ZE
ZESTEXAM

Agniveer Air Force Syllogism

Study Material · Concept Notes · Shortcuts

This page covers Agniveer Air Force Syllogism with complete concept notes, 46 graded practice MCQs, key points and exam-specific tips. Free to study.

0 PYQs
none yet
46 Practice
MCQs
10 Key Points
to remember
Free
no login needed
Take Free Mock →Full Practice Set
Also for:NDACDSAgniveerCAPF
PYQs
0
Practice
46
Key Points
10
Access
Free
Concept Notes

Syllogism— Rules & Concept

Core ConceptRead this first — the foundation of the topic
Core Concept

A syllogism has two or more statements followed by conclusions. You must check if the conclusions logically follow from the statements, ignoring what you know about the real world

Key Rules

(1) Accept all statements as true, even if they seem wrong in reality. (2) Use only the given information. (3) Draw conclusions based purely on logical connections. (4) 'Some' means 'at least one but not all'. (5) 'All' means '100% without exception'

Venn Diagram Method

This is the most reliable approach. Draw circles to represent each category mentioned in statements. Overlap circles based on relationships given in statements. Check if conclusions match your diagram.

Exam PatternsWhat examiners ask — read before attempting PYQs

SSC CGL typically asks: (1) Statement-Conclusion type (2-3 statements, 2-4 conclusions to verify) (2) Only conclusion follows questions (3) Possibility-based conclusions. Most questions use words like All, Some, No, Few. Shortcut Formula #1 - Conversion Rule: 'All A are B' can be converted to 'Some B are A'. But 'All A are B' cannot be converted to 'All B are A'. Shortcut Formula #2 - Negative Conclusions: If both statements are positive, the conclusion cannot be negative. If one statement is negative, the conclusion must be negative.

Worked ExampleSolve this step-by-step before moving on

Statements: (1) All roses are flowers (2) Some flowers are red Conclusions: (I) Some roses are red (II) All red things are flowers Solution: Draw three circles - Roses (inside Flowers circle), Flowers (big circle), Red (overlapping with Flowers). From the diagram, roses and red may or may not overlap. Conclusion I is 'possible but not definite' - so FALSE.

Conclusion II says all red are flowers, but statement 2 only says some flowers are red, not the reverse - so FALSE. Answer: Neither conclusion follows. Worked Example 2: Statements: (1) No cats are dogs (2) All cats are animals Conclusions: (I) No dogs are cats (II) Some animals are cats Solution: Draw separate circles for cats and dogs (no overlap due to 'No'). Draw animals circle containing cats circle completely.

Conclusion I: 'No dogs are cats' is the same as 'No cats are dogs' - TRUE. Conclusion II: Since all cats are animals, definitely some animals are cats - TRUE. Answer: Both conclusions follow. Trick #3 - Possibility Conclusions: When a conclusion uses 'Some X can be Y' or 'X is a possibility', it's asking if the relationship is possible, not definite.

Even if something is not proven definite, it might still be possible.

Exam TrapsCommon mistakes students make — avoid these

#1: Students use real-world knowledge instead of logical reasoning. For example, if given 'All books are tigers', students reject it as impossible. In syllogism, you must accept this as true for that question and proceed logically. Time-Saving Approach: For statement-conclusion questions, quickly eliminate obviously wrong conclusions first.

Look for direct contradictions with statements. Then use Venn diagrams only for remaining conclusions. This saves precious exam time. Medium/Definite Rule: If conclusion says 'definitely' or uses strong words like 'certainly', it needs 100% proof from statements.

If it says 'can be' or 'possible', it needs only logical possibility, not certainty.

Key Points to Remember

  • Accept all statements as true regardless of real-world logic
  • Use Venn diagrams to visualize relationships between categories
  • Formula: 'All A are B' converts to 'Some B are A' but not 'All B are A'
  • Rule: If both statements are positive, conclusion cannot be negative
  • Some means 'at least one but not all', All means '100% without exception'
  • Possibility conclusions need logical possibility, not definite proof
  • No real-world knowledge should influence your logical reasoning
  • Trick: Check direct contradictions with statements to eliminate wrong conclusions quickly
  • Formula: One negative statement makes the conclusion negative
  • Time-saver: Eliminate obviously wrong conclusions before drawing Venn diagrams

Exam-Specific Tips

  • Syllogism appears in every SSC CGL paper with 4-5 questions guaranteed
  • Statement-conclusion type is the most common format in SSC exams
  • Venn diagram method has 95% accuracy rate for solving syllogisms
  • Words 'All, Some, No, Few' appear in 90% of SSC syllogism questions
  • Possibility-based conclusions appear in 30% of recent SSC papers
  • Conversion rule: 'All A are B' always converts to 'Some B are A'
  • Two positive statements can never yield a negative conclusion
  • SSC typically gives 2-3 statements with 2-4 conclusions to verify
Practice MCQs

Syllogism — Practice Questions

46graded MCQs · easy to hard · full solution & trap analysis · showing 20 of 46

All MCQs →
Practice 1easy

Statements: 1. All teachers are educated. 2. Some educated people are doctors. Conclusion: Some doctors are teachers. Which of the following is true about this conclusion?

Practice 2easy

Statements: 1. All teachers are educated. 2. Some educated people are doctors. Conclusion: Some teachers are doctors. Is the conclusion valid?

Practice 3easy

Statements: 1. All flowers are plants. 2. All plants need water. Conclusion: All flowers need water. Which of the following is true?

Practice 4easy

Statements: 1. All flowers are plants. 2. All plants need water. Conclusion: All flowers need water. Which statement best describes this conclusion?

Practice 5easy

Statements: 1. No reptiles are mammals. 2. All snakes are reptiles. Conclusion: No snakes are mammals. Is the conclusion valid?

Practice 6easy

Statements: 1. All doctors are professionals. 2. No professionals are unemployed. Conclusion: Either all doctors are employed OR some doctors are unemployed. Which statement is correct?

Practice 7easy

Statements: 1. Some athletes are vegetarians. 2. All vegetarians are health-conscious. Conclusion: Some athletes are health-conscious. Is the conclusion valid?

Practice 8easy

Statements: 1. No reptiles are mammals. 2. All snakes are reptiles. Conclusion: No snakes are mammals. Is this conclusion valid?

Practice 9easy

Statements: 1. Some athletes are tall. 2. All tall people are strong. Conclusion: Either all athletes are strong, or no athletes are strong. Which of the following is correct?

Practice 10easy

Statements: 1. No reptiles are mammals. 2. All snakes are reptiles. Conclusion: No snakes are mammals. Is the conclusion valid?

Practice 11easy

Statements: 1. No politicians are saints. 2. All saints are honest. Conclusion: Some politicians are not honest. Is the conclusion valid?

Practice 12easy

Statements: 1. Some athletes are disciplined. 2. All disciplined people are successful. Conclusion: Some athletes are successful. Is the conclusion valid?

Practice 13easy

Statements: 1. All teachers are educated. 2. Some educated people are doctors. Conclusion: Some doctors are teachers. Is the conclusion valid?

Practice 14easy

Statements: 1. All teachers are educated. 2. Some educated people are doctors. Conclusion: Some doctors are teachers. Which of the following is true?

Practice 15easy

Statements: 1. All fruits are healthy. 2. All apples are fruits. Conclusion: All apples are healthy. Which of the following is true?

Practice 16easy

Statements: 1. No criminals are honest. 2. All dishonest people are criminals. Conclusion: All dishonest people are criminals. Which of the following is true?

Practice 17easy

Statements: 1. Some students are athletes. 2. All athletes are disciplined. Conclusion: Either some students are disciplined, or no students are disciplined. Which of the following is true?

Practice 18easy

Statements: 1. No plants are animals. 2. All trees are plants. Conclusion: No trees are animals. Which of the following is true?

Practice 19medium

Statements: 1. All athletes are disciplined. 2. No lazy people are disciplined. 3. Some students are lazy. Conclusion: Which of the following must be true? (A) All students are athletes. (B) Some students are not athletes. (C) No students are athletes. (D) Either all students are athletes or some students are not athletes.

Practice 20medium

Statements: 1. All philosophers are critical thinkers. 2. Some critical thinkers are not scientists. Conclusion: Which of the following must be true? (A) All philosophers are scientists. (B) Some philosophers are not scientists. (C) No philosophers are scientists. (D) Either all philosophers are scientists or some philosophers are not scientists.

26 more practice questions in the Study Panel

Difficulty-graded, bookmarkable, with timed mode. Free account — no credit card.

Create Free Account →Browse Questions

60-Second Revision — Syllogism

  • Remember: Accept all statements as true, ignore real-world knowledge
  • Formula: All A→B converts to Some B→A, not All B→A
  • Trap: Using real-world logic instead of pure logical reasoning
  • Method: Use Venn diagrams for visual clarity and accuracy
  • Rule: Positive statements cannot produce negative conclusions
  • Trick: Eliminate contradictory conclusions first to save time
  • Focus: 'Some' = at least one, 'All' = 100%, 'Possible' = logically feasible
Studied the notes? Now test yourself
See how Syllogism appears in the real Agniveer Air Force paper
Full timed mock · Instant All-India percentile · Free
Free forever for basic prepNo app downloadReal exam-pattern questions12,000+ aspirants
Test Syllogism under exam conditions
Free Agniveer Air Force mock · instant rank · no login
Free Mock →