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CEUET Language ProficiencyReading ComprehensionFlash Cards

Flashcards specifically for Reading Comprehension in the CEUET 2026. Every card has been tuned to match Centro Escolar University's preferred question style. Practise them during your commute, at lunch, or before bed — they are designed for short bursts of high-retention review.

Exam context

On the CEUET 2026, the Language Proficiency subtest carries a "Core" weight in Centro Escolar University's pattern. Reading Comprehension lands at position 6th out of 7 in the standard review order. Target score is Competitive overall score, and roughly a meaningful share of items come from Language Proficiency on a typical CEUET paper.

Reading Comprehension - Flashcards

Master reading comprehension skills for UPCAT and other entrance exams with these comprehensive flashcards. These cards cover the six main question types, strategies, and techniques essential for success in reading comprehension sections.

Cards

What is the main idea of a passage and where is it typically found?

The main idea is the central message or primary point the author wants to convey - the 'big picture' of the passage. It is typically found in the first two sentences of the first paragraph or in the concluding sentences. Look for repeated themes and concepts that tie the entire passage together.

Tags

  • concept_understanding
  • question_types
  • basic

Topic

Main Idea Questions

Card Id

FC1

Difficulty

easy

Image Prompt

What are supporting idea questions testing?

Supporting idea questions test your ability to identify specific pieces of information that are explicitly stated in the passage. These questions focus on details, facts, examples, or evidence that the author provides to support the main argument or theme.

Tags

  • concept_understanding
  • question_types
  • basic

Topic

Supporting Idea Questions

Card Id

FC2

Difficulty

easy

Image Prompt

How do inference questions differ from detail recall questions?

Inference questions require you to 'read between the lines' and draw logical conclusions from information that is implied but not directly stated. Detail recall questions ask for specific facts explicitly mentioned in the passage. Inference questions test critical thinking, while detail recall tests memory and comprehension of stated information.

Tags

  • comparison
  • question_types
  • intermediate

Topic

Inference vs Detail Questions

Card Id

FC3

Difficulty

medium

Image Prompt

What are the four main purposes an author might have when writing?

The four main purposes are: 1) To inform (provide facts and information), 2) To persuade (convince readers of a viewpoint), 3) To entertain (amuse or engage readers), and 4) To explain (clarify processes or concepts). Look for keywords like 'benefits,' 'should,' 'must' for persuasive; 'according to,' 'research shows' for informative.

Tags

  • key_terms
  • author_analysis
  • basic

Topic

Author's Purpose Questions

Card Id

FC4

Difficulty

easy

Image Prompt

Define author's tone and give three examples of common tones in reading passages.

Author's tone reflects the writer's attitude toward the subject matter. Common tones include: 1) Neutral/Objective (presenting facts without bias), 2) Concerned/Cautious (expressing worry about issues), 3) Optimistic/Positive (hopeful about outcomes). Tone is revealed through word choice, adjectives, and the overall emotional quality of the writing.

Tags

  • key_terms
  • author_analysis
  • basic

Topic

Author's Tone

Card Id

FC5

Difficulty

easy

Image Prompt

What is figurative language and what are the three main types tested in reading comprehension?

Figurative language uses words beyond their literal meaning to create vivid imagery or express ideas creatively. The three main types are: 1) Metaphors (direct comparisons without 'like' or 'as'), 2) Similes (comparisons using 'like' or 'as'), and 3) Personification (giving human qualities to non-human things). Example: 'The city was a jungle' is a metaphor comparing the city to a dense, chaotic environment.

Tags

  • key_terms
  • language_analysis
  • intermediate

Topic

Figurative Language

Card Id

FC6

Difficulty

medium

Image Prompt

What is the most effective strategy for approaching main idea questions?

1) Read the first and last sentences carefully, 2) Summarize the passage in your own words after reading, 3) Look for repeated ideas and themes, 4) Ask yourself 'What is the author's primary message?' Avoid choices that are too specific (supporting details) or too broad (beyond the passage scope).

Tags

  • application
  • strategies
  • intermediate

Topic

Main Idea Strategy

Card Id

FC7

Difficulty

medium

Image Prompt

How should you approach detail recall questions efficiently?

1) Scan for keywords from the question in the passage, 2) Re-read the relevant section carefully, 3) Pay special attention to names, dates, places, and specific facts, 4) Look for exact matches between the question and passage content. These questions test your ability to locate and remember explicitly stated information.

Tags

  • application
  • strategies
  • basic

Topic

Detail Recall Strategy

Card Id

FC8

Difficulty

easy

Image Prompt

What are the key steps for answering inference questions correctly?

1) Use only information from the passage - no outside knowledge, 2) Look for text clues that support logical conclusions, 3) Think 'What would naturally follow from this information?', 4) Avoid extreme or absolute statements, 5) Choose the most reasonable conclusion based on evidence provided in the passage.

Tags

  • application
  • strategies
  • advanced

Topic

Inference Strategy

Card Id

FC9

Difficulty

hard

Image Prompt

Context clues

Words or phrases surrounding an unfamiliar word that help determine its meaning. Types include: definition clues (word is defined), example clues (examples are given), contrast clues (opposite meaning provided), and inference clues (meaning must be reasoned from context). Essential for understanding vocabulary in context questions.

Tags

  • key_terms
  • vocabulary
  • basic

Topic

Vocabulary Strategies

Card Id

FC10

Difficulty

easy

Image Prompt

What time management strategy should you use when facing a long reading passage with multiple questions?

1) Read the questions first (not the answer choices) to know what to look for, 2) Skim the passage strategically focusing on topic sentences and keywords, 3) Answer easy questions first and flag difficult ones, 4) Return to flagged questions with focused re-reading. This approach saves time and improves accuracy.

Tags

  • application
  • test_strategies
  • intermediate

Topic

Time Management

Card Id

FC11

Difficulty

medium

Image Prompt

Analyze this example: 'The city was a jungle of towering skyscrapers.' What type of figurative language is this and what does it mean?

This is a metaphor - a direct comparison between the city and a jungle without using 'like' or 'as.' It means the city is dense, chaotic, overwhelming, and possibly dangerous or difficult to navigate, just like a jungle. The metaphor emphasizes the urban environment's complexity and potentially intimidating nature.

Tags

  • application
  • language_analysis
  • intermediate

Topic

Figurative Language Analysis

Card Id

FC12

Difficulty

medium

Image Prompt

What clue phrases typically signal each of the six main question types?

Main Idea: 'What is the main point?', 'Which statement best summarizes?' Detail Recall: 'According to the passage...', 'What does the passage say about...' Inference: 'What can be inferred?', 'What does the author imply?' Author's Purpose: 'Why did the author write this?' Author's Tone: 'What tone does the author use?' Word Meaning: 'What does [word] mean in this context?'

Tags

  • key_terms
  • question_types
  • intermediate

Topic

Question Recognition

Card Id

FC13

Difficulty

medium

Image Prompt

How do you determine if a passage's tone is neutral versus concerned?

Neutral tone: Uses objective language, presents facts without emotional words, avoids taking sides (words like 'according to,' 'research shows'). Concerned tone: Uses words expressing worry or caution ('challenges,' 'problems,' 'must address,' 'raises questions'), shows the author cares about potential negative outcomes or issues discussed.

Tags

  • application
  • author_analysis
  • advanced

Topic

Tone Analysis

Card Id

FC14

Difficulty

hard

Image Prompt

What makes a good strategy for eliminating wrong answers in reading comprehension?

1) Eliminate answers that contradict the passage, 2) Remove choices that are too extreme (always/never/all/none), 3) Avoid answers that bring in outside knowledge not mentioned in the passage, 4) Rule out choices that are too specific for main idea questions or too general for detail questions, 5) Choose the answer most directly supported by textual evidence.

Tags

  • application
  • test_strategies
  • advanced

Topic

Answer Elimination

Card Id

FC15

Difficulty

hard

Image Prompt

Logical structure questions

Questions that test your understanding of how a passage is organized and how ideas are connected. They ask about sequence of events, cause-and-effect relationships, comparison/contrast patterns, chronological order, or the flow of arguments. Look for transition words like 'first,' 'then,' 'however,' 'therefore' to understand the passage's organization.

Tags

  • key_terms
  • passage_organization
  • intermediate

Topic

Logical Structure

Card Id

FC16

Difficulty

medium

Image Prompt

What should you do if you encounter an unfamiliar word in a reading comprehension passage?

1) Don't panic - use context clues from surrounding sentences, 2) Look for definition clues (word may be defined nearby), 3) Check for example clues that illustrate the word's meaning, 4) Use contrast clues (opposite meanings provided), 5) Break down the word into prefixes, roots, and suffixes if possible, 6) Continue reading - meaning may become clear from overall context.

Tags

  • application
  • vocabulary
  • intermediate

Topic

Vocabulary Strategy

Card Id

FC17

Difficulty

medium

Image Prompt

Compare persuasive purpose versus informative purpose in author's intent questions.

Persuasive purpose: Author tries to convince readers to adopt a viewpoint or take action. Uses opinion words, emotional appeals, words like 'should,' 'must,' 'better,' presents arguments for one side. Informative purpose: Author presents facts, data, research findings objectively. Uses neutral language, 'according to,' 'studies show,' presents information without bias or emotional appeals.

Tags

  • comparison
  • author_analysis
  • advanced

Topic

Author's Purpose Comparison

Card Id

FC18

Difficulty

hard

Image Prompt

What are the key characteristics of passages commonly used in UPCAT reading comprehension?

1) Length: Up to 400 words typically, 2) Topics: Science, arts, Philippine literature, history, current events, 3) Languages: Both English and Filipino passages, 4) Questions: 3-6 questions per passage covering the six main types, 5) Complexity: Appropriate for high school graduates, includes academic and real-world content relevant to Filipino students.

Tags

  • key_terms
  • exam_format
  • basic

Topic

UPCAT Format

Card Id

FC19

Difficulty

easy

Image Prompt

How should you approach a passage about Philippine literature or culture differently from a science passage?

Philippine literature/culture passages: Focus more on author's tone, cultural context, figurative language, themes, and historical significance. Science passages: Focus more on processes, cause-and-effect relationships, data interpretation, and logical sequence. Both require the same question-type strategies, but literature passages often have more inference and tone questions, while science passages have more detail and logical structure questions.

Tags

  • application
  • content_areas
  • advanced

Topic

Subject-Specific Strategies

Card Id

FC20

Difficulty

hard

Image Prompt

Tag Distribution

Basic

6

Advanced

5

Key Terms

6

Comparison

2

Application

8

Intermediate

9

Concept Understanding

6

Topic Distribution

UPCAT Format

1

Author'S Tone

2

Test Strategies

4

Author'S Purpose

2

Passage Analysis

2

Figurative Language

2

Inference Questions

2

Main Idea Questions

2

Question Recognition

1

Vocabulary Strategies

1

Supporting Idea Questions

1

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