The AMCAT Verbal Ability section (also called English Comprehension) is one of the three compulsory modules in the AMCAT exam. It evaluates your command over English language β from reading long passages and spotting grammar errors to rearranging jumbled sentences and filling vocabulary gaps. A high verbal score directly boosts your overall AMCAT percentile and significantly increases your interview call chances from top IT recruiters such as Wipro, Cognizant, TCS, and Capgemini. This guide covers every sub-section, the adaptive scoring mechanism, question distribution, and a structured preparation plan to help you score 80th percentile or above.
The AMCAT Verbal Ability module is a computer-adaptive test (CAT), meaning question difficulty adjusts in real time based on your answers. Candidates typically receive 18β25 questions to be completed in 16β25 minutes, depending on the version delivered. The section is scored on a scale of 200β900, with 400+ considered competitive and 600+ putting you in the top tier for IT campus and off-campus roles.
Because AMCAT is used by more than 3,000 companies for entry-level hiring, verbal ability scores appear directly on your AMCAT scorecard, which is shared with recruiters. Companies set minimum cutoffs β commonly 50th to 70th percentile β so a weak verbal score can eliminate you even if your quantitative and logical scores are strong.
The sub-sections covered are: Reading Comprehension, Sentence Correction, Vocabulary and Fill-in-the-Blanks, Error Identification, and Para-Jumbles (sentence ordering). Each sub-section tests a distinct skill, so preparation must be targeted.
Reading comprehension questions demand speed and accuracy simultaneously. Spend 20β30 minutes every day reading articles from The Hindu editorial, BBC Learning English, or Scientific American. Focus on identifying the main argument, the author's tone (critical, neutral, appreciative), and the function of each paragraph. Aim for a reading speed of at least 200 words per minute with 85% retention.
Sentence correction and error identification questions test a finite set of grammar rules. Prioritize these eight areas: subject-verb agreement, pronoun-antecedent agreement, parallel structure, misplaced and dangling modifiers, verb tense consistency, articles (a/an/the), preposition usage, and comparatives/superlatives. Use a reference like Wren and Martin or GMAT Sentence Correction guides to drill these systematically.
Rote memorization of word lists is inefficient. Instead, learn words in families sharing the same root β for example, the Latin root bene (good) gives benevolent, beneficent, beneficial, and benign. Study 10β15 roots per week with 4β5 words each. Use spaced repetition apps like Anki to review. Target 500 high-frequency AMCAT/GRE words over 4β6 weeks of preparation.
Do not attempt para-jumbles randomly. Apply this three-step framework: (a) identify the opening sentence β it introduces a concept without using pronouns like it or they; (b) identify the closing sentence β it draws a conclusion or uses a summary phrase; (c) link the middle sentences using transition words and pronoun references. Practice 5 para-jumbles daily during the final two weeks.
Since AMCAT is computer-adaptive, your pacing strategy must change. You cannot skip and return. Spending more than 90 seconds on any single question risks running out of time for later questions that carry more weight. During practice, set a 90-second hard limit per question and move on if unsure β guessing correctly on adaptive tests still advances difficulty, which is better than leaving blanks.