Among A, B, C, D and E, E is shorter than D but taller than B who is taller than C. A is taller than E. If all are standing according to their heights and we start counting from the tallest who would be fourth ?

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Q: 16 (CAPF/2008)
Among A, B, C, D and E, E is shorter than D but taller than B who is taller than C. A is taller than E. If all are standing according to their heights and we start counting from the tallest who would be fourth ?

question_subject: 

Science

question_exam: 

CAPF

stats: 

0,23,21,7,23,4,10

keywords: 

{'heights': [0, 0, 1, 0], 'data': [1, 1, 7, 9]}

Given the information provided, we can determine the order of the heights as follows:

1. A is taller than E.

2. B is taller than C.

3. E is shorter than D.

From these statements, we can infer that the order of heights from tallest to shortest is A > E > B > C > D.

Therefore, the person who would be fourth when counting from the tallest would be B. Option 2 is the correct answer.

The information provided is sufficient to determine the position of each person based on their heights. There is no contradiction or missing information in the given statements. Therefore, option 4 (Cannot be determined as the data is insufficient) is incorrect.

There is no Alert - correct answer should be present because the provided answer (option 2) is correct based on the given information.

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