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MATHS

DPP
DAILY PRACTICE PROBLEMS

DPP No : 2 Class : 11 Chapter : Set Theory

1. Given the sets A = {1, 2, 3}, B = {3,4} , C = {4, 5, 6}, then A ∪ ( B ∩ C ) is

(1) {3} (2) {1, 2, 3, 4} (3) {1, 2, 4, 5} (4) {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}


2. If A and B are any two sets, then A ∪ ( A ∩ B ) is equal to

(1) A (2) B (3) A c (4) B c

3. If A and B are two given sets, then A ∩ ( A ∩ B) c is equal to

(1) A (2) B (3) φ (4) A ∩ B c


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4. If the sets A and B are defined as A = {( x, y ) : y = , 0 ≠ x ∈ R} B = {( x, y ) : y = − x, x ∈ R} , then
x
(1) A ∩ B = A (2) A ∩ B = B (3) A ∩ B = φ (4) None of these

5. Let A = [ x : x ∈ R, − 1 < x < 1] ; B = [ x : x ∈ R, x ≤ 0 or x ≥ 2] and A ∪ B = R − D, then the set D is

(1) [ x : 1 < x ≤ 2] (2) [ x : 1 ≤ x < 2]

(3) [ x : 1 ≤ x ≤ 2] (4) None of these

6. The shaded region in the given figure is

(1) A ∩ (B ∪ C) (2) A ∪ (B ∩ C) (3) A ∩ (B – C) (4) A – (B ∪ C)


7. If A, B and C are any three sets, then A – (B ∪ C) is equal to
(1) (A – B) ∪ (A – C) (2) (A – B) ∩ (A – C) (3) (A – B) ∪ C (4) (A – B) ∩ C
8. If A and B are non-empty sets, then (A – B) ∪ (B – A) equals
(1) (A ∪ B) – B (2) A – (A ∩ B)
(3) (A ∪ B) – (A ∩ B) (4) (A ∩ B) ∪ (A ∪ B)
9. If A = {x : x = 4n + 1, n ≤ 5, n ∈ N} and B {3n : n ≤ 8, n ∈ N}, then A – (A – B) is :
(1) {9, 21} (2) {9, 12} (3) {6, 12} (4) {6, 21}
10. The smallest set A such that A ∪ {1, 2} = {1, 2, 3, 5, 9} is
(1) {2, 3, 5} (2) {3, 5, 9}
(3) {1, 2, 5, 9} (4) None of these

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