CLAT November 1 Daily Practice Questions with Answers

Prasanthi Boodati

Updated On: November 01, 2024 11:01 AM

Here are some Practice Questions with Answers for CLAT 2025 November 1. These questions are designed to improve your preparation. CLAT 2025 is to be held on December 1, 2024. 


 
CLAT November 1 Daily Practice Questions with AnswersCLAT November 1 Daily Practice Questions with Answers

CLAT 2025 November 1 Daily Practice Questions with Answers: For the CLAT 2024 exam, the candidates should take these daily practice questions with answers for November 1. Topics covered the English language and current affairs, including general knowledge, quantitative techniques, and legal and logical reasoning. This sample practice will effectively help improve your time management, analytical thinking, and reading skills. Consistently working and analyzing the questions can boost their preparation for the upcoming exams.

Also Read | CLAT 2025 October 30 Daily Practice Questions with Answers

CLAT 2025 November 1 Daily Practice Questions with Answers: English Language

Candidates can check out the CLAT 2025 November 1  Daily Practice Questions with Answers from the English Language section:

Read the following passage and answer the questions

Passage: The call of self-expression turned the village of the internet into a city, which expanded at time-lapse speed, social connections bristling like neurons in every direction. At twelve, I was writing five hundred words a day on a public LiveJournal. By twenty-five, my job was to write things that would attract, ideally, a hundred thousand strangers per post. Now I’m thirty, and most of my life is inextricable from the internet, and its mazes of incessant forced connection—this feverish, electric, unliveable hell. The curdling of the social internet happened slowly and then all at once. The tipping point, I’d guess, was around 2012. People were losing excitement about the internet, and starting to articulate a set of new truisms. Facebook had become tedious, trivial, and exhausting. Instagram seemed better, but would soon reveal its underlying function as a three-ring circus of happiness and popularity and success. Twitter, for all its discursive promise, was where everyone tweeted complaints at airlines and moaned about articles that had been commissioned to make people moan. The dream of a better, truer self on the internet was slipping away. Where we had once been free to be ourselves online, we were now chained to ourselves online, and this made us self-conscious. Platforms that promised connection began inducing mass alienation. The freedom promised by the internet started to seem like something whose greatest potential lay in the realm of misuse.

Even as we became increasingly sad and ugly on the internet, the mirage of the better online self continued to glimmer. As a medium, the Internet is defined by a built-in performance incentive. In real life, you can walk around living life and be visible to other people. But on the internet—for anyone to see you, you have to act. You have to communicate in order to maintain an internet presence. And, because the internet’s central platforms are built around personal profiles, it can seem—first at a mechanical level, and later on as an encoded instinct—like the main purpose of this communication is to make yourself look good. Online reward mechanisms beg to substitute for offline ones, and then overtake them. This is why everyone tries to look so hot and well-travelled on Instagram; why everyone seems so smug and triumphant on Facebook; and why, on Twitter, making a righteous political statement has come to seem, for many people, like a political good in itself. The everyday madness perpetuated by the internet is the madness of this architecture, which positions personal identity as the centre of the universe. It’s as if we’ve been placed on a lookout that oversees the entire world and given a pair of binoculars that makes everything look like our own reflection.

Question 1: Which of the following statements can be inferred from the above passage?

(A)   The internet expanded very slowly

(B)   The internet can be used to cause harm

(C)    The Internet is addictive

(D)   The main purpose of social media platforms is to dissuade people from showing off

Answer: (B)

Question 2: All the following statements are ‘truisms’, except:

(A)   The internet has changed the way the world works.

(B)   A preference for cat videos can reveal a lot about your personality.

(C)    Like with any tool, digital technology has both advantages and disadvantages.

(D)   Only time can tell what the future holds.

Answer: (B)

Question 3: Which of the following is a metaphor?

(A)   the village of the internet

(B)   this feverish, electric, unliveable hell

(C)   a three-ring circus of happiness, popularity and success

(D)   all the above

Answer: (D)

Question 4: Which of the following categories best describes this piece of writing?

(A)   Non-fiction essay

(B)  Fiction

(C)  Academic paper

(D)  Poem

Answer: (A)

Question 5: Which of the following comes closest to the underlined sentence in the passage?

(A)   The way we use the internet says a lot about who we are.

(B)   The internet has reduced the distance between people living across the world.

(C)    The internet has the ability to customize what we access based on our identity.

(D)   The internet only shows us what we don’t want to see.

Answer: (A)

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