Saying that clearing the interview is necessary but not sufficient means that getting the job cannot happen without clearing the interview, yet clearing it alone does not guarantee selection because other criteria may also apply. Logically, this is represented by “If you get the job, then you cleared the interview.” The conditional runs from job to interview, reflecting necessity, not from interview to job, which would indicate sufficiency.
Option A:
Option A wrongly interprets clearing the interview as sufficient and guaranteeing the job, which contradicts the “not sufficient” part of the statement.
Option B:
Option B captures the idea that job selection implies interview clearance, exactly what a necessary condition expresses.
Option C:
Option C denies necessity by allowing job selection without interview clearance, which goes against the original statement.
Option D:
Option D contradicts the problem statement by claiming clearing the interview is neither necessary nor sufficient.
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