Analytical Reasoning Online Quizzes | ExamChamber

Master Analytical Reasoning with ExamChamber

Boost your logical thinking and exam performance with structured quizzes designed for competitive exams.

This subject is included in:

  • CSS & PMS Competitive Exams
  • ISSB & Armed Forces Tests
  • PPSC / FPSC / SPSC / KPPSC Jobs
  • NTS / OTS / CTS / STS Tests
  • University Admission Tests
  • Scholarship Exams

ExamChamber provides complete, authentic and exam-oriented analytical reasoning preparation including:

  • Concept explanations
  • Solved examples
  • MCQs with answers
  • Past papers
  • Practice exercises
  • Shortcuts and strategies

Analytical Reasoning Preparation for Competitive Exams

Analytical Reasoning is a crucial part of competitive exams including CSS, PMS, ISSB, FPSC, PPSC, Armed Forces tests, and many private sector exams. It tests your ability to think logically, analyze complex information, identify patterns, and solve problems efficiently. Mastering this skill not only improves exam performance but also enhances decision-making and problem-solving in real-life situations.

Types of Analytical Reasoning Questions

1. Logical Puzzles

Logical puzzles test your ability to arrange, match, or order elements based on given conditions. They include seating arrangements, scheduling problems, and sequence-based puzzles. Use diagrams, charts, and step-by-step deduction for accuracy.

2. Coding-Decoding

Coding-Decoding involves converting letters, numbers, or words into coded forms based on patterns. Learn common coding techniques, practice backward decoding, and focus on speed and accuracy.

3. Blood Relations

Blood relation problems test your understanding of family relationships. Draw family trees, identify relationships step by step, and practice various patterns like paternal, maternal, and mixed relations.

4. Syllogism

Syllogisms test logical reasoning through statements and conclusions. Use Venn diagrams or direct reasoning to evaluate whether conclusions follow from the given premises.

5. Analogy

Analogy questions examine the relationship between pairs of words, numbers, or concepts. Identify patterns such as synonym, antonym, part-whole, or functional analogy.

6. Series (Number/Letter)

Series questions require identifying the next element in a sequence of numbers, letters, or symbols. Analyze arithmetic, geometric, or alphabetical patterns carefully to solve accurately.

7. Direction Sense

Direction sense problems involve determining final positions or directions based on a sequence of movements. Draw a simple compass diagram, mark directions, and track steps carefully.

8. Seating Arrangement

Seating arrangement problems involve organizing people or objects according to given conditions. Use visual diagrams, elimination methods, and stepwise logic to solve efficiently.

9. Odd One Out

Identify the element that does not fit the given pattern or group. Look for differences in characteristics, function, or type.

10. Ranking & Order

Ranking & order problems test your ability to arrange people or objects based on ranks, heights, ages, or scores. Use charts and comparison techniques to solve accurately.

11. Venn Diagrams

Venn diagrams visually represent relationships between sets. Useful for solving questions on logic, sets, and overlaps effectively.

12. Statement & Conclusion

These questions require analyzing statements and determining logically valid conclusions. Focus on direct deductions and avoiding assumptions beyond given information.

13. Cause & Effect

Cause & Effect questions test your reasoning by identifying outcomes resulting from given situations. Practice identifying direct and indirect effects logically.

Tips to Master Analytical Reasoning

  • Practice regularly with past papers and mock tests.
  • Use diagrams, charts, and tables wherever applicable.
  • Focus on time management and speed improvement.
  • Understand patterns and logical connections rather than rote memorization.
  • Review mistakes to avoid repeating them in exams.

Why Practice Analytical Reasoning?

Analytical Reasoning is a key component of aptitude and competitive exams, testing your ability to analyze patterns, solve puzzles, and think critically. These quizzes are built to simulate real exam conditions with instant feedback and mobile-friendly design.

From CSS to FPSC, NTS, PPSC, ISSB, and job tests, analytical reasoning plays a decisive role in scoring high. Our quizzes help sharpen logic, speed, and accuracy.

Benefits at a Glance

  • ✔ Covers all important reasoning categories for exams.
  • ✔ Lightweight, fast-loading quizzes with instant scoring.
  • ✔ Suitable for both beginners and advanced learners.
  • ✔ Practice anytime on mobile or desktop with responsive design.

Start an Analytical Reasoning Quiz

Select a topic below to begin. Only one quiz shows at a time for focus and clarity.

Logical Puzzles

Logical Puzzles

1 / 19

A and B together can do a piece of work in 10 days. A alone takes 15 days more than B. How many days will B alone take?

2 / 19

Six persons P, Q, R, S, T, U are to be seated in a line so that P is left of Q, R between Q and S, T not at ends. How many valid arrangements?

3 / 19

A number when divided by 7 leaves remainder 4. When the same number is divided by 5 it leaves remainder 3. The smallest positive such number is:

4 / 19

There are 8 people, including X and Y. Probability that X sits next to Y around a round table?

5 / 19

A drug is diluted such that 1 part drug + 4 parts solvent gives concentration 20%. To make 10 L of 5% solution, how much of pure drug needed?

6 / 19

If A is the brother of B; C is the father of D; B is mother of E; E is daughter of C. How is D related to A?

7 / 19

In a class, 70% passed Math, 60% passed English and 50% passed both. What percent failed at least one subject?

8 / 19

There are three boxes: one contains only apples, one only oranges, one both. All labels are wrong. You may open one box and take one fruit. Which box to pick to correctly relabel all?

9 / 19

If 7 men can build a wall in 12 days, working 8 hours/day. How many men working 6 hours/day will build the same wall in 14 days?

10 / 19

A train 150 m long crosses a platform in 30 seconds at uniform speed. It crosses a pole in 18 seconds. What is length of the platform?

11 / 19

Five persons sit around a circular table. A is opposite C. B sits immediately left of A. D sits between B and E. Who sits to the right of C?

12 / 19

In a box there are 4 red, 5 blue and 7 green balls. What is the minimum number of draws (without looking) to guarantee at least two balls of same colour?

13 / 19

A cube is painted on all faces then cut into 27 equal small cubes (3×3×3). How many small cubes have exactly two painted faces?

14 / 19

If in a row of 31 students, A is 9th from left and B is 7th from right, how many students are between A and B?

15 / 19

A man walks 6 km east, then 8 km south, then 6 km west. How far is he from the starting point?

16 / 19

Three taps A, B, C fill a tank in 12, 15 and 20 minutes respectively. First A and B open for 5 minutes then A closes and C opens. How much more time to fill the tank?

17 / 19

A clock shows 8:20. What is the smaller angle between hour and minute hands?

18 / 19

Five friends P, Q, R, S, T are in a line. Q is 3rd from left. R is immediate right of Q. P is between R and T. S is at one end. Who is 2nd from right?

19 / 19

A, B, C and D are standing in a row facing north. B is left of C but not at either end. A is to the right of C. Who is at the extreme left?

Your score is

The average score is 27%

0%

Coding-Decoding

Coding-Decoding

1 / 20

In a certain code, WORLD = DLROW, then PAKISTAN = ?

2 / 20

If CITY = 3925 and NATION = 714376, then PAKISTAN = ?

3 / 20

If KING = 3914, then QUEEN = ?

4 / 20

In a certain code, HARD = 8254, SOFT = 9716, then FAST = ?

5 / 20

If CLOUD = 23147, then RAIN = ?

6 / 20

If RAIN = 1449, then WIND = ?

7 / 20

If ROSE = 6812 and BORE = 4612, then SORE = ?

8 / 20

If DELHI is coded as AFIGL, then LAHORE is coded as:

9 / 20

If 789 = DOG, then 231 = ?

10 / 20

If APPLE = BQQMF, then ORANGE = ?

11 / 20

In a code, WHITE = 58329, then BLACK = ?

12 / 20

If PAKISTAN → 38291713, then AFGHAN is:

13 / 20

If JUDGE = LWHJI, then COURT = ?

14 / 20

If ’REAP’ is coded as ‘QDBO’, then ’CROP’ is coded as:

15 / 20

If MILK = 5683, then SUGAR = ?

16 / 20

In a certain code, PROBLEM = ORANFDL.
How is SOLUTION coded?

17 / 20

If GOOD = 7225, then BAD = ?

18 / 20

If BIND → 3914, then HAND → ?

19 / 20

If CLOCK = 31631, then WATCH = ?

20 / 20

In a code language, FIRE = 2695 and WATER = 23895.
What is RIVER coded as?

Your score is

The average score is 0%

0%

Blood Relations

Blood Relations

1 / 20

K is father of L. L is father of M. M is brother of N. N is daughter of O. How is O related to K?

2 / 20

A’s wife’s sister’s daughter is P. What is A to P?

3 / 20

A says: “Her husband is my father’s son.” Who is she?

4 / 20

B is the daughter of C. C is married to D. D is the brother of E. How is B related to E?

5 / 20

R is the father of S and brother of T. T is the mother of U. How is U related to S?

6 / 20

A + B means A is father of B

A – B means A is sister of B
A ÷ B means A is mother of B
What is X ÷ Y – Z?

7 / 20

M is N’s brother. N is O’s sister. O is P’s mother. How is M related to P?

8 / 20

If A says, “Your mother’s husband’s sister is my aunt”, who is A?

9 / 20

A’s father’s only brother B has a son C. How is C related to A?

10 / 20

X is the mother of Y. Y is the sister of Z. Z is the father of K. How is X related to K?

11 / 20

P × Q means P is the wife of Q.

Q + R means Q is the father of R.
What does P × Q + R mean?

12 / 20

B is the mother of D. D is the sister of E. E is the father of F. How is B related to F?

13 / 20

A says: “He is the son of my grandfather’s only son.” Whom is A talking about?

14 / 20

P is the only son of Q. Q is daughter of R. R is the father of S. How is S related to P?

15 / 20

A is married to B. B is the sister of C. C is the father of D. How is A related to D?

16 / 20

Q is the son of R. R is the father of S. S is the mother of T. How is Q related to T?

17 / 20

If X + Y means X is the father of Y.

X – Y means X is the sister of Y.
X × Y means X is the wife of Y.
What does A – B + C mean?

18 / 20

A’s mother is B’s sister, and B is C’s brother. How is A related to C?

19 / 20

P is the brother of Q. Q is the mother of R. R is the sister of S. How is P related to S?

20 / 20

A is the sister of B. B is the father of C. How is A related to C?

Your score is

The average score is 38%

0%

Syllogism

Syllogism

1 / 20

Statements:
Some A are B.
All B are C.

Conclusions:
I. Some C are A.
II. All A are C.

2 / 20

Statements:
All men are mortal.
Some mortals are animals.

Conclusions:
I. Some men are animals.
II. No animal is man.

3 / 20

Statements:
No fruit is vegetable.
Some vegetables are green.

Conclusions:
I. Some fruits are green.
II. Some green things are not fruits.

4 / 20

Statements:
All teachers are educated.
Some educated are poor.

Conclusions:
I. Some teachers are poor.
II. No poor person is a teacher.

5 / 20

Statements:
Some mobiles are Apple.
Some Apple are expensive.

Conclusions:
I. Some mobiles are expensive.
II. All expensive are mobiles.

6 / 20

Statements:
All lions are animals.
No animal is immortal.

Conclusions:
I. No lion is immortal.
II. Some animals are immortal.

7 / 20

Statements:
All soldiers are brave.
Some brave people are intelligent.

Conclusions:
I. Some soldiers are intelligent.
II. All intelligent people are soldiers.

8 / 20

Statements:
No pen is pencil.
Some pencils are red.

Conclusions:
I. Some red things are not pens.
II. Some pens are red.

9 / 20

Statements:
All students are humans.
Some humans are intelligent.

Conclusions:
I. Some students are intelligent.
II. All humans are students.

10 / 20

Statements:
Some dogs are pets.
Some pets are cats.

Conclusions:
I. Some dogs are cats.
II. All cats are dogs.

11 / 20

Statements:
All smart people are engineers.
No engineer is lazy.

Conclusions:
I. No smart person is lazy.
II. Some lazy people are engineers.

12 / 20

Statements:
All computers are machines.
Some machines are robots.

Conclusions:
I. Some computers are robots.
II. All robots are computers.

13 / 20

Statements:
Some books are stories.
No story is boring.

Conclusions:
I. Some books are not boring.
II. All books are boring.

14 / 20

Statements:
All roses are flowers.
No flower is harmful.

Conclusions:
I. No rose is harmful.
II. Some flowers are roses.

15 / 20

Statements:
Some phones are Samsung.
All Samsung are Android.

Conclusions:
I. Some phones are Android.
II. All phones are Android.

16 / 20

Statements:
No student is lazy.
Some boys are students.

Conclusions:
I. Some boys are not lazy.
II. No boy is lazy.

17 / 20

Statements:
All cars are vehicles.
Some vehicles are trucks.

Conclusions:
I. All trucks are cars.
II. Some cars are trucks.

18 / 20

Statements:
Some pens are blue.
All blue things are plastic.

Conclusions:
I. Some pens are plastic.
II. All pens are plastic.

19 / 20

Statements:
All birds are animals.
All eagles are birds.

Conclusions:
I. All eagles are animals.
II. Some animals are eagles.

20 / 20

Statements:
All cats are animals.
Some animals are wild.

Conclusions:
I. Some cats are wild.
II. All wild are cats.

Your score is

The average score is 45%

0%

Analogy

Analogy

1 / 20

SKELETON : SUPPORT :: FRAME : ?

2 / 20

ECLIPSE : SUN :: OCCLUDE : ?

3 / 20

CIRCUIT : ELECTRICITY :: VEIN : ?

4 / 20

PYRAMID : EGYPT :: ACROPOLIS : ?

5 / 20

ARCHIPELAGO : ISLANDS :: CONGLOMERATE : ?

6 / 20

TIDE : MOON :: SEASONS : ?

7 / 20

SWORD : WAR :: LAW : ?

8 / 20

HARMONY : MUSIC :: GRAMMAR : ?

9 / 20

MASK : PROTECT :: FILTER : ?

10 / 20

MERCURY : PLANET :: QUICKSILVER : ?

11 / 20

ATOM : MOLECULE :: LETTER : ?

12 / 20

HYPERLINK : WEBPAGE :: ANCHOR : ?

13 / 20

ROOT : TREE :: FOUNDATION : ?

14 / 20

NOVEL : AUTHOR :: SYMPHONY : ?

15 / 20

HAT : HEAD :: GLOVES : ?

16 / 20

FLOCK : BIRDS :: SCHOOL : ?

17 / 20

SINGER : MICROPHONE :: PAINTER : ?

18 / 20

OXYGEN : BREATH :: FOOD : ?

19 / 20

DOCTOR : HOSPITAL :: TEACHER : ?

20 / 20

BAT : BALL :: PEN : ?

Your score is

The average score is 39%

0%

Series (Number/Letter)

Series (Number/Letter)

1 / 20

9, 7, 10, 8, 11, 9, ?

2 / 20

2, 4, 8, 14, 22, 32, ?

3 / 20

14, 19, 27, 40, 60, ?

4 / 20

1, 8, 27, 64, 125, ?

5 / 20

100, 81, 64, 49, 36, ?

6 / 20

3, 6, 11, 18, 27, 38, ?

7 / 20

1, 2, 6, 24, 120, ?

8 / 20

Z, X, U, Q, L, ? (letters)

9 / 20

A, C, F, J, O, ? (letters)

10 / 20

2, 5, 10, 17, 26, 37, ?

11 / 20

31, 29, 24, 16, 5, ?

12 / 20

1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, ?

13 / 20

5, 11, 23, 47, 95, ?

14 / 20

2, 4, 12, 48, 240, ?

15 / 20

7, 10, 8, 11, 9, 12, ?

16 / 20

1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, ?

17 / 20

2, 3, 5, 7, 11, ?

18 / 20

121, 144, 169, 196, ?

19 / 20

3, 9, 27, 81, ?

20 / 20

2, 6, 12, 20, 30, ?

Your score is

The average score is 69%

0%

Direction Sense

Direction Sense

1 / 20

From a point, a person walks 15 km north, then 20 km west, then 8 km south, then 12 km east. What is his final displacement and direction from the starting point?

2 / 20

A faces North. He turns 45° right, then 90° left, then 135° left. Which direction is he facing at the end?

3 / 20

A starts at point O, walks 9 km north, 12 km east, 9 km south. How far is he from O and in which direction?

4 / 20

Starting from origin, a person walks 4 km west, 3 km north, 4 km east, 3 km south. Where is he?

5 / 20

X faces east. He turns 225° clockwise. Which direction is he facing?

6 / 20

A walks 5 km north, then turns right to walk 3 km, then turns right and walks 5 km, then turns left and walks 2 km. Where is he from starting point?

7 / 20

From a point, a man walks 6 km east, 8 km north, 6 km west, 2 km north. How far and in which direction is he from start?

8 / 20

A faces South-West. He turns 90° anticlockwise. Which direction does he face?

9 / 20

From a point, Muneer walks 12 km south, then 5 km east, then 12 km north. How far is he from the starting point and in which direction?

10 / 20

A is facing west. He makes two successive left turns of 135° each. Which direction will he face?

11 / 20

A walks 10 km east, turns right and walks 8 km, turns right and walks 10 km, turns left and walks 6 km. Where is he relative to starting point?

12 / 20

From a point, Zafar walks 3 km north, 4 km east, 5 km south, 2 km west. What is his final displacement and direction from starting point?

13 / 20

A faces North-East. She makes a 270° clockwise rotation. Which direction is she facing?

14 / 20

Starting at a point, Sana walks 7 km east, then 7 km south, then 3 km west, then 3 km north. Where is she relative to the starting point?

15 / 20

A walks 6 km north, turns left and walks 3 km, then turns left and walks 6 km, then turns right and walks 4 km. How far is A from starting point?

16 / 20

Mary faces north. She turns 90° to her right, then 180° to her left. Which direction does she face now?

17 / 20

A faces east. He turns 135° clockwise and then 45° anticlockwise. Which direction is he facing now?

18 / 20

From home, Ali walks 5 km south, then 12 km west, then 5 km north. What is his final direction from home?

19 / 20

A starts from point P and walks 8 km east, then turns left and walks 5 km, then turns left and walks 8 km. How far and in which direction is A from P?

20 / 20

Rahim walks 10 km north, turns right and walks 6 km, then turns right and walks 10 km. In which direction is he from starting point?

Your score is

The average score is 25%

0%

Seating Arrangement

Seating Arrangement

1 / 20

Eight persons sit around a table. A is second left of B. C is fourth right of B. D is opposite A. Who is second right of C?

2 / 20

Six persons facing south sit in a line. F is second left of D. C is to the right of A but left of D. Who sits at extreme left?

3 / 20

In a circular arrangement, A is to the immediate left of B. C is opposite B. D is two places right of C. Who sits opposite A?

4 / 20

Five boys sit in a row. Z is to the right of Y. X is to left of Y but right of W. Who is in the center?

5 / 20

Seven people in a circle. A is between B and C. D is opposite A. E is to the left of D. Who sits between D and B?

6 / 20

Eight people sit in two rows facing each other (4 in each). W faces A. B is to the right of A. Z is left of W. Who faces B?

7 / 20

Six persons sit in a line. D is to left of E. A is between C and D. B is to the far right. Who is second from left?

8 / 20

Four couples sit around a circular table. Men and women alternate. If A sits between C and E, and B sits opposite A, who is to the right of B?

9 / 20

Eight persons A–H sit around a circle. E is third to the right of A. B is immediate left of A. Who is second to the left of E?

10 / 20

In a row of 7 persons facing north, R is to the left of Q but right of T. P is at extreme left. Who is third from left?

11 / 20

Six people sit in a circle facing inward. A is second to right of F. C is opposite F. Who is opposite A?

12 / 20

Five persons A, B, C, D, E sit in a straight line. D is left of C. B is right of A and left of C. Who sits at the extreme right?

13 / 20

Eight people sit around a circular table. H is to the immediate left of A. C is opposite A. If B is second to the right of A, who sits opposite B?

14 / 20

Five persons P, Q, R, S, T sit in a row. R is not at any end. T is second to the right of R. Q is to the left of P. Who is at the left end?

15 / 20

Seven people sit around a circle. D is between A and E. C sits opposite D. B is to the immediate left of C. Who is to the right of E?

16 / 20

Ten persons sit in two parallel rows facing each other. In row 1 (A–E), A faces P. B sits to the right of A. Who faces C?

17 / 20

A, B, C, D, E are sitting in a straight line facing north. B is to the right of A but left of D. C is at the extreme right. Who sits in the middle?

18 / 20

In a circular arrangement, P sits second to the right of Q. R sits third to the left of Q. Who is to the immediate right of R?

19 / 20

Eight people sit in a circle. A is third to the right of B. C is second to the left of B. Who is directly opposite A?

20 / 20

Six persons A, B, C, D, E and F are sitting in a row. A is to the immediate right of B. C is at an extreme end. D is between E and F. Who is sitting at the other extreme end?

Your score is

The average score is 8%

0%

Odd One Out

Odd One Out

1 / 20

Odd word:

2 / 20

Odd one out:

3 / 20

Odd number:

4 / 20

Odd one out:

5 / 20

Odd one:

6 / 20

Odd one out:

7 / 20

Find the odd pair:

8 / 20

Odd word:

9 / 20

Which number is odd?

10 / 20

Odd one out:

11 / 20

Which is different?

12 / 20

Odd one out:

13 / 20

Odd letter group:

14 / 20

Odd one out:

15 / 20

Choose the odd number:

16 / 20

Odd one out:

17 / 20

Which shape is different?

18 / 20

Find the odd pair.

19 / 20

Which number is different from the rest?

20 / 20

Which word is the odd one out?

Your score is

The average score is 69%

0%

Ranking & Order

Ranking & Order

1 / 24

In a row, A is 4th from left. Only 3 people behind him? Total?

2 / 24

If P stands before Q, Q before R, who is last?

3 / 24

If 60 people arranged randomly, positions possible?

4 / 24

A is 9th, B is 15th. How many between?

5 / 24

A is 9th, B is 15th. How many between?

6 / 24

A is 9th, B is 15th. How many between?

7 / 24

Rank from bottom if 18th from top in 40?

8 / 24

A is shorter than B, B shorter than C. Who is tallest?

9 / 24

If T is 6th from left in row of 15, what is right position?

10 / 24

In a line, A is 8th, B is 12th. How many between?

11 / 24

In a class of 50, M is 22nd from top. From bottom?

12 / 24

Four persons P>Q>R>S. Who is 2nd tallest?

13 / 24

If R is 9th from the top and 12th from bottom, total?

14 / 24

If R is 9th from the top and 12th from bottom, total?

15 / 24

A’s rank improves from 25 to 19. How many positions improved?

16 / 24

A’s rank improves from 25 to 19. How many positions improved?

17 / 24

In a queue, L is 15th from front and 10th from back. Total?

18 / 24

A is taller than B; B taller than C; C taller than D. Who is shortest?

19 / 24

If 5 people stand in line, how many possible orders?

20 / 24

In a race A is between B and C. If B is 3rd and C is 5th, what is A’s position?

21 / 24

A is 5th from the top in a class of 30. What is his rank from bottom?

22 / 24

In a row of 40 students, Rohan is 10th from left. What is his position from right?

23 / 24

If P is 12th from left and 8th from right, how many students are there?

24 / 24

In a line, A is 10th from left and 17th from right. Total people?

Your score is

The average score is 57%

0%

Venn Diagrams

Venn Diagrams

1 / 26

“Car, Vehicle, Road”

2 / 26

“Vegetarian, Vegan, People”

3 / 26

“Prime numbers, Even numbers, 2”

4 / 26

Which disjoint?

5 / 26

Which diagram matches “Actors who are not singers”?

6 / 26

Which groups intersect?

7 / 26

“Teacher, Student, Human”

8 / 26

“Reptiles, Frogs, Snakes”

9 / 26

“Vehicles, Bikes, Engines”

10 / 26

Which two always intersect?

11 / 26

Which two always intersect?

12 / 26

“Mammal, Whale, Shark”

13 / 26

“Mammal, Whale, Shark”

14 / 26

“Author, Writer, Teacher”

15 / 26

“Author, Writer, Teacher”

16 / 26

“Author, Writer, Teacher”

17 / 26

“Author, Writer, Teacher”

18 / 26

Which sets are disjoint?

19 / 26

Which overlap?

20 / 26

Relationship: Science, Physics, Chemistry

21 / 26

Which is correct?

22 / 26

Which of these is mutually exclusive?

23 / 26

Which relationship? “Dogs, Animals, Cats”

24 / 26

All roses are flowers; some flowers are red. Which is correct?

25 / 26

Which set represents “Students who play cricket and football”?

26 / 26

Which set represents “Students who play cricket and football”?

Your score is

The average score is 30%

0%

Statement & Conclusion

Statement & Conclusion

1 / 20

Statement:

Some people are honest. All honest people are respected.
Conclusions:
I. Some people are respected.
II. All respected people are honest.

2 / 20

Statement:

All books are knowledge. Some knowledge is power.
Conclusions:
I. Some books are power.
II. Some power is books.

3 / 20

Statement:

Some mobiles are Samsung. No Samsung product is cheap.
Conclusions:
I. Some mobiles are not cheap.
II. All mobiles are not cheap.

4 / 20

Statement:

All bags are blue. Some blue things are plastic.
Conclusions:
I. Some bags are plastic.
II. All plastic things are bags.

5 / 20

Statement:

No student is perfect. Some students are hardworking.
Conclusions:
I. No hardworking person is perfect.
II. Some hardworking people are not perfect.

6 / 20

Statement:

All players are fit. Some fit people are strong.
Conclusions:
I. Some strong people are players.
II. Some players are strong.

7 / 20

Statement:

Some chairs are wooden. No wooden item is light.
Conclusions:
I. Some chairs are not light.
II. All chairs are wooden.

8 / 20

Statement:

Some laptops are Dell. All Dell are electronics.
Conclusions:
I. Some laptops are electronics.
II. All electronics are laptops.

9 / 20

Statement:

All pens are blue. No blue item is expensive.
Conclusions:
I. No pen is expensive.
II. Some pens are not expensive.

10 / 20

Statement:

Some men are doctors. Some doctors are rich.
Conclusions:
I. Some men are rich.
II. Some rich people may be men.

11 / 20

Statement:

No soldier is lazy. Some lazy people are students.
Conclusions:
I. No student is a soldier.
II. Some students are not soldiers.

12 / 20

Statement:

All roses are flowers. Some flowers are red.
Conclusions:
I. Some roses are red.
II. Some red things are flowers.

13 / 20

Statement:

Some mobiles are expensive. All expensive things are branded.
Conclusions:
I. Some mobiles are branded.
II. All mobiles are branded.

14 / 20

Statement:

No dog is a cat. Some cats are pets.
Conclusions:
I. No dog is a pet.
II. Some pets are not dogs.

15 / 20

Statement:

All teachers are graduates. Some graduates are engineers.
Conclusions:
I. Some engineers may be teachers.
II. All graduates are teachers.

16 / 20

Statement:

Some fruits are apples. All apples are red.
Conclusions:
I. Some fruits are red.
II. All fruits are red.

17 / 20

Statement:

All students are intelligent. Some intelligent people are hardworking.
Conclusions:
I. Some students are hardworking.
II. All intelligent people are students.

18 / 20

Statement:

No car is a train. All trains are engines.
Conclusions:
I. No car is an engine.
II. Some engines are trains.

19 / 20

Statement:

Some books are papers. All papers are files.
Conclusions:
I. Some books are files.
II. All files are books.

20 / 20

Statement:

All birds are animals. All animals are living things.
Conclusions:
I. All birds are living things.
II. Some living things are birds.

Your score is

The average score is 23%

0%

Cause & Effect

Cause & Effect

1 / 20

I. Many students scored high marks in the test.
II. A new easy syllabus was introduced this year.

2 / 20

I. The company laid off many employees.
II. The company suffered heavy financial losses.

3 / 20

I. Water level in the dam reached dangerously high levels.
II. Authorities released excess water from the dam.

4 / 20

I. Several roads were blocked.
II. A huge political rally was held in the city

5 / 20

I. The demand for electricity increased sharply.
II. The temperature rose significantly across the region.

6 / 20

I. Farmers experienced major crop loss.
II. The monsoon arrived very late this year.

7 / 20

I. The match was postponed.
II. Heavy rain started shortly before the match.

8 / 20

I. A large number of people visited hill stations.
II. Temperatures in the plains crossed 45°C.

9 / 20

I. Several people reported food poisoning.
II. A contaminated water pipeline was discovered.

10 / 20

I. The company earned record profits.
II. The company launched a new successful product.

11 / 20

I. Many trees were uprooted.
II. A strong storm hit the coastal area.

12 / 20

I. Many people switched to online shopping.
II. Several major e-commerce websites offered huge discounts.

13 / 20

I. Students performed poorly in the entrance test.
II. The difficulty level of the exam was increased this year.

14 / 20

I. Several flights were cancelled at the airport.
II. Dense fog covered the entire region.

15 / 20

I. A fire broke out in the chemical factory.
II. Thick smoke covered the nearby area.

16 / 20

I. The government increased fuel prices.
II. Inflation rose in the country.

17 / 20

I. Many fruits were destroyed in the storm.
II. Fruit prices increased in the market.

18 / 20

I. The school announced extra classes.
II. Several students failed the mid-term exam.

19 / 20

I. Many people started wearing masks.
II. Air quality in the city dropped significantly.

20 / 20

I. Heavy rainfall occurred in many parts of the city.
II. Several areas of the city were flooded.

Your score is

The average score is 40%

0%

How to Prepare Effectively

Follow these strategies to maximize your reasoning score:

  • 🕒 Practice under timed conditions to simulate exam pressure.
  • ⚖️ Analyze mistakes after each quiz and revisit problem areas.
  • 🔄 Retake quizzes to reinforce logic patterns and memory.
  • 💡 Use elimination and shortcut methods for faster solving.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

1. What is Analytical Reasoning?

Analytical Reasoning is the ability to analyze information, identify patterns, relationships, and solve problems logically and efficiently.

2. What are the main types of Analytical Reasoning?

Logical Puzzles, Coding-Decoding, Blood Relations, Syllogism, Analogy, Series, Direction Sense, Seating Arrangement, Odd One Out, Ranking & Order, Venn Diagrams, Statement & Conclusion, and Cause & Effect.

3. How to solve Logical Puzzles?

Understand conditions, make charts/tables, apply elimination techniques, and deduce relationships carefully.

4. What is Coding-Decoding?

Coding-Decoding involves converting letters, numbers, or words according to a specific pattern or rule and decoding them efficiently.

5. How to approach Blood Relation questions?

Use family tree diagrams, identify direct relationships, and apply logical deductions systematically.

6. What is the best strategy for Series questions?

Analyze patterns, differences, ratios, or sequences in numbers or letters and apply the rule to find the next element.

7. How to solve Direction Sense problems?

Visualize directions, draw diagrams, and use relative positioning carefully to solve efficiently.

8. Are Venn Diagrams useful?

Yes, Venn Diagrams are useful for problems involving set theory, logic, and relationships between groups.

9. How to solve Seating Arrangement questions?

Visualize seating, make tables or diagrams, follow clues step by step, and eliminate impossible options.

10. What are Statement & Conclusion questions?

These questions require evaluating statements and determining logically valid conclusions based on the given information.

20 Frequently Asked Questions (HTML — User + SEO Friendly)

Q1: What is analytical reasoning used for?
It measures logical thinking and decision-making ability.
Q2: Is analytical reasoning included in job tests?
Q3: How can I master analytical reasoning?
Q4: How many questions are in competitive exams?
Q5: Do I need mathematics?
Q6: Are past papers important?
Q7: Can weak students improve?
Q8: What is the best way to practice?
Q9: Which books are recommended?
Q10: Does time management matter?
Q11: How to avoid confusion?
Q12: What mistakes students make?
Q13: Is it similar to logical reasoning?
Q14: Can beginners learn from zero?
Q15: Are patterns repeated?
Q16: Does ISSB include analytical reasoning?
Q17: How long to become good?
Q18: Is coaching required?
Q19: Can online preparation work?
Q20: Where to get free material?
Scroll to Top