Reading Comprehension (Prose, Poem & Drama) • Topic 2 of 4

Inference & Tone

Once the literal level is secure, CTET tests reading between the lines. An inference is a conclusion the passage does not state outright but clearly points to — the evidence is on the page, you simply join the dots. The discipline is to infer only what the text supports: if a passage says a man 'pulled his coat tight and hurried home as the sky darkened', you may infer it was cold or about to rain, but you may NOT infer he was unhappy — that is unsupported. Tone is the writer's attitude towards the subject (critical, admiring, nostalgic, sarcastic, objective), while mood is the feeling created in the reader (gloomy, hopeful, tense). You catch tone from word choice: warm, fond words signal a nostalgic or affectionate tone; sharp, mocking words signal sarcasm or criticism. CTET also asks for the author's purpose — to inform, to persuade, to entertain or to describe — which you judge from the overall thrust of the passage. The golden rule for this whole topic: stay inside the passage; never bring in your own opinions or real-world knowledge.

✅ Solved examples

1. Passage: 'She read the letter twice, set it down without a word, and stared out of the window for a long time.' We can BEST infer that the news in the letter was:
Serious or troubling — her silence and long stare imply it, though the passage never says so directly. This is a supported inference, not a stated fact.
2. Passage: 'Ah, those endless summer afternoons of childhood, when a single mango tree was the whole world.' The tone of these lines is:
Nostalgic — the fond, longing recollection of the past ('those endless... of childhood') signals a nostalgic, affectionate tone.
3. An article that lists the steps to plant a tree and explains why each matters has the primary purpose of:
To inform / instruct — it conveys factual information and guidance, not to entertain or persuade.
4. Why is choosing 'the man was lazy' usually a wrong inference if the passage only says 'he sat by the window all morning'?
Because it is not supported — sitting by the window does not establish laziness. Valid inference must rest on evidence in the passage, not assumption.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. An inference is:
Not stated word for word.
Backed by clues in the text.
A conclusion strongly implied but not directly stated
2. Passage: 'The children pressed their noses to the bakery glass and counted their few coins again and again.' We can best infer the children:
What does counting few coins suggest?
Stay supported.
Wanted something they could barely afford
3. The writer's attitude or feeling towards the subject of a passage is called the:
Caught from word choice.
Critical, fond, mocking, etc.
Tone
4. A speech written to convince readers to save water has the main purpose of:
It wants you to act/agree.
To persuade
5. When answering an inference question, you must base your answer on:
Not your own opinion.
Evidence on the page.
Information and clues given in the passage

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

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