1. English:
The English section was entirely RC-based similar to CLAT 2022. There were 9 passages of varying lengths with number of questions ranging from 3 to 10. Overall, passages were easy to read. There were regular contextual vocabulary questions, grammar questions based on parts of speech and question tags and a mix of informational and inferred questions. The figures of speech based questions, which were a regular feature in previous years were conspicuously absent. The trick was to pick the right passages and solve as many questions as possible. ALPians with good practice of CLAT would have nailed it. Overall a moderate section.
2. Current Affairs General Knowledge(30):
This section had a mix of Static and Current affairs with around 13 questions from International Affairs across the globe. There were questions from Sports, History, Geography, Awards, Books. There were a few tricky questions, but were predominantly easy to moderate from familiar topics. Overall an easy section.
3. Logical Reasoning 70):
The logical reasoning section was heavy on Critical Reasoning (CR) with 58 questions, having only 4 Analytical Reasoning(AR) arrangements based questions and 8 Legal principle-based questions. This section was time-consuming due to high levels of concentration needed to eliminate close options. Assumptions-based (17) and Syllogisms (18) were spread across this section, with around 6 argument-based questions, 6 inference-based and 8 conclusions. There were 3 questions based on Deductive Logic. ALPians who have practised CR questions would have aced it. Overall a moderate section