,
(1) x – y  A (2) xy  A
x
(3) x + y  A (4) A
y

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