Last Updated: April 2026
English Language in CLAT 2027 carries 22–26 questions — all passage-based. In CLAT 2025 analysis, Inference questions accounted for 26% of all English marks and Vocabulary-in-Context for 19%, making these two the highest-yield areas in the section. The passages are drawn predominantly from Indian literary and journalistic sources.
CLAT English Section — Topic-wise Marks Distribution
| Question Type | Approx Share | Questions (of 24) | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inference / Central Idea | 26% | 6–7 | Medium-High |
| Vocabulary in Context | 19% | 4–5 | Medium |
| Fact / Argument Distinction | 16% | 4 | Medium |
| Author’s Tone / Attitude | 14% | 3–4 | Medium-High |
| Summary / Paraphrase | 13% | 3 | Medium |
| Grammatical Correction | 12% | 2–3 | Low-Medium |
Passage Sources — Where CLAT English Passages Come From
The Consortium draws English passages from a diverse range of sources. Knowing these helps you practise with the right material:
- Indian literary authors: Arundhati Roy, Amitav Ghosh, Vikram Seth, Jhumpa Lahiri, R.K. Narayan
- Indian journalism: The Hindu editorials, Indian Express opinion, EPW (Economic and Political Weekly)
- Constitutional/legal commentary: Granville Austin, Nani Palkhivala, Fali Nariman
- Social commentary: Romila Thapar, Ramachandra Guha, Shashi Tharoor
- International literary sources: George Orwell, Aldous Huxley, VS Naipaul (Indian connection)
Inference Questions — How to Solve Them
Inference questions ask what can be “inferred,” “concluded,” or “assumed” from the passage. These are the most common traps:
- Too strong: Answer choices that use “always,” “never,” “all,” “only” are usually wrong
- Outside scope: If it requires knowledge not in the passage, it is wrong
- Reversal trap: An answer that says the opposite of what the passage implies
- Correct inference: A logical, modest extension of what the author actually states or implies
5-Step Inference Solving Framework
- Identify the sentence(s) the question is based on
- Paraphrase what the author is saying in simple terms
- Ask: what must be true IF this passage is true?
- Eliminate options that go beyond or contradict the passage
- Select the option that is the most modest, supported conclusion
Vocabulary in Context — CLAT vs Standard Vocabulary
CLAT tests words in context — not dictionary definitions. The same word can mean different things depending on passage tone. Key strategy:
- Read the sentence before and after the word
- Identify whether the word is used positively, negatively, or neutrally
- Replace the word with each answer option and check logical fit
- Eliminate obvious outliers
High-Frequency CLAT Vocabulary — 30 Words You Must Know
| Word | Meaning | Common Context in CLAT |
|---|---|---|
| Albeit | Although / even though | Concession in argument |
| Ameliorate | To improve a bad situation | Policy/social reform passages |
| Anachronism | Out of its proper time | Legal/historical passages |
| Equivocal | Open to more than one interpretation; ambiguous | Legal reasoning tone |
| Hegemony | Leadership/dominance of one entity over others | IR and polity passages |
| Inimical | Tending to obstruct or harm | Constitutional rights passages |
| Insidious | Proceeding in a gradual, subtle way | Social commentary |
| Jurisprudence | Theory and philosophy of law | Legal reasoning passages |
| Malfeasance | Wrongdoing by a public official | Governance/current affairs |
| Perfidious | Deceitful and untrustworthy | Literary passages |
Author Tone — How to Identify It in CLAT Passages
Author tone questions ask you to characterise the writer’s attitude. Common tones in CLAT passages:
| Tone | Signal Words | Common Passage Type |
|---|---|---|
| Critical | fails, neglects, inadequate, flawed | Policy/governance critique |
| Cautious/Tentative | perhaps, might, could, possibly | Legal/academic analysis |
| Optimistic | promising, opportunity, progress, potential | Economic/social reform |
| Ironic/Satirical | Contrast between literal and intended meaning | Literary/opinion passages |
| Objective/Neutral | Data presented without clear judgment | Factual/report passages |
30-Day CLAT English Preparation Plan
| Week | Focus Area | Daily Practice |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | Inference + Central Idea | 3 passages daily from The Hindu |
| Week 2 | Vocabulary in Context | 10 words daily + 2 passages |
| Week 3 | Author Tone + Fact vs Argument | 3 passages + tone identification exercises |
| Week 4 | Full Section Timed Practice | 1 full English section (24Q) under 28 minutes |
Frequently Asked Questions — CLAT English Language
Are there direct grammar questions in CLAT English 2027?
Yes, but minimally — 2–3 questions test grammatical correction within passages. The focus is overwhelmingly on comprehension: inference, vocabulary, tone, and argument structure. Grammar questions are easier to score and should not be neglected.
Which newspaper is best for CLAT English preparation?
The Hindu (editorial page) is the closest match to CLAT passage style. Indian Express opinion section and EPW are also excellent. Read 2–3 editorials daily, focusing on identifying the central argument, tone, and vocabulary in context.
How much time should I spend on CLAT English in the exam?
Target 25–28 minutes for the English section (24 questions at approximately 1 minute 10 seconds per question). English is typically faster to complete than Legal Reasoning, leaving more time for GK and Logical Reasoning.
Do CLAT English passages have Indian authors?
Yes — approximately 60–70% of CLAT English passages in recent years have been from Indian authors or Indian journalistic sources. Arundhati Roy, Amitav Ghosh, Romila Thapar, and The Hindu editorial board feature prominently.
What is the biggest mistake students make in CLAT English?
The biggest mistake is using outside knowledge to answer inference questions. CLAT tests what the passage says, not what you know. Always return to the passage for every answer — especially for inference and vocabulary questions where common knowledge can mislead you.
Strengthen your English skills with CLAT English practice resources at CLAT Gurukul.