Reasoning Question Bank – All Important Chapters
Practice reasoning topics that appear again and again in banking, SSC, railways and other competitive exams. Start from puzzles and core logic, then move into pattern and verbal reasoning.
1. Puzzles & Seating Arrangement
High-weightage reasoning topics for both prelims and mains exams. Essential for speed and accuracy.
Puzzle (Prelims)
Prelims FocusBasics to moderate level seating and arrangement puzzles to build comfort with standard patterns.
Puzzle (Mains)
Mains FocusAdvanced, layered puzzles and seating sets that match real exam difficulty for mains reasoning.
Logical Problems
Mixed LogicMixed logical situations that train you to read carefully, connect clues and avoid silly mistakes.
2. Core Logic: Inequality, Syllogism & Series
Must-do chapters that appear in almost every competitive exam’s reasoning section.
Inequality
Core LogicGreater-than, less-than and mixed relation questions that test direction sense in logical form.
Syllogism
Core LogicVenn diagram and statement–conclusion type problems based on everyday logical situations.
Alpha-Numeric Series
SeriesSeries based on mix of letters, numbers and symbols to test pattern spotting and speed.
Coding–Decoding
Series LogicWord and number coding patterns that train you to decode rules quickly in the exam hall.
Analogy
High ScoringIdentify relationships between words, numbers or figures and extend them to new questions.
Classification
Core Topic“Odd one out” style problems where you group similar items and detect the different one.
3. Pattern & Series Reasoning
Chapters that train your brain to see patterns in words, letters and sequences.
Odd Man Out
PatternChoose the option that does not follow the pattern of the others in the group.
Verbal Classification
Verbal LogicGroup words or phrases based on meaning, category or usage to find the correct classification.
Continuous Series
SeriesIdentify missing or wrong terms inside continuous letter or symbol sequences.
Letter–Symbol Series
PatternQuestions based on repeating cycles of letters and symbols with logical jumps.
Sequence of Words
OrderArrange words in a meaningful or logical order, such as day-to-day events or size-based order.
Artificial Language
LogicConstruct and decode “made-up” languages by spotting consistent rules in the statements.
4. Direction & Statement-Based Reasoning
Chapters that test your understanding of directions, assumptions, arguments and logical flow.
Direction Sense
BasicsMove north, south, east and west on paper to track positions and distances correctly.
Statement–Assumption
StatementsDecide which assumptions are logically implied by a given statement without adding extra facts.
Statement–Arguments
CriticalJudge whether given arguments in favour or against a statement are strong, weak or irrelevant.
Course of Action
DecisionDecide which actions logically follow from a problem situation without over- or under-reacting.
Statement–Conclusion
LogicChoose which conclusions logically follow from the given statements and which do not.
Cause and Effect
ReasoningIdentify whether two given events are related as cause and effect, both causes, or independent.
5. Advanced Verbal & Critical Reasoning
Higher-order topics that improve judgement, reading and argument analysis for tough exams.
Making Judgments
DecisionEvaluate situations and decide which options reflect sound judgement and practical thinking.
Matching Definitions
VerbalMatch complex definitions with the correct situation or example given in the options.
Theme Detection
ReadingRead short paragraphs and detect the central idea or theme behind them.
Analyzing Arguments
CriticalCheck whether an argument is logically strong, weak, relevant or based on faulty reasoning.
Truth Verification
LogicDecide whether given statements are definitely true, definitely false or uncertain from the data.
Essential Part
ConceptIdentify which option represents an essential component of a given concept or activity.