InferenceXAT Previous-Year Questions

8 previous-year questions on Inference from XAT, with full solutions. Practise free — check answers as you go; sign in to save your progress.

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8 questions

Inference · XAT PYQs

XAT 2024 · VARC
Passage / Data

Read the following poem and answer the TWO questions that follow.

In the darkened room
a woman
cannot find her reflection in the mirror

waiting as usual
at the edge of sleep

In her hands she holds
the oil lamp
whose drunken yellow flames
know where her lonely body hides

Q1.

What do the lines “the drunken yellow flames/know where her lonely body hides” BEST represent?

XAT 2023 · VARC
Q2.

Read the following paragraph and answer the question that follows.

The fundamental laws that govern the smallest constituents of matter and energy, when applied to the Universe over long enough cosmic timescales, can explain everything that will ever emerge. This means that the formation of literally everything in our Universe, from atomic nuclei to atoms to simple molecules to complex molecules to life to intelligence to consciousness and beyond, can all be understood as something that emerges directly from the fundamental laws underpinning reality, with no additional laws and forces.

Which of the following can be BEST inferred from the paragraph above?

XAT 2023 · VARC
Passage / Data

Read the poem and answer the TWO questions that follow.

The slow person you left behind when, finally,

you mastered the world, and scaled the heights you now command,

where is he while you

walked around the shaved lawn in your plus fours,

organizing with an electric clipboard

your big push to tomorrow?

Oh, I have come across him, yes, I have, more than once,

coaxing his battered grocery cart down the freeway meridian,

Others see in you sundry mythic types distinguished

not just in themselves but by the stories

we put in with beginnings, ends, surprises:

the baby Oedipus on the hillside with his broken feet

or the dog whose barking saves the grandmother

flailing in the millpond beyond the weir,

dragged down by her woolen skirt.

He doesn’t see you as a story, though.

He feels you as his atmosphere. When your sun shines,

he chorteles. When your barometric pressure drops

and the thunder heads gather,

he huddles under the overpass and writes me long letters with

the study little pencil he steals from the public library.

He asks me to look out for you.

Q3.

Which of the following statements BEST interprets the lines “He doesn’t see you as a story, though/He feels you as his atmosphere”?

XAT 2022 · VARC
Passage / Data

Read the poem carefully, and answer the TWO questions that follow.

It hurts to walk on new legs:
The curse of consonants. The wobble of vowels.
And you for whom I gave up a kingdom
Can never love that thing I was.
When you look into my past
You see
Only weeds and scales.
Once I had a voice.
Now I have legs.
Sometimes I wonder

Was it a fair trade?

Q4.

What does the author BEST mean by “Once I had a voice. /Now I have legs?”

XAT 2021 · VARC
Passage / Data

Read the following poem and answer the two questions that follow.
Sit, drink your coffee here; your work can wait awhile.
You're twenty-six, and still have some of life ahead.
No need for wit; just talk vacuities, and I'll
Reciprocate in kind, or laugh at you instead.
The world is too opaque, distressing and profound.
This twenty minutes' rendezvous will make my day:
To sit here in the sun, with grackles all around,
Staring with beady eyes, and you two feet away.

Q5.

What does the poet BEST convey by mentioning grackles in these lines, “...with grackles all around, /Staring with beady eyes, and you two feet away.”?

XAT 2021 · VARC
Passage / Data

Read the following passage and answer the question that follows.
Twitter is not on the masthead of a newspaper. But Twitter has become its ultimate editor. As the ethics and mores of that platform have become those of the paper, the paper itself has increasingly become a kind of performance space. Stories are chosen and told in a way to satisfy the narrowest of audiences, rather than to allow a curious public to read about the world and then draw their own conclusions.

Q6.

Based on the passage, the writer’s disappointment can be BEST summarised as:

XAT 2020 · VARC
Passage / Data

Read the poem below and answer the 2 associated questions:

Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what I’ve tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire.
But, if it had to perish twice,
I think I know enough of hate
To know that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice.

Q7.

Which of the following statements will the poet agree with the MOST?

XAT 2017 · VARC
Passage / Data

Read the following excerpt and answer the question that follows:

Fragrant with steam
were the days and the nights red
with many braziers
in the beloved house
of my father, my mother.

Q8.

Which of the following options is the closest expression of the poet’s feeling?