November 10, 2024
3 min read
Michael C.
April 3, 2025
10 mins
The following sample questions have been created by Classic Test Prep to closely reflect real CLT Exam questions.
▴
There are 7 basic types of questions on the CLT's Verbal Reasoning section (according to... us, NOT the test writers).
A) examine a psychological phenomenon through the lens of a personal anecdote.
B) discuss three famous artists and the way in which their work is related.
C) tarnish the reputation of a people group by examining their personal habits.
D) reminisce about the author traveling with a stranger to Italy where they saw famous frescoes.
Understanding "Main Idea" Questions
As the question states, the purpose of these questions is to see if a students understands what the main idea of the passage is.
So, some of the answer choices might contain details from the passage that are completely true, but, since the question is about the Main Idea of the passage (not a minute detail), that answer choice would be wrong.
Here's what that means:
This sample question is taken from a set of questions about Sigmund Freud's Psychopathology of Everyday Life. In the passage, Freud actually does discuss three famous artists and the way their work is related (Answer Choice B).
However, that is just a detail from the story. And... it's really not the point of the passage.
The correct answer is A) examine a psychological phenomenon through the lens of a personal anecdote because that's the point of the passage. It's pretty general... but it's an accurate description of why the passage was written... the main idea.
A) the customs of the Turks in Bosnia cause them to be forgetful people.
B) false recollection, the substitution of false names, is not an observable phenomenon.
C) forgetting names happens, at least sometimes, due to the interruption of streams of thought.
D) Botticelli's work was much more profound than Signorelli's.
Understanding "Inference" Questions
Inference questions require the student to interpret the author's point of view or a character's point of view.
So, you can't just search the text for a concrete fact and answer these questions correctly.
You're probably going to need to interpret a few sentences of the passage accurately in order to get these questions correct.
In the Sample Question above, C) is the correct answer because the author expresses this belief over the course of multiple paragraphs.
A) Signorelli.
B) Botticelli.
C) Boltraffio.
D) not mentioned in the passage.
Understanding "Finding Details" Questions
Finding Details questions are objective. There is no need for interpretation. You just have to track down the right line in the passage containing the detail.
A) lack of familiarity
B) confusing pronunciation
C) awkward spelling
D) foreign origin
Often, the answer choices for Vocab in Context questions give definitions of the word that could be a reasonable definition in another context.
Of course, the correct answer is the one that describes the context of the question.
Here's the full context for this question:
"The reason for the escape of the name Signorelli cannot be found in the strangeness of this name.
The forgotten name was just as familiar to me as one of the substitutive names"
The author is discussing his familiarity with names in this context, and even though the other answer choices would be a reasonable definition of "strangeness" in other contexts, the correct answer is A) lack of familiarity.
Structure questions test many things, including: Understanding of Literary devices, Sequence of events, the Type of passage you are reading.
For example:
A) a collection of maxims.
B) a persuasive argument.
C) an entertaining legend.
D) a historical account.
This question is from a passage where the narrator is telling the tale of his real life, so the correct answer is D) historical account. It's not a legend, because, to the narrator, it's his real life.
Evidence questions ALWAYS follow a question that they are related to. In the following sample questions, the "evidence question" is the second question, which asks for the evidence to support the answer to the first question.
Students must determine the correct answer to the first question and which line from the passage provides the evidence for that answer.
A) happened despite the author wanting to forget something else.
B) was an accidental occurrence.
C) was due to the company he was keeping on his journey.
D) could happen at any time with no possible explanation.
A) Paragraph 7, Sentence 1 ("I can no… occurrence.")
B) Paragraph 7, Sentence 5 ("To be sure… Orvieto.")
C) Paragraph 4, Sentence 3 ("The forgetting.. Herzegovina.")
D) Paragraph 2, Sentence 1 ("Now.. path.")
Analogies on the CLT can be very difficult.
Students must determine which answer choice has the same relationship as the proposed analogy in the prompt.
A) physician : diagnosis
B) forgetfulness : false recollection
C) Frescoes of Orvieto : Dome of Orvieto
D) Dalmatia : Herzegovina
A) is the correct answer because the master is a person who made the frescoes, and a physician is a person who makes a diagnosis.
There are too many Grammar / Writing question types to do a sample question of all of them in this article,and most of the Grammar questions on the CLT are similar to what you would see on other standardized tests.
But, here's a basic list of Grammar topics on the CLT:
1. Punctuation
2. Syntax
3. Subject-verb agreement
4. Pronoun-antecedent agreement
We know that's not very specific, but really, Grammar on the CLT is similar to other Grammar tests.
Writing is where things get different.
Every standardized test has "Writing Standards."
And even if they say they're the exact same as the other standardized tests...the "Writing" questions on the CLT, ACT, and SAT are completely different from a student's perspective.
Every chapter must be so translated; God employs several translators. Some pieces are translated by age, some by sickness, some by war, some by justice. [44] However, God's hand shows up in every translation, and his hand will get us together again once we're gone.
44. Which of the following best matches the tone of the passage?
However, God's hand shows up in every translation, and his hand will get us together again once we're gone.
A) NO CHANGE
B) However, God's hand is in every translation, and his hand shall bind up all our scattered leaves again for that library where every book shall lie open to one another. (correct answer)
C) However, God's hand is in every translation, and his hand will really just go around picking up our scattered leaves again and bind us together just like you could with a book.
D) However, God's hand is seriously there for every change, and his hand will totally gather us up like pages and physically place us into the books that are opened up in the eternal library.
There was a contention (in [45] who both piety and dignity were mingled) as to which of the religious orders should ring to prayers first in the morning; it was determined they should ring first that rose earliest. [46] If we understand aright the dignity that tolls this bell for our evening prayer, we would, rising, gladly, early, make it ours.
46. Which of the following represents the clearest and most concise way to convey all of the information in the following sentence?
If we understand aright the dignity that tolls this bell for our evening prayer, we would, rising, gladly, early, make it ours.
A) NO CHANGE
B) If we understand aright the dignity of this bell that tolls for our evening prayer, we would be glad to make it ours by rising early. (correct answer)
C) If we understand aright this bell, we would be glad to make it ours by rising early.
D) If we understand aright the tolling of this bell for our evening prayer, we, of dignity, would be making it ours, gladly rising early.
Therefore, never send to know for whom the bells tolls; [49] it marks the hour. Neither can we call this a borrowing of misery, as though we were not miserable enough of ourselves, but must fetch in more from the next house.
49. it marks the hour.
A) NO CHANGE
B) it rings in spring.
C) it tolls for thee. (correct answer)D) it is but a whisper.
Another man may be sick too, and this affliction may lie in his stomach, as gold in a mine, and be of no use to him. [50] Yet this bell, that tells me of his affliction, digs out and applies that gold to me, if by this consideration of another's danger I take mine own into contemplation, and so secure myself, by making my recourse to my God, who is our only security.
50. Yet
A) NO CHANGE (correct answer)
B) Unless
C) Despite
D) Before that
The bell doth toll for him that thinks it doth; though it should [47] intimidate again, from that minute, he is united to God.
47. intimidate
A) NO CHANGE
B) intermingle
C) intern
D) intermit (correct answer)
There are three concepts included on the Quantitative Reasoning section of the CLT:
The CLT tests students on concepts that almost every single high school student has learned.
There are no advanced statistics questions, because many students don't learn that in high school. But that doesn't mean all of the questions are easy.
It just means the underlying concepts are things that almost every student has learned.
ℎ(𝑡)= –0.5𝑡2 - 2𝑡 + 30
where 𝑡 is the number of seconds after the ball is thrown and ℎ(𝑡) is the ball's height in feet at time 𝑡. After how many seconds will it hit the ground?
A) 6 seconds
B) 4 seconds
C) 10 seconds
D) 15 seconds
A) 204 inches squared
B) 174 inches squared
C) 120 inches squared
D) 264 inches squared
A) 20
B) 19
C) 10
D) 21