Let's clear up the biggest myth on day one. Many students still prepare for clat english language by drilling grammar rules, memorising synonym lists and grinding through idioms. That is the old exam. The current CLAT English section tests one thing only: reading comprehension. You are given a passage and asked questions about it. No standalone grammar, no vocabulary out of context, no spotting-the-error. Just reading — done well, done fast.
That single fact is liberating. You don't need to swallow a thesaurus or learn grammar tables. You need to become a sharp, efficient reader — a skill you can build in a few weeks. This guide covers the lot: the format, the five question types, how to read a passage fast and accurately, how to crack each type, time and negative-marking strategy, the traps that steal marks, a daily reading habit, and worked examples in real CLAT style.
What CLAT English actually tests
The English Language section gives you several passages of around 450 words each, drawn from fiction, non-fiction and editorials — think a literary extract, a popular-science article, a historical essay, or an opinion piece from a quality newspaper. Each passage is followed by four to six questions. Together these make up roughly 20% of the paper — about 24 questions out of 120.
The passages are pitched so a Class 12 student can comfortably read them. The challenge is never that the words are too hard. It is reading precisely under time pressure — catching the writer's main point, their tone, the structure of their argument, and the exact shade of meaning a word carries in its sentence.
- ✓Comprehend the passage — follow the argument and grasp what the writer is actually saying.
- ✓Draw inferences and conclusions — work out what follows from the text without it being stated outright.
- ✓Summarise — identify the central idea and distinguish it from supporting detail.
- ✓Compare and contrast — track different viewpoints or arguments within one passage.
- ✓Read meaning in context — decode words and phrases by how the passage uses them, not a dictionary.
The five question types you will meet
Almost every CLAT English question is one of five recognisable types. Learn to name the type the moment you read the question — because each type has its own method and its own trap. This is the single most useful piece of map-reading for the section.
| Question type | What it asks | Where the answer lives |
|---|---|---|
| Main idea / summary | The central point of the passage or a paragraph | The thesis — often the intro or conclusion; the thread running through all paras |
| Inference / conclusion | What logically follows, though unstated | Just beyond the text — built from the lines, never wildly past them |
| Vocabulary in context | What a word or phrase means as used here | The surrounding sentence, not the dictionary's first meaning |
| Tone / attitude / style | The writer's mood or stance toward the subject | Word choice, adjectives, irony, emphasis |
| Purpose / structure | Why the writer wrote it, or how a part functions | The role of a paragraph; the verb in 'the author seeks to…' |
Each of these is a full chapter in this guide, with its own walkthrough and 10 drills (150 questions) in the real exam format. The cards near the end link straight into each. First, though, the skill that powers all five: active reading.
Active reading — the master skill
Weak readers read every passage the same way: passively, word by word, hoping it sticks. Strong readers read actively — they interrogate the text as they go, building a mental map of the argument so that when the questions come, they already know where to look. Active reading is the difference between re-reading the passage four times and reading it once.
- 1
Read the first and last sentence with intentThe opening usually plants the topic; the closing often states or restates the main point. Before you even reach the middle, you frequently know what the passage is arguing.
- 2
Find the thesis and the turnHunt for the one sentence that captures the writer's central claim. Then watch for the pivot — words like 'but', 'however', 'yet', 'although' that signal a change of direction. The turn is where examiners love to set questions.
- 3
Map each paragraph in one phraseAs you finish each paragraph, mentally label it: 'problem', 'example', 'counter-view', 'author's verdict'. You are building a table of contents in your head. This is what lets you find an answer in seconds.
- 4
Mark the signposts and strong wordsNote connectors ('therefore', 'on the contrary', 'in addition') and loaded words (adjectives, irony, exaggeration). Connectors reveal structure; loaded words reveal tone.
- 5
Anticipate the questionsBy the end of a CLAT passage you can almost predict the questions: 'What's the main idea?', 'What does this word mean here?', 'What's the tone?'. Reading with these in mind keeps your attention sharp and purposeful.
In the exam you can't scribble on the screen, so do it mentally and with the on-screen highlighter where available. When you practise, train the habit deliberately: underline the thesis, bracket the turn, label each paragraph. After a few weeks it becomes automatic and silent — exactly what you want under the clock.
Read the passage once, like a detective — then let the questions tell you where to look again.
How to handle each question type
With the passage mapped, each question type has a clean method. Recognise the type, run its routine, and pick from the text — never from your gut.
Main idea & summary
The right answer captures the whole passage, not one striking paragraph. Test each option with one question: 'Does this cover the entire passage, or only a part of it?' The classic wrong answer is a true statement that is far too narrow — it describes one paragraph and ignores the rest. Drill this in the main idea and summary chapter.
- Prefer the option that is broad enough to include every paragraph yet specific enough to be this passage, not any passage.
- Reject anything too narrow (one detail) or too sweeping (a grand claim the passage never made).
- For 'best title' questions, the title must fit the main idea — not just mention a word that appears in the text.
Inference & conclusion
An inference is what must be true given the passage, even though the writer never said it outright. Stay one careful step beyond the text — no more. The favourite trap here is the option that leaps three steps too far, or one that is true in the real world but unsupported by this passage.
Vocabulary in context
The question is never 'what does this word mean?' It is 'what does this word mean here?' Many words have several meanings; the passage fixes which one applies. Cover the options, read the sentence, decide the meaning yourself, then find the option that matches. Beware the option that gives a real but irrelevant dictionary meaning.
Tone, attitude & style
Tone lives in word choice. Is the writer admiring, critical, sceptical, nostalgic, ironic, neutral, alarmed? Scan for the loaded adjectives and verbs. Watch especially for irony and sarcasm — where the words say one thing but clearly mean the opposite. Avoid extreme tone labels ('furious', 'contemptuous') unless the language truly earns them; CLAT writers are usually measured.
Author's purpose & structure
Purpose answers 'why was this written?' — to inform, persuade, criticise, narrate, compare? Structure answers 'how is it built?' — and 'what does this particular paragraph do?' A paragraph might give an example, raise an objection, concede a point, or deliver the verdict. Name its job and the answer follows. The full method for author's purpose and structure questions is its own chapter.
Time and negative-marking strategy
CLAT UG is 120 questions in 120 minutes, marked +1 for a correct answer, −0.25 for a wrong one, and 0 for an unattempted one. English is roughly 20% of the paper — about 24 questions across four to six passages. The reading is shared: you pay the reading cost once, then several questions hang off the same passage. That shared-reading effect is why a confident reader can clear this section well inside its time share.
| Section | Approx weight | Style |
|---|---|---|
| English Language | ~20% | Reading-comprehension passages |
| Current Affairs incl. GK | ~25% | Passage-based |
| Legal Reasoning | ~25% | Principle + facts passages |
| Logical Reasoning | ~20% | Argument passages |
| Quantitative Techniques | ~10% | Data / graph passages |
A practical budget: about 2 to 3 minutes reading a passage, then roughly 40 to 50 seconds per question. The biggest time leak here is re-reading the whole passage for every question. Active reading kills that leak — map it once, then return only to the relevant lines.
- ✓Read the passage first, fully — skimming the questions before reading often wastes time here.
- ✓Bag the easy question types first — main idea and vocabulary are usually quicker than subtle inference.
- ✓Don't sink 3 minutes into one stubborn inference — flag it, move on, come back.
- ✓Always answer from the text — if your reason starts with 'I think' rather than 'the passage says', pause.
The common traps (and how to dodge them)
CLAT English is a section of close options. The setters rarely offer one obvious right answer and three silly ones; they offer one correct answer and three carefully built distractors. Almost every distractor falls into one of these families. Learn the families and you start seeing the trap before it catches you.
- ✓Out-of-scope — the option brings in an idea, fact or comparison the passage never mentions. It may sound clever and plausible, but if it isn't in the text, it's wrong.
- ✓Extreme language — words like 'always', 'never', 'all', 'none', 'only', 'impossible', 'must'. CLAT passages are usually measured, so an option with absolute language is frequently the trap.
- ✓True but irrelevant — the statement is factually true (or true in the real world) but does not answer this question or isn't supported by this passage.
- ✓Too narrow for a main-idea question — a real detail from one paragraph offered as the whole point.
- ✓Reversed or distorted — the option takes a real idea from the text and flips it, exaggerates it, or attributes it to the wrong person.
- ✓Half-right — the first half matches the passage; the second half quietly contradicts it. Read every option to its full stop.
A daily reading habit that actually works
Here's the truth no shortcut can replace: the strongest CLAT English scorers are simply the strongest readers. You build that not by cramming, but by reading well, daily. The plan below takes 30–40 minutes a day and turns reading from a chore into your sharpest weapon.
- 1
Read one quality editorial dailyPick one opinion piece or long-read from a serious newspaper or magazine each day. After reading, write the main idea in one sentence and name the writer's tone in one word. This trains the two question types students fear most.
- 2
Mix your genres across the weekRotate: editorials and op-eds for argument and tone; non-fiction essays on history, science or culture for structure; a few pages of literary fiction for nuance and inference. CLAT pulls from all three, so practise all three.
- 3
Keep a word-in-context notebookWhen a word's meaning is shaped by its sentence, jot the word and the sentence — not a dictionary definition. You're training the vocabulary-in-context skill, not memorising lists. Five entries a day is plenty.
- 4
Do one timed RC set, several times a weekReading widely builds the muscle; drilling under time builds exam speed. Do a passage with its questions against the clock, then review every wrong answer and name which trap caught you.
- 5
Keep an error logOne line per miss: was it out-of-scope, extreme language, true-but-irrelevant, or a misread tone? After two weeks your top two leaks will be obvious. Plug those and your score climbs.
Worked examples in real CLAT style
Theory sticks only when you see it work. Read each short passage actively, answer the question, then check the solution. Notice how every correct answer can be defended by pointing back to the text — and how each wrong option fits one of the trap families.
Which of the following best captures the main idea of the passage?
▸ Show solution
What is the critic's attitude toward the debut novel?
▸ Show solution
It can most reasonably be inferred from the passage that the committee was:
▸ Show solution
As used in the passage, the phrase 'the wonder had cooled into routine' most nearly means that:
▸ Show solution
The five chapters of CLAT English
We've split the section into the five question types CLAT keeps asking, each with a focused guide and 10 drills (150 questions) in the real exam format. Start with Main Idea & Summary — it's the foundation skill that every other type builds on. Then work outward to inference, vocabulary, tone and structure.
- It is 100% reading comprehension — no standalone grammar, no synonym lists, no fill-in-the-blanks.
- ~450-word passages from fiction, non-fiction and editorials, each with 4–6 questions; ~20% of the paper, ~24 Qs, +1 / −0.25 / 0.
- Five question types power the section: main idea, inference, vocabulary-in-context, tone, and purpose/structure.
- Active reading is the master skill: map the structure once, then return to the lines the question needs.
- Beware three big trap families: out-of-scope, extreme language, and true-but-irrelevant options.
- Build a daily reading habit — name the main idea and the tone of one editorial every day, and keep an error log.