On exam day, Kiran faced the Reasoning section without fear. Question after question, she recognized patterns from the Kiran book. She finished the section 10 minutes early.
She solved five questions. Then ten. Then twenty. Each question had a detailed solution below it. For the first time, she understood why an answer was correct.
Kiran skeptically opened the book. The first chapter was indeed Analogy. On the left page, the instructions were in English; on the right, the same in Hindi. She felt relieved—no more struggling with tricky English-only explanations.
When the results came, she had scored 172/200 in Reasoning alone. Kiran Bilingual SSC Reasoning Chapterwise And T...
That evening, she touched the book’s cover and whispered, “Thank you.”
One rainy evening, her older brother placed a thick, worn-out book on her study table. Its cover read: .
Kiran had always been afraid of reasoning. The puzzles, the patterns, the logical sequences—they swirled in her head like a maze with no exit. But her SSC CGL exam was only three months away, and she knew she couldn't afford to skip the Reasoning section. On exam day, Kiran faced the Reasoning section without fear
“This is your weapon,” he said. “It’s bilingual—Hindi and English. No more language barriers. And it’s chapterwise. Start from the easiest topic: Analogy.”
Within two weeks, she finished the Analogy, Classification, Coding-Decoding, and Direction Sense chapters. The book's chapterwise progression—from easy to tough—built her confidence like stairs leading upward.
From then on, whenever a friend asked for SSC advice, Kiran would say: “Start with Kiran. Chapterwise. Bilingual. And don’t skip the solutions.” Would you like a similar story focused on a specific reasoning topic from that book (e.g., Syllogism, Blood Relations, or Non-Verbal Reasoning)? She solved five questions
The Chapter That Changed Everything
One night, she stumbled on a tough Venn diagram problem. She almost gave up. But the bilingual solution broke it down step-by-step in both languages. Something clicked. She smiled, solved it, and marked the page with a sticky note: “Victory.”