Reading Comprehension

30 minutes Advanced 48 Questions
Topic Overview

Master 8 reading comprehension question types — from literal facts to inference and tone — with strategies, examples, and exam traps for NTS, PPSC, FPSC, CSS, and entry tests.

Complete Topic Overview

Topic Introduction

Reading comprehension tests whether you can understand a passage deeply — not just what it says on the surface, but what it implies, how the writer feels, and what it means word-for-word. It's one of the longest sections of any competitive English paper, and it rewards students who have a clear, repeatable strategy for each question type rather than just "reading carefully."

This topic covers:

  • Factual / literal questions
  • Inferential questions
  • Vocabulary in context
  • Main idea & title selection
  • Tone & attitude of the author
  • Cause & effect questions
  • True / false / not given
  • Summary completion

Reading comprehension appears in almost every competitive exam in Pakistan — NTS, PPSC, FPSC, CSS, and all major university entry tests — and typically carries a significant share of the English section marks.

Quick Concept Map

SubtopicOne-line definitionKey signal/clue word
Factual / literal questionsFind information that is directly and explicitly stated in the passage"According to the passage," "The author states," "Which of the following is mentioned"
Inferential questionsDraw a conclusion the passage implies but never directly states"It can be inferred," "It is most likely," "The passage suggests"
Vocabulary in contextIdentify the meaning of a word as used in that specific passage context"As used in paragraph X, the word '___' means"
Main idea & title selectionIdentify what the whole passage is primarily about"The main idea," "The best title," "The passage is primarily about"
Tone & attitude of the authorIdentify the writer's emotion, purpose, or stance toward the subject"The author's tone," "The writer's attitude," "The passage can best be described as"
Cause & effect questionsIdentify what caused something or what resulted from it"As a result," "Because of," "Led to," "Consequently"
True / false / not givenDecide whether a statement is confirmed, contradicted, or absent in the passage"Not given," "True," "False" — and the critical difference between False and Not Given
Summary completionFill blanks in a summary using words or ideas from the passageBlank-filling within a condensed rewrite of the passage

Subtopic Deep-Dive

1. Factual / Literal Questions

Definition: These questions ask you to locate information that is directly written in the passage. No guessing, no reading between the lines — the answer is there in the text, word-for-word or in very close paraphrase.

Approach / Strategy

StepAction
1Read the question carefully and underline the key noun or event it asks about
2Scan the passage for that keyword or a close synonym of it
3Read that sentence and the one before/after it
4Match the passage's meaning to one of the answer options

Never choose an option that sounds true from general knowledge — it must be confirmed by the passage itself.

Worked Examples

Passage Snippet:

"The Indus Valley Civilisation flourished between 3300 and 1300 BCE and is considered one of the world's earliest urban cultures. Its two most excavated cities, Mohenjo-daro and Harappa, had advanced drainage systems that most contemporary cities lacked."

Question: According to the passage, what distinguished Mohenjo-daro and Harappa from other cities of that time?

Options:

  • A) Their large populations
  • B) Their advanced drainage systems ✓
  • C) Their military strength
  • D) Their trade routes

Reasoning: The passage directly states "advanced drainage systems that most contemporary cities lacked." Options A, C, and D introduce ideas not mentioned anywhere in the passage.

Question: According to the passage, when did the Indus Valley Civilisation flourish?

Options:

  • A) 2000–1000 BCE
  • B) 3300–1300 BCE ✓
  • C) 4000–2000 BCE
  • D) 3000–1000 BCE

Reasoning: The exact dates are stated in the first sentence. This is a direct retrieval — no interpretation needed.

Question: According to the passage, which TWO cities are mentioned as the most excavated?

Answer: Mohenjo-daro and Harappa — both explicitly named in the second sentence.

Common Mistake: Students select an answer that sounds historically accurate from memory, rather than confirming it is actually stated in the passage. Exam passages can deliberately include plausible-but-absent facts as distractors.

Exam Tip: The answer to a factual question is always in the passage — if you can't point to the exact line, keep scanning; don't trust memory.

2. Inferential Questions

Definition: Inferential questions ask you to go one step beyond what is stated — to figure out what the passage implies, suggests, or leads you to conclude, even though it is never directly written.

Approach / Strategy

StepAction
1Read the question and ask: "What does the passage hint at without saying outright?"
2Eliminate options that are directly stated (too literal — that's a factual question)
3Eliminate options that go far beyond what the passage can support (speculation)
4Choose the option that is the most reasonable conclusion a careful reader could draw from the clues in the passage

The correct inference is always supported by evidence in the text — it just isn't spelled out in plain language.

Worked Examples

Passage Snippet:

"Despite receiving three promotions in five years, Arif quietly submitted his resignation on a Tuesday morning without informing any of his colleagues. His desk was cleared before the office opened."

Question: It can be inferred from the passage that Arif most likely —

Options:

  • A) was unhappy with his salary ✗ (not supported — promotions suggest reasonable pay)
  • B) wanted to avoid an emotional farewell ✓
  • C) had been asked to resign by management ✗ (no evidence of this)
  • D) planned to start his own business ✗ (never mentioned)

Reasoning: "Quietly submitted," "without informing any colleagues," and "desk cleared before the office opened" all suggest a deliberate effort to leave without interaction — pointing to B as the strongest supported inference.

Passage Snippet:

"The old library building had cracked walls, a leaking roof, and shelves so warped the books could barely stand upright. The municipal committee had last visited it in 2009."

Question: What can be inferred about the municipal committee's attitude toward the library?

Answer: The committee had been neglectful or indifferent — the long gap since their last visit (16+ years) combined with the building's severe disrepair implies a lack of attention, even though the word "neglect" is never used.

Common Mistake: Choosing the option that restates something already directly said in the passage — that's a factual answer, not an inference. Inference must go one logical step beyond the text.

Exam Tip: A valid inference is always "supported but not stated" — if you can copy-paste the answer from the passage, it's a factual question, not an inferential one.

3. Vocabulary in Context

Definition: These questions ask what a specific word means as it is used in the passage — not its dictionary definition, but the meaning that fits that particular sentence and context.

Approach / Strategy

StepAction
1Locate the word in the passage and read the full sentence it appears in, plus the sentence before and after it
2Cover the word and ask: "What word or phrase could replace it here without changing the sentence's meaning?"
3Plug each answer option into that sentence mentally
4Eliminate options that create a false meaning even if they are a known definition of the word elsewhere

The context decides the meaning — not the dictionary.

Worked Examples

Passage Snippet:

"The lawyer's argument was so lucid that even jurors with no legal background found it easy to follow."

Question: As used in the passage, "lucid" most nearly means —

Options:

  • A) lengthy
  • B) clear ✓
  • C) aggressive
  • D) technical

Reasoning: The context clue is "even jurors with no legal background found it easy to follow" — this signals the argument was easy to understand, pointing to "clear." "Lengthy," "aggressive," and "technical" each contradict the surrounding context.

Passage Snippet:

"The government's response to the flood was tentative — officials waited days before committing resources, leaving thousands stranded."

Question: As used in the passage, "tentative" most nearly means —

Options:

  • A) decisive
  • B) generous
  • C) hesitant ✓
  • D) organized

Reasoning: "Waited days before committing" is the context clue — it describes delay and uncertainty, which matches "hesitant."

Passage Snippet:

"After the scandal, the politician maintained a conspicuous silence on the matter."

Question: As used here, "conspicuous" most nearly means —

Answer: Noticeable / obvious — the silence was so complete and deliberate that it drew attention, which is the meaning the context demands.

Common Mistake: Choosing the most common dictionary definition of the word instead of testing which meaning actually fits the sentence. Many words have multiple meanings — context tells you which one applies.

Exam Tip: Always substitute your chosen answer back into the original sentence and read it aloud — if the sentence still makes full sense, you have the right answer.

4. Main Idea & Title Selection

Definition: These questions ask you to identify what the entire passage is primarily about — the central argument or theme that every paragraph connects to, not a detail from one section.

Approach / Strategy

StepAction
1Read the first and last paragraphs carefully — these typically state or restate the main point
2Ask: "What single idea does every paragraph in this passage connect to?"
3Eliminate options that are too narrow (only one paragraph covers this), too broad (the passage does not cover all of this), or a supporting detail dressed up as a theme
4For title questions: the best title is broad enough to cover the whole passage but specific enough to exclude unrelated topics

Worked Examples

Passage Snippet:

"Pakistan's textile industry employs millions, contributes over 60% of total export earnings, and is the backbone of the country's manufacturing sector. However, outdated machinery, energy shortages, and stiff global competition now threaten its position. Without urgent investment in modernization and worker training, the sector risks losing its competitive edge permanently."

Question: The main idea of this passage is —

Options:

  • A) Pakistan exports more textiles than any other country ✗ (not stated; too narrow)
  • B) The textile industry faces serious challenges that require immediate action ✓
  • C) Energy shortages are the biggest problem in Pakistan ✗ (one detail, not the theme)
  • D) Worker training programmes have failed in Pakistan ✗ (not stated)

Reasoning: The passage opens with the industry's importance, then shifts to threats, then calls for action — the overall theme is challenge + urgency, which matches B.

Question: Which of the following is the best title for this passage?

Options:

  • A) "Pakistan's Energy Crisis" ✗ (too narrow — only one issue mentioned)
  • B) "Global Textile Markets" ✗ (too broad — passage is about Pakistan specifically)
  • C) "Pakistan's Textile Industry: Strengths, Threats, and the Way Forward" ✓
  • D) "Why Pakistan Should Invest in Factories" ✗ (partially correct but misses the full scope)

Common Mistake: Selecting a detail from the middle of the passage and treating it as the main idea. Distractors are often important points from the passage — they just aren't the central theme.

Exam Tip: If an option is only discussed in one paragraph, it's a supporting detail, not the main idea — eliminate it.

5. Tone & Attitude of the Author

Definition: Tone questions ask how the author feels about the subject — whether they are critical, admiring, neutral, concerned, sarcastic, or something else — based on the language choices they make throughout the passage.

Approach / Strategy

StepAction
1Look for emotionally charged adjectives, adverbs, and verbs in the passage — these carry tone
2Ask: "Does the author approve, disapprove, feel worried, feel neutral, or feel something else about this subject?"
3Look for patterns across the whole passage, not just one sentence
4Match the overall emotional direction to the correct tone word

Common Tone Words to Know

Disapproving / negativeNeutralPositive
critical, cautionary, concerned, alarmed, sarcastic, ironic, pessimisticobjective, neutraladmiring, appreciative, hopeful, nostalgic

Worked Examples

Passage Snippet:

"Another year has passed, and the city's roads remain a masterpiece of neglect — potholes expanding season by season, and the same three contractors awarded the same repair tenders that produce the same invisible results. The officials responsible assure us, as always, that improvements are 'underway.'"

Question: The author's tone in this passage can best be described as —

Options:

  • A) neutral and informative ✗
  • B) admiring and respectful ✗
  • C) sarcastic and critical ✓
  • D) optimistic and encouraging ✗

Reasoning: "Masterpiece of neglect," "invisible results," and the quoted "underway" with implied skepticism all signal heavy sarcasm and disapproval of the officials.

Passage Snippet:

"The forest, once thick with ancient trees that had stood for centuries, is now crossed by power lines and dotted with concrete. The birdsong that used to fill the morning has been replaced by the hum of machinery."

Question: The author's attitude toward the change described is best described as —

Options:

  • A) celebratory
  • B) indifferent
  • C) melancholic and regretful ✓
  • D) angry and aggressive

Reasoning: "Once thick," "used to fill" — the language mourns what was lost, signaling nostalgia and sadness rather than anger or celebration.

Common Mistake: Confusing the topic of the passage with the tone. A passage about a difficult topic can still have a neutral or even hopeful tone — it's the author's word choices, not the subject, that reveal tone.

Exam Tip: Underline all loaded adjectives and verbs in the passage — their collective emotional direction is the tone.

6. Cause & Effect Questions

Definition: These questions ask you to identify what caused an event described in the passage, or what resulted from it — tracing the logical chain of events the author has built.

Approach / Strategy

StepAction
1Identify the cause-effect pair the question asks about
2Scan the passage for signal words that link events
3Once you find the linked sentences, determine what happened first (cause) and what happened as a result (effect)
4Choose the option that correctly maps this relationship

Signal Words

Cause signalsEffect signals
because, since, due to, as a result of, owing totherefore, consequently, thus, led to, resulted in, so

Worked Examples

Passage Snippet:

"The region experienced an unusually dry winter with below-average rainfall. Consequently, the wheat crop yield was nearly 40% lower than the previous year, forcing the government to import grain at higher international prices."

Question: According to the passage, what caused the government to import grain?

Options:

  • A) A lack of international trade agreements ✗
  • B) High demand for wheat in cities ✗
  • C) A drop in wheat yield due to low rainfall ✓
  • D) A rise in grain prices abroad ✗

Reasoning: The causal chain is: low rainfall → lower wheat yield → government forced to import. Option C correctly captures the cause two steps back in the chain.

Question: According to the passage, what was the direct result of the dry winter?

Answer: A 40% drop in wheat crop yield — this is the first and most direct effect stated after the cause.

Passage Snippet:

"Owing to prolonged power outages, the factory halted production for three weeks, leading to a significant backlog of unfulfilled orders and, ultimately, the loss of two major international contracts."

Question: What ultimately resulted from the power outages?

Answer: The loss of two major international contracts — the chain is: power outages → halted production → backlog of orders → lost contracts.

Common Mistake: Picking the immediately adjacent event instead of following the full cause-effect chain to what the question actually asks for. Questions often ask about the ultimate result, not the first step.

Exam Tip: Draw a quick arrow chain — Cause → Effect 1 → Effect 2 — so you can track how far down the chain the question is pointing.

7. True / False / Not Given

Definition: For each statement, you must decide: is it confirmed by the passage (True), contradicted by the passage (False), or simply absent from the passage with no information either way (Not Given)?

Approach / Strategy

VerdictMeaningTest
TrueThe passage directly confirms this statement (exact meaning, possibly paraphrased)Does the passage say this is so?
FalseThe passage directly contradicts this statement (the passage says something opposite or different)Does the passage say the opposite?
Not GivenThe passage neither confirms nor contradicts this statement — the topic may appear, but no information allows you to judge it either wayDoes the passage say nothing on this point?

Critical rule: "Not Given" does NOT mean "obviously wrong" — it means the passage gives no evidence either way. Do not use outside knowledge to answer these questions.

Worked Examples

Passage Snippet:

"The new hospital in Lahore was inaugurated in March 2023. It has 400 beds and is staffed by over 300 doctors. The hospital specialises in cardiac and orthopaedic care."

StatementAnswerReasoning
The hospital was opened in 2023.TruePassage says "inaugurated in March 2023" — directly confirmed.
The hospital has more than 500 beds.FalsePassage says 400 beds — directly contradicted.
The hospital plans to expand to a second location.Not GivenThe passage says nothing about expansion — no evidence to confirm or deny.
The cardiac unit is the most popular department.Not GivenCardiac care is mentioned as a speciality, but no popularity ranking is given.
The hospital is fully funded by the government.Not GivenFunding is never discussed anywhere in the passage.

Common Mistake: The single most common error is marking a statement False when it should be Not Given. Students think: "If the passage doesn't say it, it must be false." Wrong — False means the passage says the opposite. Not Given means the passage says nothing about it.

Exam Tip: Ask yourself two questions in order — (1) "Does the passage confirm this?" → True. (2) "Does the passage directly deny or contradict this?" → False. If neither answer is yes → Not Given.

8. Summary Completion

Definition: You are given a shortened version of the passage with blanks, and you must fill in those blanks using words or ideas taken from the original passage — keeping the summary accurate and consistent with what the passage says.

Approach / Strategy

StepAction
1Read the summary first to understand its overall structure
2For each blank, identify what type of word is needed: noun, verb, adjective, or short phrase
3Go back to the relevant section of the passage — the summary is usually in the same order as the passage
4Find the word or phrase in the passage that fits the blank both grammatically and in meaning
5Write it in and re-read the completed sentence — it must make full sense and accurately reflect the passage

Rule: never introduce words that are not in the passage or that change the original meaning.

Worked Examples

Original Passage Snippet:

"Pakistan's northern regions are home to some of the world's highest peaks, drawing thousands of mountaineers and trekkers every year. The tourism industry in these areas, however, has long suffered from a lack of adequate infrastructure — particularly roads and accommodation facilities. Local communities, though rich in culture and hospitality, have rarely benefited economically from the visitors who pass through."

Summary to Complete:

"Pakistan's northern areas attract large numbers of __________ (1) due to the presence of high mountains. However, the region's tourism sector is limited by poor __________ (2), especially roads and hotels. Despite their __________ (3) and welcoming nature, local people have not seen significant economic __________ (4) from tourism."

BlankAnswerReasoning
(1)mountaineers / trekkersPassage: "drawing thousands of mountaineers and trekkers"
(2)infrastructurePassage: "lack of adequate infrastructure"
(3)culturePassage: "rich in culture and hospitality"
(4)benefit / gainsPassage: "rarely benefited economically"

Tip Exercise — Identifying the Wrong Fill:

For blank (3), a student might write "hospitality" — this is also in the passage. However, re-reading the summary sentence reveals: "Despite their __________ and welcoming nature" — "welcoming nature" is already paraphrasing "hospitality," so the blank is asking for the other quality: "culture." Always re-read the full summary sentence to avoid repeating a meaning already covered.

Common Mistake: Choosing a word from the passage that is close to the blank but doesn't grammatically or logically complete the summary sentence. The word must fit the exact context of the summary, not just the passage.

Exam Tip: Read the completed sentence out loud after filling each blank — if it sounds awkward or changes the passage's meaning, find a better word.

Comparison Table

The following question types are frequently confused with each other in exams:

FeatureFactual / LiteralInferentialTrue / False / Not Given
Is the answer directly in the passage?Yes — word-for-word or close paraphraseNo — you must draw a conclusionYes for True/False; absent for Not Given
Do you use outside knowledge?NeverNeverNever
Can the answer be something the passage implies?NoYes — that's the pointNo — implication still counts as Not Given unless fully confirmed
Key question to ask"Where does the passage say this?""What does the passage lead me to conclude?""Does the passage confirm, deny, or ignore this?"
Most common trapChoosing a "sounds true" distractorGoing too far beyond the passageMarking Not Given as False

Common Traps in This Topic

  • Distractors in factual questions are often real, plausible facts about the topic that simply aren't in the passage — never answer from general knowledge
  • Inferential questions have a "too strong" trap: one option goes much further than the passage supports, and students pick it because it sounds impressive; the correct inference is always modest and firmly grounded in text evidence
  • Vocabulary questions often include the most common dictionary meaning of the word as a wrong option — the correct answer is the contextually appropriate one, which may be a less-well-known definition
  • Main idea questions always include at least one option that is a genuine point from the passage — it's just a detail, not the theme; if it only appears in one paragraph, it's a trap
  • Tone questions on neutral-sounding passages trick students into marking "objective/neutral" when the language actually contains subtle approval or disapproval — read every adjective carefully
  • In cause-effect questions, distractors often reverse the cause and effect, or name an effect of a different cause mentioned elsewhere in the passage
  • The False vs. Not Given trap in True/False/Not Given is the most heavily tested trick in the entire reading section — "not mentioned" is never the same as "wrong"
  • Summary completion traps include words that appear in the passage but don't grammatically fit the blank, or words whose meaning shifts slightly in the summary context

Cheat Sheet / Quick Revision

  • Factual: Answer is in the passage — scan and locate; never use outside knowledge
  • Inferential: Answer is implied, not stated — most reasonable conclusion supported by text clues
  • Vocabulary in context: Read the surrounding sentences; substitute options back into the sentence; context beats dictionary
  • Main idea: Covers ALL paragraphs; if only one paragraph discusses it, it's a detail, not the main idea
  • Tone: Look at adjectives, adverbs, and loaded verbs across the whole passage — not just one line
  • Cause & effect: Find the signal word (because, therefore, consequently), then trace the full chain to the event the question asks about
  • True/False/Not Given: True = confirmed; False = contradicted; Not Given = absent; never confuse False with Not Given
  • Summary completion: Words must come from the passage; re-read the full completed sentence to check grammar and meaning

Wrap-Up

Reading comprehension rewards students who read with a purpose — approaching each question type with its own strategy, rather than re-reading the passage from start to finish for every question. Once you recognize which of the eight question types is in front of you, the approach follows automatically.

21
Passage: "The city's new metro line has reduced average commute times by nearly 30 minutes, though critics argue that ticket prices remain too high for many low-income daily commuters." Summary: "While the new metro line has significantly reduced __________ for residents, critics believe the fares are unaffordable for many low-income passengers." Which word best completes the blank?
Easy 1 Mark
Identify what specifically improved according to the first half of the passage.
A commute times
B construction costs
C traffic accidents
D pollution levels
22
Passage: "Despite producing award-winning research, Dr. Amna struggled to secure long-term funding for her laboratory, forcing her to rely on short-term grants that limited the scope of her ongoing studies." Summary: "Although Dr. Amna's research was widely praised, a lack of __________ restricted what her laboratory could accomplish." Which phrase best completes the blank?
Medium 1 Mark
Look for the specific resource the passage says she lacked, not a general guess.
A qualified staff
B long-term funding
C international recognition
D laboratory equipment
23
Passage: "Traditional fishing communities along the coast have faced declining catches in recent years, a trend scientists attribute to rising sea temperatures rather than overfishing, which industry data shows has actually decreased." Summary: "Coastal fishing communities are experiencing reduced catches, which scientists link to __________ rather than overfishing." Which phrase best completes the blank?
Medium 1 Mark
Notice the passage explicitly rules out overfishing as the cause, pointing to a specific alternative reason.
A rising sea temperatures
B improved fishing technology
C new government regulations
D increased tourism
24
Passage: "The startup's rapid early growth attracted significant investor interest, but its failure to build a scalable customer support system eventually led to a wave of negative reviews that damaged its reputation." Summary: "Despite early investor interest, the startup's reputation suffered because it failed to build a scalable __________ system." Which phrase best completes the blank?
Easy 1 Mark
Find the exact phrase describing what the startup failed to build.
A marketing
B customer support
C manufacturing
D accounting
25
Passage: "The university's new scholarship program targets first-generation college students from rural districts, offering not only tuition coverage but also mentorship and career counseling throughout their degree." Summary: "The scholarship program supports first-generation rural students with tuition coverage as well as __________ throughout their studies." Which phrase best completes the blank, avoiding repetition of ideas already covered elsewhere in the summary?
Hard 1 Mark
Check which benefits are already mentioned in the summary sentence itself before choosing the blank's answer.
A mentorship and career counseling
B additional tuition discounts
C free housing only
D transportation allowances
26
Passage: "The Karakoram Highway, completed in 1979, connects Pakistan and China through some of the highest mountain passes in the world, including the Khunjerab Pass at 4,693 metres." Question: According to the passage, in which year was the Karakoram Highway completed?
Easy 1 Mark
Scan the passage for the exact year mentioned alongside 'completed'.
A 1969
B 1979
C 1989
D 1999
27
Passage: "Pakistan's first satellite, Badr-1, was launched in 1990 with assistance from China, making Pakistan one of the early entrants into space technology among developing nations." Question: According to the passage, which country assisted Pakistan in launching its first satellite?
Easy 1 Mark
Look for the exact phrase naming the assisting country.
A Russia
B United States
C China
D India
28
Passage: "The Indus River, stretching over 3,000 kilometres, originates in Tibet and flows through Pakistan before emptying into the Arabian Sea near Karachi." Question: According to the passage, where does the Indus River empty?
Easy 1 Mark
Find the exact location mentioned at the end of the river's described journey.
A The Bay of Bengal
B The Arabian Sea near Karachi
C The Persian Gulf
D The Indian Ocean near Mumbai
29
Passage: "Allama Iqbal, widely regarded as the spiritual father of Pakistan, delivered his famous Allahabad Address in 1930, in which he proposed a separate homeland for Muslims in the northwestern regions of British India." Question: According to the passage, what did Iqbal propose in his Allahabad Address?
Medium 1 Mark
Identify the exact proposal described, not a general summary of Iqbal's importance.
A A united India under British rule
B A separate homeland for Muslims in the northwestern regions
C An alliance between Hindus and Muslims
D The abolition of British rule entirely
30
Passage: "Despite covering less than 2% of the Earth's surface, coral reefs support approximately 25% of all marine species, making them one of the most biodiverse ecosystems on the planet." Question: According to the passage, what percentage of marine species do coral reefs support?
Easy 1 Mark
Distinguish between the two percentages mentioned in the passage — one refers to surface area, the other to species supported.
A Less than 2%
B Approximately 25%
C Exactly 50%
D Over 75%
31
Passage: "The Lahore Resolution, passed in March 1940 at a session of the All-India Muslim League, called for the creation of independent states for Muslims in the northwestern and eastern zones of India." Question: Which of the following is NOT explicitly mentioned in the passage?
Hard 1 Mark
Check each option against the passage one by one; the correct answer is the one with no textual support at all.
A The resolution was passed in March 1940
B It was passed at an All-India Muslim League session
C It called for independent states in the northwestern and eastern zones
D It was personally drafted by Muhammad Ali Jinnah
32
Passage: "Despite the company's record profits this quarter, the CEO held no celebratory press conference and instead issued a brief written statement announcing budget cuts across all departments effective immediately." Question: It can be inferred from the passage that the CEO most likely —
Medium 1 Mark
Look at what the CEO actually did (cut budgets, avoided celebration) rather than what the company achieved.
A was pleased with the quarter's results and wanted privacy
B anticipated future financial difficulties despite the current profits
C had been forced to resign by the board
D planned to sell the company soon
33
Passage: "The young athlete trained alone at dawn every day for two years, declining all interview requests and skipping the team's victory celebrations even after winning national titles." Question: It can most reasonably be inferred that the athlete —
Medium 1 Mark
Identify the pattern of behaviour across the whole passage rather than just one detail.
A disliked the sport and wanted to quit
B was intensely focused and avoided distractions from training
C had a conflict with teammates
D was injured and unable to attend events
34
Passage: "The restaurant that once had a two-hour waiting list now sits half-empty on weekend evenings, though the owner insists nothing has changed about the menu or service." Question: What can be inferred from this passage?
Hard 1 Mark
Avoid choosing an option that assumes more than the passage actually supports.
A The restaurant's quality has objectively declined
B Customer interest in the restaurant has decreased for reasons that remain unclear
C The owner is lying about the menu
D The restaurant will close within a month
35
Passage: "After the merger was announced, several senior engineers quietly updated their resumes on professional networking sites, while management publicly assured staff that no layoffs were planned." Question: It can be inferred that the engineers —
Medium 1 Mark
Compare what management said with what the engineers actually did.
A fully trusted management's assurances
B were skeptical about job security despite the official statements
C were planning to ask for raises
D supported the merger completely
36
Passage: "The elderly shopkeeper still opens his small store every morning at 6am sharp, even though the new shopping mall across the street has taken most of his customers over the past year." Question: What does the passage most strongly suggest about the shopkeeper?
Hard 1 Mark
Focus on the contrast between his consistent routine and his declining business.
A He is unaware that the mall has affected his business
B He continues out of habit or personal commitment despite declining business
C He plans to close the shop within days
D He has found new customers to replace the old ones
37
Passage: "The professor returned the exam papers without comment, but students noticed she had underlined certain phrases in red ink and placed small checkmarks beside others." Question: It can be inferred that the professor —
Easy 1 Mark
Consider what the markings (underlining, checkmarks) imply about her level of attention.
A did not read the exam papers carefully
B gave detailed feedback through markings rather than written comments
C was angry with the entire class
D lost some of the exam papers
38
Passage: "The negotiations remained acrimonious for weeks, with both sides trading accusations instead of working toward a resolution." Question: As used in the passage, "acrimonious" most nearly means —
Easy 1 Mark
Look at what the two sides were doing instead of resolving their dispute.
A friendly
B bitter and hostile
C brief
D confidential
39
Passage: "The committee's decision to approve the project was met with vehement opposition from local residents, who organized protests within days." Question: As used in the passage, "vehement" most nearly means —
Easy 1 Mark
Notice how quickly and strongly residents reacted to the decision.
A mild
B intense and forceful
C delayed
D secretive
40
Passage: "Years of drought had left the once-fertile valley barren, with cracked earth stretching for miles in every direction." Question: As used in the passage, "barren" most nearly means —
Easy 1 Mark
Picture the physical description given right after the word — cracked, dry earth.
A lush and green
B unable to produce vegetation
C extremely populated
D recently flooded
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Instructions:
  • Click on an option to select your answer
  • Use the hint button if you need help
  • Track your progress with the question palette
  • Submit your answers to see results
Difficulty Distribution
Easy 10
Medium 6
Hard 4