| LIST I | LIST II | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Chop wound | I | Axe | 
| B | Punctured wound | II | Needle | 
| C | Bruises | III | Whip | 
| D | Incised wound | IV | Knife | 

Different types of wounds correlate with specific instruments or causes. Chop wounds result from axes, punctured wounds from needles, bruises from whips, and incised wounds from knives. These associations aid forensic experts in deducing the cause of injuries.
| LIST I (Phenotype) | LIST II (Antibodies) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| A | O | I | Anti-A | 
| B | A | II | None | 
| C | B | III | Anti-B | 
| D | AB | IV | Anti-A and Anti-B | 
Match Fibre with Application.\[\begin{array}{|l|l|} \hline \textbf{LIST I} & \textbf{LIST II} \\ \textbf{Fibre} & \textbf{Application} \\ \hline \hline \text{A. Silk fibre} & \text{I. Fire retardant} \\ \hline \text{B. Wool fibre} & \text{II. Directional lustre} \\ \hline \text{C. Nomex fibre} & \text{III. Bulletproof} \\ \hline \text{D. Kevlar fibre} & \text{IV. Thermal insulation} \\ \hline \end{array}\]