- 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, i have never understood syllogism with such a clarity.Thank you very much man,,u were outstanding.the examples and explanation are simple,clear and amazing. If i would have visited ur site in a earlier time definitely i would have been working now. This site Rocks!!!
thank u so much mrunal sir …..really helpful :)
sir i tried hard but coudnt succed to solve this problem from TIME’S coaching study material(DEDUCTION).
Some tools are not hammers.
all tools are made of iron.
ans chices are:-
(1) some hammers are made of iron.
(1) some hammers are not made of iron.
(1) some thing made of iron are not hammers.
(1) none of the above.
the correct ans as per TIME is option no (3).
sry sir by mistake i gave all option no (1)..plz correcct them as …
ans chices are:-
(1) some hammers are made of iron.
(2) some hammers are not made of iron.
(3) some thing made of iron are not hammers.
(4) none of the above.
statements: 1 no parrot is crow
2 All crows are bat
conclusions: 1 some bats are parrots
2 All bats are parrots
3 some bats are crows
4 some bats are not crows
This question is from R.S. Agrwal book. According to the rules given above iam getting the answer which seems to incorrect according to the book.can you tell me the approach for these type of questions?
i have doubts in below qs,
Q1
some tools are not hammers
All tools are made of iron
conclu
1>some hammers are made of iron
2>some hammers are not made of iron
3>some things made of iron are not hammers
4>none of the above.
according to me ans should be 4 but 3 option is given as answer.
Q2:
No Negro is fair
Some Europeans are fair.
con:
1>No Negro is European
2>Some Negroes are European
3>All European people are Negroes.
4>None of the above.
acc to me it shud be option 1 but option 4 is given answer
could u plz help me on this
thanks
ashok
Dear Mrunal Sir, I understood the way of solving these types of questions and practised a lot of questions..But
Sir I have one doubt. Please clear my doubt:
Question:
Statements:
1. No man is intelligent.
2. All women are intelligent.
Conclusions:
I. No man is woman.
II. No woman is a man.
(1) Only I follows.
(2) Only II follows.
(3) Both I and II follow.
(4) Neither of them follow.
Doubt: I solved the question by converting the 2nd statement and got the wrong answer and when I saw the solution I saw that they solved the question by converting the 1st statement (and changing the order of the statements) and got the right answer…. So sir, My doubt is, how to know that which statement to convert (1st or 2nd) in these types of questions.
dude the priority order for conversion is “PP>>UN>>UP”
i guss the right ans for ur problem is option (3) ie both 1 &2..
Yes…Your answer is correct) Thanks for reply.
Are u sure about the priority order..because if it becomes wrong my whole concepts will be wrong??
The priority order for conversion is:
1) Particular positive (PP) >> 2) Universal Negative (UN) >> 3) Universal Positive (UP)
so you should convert first statement (No man is intelligent). then exchange position of first and second statement and then apply the combo rules.
Thanks for your valuable reply sir.
1 All good athletes want to win and athletes who want to win, eat well balanced diet therefore, all athletes who don’t eat a well balanced diet are bad athletes.
If above assumption of the argument are true then which of the following statement must be true
1 No athlete who doesn’t eat a well diet is good athlete
2 No bad athlete wants to win
3 Every athlete who eats a well diet is a good athlete
4 All athletes who want to win are good athlete.
2 Which of the following, if true, would refuse to assumption of the argument above?
1 Bob, the accountant, eats a well balanced diet, but he is not a good athlete.
2 Ann wants to win, but she is not a good athlete
3. All Players on the Burros baseball team eat a well balance diet
4 Andy, the basketball star, does not eat a well balanced diet but she is a good athlete.
Very Informative. Thank You Sir…………….
hi sir,
UN–>can convert PN or UN
when we convert into PN and When we convert into UN
I have 2 doubts regarding complimentary case approach.
QA)
STATEMENTS:some books are tables
some tables are mirror
CONCLUSION:1)some mirrors are books
2)no book is morror
As per our method , I found out PP+PP=NO CONCLUSION
BUT MR R S AGRAWAL has considered it as complimentary pair and given answer as “either 1 or 2 follows ”
same difficulty I met with in another question
Q B)
STATEMENTS:No magazines is caps
All caps are cameras
CONCLUSIONS:1)No camera is magazine
2)some cameras are magazine
PLEASE HELP
M STUCK
2ND ONE RIGHT BUT FIRST will be no cnclsn
please reply m not able to proceed
Can you explain what are difficulty are faced with this excellent article written by mrunal.
mrunal sir can u please explain or provide the source to understand assumption/ inference type questions
The theory regarding assumption, inference etc. is lucidly explained in MK Pandey’s reasoning book.
http://www.flipkart.com/analytical-reasoning-8190458914/p/itmdyv7d6fhkgp8s?pid=9788190458917
Statements: Only pink is red
Some pink are blue.
No blue is white.
Conclusions: I. All pink, if they are blue are also white.
II. At least some pink being white is a possibility.
I am finding it difficult to decide about conclusion-1 in the above question.
Plz reply as soon as possible.
If possible, plz reply me via E-mail as it becomes difficult to search your replies as comments increase in number..
Thanx in advance
Rajat
Hi Mrunal Sir,
Hats off to your work!!
I was going through this and I got a doubt that is, are UN(A-C) and UN(C-A)same?? I got this doubt while solving the crocodile and politician vala question(DemoQ: 4 questions in 1!) As per my understanding UP+UN=UN(A-C) rite?? and here A=Politician, B=Frank and C=Crocodile rite?? so ans should be UN(A-C) i.e ‘NO politician are crocodile’ instead of ‘No crocodile are politician’. Can we convert the answer given in the form of (A-C) form to (C-A) form??
Please clear my doubt that A-C and C-A are same?? Also correct me if I am wrong in my calcualtion.
Thank you so much!
Hi Sangeeta,
‘NO politician are crocodile’ is UN and if we convert it to other form, the alternatives are PN and UN. So assuming UN can be converted to UN by Conversion Rules, ‘No crocodile are politician’ can be written as ‘NO politician are crocodile’. Hope you got the idea.
Hi Mrunal,
Please Clear this question (ans as per R S Aggarwal)
Some C are M. Some M are B.
Conclusion – 1) no C is B.
2) Some B are C.
As per RS Agarwal – Either or -is ans.(because, we can converse conclusion 2 and find “some C are B”.)
But as per your explanation – No conclusion.
Please clarify this.
Thank you
Hi Saurabh,
I am sharing my experience after reading many book and this article I found your conclusion 1 and 2nd make complementary cases. How?
First Clear your doubt from mind The choice “Either or follows” should be chosen if two condition meet:-
1. none of the given two choices are found to be correct
2. both choices are make complementary pairs.
If in complementary pairs any conclusion found to be correct then either or condition must be false.
Now your second question is :-
Some C are M.
Some M are B.
Conclusion –
1) no C is B.
2) Some B are C.
we know that PP + PP = No conclusion
hence both conclusion are not correct.
First requirement is meet for complementary case.
Next pair is UN+PP hence it make complementary pair.
Now most important thing subject and and predicate are not in correct format hence do the correct format(Do conversion).
No B is C
some B are C
Hence complementary case found so Either I or II follow.
Note that this is only for (PP and UN) because PP = PP and UN = UN
Go to Analytical Reasoning(M K Pandey) boojm on page no 348 Ex 5 for more explanantion
in complementry case can it be cnvrted
no C is B to- no B is C???
Yes, you can convert in complementary case only for “Some and No”. means c-b to b-c
thanks…
Hi Mrunal,
UP+PP = No Conclusion; But we can exchange the position and then they are PP+UP = PP( According to the NASA Rule). So what is the use of UP+PP= No Conclusion where they can be easily converted. Can you please explain?
EXCELLENT
Mrunal,
In Complimentary checklist, 2nd condition 3rd point states PP + UN = Either 1 or 2 follows (rest conditions fulfilled) but will this ever happen because in SOP step 4: under conclusive combo rules it is already given PP+UN= PN.
I want to ask in such situation how can it go in complementary case scenario when we already get the answer in first place. Thanks in Advance…
I have one more doubt please explain: from above article.
1-all politicians are frank.
2- No frank people are crocodiles.
conclusion: No crocodiles are politicians.
My understanding:
from conclusive combo rules:
UP+UN = UN(A->C) so, No Politicians are crocodiles.
but the conclusion given is not the same. where i am doing wrong??
please help….
No Politicians are crocodiles. also can be converted in No crocodiles are politicians from conversion rule hence given conclusion is correct.
please ignore my first question i got my mistake. please help me with my second query only.
Sorry i got my second mistake also.. as UN –> UN is valid conversion so
a) No crocodiles are politicians and
b) No politician are crocodile are one and same.
thankS
Hi Mrunal or anybody out there who is reading this,
One doubt – ‘All cats are dogs’. If the answer choice contains ‘Some cats are dogs’, is it a correct choice?
Yes. it is called immediate conclusion. But if the question says “Using both the sentences, draw a conclusion”, then this would be wrong.
yes its abs. correct….
its lyk some boys are cats can b written as some cats are boys…
Thanks..:)
Knew it was logically correct but still had sm doubt..
doubt regardn wat thng????
yes its abs. correct….
its lyk some boys are cats can b written as some cats are boys….
Statements: Some clothes are marbles.
Some marbles are bags.
Conclusions:
1) No cloth is a bag.
2) All marbles are bags.
3) Some bags are clothes.
4) No Marble is a cloth.
a) Only Either (OE) 1 or 4 follows b) OE 1 or 2 follows
c) OE 1 or 3 follows d) None follows e) All follow
What would be the answer here?
d)none follows
Either 1 or 3 follows
I have a small doubt regarding the complementary pairs. Can we convert the conclusions which are being considered as complimentary pairs into different forms?
e.g. if there are 2 conclusions where the subject and predicate are opposite in place, can one of the conclusions be converted using the valid rules in order to align the subject-predicate pairs of both statements?
Anybody is free to answer this query. Thanks in advance.
Dear Mrunal Sir,
I have searched your syllogism threads but could not find any satisfactory ans to the question of the following type:::
Statements
1. the light bulb sprinkles only when paper gets wet
2. the paper gets wet if pin nails.
3. if the pin nails the light bulb sprinkles
Which can be definitely concluded
1. if the pin nails the paper gets wet
2. pin nails only if light bulb sprinkles
3. light bulb sprinkles if pin nails
4. light bulb sprinkles if paper gets wet
Please help me solve such types????? [whenever, only if, if, only when, ]
Waiting for your quick reply.
Thanks in advance.
Best Regards,
Atul Sharma
gr8 work
Statment : Some Books are tables.
Some tables are mirrors.
conclusion : 1 Some mirrors are books.
2 No book is mirror.
Both conclusions are not possible. Now checking for Complementary case . Subject and predicate’ s position are differene in conclusions. So it is not a complementary case.
But the official answer for this question is ” Either 1 or 2 follows.”
Please explain where i went wrong.
2. No Book is a mirror => No mirror is a book (UN->UN)
Now either 1 or 2 follows.
Statements
1. the light bulb sprinkles only when paper gets wet
2. the paper gets wet if pin nails.
3. if the pin nails the light bulb sprinkles
Which can be definitely concluded
1. if the pin nails the paper gets wet
2. pin nails only if light bulb sprinkles
3. light bulb sprinkles if pin nails
4. light bulb sprinkles if paper gets wet
Please help me solve such types????? [whenever, only if, if, only when, ]
Statements containing if / unless / only if etc. are not from the syllogism theory.
They’re from the “logical connective” theory. (explained in the first few pages of MK Pandey.)
Guys got any idea when the cut off marks would be out?
Sir, I have a doubt in Special Conversions
Given Question statement Conversion (all applicable to all given question statements)Type
Only A is B–>all B are A
then can we write ”only politicians are honest”as ”No non honest are non politician”??