- Introduction to Syllogism
- Basics
- Subject vs Predicate
- Classification of statement
- Standard format: conversion
- No conclusion Combos
- Conclusive-Combos
- DemoQ: Crazy men and Women
- DemoQ: Intelligent Poets and singers
- CAT-level
- Special Conversions
- Complimentary pairs
- Tricky Situations: Priority order
- Tricky Situations: 1-Statement Conclusion
- Summary
Introduction to Syllogism
There are two main types of Syllogism question
| 2-Statements | 3-Statements |
| Question Statement: I. All cats are dogs II. All dogs are birdsConclusion: I. Some cats are birds II. Some birds are cats. |
Question Statement A. All cats are dogs B. some pigs are cats C. no dogs are birdsConclusion I. some cats are dogs II. no birds are cats III. some pigs are birds IV. some pigs are not birds |
- 2 Statement Syllogism questions are usually found in IBPS (Bank) and SSC exams.
- UPSC CSAT 2012 exam had quite a few questions on 3 Statement Syllogism.
- In CAT exams, they ask 2 Statement Syllogism but they pack 3-4 such “2-statement” syllogism questions inside one question to make it very time-consuming process.
- In this article, you will learn how to solve the 2 Statement syllogism questions.
- 3 Statement syllogism syllogism is explained in separate article (CLICK ME). (They’re mere an extension of the concepts explained in this article, so first master the 2-statement technique here.)
There are three methods to solve 2-statement Syllogism questions.
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The technique explained in this article, is a modified version of AEIO method combined with the Tick Method. Let’s call it U.P.–U.N. method.
Basics
Subject vs Predicate
Consider this question statement
1. All cats are dogs
2. Some dogs are birds
3. No bird is a pig
4. Some pigs are not birds.
In all such statements, first-term is called subject and second is called predicate.
It doesn’t matter what word is given: Table, Chair, Raja, Kalmadi, Kanimozhi or Madhu Koda – first term is subject and second term is predicate.
Let’s relook at those question statements
| Subject | Predicate | |
| 1. All cats are dogs | Cats | Dogs |
| 2. Some dogs are birds | Dogs | Birds |
| 3. No bird is a pig | Bird | Pig |
| 4. Some pigs are not birds. | Pigs | Birds |
I hope the Subject vs. Predicate is clear now. Let’s move to second thing
Classification of statement
In syllogism, each statement usually has following format
“xyz subject is/are (not) predicate.”
For example,
| Xyz | Subject | Is/are (+/-not) | Predicate |
| All | Cats | Are | Dogs |
| Some | Pigs | Are not | birds |
Based on “xyz” and “not”, we classify the statements as following
| Statement | Type | Codename |
| 1. All cats are dogs | Universal Positive | UP |
| 2. Some dogs are birds | Particular Positive | PP |
| 3. No bird is a pig | Universal Negative | UN |
| 4. Some pigs are not birds. | Particular Negative | PN |
Please remember following words. Whenever they come, you classify the statement accordingly.
| All, every, any, none, not a single, only etc. | Universal (positive or negative) |
| Some, many, a few, quite a few, not many, very little, most of, almost, generally, often, freqently, etc. | Particular (positive or negative) |
Standard format: conversion
The standard 2-statement syllogism question format is following:
1. (xyz) “A” is/are (+/- not) “B”
2. (xyz) “B” is/are (+/- not) “C”
So basically it is
1. A—>B
2. B—>C
(read as “A to B then B to C”)
What does this tell us?
Question statements must have ONLY three terms. (A, B and C).
In the exam, if they give you two question statements with four terms then your time is saved! Just tick the answer “no conclusion can be drawn”.
For example
| Question statements | Answer |
| 1. All cats are Dogs 2. Some birds are pigs |
No conclusion can be drawn. Because it has four terms (cats, dogs, birds, pigs) A–>B C–>D |
Anyways back to the topic,
The standard format for question statements is:
| 1. A—>B 2. B—>C |
1. First term—>Middle Term 2. Middle Term—>Third term |
But if the given question statements are not given in this format, then we must convert them into above format. Otherwise we cannot proceed with answer. For example
| Given question statements are 1. A—>B 2. C—>B |
This must be converted into 1. A—>B 2. B—>C |
| Given question statements are 1. B—>A 2. B—>C |
This must be converted into 1. A—>B 2. B—>C |
Ok, so how to convert the statements?
Universal Positive (UP)
| Given Statement | Valid conversions | Type |
| Given Statement: All Cats are Dogs | Some Cats are dogs | Particular Positive (PP) |
| Some dogs are cats | Particular Positive (PP) |
It means UP can be converted into PP.
Please note: if the statement is “Only Dogs are cats”, then better convert it into “All cats are dogs”. (Only A is B –> All B are A)
Universal Negative (UN)
| Given Statement | Valid conversions | Type |
| Given Statement: No Cats are Dogs | Some dogs are not cats | Particular Negative (PN) |
| No dogs are cats | Universal Negative (UN) |
It means UN can be converted into PN or UN.
Particular Positive (PP)
| Given Statement | Valid conversions | Type |
| Some Cats are Dogs | Some dogs are cats | Particular Positive (PP) |
It means PP can be converted into PP only.
Particular Negative
Example: Some Cats are not Dogs. In Particular negative statements (PN), no conversion can be made.
So PN=can’t convert.
To sum up the conversion rules
| Type | Valid Conversion |
| Universal Positive (UP) | Only PP |
| Universal Negative (UN) | PN or UN |
| Particular Positive (PP) | Only PP |
| Particular Negative (PN) | Not possible. |
Please note:
In some lower level exams, sometimes they directly ask about conversion. For example
Q. What can be concluded from the given statement: “Some Politicians are honest men.”
Answer choices
- Some Honest men are not Politicians.
- All Honest men are not politician
- Some Honest men are politicians.
- None of Above.
(Please donot read further, without solving above question.)
Solution
well, the given statement “Some Politicians are honest men.” is a particular positive statement (PP).
Hence according to our table, it can be converted into PP only. Therefore
| Given answer choice | Thought process |
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Particular negative (PN), hence eliminate. |
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Universal Negative, hence eliminate |
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PP hence this is correct answer. |
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–not applicable because C is the correct answer. |
In case you are wondering,
Q. Some politicians are honest men.
In above case, can’t the answer be “A”: Some honest men are not politicians?
Well, if you go by Venn Diagram method, it’ll lead to two cases hence it is “doubtful”.
Case #1
| Data | |
| Subject (Politicians) |
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| Predicate (Honest Men) |
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In above situation, can you say “Some honest men are not politicians”?
Well you can’t say that. Because both Honest men (Sardar and Shastri) are in politician set.
Case #2
| Data | |
| Subject (Politicians) |
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| Predicate (Honest Men) |
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- In above situation, can you say “Some honest men are not politicians”?
- Yes you can. Because two Honest men (Bhagat Singh and Azad) are not in politician set.
- The point is, whenever “two cases” are possible, you cannot ‘safely’ conclude one statement.
Hence, if the statement is
- Some “A” are “B”–> it doesn’t mean Some “B” are not “A”.
- The only valid conclusion in above case is :Some “B” are “A”.
Therefore Particular Positive (PP) statement can be converted into Particular Positive (PP) statement only.
Similarly
| Type of Statement | Valid Conversion | Path |
| Universal Positive (UP)All cats(A) are dogs (B) | Only PPSome Cats (A) are dogs. (B)Some dogs (B) are cats. (A) | A to BB to A |
| Universal Negative (UN)No Cats(A) are dogs (B) | PN :Some Dogs (B) are not Cats (A). | B to A |
| UN: No Dogs (B) are cats. (A) | ||
| Particular Positive (PP)Some cats (A) are dogs (B) | Only PP: Some dogs (B) are cats(A) | B to A |
| Particular Negative (PN) | Not possible. | — |
Anyways back to the topic, what are we discussing?
- Topic of discussion is: How to solve 2 statement syllogism question
- Subject vs predicate
- Type of statements (UP, UN, PP, PN)
- Standard format and conversion.
The standard question format is
A–>B
B–>C
If the given question doesn’t have statements in ^above standard format, then we must convert them into standard format. Only then we can proceed further.
So far, We constructed our shortcut table on how to convert the statements. Now
let’s try some examples
| Question statements | Conversion? |
| 1. All Cats are dogs(B) 2. Some dogs(B) are not pigs. |
Already in standard format (A to B and then B to C) hence no need to convert. |
| 1. Some dogs(B) are not pigs. 2. All Cats are dogs(B) |
No need to convert any statement. Just exchange the position of first and second statement. 1. All Cats are dogs(B) 2. Some dogs(B) are not pigs. |
| 1. All Cats are dogs (B) 2. All pigs are dogs(B) |
Have to convert, because not in standard format.1.All cats(A) are dogs(B) 2.Some dogs(B) are pigs(C). (Rule UP-> only PP) |
Now coming to the heart of the matter: how to solve the (stupid) 2 statement syllogism question?
No conclusion Combos
Here are the non-conclusion combos when two question statements are in following format.
| First statement (A to B) | Second statement (B to C) | Answer |
| Universal Positive (UP) | Particular Positive (PP) | No conclusion |
| Particular Negative (PN) | No conclusion | |
| Universal Negative (UN) | Universal Negative (UN) | No conclusion |
| Particular Negative (PN) | No conclusion | |
| Particular Positive (PP) | Particular Positive (PP) | No conclusion |
| Particular Negative (PN) | No conclusion | |
| Particular Negative (PN) | Any other (UP, UN, PP, PN) | No conclusion |
^does it look difficult?
Not really. Let’s condense this table into mug-up rules.
- UP’s politicians hate giving particular statements (both positive and negative). E.g. they donot reveal their clear position on FDI in retail until the 11th hour.
- United Nations hates negativity. (both Universal and particular)
- Pritish Nandy hates everybody.
- Two-negatives=no conclusion. (although implicit in 2+3)
- Two particulars=no conclusion. (although implicit in 1+3)
Please note: in ^above situations definite conclusion is impossible. However, sometimes two answer choices are still possible “either a or b”.
That concept is called “Complimentary pairs”. We’ll learn about it at the bottom of this article.
For the moment, let’s not complicate the matters with complimentary pairs.
Ok back to topic, when you face a “Two-statement syllogism question”? you’ll follow these steps:
- first, make sure it contains only three terms (ABC) (else no conclusion.)
- Make sure question statements are in standard format (A to B then B to C). If not in standard format, then re-arrange.
- Classify the question statements. (UP, UN, PP, PN)
- Check if the question statements have no conclusion combos (^Above rules)
if above things donot yield an answer, then we’ve to think about what will be the “conclusion(s)”?
Conclusive-Combos
If you’ve followed above steps, then question statements in the format “A to B and then B to C.”
| First statement (A to B) | Second statement (B to C) | Conclusion |
| Universal Positive (UP) | Universal Positive (UP) | Universal Positive (UP) (A to C) |
| Universal Negative (UN) | Universal Negative (UN) (A to C) | |
| Universal Negative (UN) | Universal positive (UP) | Particular Negative (PN). (C to A) |
| Particular Positive (PP) | ||
| Particular Positive (PP) | Universal Positive (UP) | Particular Positive (PP) (A to C) |
| Universal Negative (UN) | Particular Negative (PN) (A to C) |
As you can see from above table,
The answer statement is usually in the format of A to C. with exception when first question statement is Universal Negative (UN).
Let’s condense this table into mug-up rules as well.
| Conclusive-Combos | In your head, visualize |
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If Uttar Pradesh meets Uttar Pradesh, then its size doesn’t increase. |
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If Uttar Pradesh meets United Nations then its size increases and it becomes United Nations. |
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United Nations Secretary Ban Ki Moon is in very positive mood. But he meets another positive person, and his attitude is totally reversed– he becomes particularly negative! (reversed =C to A) |
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When Mr.PP observes the universe via NASA telescope, his mood becomes positive or negative depending on the mood of universe. |
Try a question from SSC-CGL (Tier-I, 2010) exam,
DemoQ: Crazy men and Women
Question Statements
- All men are women.
- All women are crazy.
Conclusion
- All Men are crazy
- All the crazy are men
- Some of the crazy are men
- Some of the crazy are women
Answer
- None of the conclusion follows
- All conclusions follow
- Only 1, 3 and 4 follow
- Only 2 and 3 follow
(I suggest you pause here. First try to solve it on your own, without directly reading the solution. If you’ve difficulty, re-read rules given above)
Solution
Our standard operating procedure (SOP)
Question Statements
- All men are women.
- All women are crazy.
First step: make sure four terms are not given = check. Only three terms (men, women, crazy)
Second step, make sure they’re in standard format (A to B and then B to C): Check yes they’re.
Hence conversion is not required.
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Third step, classify the statements.
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Universal Positive (UP) |
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Universal Positive (UP) |
Fourth step: check the combo for question statements.
- Well, since it is UP+UP= its size doesn’t increase. Hence conclusion should be UP. (A to C) meaning All men(A) are crazy.(C)
Check the answer statements.
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Correct. |
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Recall that “conversion table”.Universal Positive (UP) can be converted only into Particular Positive (PP). Since All men are crazy => Some Crazy are men. But we cannot say All crazy are men. So this option is false. If you apply common sense at this stage: well, 1st statement correct, and 2nd statement is false, hence answer is (C): only 1, 3 and 4 follow! |
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Correct because of “conversion table” |
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Given question statement : All women are crazy. (Universal positive). If we apply conversion table (UP=> PP) then Some Crazy are women. Hence this statement is also correct. |
Final answer (C): only 1, 3 and 4 follow
If you’re still staggering, I suggest you go through those rules again, note them down in a diary in your own words and language, revise a few times. Then try next question
DemoQ: Intelligent Poets and singers
Question Statements (SSC-CPO exam)
- All poets are intelligent
- All singers are intelligent.
Conclusion
- all singers are poets
- some intelligent persons are not singers
Answer choices
- only conclusion one follows
- only conclusion two follows
- either conclusion one or conclusion two follows
- neither follows
solution
first step: does the question statements have only three terms? Check: Yes. Singers, poets, intelligent. Good, proceed with next step.
Second step: Are the question statements given in standard format (A to B then B to C)?
Check. Nope
- All poets (A) are intelligent (B)
- All singers (C) are intelligent. (B)
Then we have to convert it into standard format. And since both statements are universal positive, we don’t need to worry about which statement to convert first? (that “priority order”, more about it, explained at the bottom of this article.)
Second statement is universal positive (UP), according to our table, we can only convert it into particular positive (PP) therefore
All singers (C) are intelligent. (B)==> Some intelligent persons(B) are singers.(C)
Now the new question statements, in the standard format (A to B then B to C) are
1. All poets are intelligent (B)
2. Some intelligent persons(B) are singers.
Third step, classify the question statements
| question statement | type |
| 1. All poets(A) are intelligent (B) | Universal positive (UP) |
| 2. Some intelligent persons(B) are singers.(C) | Particular positive (PP) |
Fourth step, apply the combo rules.
Since UP’s politicians hate particular statements (both positive and negative), hence no conclusion can be drawn. That means we cannot connect A to C or C to A.
Now check the Answer statements
| i. all singers(C) are poets (A) |
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| ii. some intelligent persons are not singers |
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Final answer: (D) neither follows.
CAT-level
Same UP-UN Concept but they pack 3-4 or more syllogism questions into one question to test your speed, not just your understanding. for example:
DemoQ: Sweet Testing Apples (CAT)
given question has five statements followed by options containing three statements put together in a specific order. Choose the option which indicates a valid argument, where the third statement is a conclusion drawn from the preceding two statements.
Question statements (CAT 1999)
- Apples are not sweet
- Some apples are sweet
- All sweets are tasty
- Some apples are not tasty
- No apple is tasty
answer choices
- cea
- bdc
- cbd
- eac
solution and approach
we’ve to check the given options one by one.
Option (i). CEA. Meaning we’ve to take C as our statement (I), E as our Statement (II) and then observe, if statement (A) can be concluded from C and E.
| C | All sweets are tasty | Universal positive |
| E | No apple is tasty. | Universal negative |
| A | Apples are not sweet | Universal negative |
In the actual CAT exam, we cannot afford to waste time in actually converting all statements and checking them.
Here is the fast approach
1. three terms?= yes
2. in standard format? No. but we can convert second (UN) into another UN and then combo rule is UP+UN=UN.
Hence this answer choice (CEA) is correct.
Final answer (i) CEA
DemoQ: Working mother nurses (CAT)
| question statement | answer choices |
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Check the answer choices one by one.
i. ABE
| A (Statement I) | No mother is a nurse. (UN) |
| B (Statement II) | Some Nurses like to work |
| E (Conclusion) | Some Nurses are women. |
This is invalid. Because Statement I and II have three terms (Mother, Nurse and work) while given conclusion statement adds fourth new term “women”
Move to next choice.
ii. CED
| Statement | Type | |
| C (Statement I) | No woman is prude | Universal negative |
| E (Statement II) | Some nurses are women | Particular positive |
| D (conclusion) | Some prude are also nurses | Particular positive |
Question statements have three terms? Yes (women, prude, nurses)
Are they in standard format (A to B then B to C?) nope.
| No woman(B) is prude | Universal negative |
| Some nurses are women(B) | Particular positive |
change position of first and second statement.
1. Some nurses(A) are women(B)
2. No woman(B) is prude(C)
| question statement | type |
| 1. Some nurses(A) are women(B) | Particular positive (PP) |
| 2. No woman(B) is prude(C) | Universal negative (UN) |
Apply the combo rules
PP+UN=??
- When Mr.PP observes the universe via NASA telescope, his mood becomes particularly negative or positive depending on the mood of universe. Hence PP+UN=PN.(A to C)
- So legitimate conclusion is “Some Prune arenot nurses”.
- But Check the given conclusion statement: “Some prude are also nurses.” It is Particular positive (PP).
- But According to conversion table, PN cannot be converted. So we cannot say that since “Some prune are not nurses, that means some prunes are nurses!”
- Therefore given answer choice(ii) CED is false because D cannot be concluded from C+E.
- Move to the next answer choice.
Actual thought process: three terms =yes. Standard form=no. rearrange. But PP+UN=PN, can’t be converted to PP. Hence false.
iii.FEB
| Statement | Type | |
| F (Statement I) | All women like to work | Universal positive UP |
| E (Statement II) | Some nurses are women | Particular positive PP |
| B (conclusion) | Some nurses like to work | Particular positive PP |
three terms =yes. Standard form=no. but no need to convert, just exchange position of statement I and II.
| Some nurses(A) are women(B) | Particular positive PP |
| All women(B) like to work (C) | Universal positive UP |
Apply combo rule, again same situation
When Mr.PP observes the universe via NASA telescope, his mood becomes particularly positive or negative depending on the mood of universe. Hence PP+UP=PP.(A to C).
Some nurses(A) like to work(C). Done! This is same as the given conclusion (B)
Therefore, final answer is (iii) FEB.
DemoQ: 4 questions in 1!
This one is from CAT-1999.
Each of the given question statement as three segments. Choose the alternative where third segment of the statement can be logically be used using the both preceding two but not just from one of them
Question statements
- all dinosaurs are prehistoric creatures. Water buffaloes are not dinosaurs. Water buffaloes are not prehistoric creatures
- all politicians are frank. No frank people are crocodiles. No crocodiles are politicians
- no diamond is quartz. No opal is quartz. Diamonds are opals.
- All monkeys like bananas. Some Joes like bananas. Some Joes are monkeys.
Answer choice
- Only C
- Only B
- Only A and D
- Only B and C
Approach
| C. Diamonds, Quartz, Opals. | Three terms yes. Standard format =No.Both question statements are Universal negative. We can convert either of them, into UN or PN. But in any case, both question statements will remain negative. And Two negatives=no conclusion. So “C” is not possible. Hence answer choice (i) and (iv) eliminated. |
| B. Frank politicians and crocodiles | Already in three terms standard format.UP+UN=size enlarged and becomes UN. So conclusion should be “No crocodile is politician” so this statement is correct. Hence answer choice (ii). |
Final answer: (ii) only B.
The End?
No. Picture abhi baaki hai mere dost: just three more concepts before concluding the Two-Statement Syllogism
Special Conversions
Recall that when question statements are not in standard format (A to B then B to C), in that case we’ve to convert them according to conversion table. Here are some special cases.
| Given Question statement | Conversion (all applicable to all given question statements) | Type |
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UP |
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UN | |
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PP |
Second concept:
Complimentary pairs
Earlier we saw there are five no-conclusion combos
- UP’s politicians hate giving particular statements (both positive and negative). E.g. they donot reveal their clear position on FDI in retail until the 11th hour.
- United Nations hates negativity of any type. (both Universal and particular)
- Pritish Nandy hates everybody.
- Two-negatives=no conclusion.
- Two particulars=no conclusion.
For example
| Question statement | 1. Some Politicians are male.2. Some males are honest. |
| Conclusion | 1. Some Politicians are honest.2. No Politicians are honest. |
Answer choice
- Only 1 follows
- Only 2 follows
- Either 1 or 2 follows
- Neither follows
Apply the standard operating procedure:
Three terms? Check: yes
Are they in standard format? A to B then B to C? check. Yes
Then classify the statements
| 1. Some Politicians(A) are males(B) | Particular positive. |
| 2. Some males(B) are honest(C) | Particular positive. |
From the given rules, Two particulars = No conclusion!
But please observe one of the answer choice (C)= Either 1 or 2 follows.
Consider these cases
Case#2
| Politicians | Males | honest |
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In this case#1: some politicians (Sardar and Shastri) are honest.
So “conclusion (1) may be possible.”
Case#2
| Politicians | Males | honest |
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In this case, No politician is honest.
So “conclusion (2) may be possible.”
Therefore answer becomes “Either 1 or 2 follows”
Such syllogism-situations are called “complementary”.
You’ve to check following things, before thinking about “complementary” cases.
- Two statements with three terms? Yes
- Question statements are given in standard format (A to B Then B to C). if not, then rearrange or convert them.
- Classify the statements (UP, UN, PP, PN)
- Apply the rules. Get the answer.
- If Step #4 gives “No conclusion” AND one of the answer choice is in the format of “Either I or II follows”, only then check for complemantary case.
Checklist: complementary case
- Two answer choices have same subject and predicate.
| Applicable | Not applicable |
| 1. Some Politicians are honest.2. No Politicians are honestBecause both have common subject (politician) and common predicate (honest) | 1. Some Politicians are honest.2. No Honest are Politicians.In first statement, subject=Politician but in second statement, subject= Honest. Hence complemantary case not possible. |
2). The answer choice combo must be either of these three
| Answer choice combo | example |
| Uttar Pradesh (UP) + Pritish Nandy (PN) | 1. All Politicians are honest. 2. Some Politicians arenot honest |
| PP + Pritish Nandy (PN) | 1. Some Politicians are honest. 2. Some Politicians arenot honest |
| PP + United Nations (UN) | 1. Some Politicians are honest. 2. No Politicians are honest |
When these two conditions are met, then answer would be “Either (I) or (II) follows.”
Priority order
You know that when Question statements are not in standard format (A to B Then B to C), we must convert them. But here is a thing to keep in mind. Consider these statements
Question statements:
1. All Dogs are Cats.
2. Some Dogs are Pigs.
Common term or middle term is Dogs. So that’s our “B”.
1. All Dogs(B) are Cats.
2. Some Dogs(B) are Pigs.
We can convert it via two routes
| Route #1 | Route #2 |
| Just convert the first statement. 1. Some Cats are dogs. (Rule: UP to PP) 2. Some Dogs are pigs. |
We’ll re-order the statements. (that is interchange thee position of both statements) 1. Some dogs(B) are pigs 2. All Dogs(B) are Cats Now we’ll convert the first statement. 1. Some pigs are Dogs (B) (Rule: PP to PP) 2. All dogs (B) are cats. |
Both routes are valid.
Now the question is, which route should be preferred?
The priority order is:
1) Particular positive (PP) >> 2) Universal Negative (UN) >> 3) Universal Positive (UP)
Note: we’ve not included Particular Negative (PN) in this order because PN cannot be converted. So according to this priority order PP>UN>UP, route #2 is the more suitable approach. (although such complications don’t usually arise in most of the questions).
Tricky Situations: Priority order
Consider this scenario
| Question statements | Conclusion |
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As you can see, the question statements are not in standard format (A to B then B to C).
So, which question statement to convert?
First the wrong approach.
| WRON
G |
Since question statements are not in standard format (A to B then B to C), hence we’ll convert first statement. (UP to PP)After conversion
Both question statements are particular, hence final answer=No conclusion. (please note: this approach is wrong, because we’ve not followed the priority order). |
Now the correct approach
| CORR
E C T |
The priority order for Statement conversion is PP>UN>UP.Meaning, if there are two question statements, and we’ve to convert one of them to make it a standard format=> then we’ll convert Particular positive statement first.So in the given case
Convert second statement. (PP to PP)
Now exchange positions of question statements
Now they’re in standard format, apply combo rule: PP+UP=PP (Nasa telescope rule!) Hence conclusion is Some trees are birds. (PP) We can also say that Some birds are trees. (PP to PP conversion). Therefore answer is (1) |
Moral of the story: Conversion priority: PP>UN>UP. Especially when you’re getting PP+PP= no conclusion after conversion.
Tricky Situations: 1-Statement Conclusion
| Question statements | Conclusion |
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Question statement contains only three terms=yes.
Are they in standard format? (A To B then B to C?) =Yes.
Apply combo rules: UP+PP=No conclusion because Uttar Pradesh’s politicians hate particular statements.
But here’s the catch. Observe the conclusion statements carefully
| Conclusion statement | Thought process |
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Not possible because combo rule. |
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first question statement says All flowers are leaves. If you apply the conversion rule UP->PP, thenAll flowers are leaves=> Some leaves are flowers. Hence this conclusion is correct, although it did not employ both question statements. |
Moral of the story: Read terms (subject-predicate) of conclusion statements.
Summary
What to do when 2-statement syllogism question is given?
- They must have only three terms (A, B and C)
- Are the question statements in standard format (A to B then B to C)? if no, then refer to following conversion table. (important: priority order for conversion is PP>UN>UP.)
| Type | Valid Conversion |
| Universal Positive (UP) | Only PP |
| Universal Negative (UN) | PN or UN |
| Particular Positive (PP) | Only PP |
| Particular Negative (PN) | Can’t do. |
3. Classify the Question statement (UP, UN, PP, PN)
4. Apply the combo rules on Question statements.
No conclusion |
Yes conclusion |
|
|
5. (rarely required): if no-conclusion and “either or” given in answer, then check for Complimentary case.
This concludes the discussion on 2 statement Syllogism question.
In later article, we’ll see the 3-statement syllogism. It is basically extention of the same UP-UN method that we learned here. However, to quickly solve 3-statements, first you must become a master of 2-statement. So, practice as many sums as you can, from any of the following books.

For the whole archive of Aptitude related articles, visit Mrunal.org/aptitude

hi mrunal ji, this is vijay,
the question that pars asked i.e. 1st one,
statement 1- all cups r books
statement 2- all books r shirts
conclusion 1- some cups r not shirts
conclusion 2- some shirts r cups
based on the funda, up+up=up,neither of the conclusions r right. but if we solve thru ven diagram the conclusion 2 is rt(i.e. it makes sense right away). how to tackle this. upon trying to break the jinx, i had to convert the statement1
i.e some cups r books(a to b, not b to a coz again the sequence will change so)then the logic was
pp+up=pp
the conclusion being some cups r shirts,
to get the answer in the given choices, i again converted the arrived at conclusion into pp i.e.
some shirts r cups,
then i could get the answer thru the logic(approach) given by u. plz help to make it easy, coz it is leading to confusion. plzzzzz attend the query
Q.Statements
statement 1- all cups r books (UP)
statement 2- all books r shirts (UP)
approach
three terms=yes
standard format=yes.
apply combo rule=UP+UP=UP==> all cups are shirts.
check answer choices
conclusion 1- some cups r not shirts. (not possible because all cups are shirts already.)
conclusion 2- some shirts r cups (yes because UP can be converted into PP).
I’m afraid it can’t be simplified any further. I agree it feels bit awkward at first hand, but practice some sums, and you’ll get comfortable.
I think – all cups are books(UP), all books are shirts (UP) implies All cups are shirts (UP=UP+UP), further UP can convert to PP implies some shirts are cups.
Sir, i am facing problem solving complementry cases. Please help…
Eg. Statementd:
1. All papers r files
2. Some file r pens
conclusion:
1. No paper is a pen
2. Some pens are paper
neither follows?
neither can be concluded
Sir, now i underatand the method of solving complementry cases as follow. If i am wrong please correct me.
We need to check subject and predict in conclusion not in statement. If both r same, than need to check combination of 1.UP + PN 2. PP + PN 3. PP + UN IN CONCLUSION NOT IN STATEMENT.
M I RIGHT ?
explain thi any body?
RYT :D
simply learn if first conc is positive nd secnd is negative nd there must be one particular conclusion statemnt then option is either 1 or
plz help me out.
Stat 1-all green is blue
Stat 1-all green is white
Conclusion-all blue is white
Is it right conlusion..in answer given tht it is wrong..bt m getng right.. And plz convert 2nd statement and thn solve.
1-all green(B) is blue
2-all green(B) is white
Standard procedure:
does it have three terms? yes
are they in standard form (A to B then B to C)? no.
then change any statement. (priority doesn’t matter because both are UP)
I’m changing the first statement (UP to PP)
1-Some blue(B) is green(B) (PP)
2-all green(B) is white (UP)
combo rule: PP + UP = PP. (NASA mood)
So conclusion is 1)some blue is white.
and if you convert above conclusion (PP to PP) then
2) some white is blue (PP to PP).
Stat 1-all green(B) is blue
Stat 2-all green(B) is white
by using convert first statemnt::
some blue(A) are green(B) (PP)
all green(B) are white (C) (UP)
now PP+UP=PP(A to C) means SOME BLUE ARE WHITE
conc. is ALL BLUE IS WHITE (UP) can be covrtible into PP =some blue are white hence follows
by using convert secnd statmnt:: 1all green is blue
2 some whites are green which is still not in standrd formt ie A to B B to C therefore xchange postions we get:
1some whites are green(PP)
2all green is blue(UP)
now pp+up=pp (A to C) we get SOME WHITES ARE BLUE
conc. is ALL BLUE IS WHITE (UP) can be covrtible into PP =some white are blue hence follows
therefore we get SAME ANSWER
sir bt if u change 2nd statement thn conclusion come out to be some white is blue which favours the given conclusion..
And u did mistake in conversion by typing ‘all’ istead of ‘some’
if the statement is..T may be A then hw to solve it?
sir answer wrong diya hua h nd u r proving it as right..means some lacuna in ur method
Hello, Sir can u tell me abt this question
Statements I: All fishes are cars.
II: All cars are vegetables.
Conclusions I: Some vegetables are cars.
II: Some vegetables are fishes.
Answer. Both the statements are true
My solution
All fishes are cars (UP)——–>(if converted to PP)—>Some cars are fishes
All cars are vegetables (UP)————>can be converted to PP so Some vegetables are car(Proved 1st conclusion)
How can i prove te second conclusion be true??
Please reply back
Thank you !!!
a/c to statement ans. is-all fishes are vegetables which can be cnvrted into some vegetables are fishes
Mrunal Sir
as per the rules you explained UP+UP=UP. tHEN ANSWER FOR ABOVE STATEMENTS SHOULD BE NONE OF THESE since there is no ‘UP’ in answer.
conversions are not required as it follows A to B , B to C rule.
but conclusion II is right if we convert STATEMENT I(All cars are vegetables (UP)————>can be converted to PP so Some vegetables are car)
so in this case there are high chances of candidates marking no conclusion as answer. I did that too.
Sir kindly answer
Another question in which I have a doubt..I will be obliged if you could answer both..the one above and this
Statements I: All rivers(A) are mountains(B). [UP]
II: Some rivers(A) are deserts(C). [PP]
Conclusions I: Some mountains are deserts.
II: Some deserts are not mountains.
Answer-Both the conclusions are correct.
According to priority order I converted the second statemnet as Some deserts(C) are rivers(A).(PP->PP)
And arranging the statements
Some deserts(C) are rivers(A).[PP]
All rivers(A) are mountains(B).[UP]
PP+UP->PP
Conclusion: Some deserts are mountains.(PP) OR Some mountains are deserts(As PP is converted to PP only.
Conclusion 1st proved but I think the second conclusion is wrong. Cant prove that to be true.
Please tell whether my inference is correct or not.
PP + UP = always PP
so only Conclusion I is correct
Conclusion II= PN
sir plz tell me one thing.
There are two statement let 1-no cat is dog
2-cat is not dog
Both are UN..then while converting, the negative i.e’no/not’ to be used with whom? With subject or with predicate.? Or with same as given in the statement…
Hi Mrunal,
I have a question which I am not able to solve.
Q. Some chairs are stools
Table is a stool
Conclusion: some stool are chair
Table is not a stool
Options 1 only
2 only
Both
None
Either 1 or 2
1 only.
1 is the corollary of 1st statement.
2 violates 2nd statement.
Hi Mrunal,
another question which I am not able to solve.
Q. Some dog bite
All dog bite
Conclusion: even those dogs who do not bark bite
Those dogs who do not bark do not necessarily bite
Options 1 only
2 only
Both
None
Either 1 or 2
plz any one solve this….
Thank u so much. Syllogisms can’t be explained better than this.
plz some one help me.
a>Conclusion 1 follows
b>Conclusion 2 follows
c>either 1 or 2 follows
d> neither 1 nor 2 follows
e> both 1 and 2 follows
1.Statement: Some adults are boys.Some boys are old.
conclusion: 1 some adults are not old. 2 Some boys are not old.
ANS: d
2.Statement: Some books are tables.Some tables are mirrors.
conclusion: 1 some mirrors are books 2 No mirror is book.
ANS: c
In both statements PP+PP= no conclusion.
how to proceed further as two ans are different.
Because in the first question in the starting answer is no conclusion then we check for complementary case (of answer statement) but in this the subject and predicate are not same and PP+PP is also not any case of complementary (point no.2) so answer can’t be “either” one that’s why answer is (d).
But in the second question there is also PP+PP so answer may be No conclusion but the complementary case is present as the answer statement has same subject & predicate (mirror,book) that’s why answer is “Either” one i.e (c)
For more clarification read the article’s complementary case checklist.(just above it there are 5 points note them).
i got the point of checking subject and predicate when there is no conclusion.
but plz explain the below example plz.
statement: Some doctors are fool.Some fools are rich.
conclusion: 1 Some doctors are rich 2 Some rich are doctors.
PP+PP=no conclusion
now in conclusion both 1 & 2 have same subject and predicate.
But ans of this is “d”.
plz solve this….
Can anybody pls help me on this question (how to approach and what should be the answer and this question is from the following exam) :
SSC-CGL-2012-Tier-1-Exam-08-July-2012-Morning-Session
Statement :
1)Due to contamination of water, large number of people were admitted to hospital.
2)The symptoms were of typhoid.
Conclusion :
1)Contamination of water may lead to Typhoid.
2)Typhoid is a contagious disease.
a)Only conclusion 1 is true.
b)Only conclusion 2 is true.
c) Both conclusion 1 & 2 are true.
d) Both conclusion 1 & 2 are false.
i guess it should be (c).
the symptoms were of typhoid, if you need to check for symptoms, there is no sure-shot disease that follows after water contamination…so “may lead to..”
since it is due to contamination of water, it is definitely contagious.
wtf…..contamination and contagiousness have no relation to each other..only statement 1 can b concluded
Mr. vips, If you are not able to understand what is the relation between contamination and contagiousness, start reading the science books once again. The links are provided all over this website of Mr. Mrunal.
a s basak//dost contagious diseases are the ones that are easily transmitted by physical contact
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contagious_disease
ans should be= a) only conclusion 1 is true
very lucidly explained….could you solve this question according to this method:
all boys are rivers.
some rivers are girls.
a. some girls may be boys
b. some boys maybe girls.
As per me the answer is (b) some boys may be girls
i think either a or b follows.
neither follows
all books are friends. all friends are dangerous. therefore
a. some dangerous hings are book
b. some books are dangerous things
answer given is (a.) option……buT if UP+UP is UP.where am i going wrong
dheeraj ,, UP–>PP
ansr comes , ALL BOOKS ARE DANGEROUS ,,UP BY RULES
but UP IS –> PP ALSO ,SO SOME DANGEROUS IS ARE BOOK,
ANSR a IS CORRECT
This ones prolix and it has a second part as well.
Hi All,
I’ve one doubt here.
Statement1: Some carts are darts.
Statement2: No smarts are darts.
Conclusions are: a)Some darts are not smarts.b)All darts are smarts.c)Some smarts are not darts.d)All smarts are darts.
1)a and c follow.
2)a follows
3)a and c or d follow
4)c and a or b follow
My solution:
Interchange positions
Statement1: No smarts are darts.
Statement2: Some carts are darts.
So ans= (UN+PP=PN(c->a)= some darts are not smarts.
But the solution is 3)a and c or d follows.
MY question. Even if i assume that 3) is correct and in that case suppose c follows with a. Ain’t c exactly opposte of a. How can we reverse PN, as these two are just reverse of each other?
strange.
cant be concluded to given options
explain it…
One more doubt,
Statement1:Some rooms are stones.
Statement2:All stones are radios.
Conclusion1:Some rooms are radios.
Conclusion2:Some stones are rooms.
According to your rules, both conclusions are right. But Conclusion 2 is immediate conclusion of Statement1 and Immediate conclusions can’t be used when we have more than 1 statement. Let me know if I am right?
The ans given is only conclusion1.
if the question instruction specifically mentions that “conclusion drawn using both of statements”, then immediate conclusion answer choice gets eliminated.
Thanks for your time Sir.After reading your articles on 3 statement syllogism ,special cases are also clear to me now. In fact u had even answered to one of the same question which i had posted but raised another aspirant too.I am sorry i didn’t refer them before questioning.
I just need clarification on the below type of questions
Some Dogs bark (PP)
All Dogs bite (UP)
Conclusion
1)Those dogs who do not bark,also bite
2)Those dogs who do not bark,not necessarily bite
Since question is not in standard format and by PP>>UP principle,we rewrite as
Some barking(animals) are dogs
All Dogs bite
PP+UP=PP
some barking (animals) bite
Since the conclusion PP can’t be converted into another PN(PP–>PP alone is valid),both the conclusion are wrong.But by Venn diagram first option is right.
So are there any conversion method for PP to PN?(Found many problems with venn diagram satisfying this)
Please correct me if the approach for solving this is wrong.
sir,
please explain the table for special conversions again……. got the overall concept but statements like none,no one,alone are universal positive or negative…till there it was fine…but not able to get the table….please help…
Hi Mrunal,
Kindly explain the table for special conversions again.Not able to undestand it as in the post given “Only” comes under UP category.Then how come statment”Only Politician are honest ” is converted into “No honest are non politician”.It should be converted into PP only.
Regards
Manish
Hi Mrunal,
Kindly explain the table for special conversions…does it mean that I can convert the statement s on left to any on the right???
thanks
Hi Mrunal,
Thanks a lot for posting a detailed article on syllogism. I have a doubt in it.
When you say, Universal Positive(UP) can be converted into only Particular Positive(PP), why cannot we convert the sentence “All singers are intelligent” into “some intelligent are not singers” ? That is UP into PN?
I feel it is possible. Also when I checked with venn diagram, i felt the same. Please clarify.
Regards,
Dinesh.
Hi Dinesh,
I think it is also a tricky situation and not an anomaly, i would like to see the situation with this eg.
Singers
1.Taylor Swift
2.Sonu Nigam
3.S.P.B.
Intelligents
1.Taylor Swift
2.Sonu Nigam
3.S.P.B.
If both the sets are one and the same, The PN statement i.e. “Some Intelligents are not same” wont be possible i think….
Hope it helped… Pls correct if i’m wrong….
Regards
Soundar…
thankyou sir!!!!
Hi Mrunal,
Was not able to apply these rules to a few problems.
Please let me know where I went wrong.
A. Some stone is bone.
B. All slipper is bone.
C. All bone is stone.
D. No stone is slipper.
E. No bone is stone.
F. Some bone is slipper.
a) BCA b)AFE c) DEF d) CEA
Answer is a.
All slipper is bone UP
All bone is stone UP.
The answer is a which is PP, should have been UP right?
if you will apply conversion rule on statement c(UP), then you will get statement A(PP).
So a option is correct.
how it can b correct..as the middle term is bone..should not follow in the answer..
plz correct me if I ws wrong..
Sir,
Ur article was used by many websites as their own…. why dont u use copyrights for ur articles…
just check this link…. http theexamtimes com/articles/reasoning-syllogism-all-cats-are-do plained-for-ibps-ssc-csat-and-cat
thanks mrunal..
helped me alot..
upsc each year asking question one or two question on state charactersitics like thisyears arunachal pradesh but from where i can get this information as ncert of 11and 12 are not having this information.plz help
Hi Mrunal,
Thanks for this wonderful article. After reading this I was practising and have some doubts as follows:
1. No cat is dog (UN).
Now when we convert this we have 2 option as PN/UN.
This means it will be – No dog is cat (UN) and Some cats are not dogs (PN)
Is this right as this is what is given in the MK Pandey book but you have something different mentioned above.
2. Only S is P
Now upon conversion is it All P is S (as per the book) only or are there other possibilities.
Pl pl Mrunal explain the conversion in a bit more detail as I am really confused about this…
Thanks,
PANKAJ Arora
@Pankaj,
check this conversion table
http://img842.imageshack.us/img842/4192/tablebp.png
This involves a concept which is called exclusive prepositions (or statement)
the exclusive prepositions may be converted in UP or UN or PP , but from exam point of view it is advisable that we should convert it in UP type , it means
“Only S are P” should be converted in “All P are S” (UP type)
although it may also be converted in following types
1. No non-S is/are P. (i.e. UN type)
2. No P is non-s. (i.e. UN type)
3. Some S are P. (i.e. PP type)
there are some more Exclusive prepositions such as
1. Statements with ‘none but’ and ‘none except’ but usually ‘only’ type is the one which have been asked so far in exams.