Non-Verbal Reasoning
What you'll learn
- Identify the pattern in a series of shapes and select the next figure
- Find the correct mirror image of a given figure
- Locate a smaller shape hidden within a larger complex figure
- Predict the pattern of holes after a paper is folded and punched
Key concepts
Type 1 — Figure Series Completion
A series of figures follows a visual rule. You must identify what changes from figure to figure and select the next one.
Common patterns to check:
| Pattern | What changes |
|---|---|
| Rotation | Shape turns by 45°, 90°, or 180° each step |
| Size change | Shape gets larger or smaller |
| Addition | A new element is added each step |
| Shading | Sections alternate between filled and empty |
| Movement | An element shifts position (clockwise, anticlockwise) |
Worked Example: Step 1: Square with one dot in top-left corner. Step 2: Square with one dot in top-right corner. Step 3: Square with one dot in bottom-right corner. Pattern: Dot moves clockwise, one corner at a time. Next (Step 4): Dot in bottom-left corner.
Tip: Look at ONE element at a time (position, number, shading, orientation). Do not try to process all elements simultaneously.
Type 2 — Mirror Images
A mirror image is the reflection of a figure as seen in a vertical mirror placed to its right.
Key rules:
- Left and right are swapped; top and bottom stay the same.
- Letters and numbers flip horizontally:
bbecomesd;pbecomesq. - Shading and internal markings also flip left-right.
Common mirror image pairs:
| Original | Mirror Image |
|---|---|
| b | d |
| p | q |
| 6 | Mirrored 6 (facing left) |
| Arrow pointing right (→) | Arrow pointing left (←) |
Worked Example: Original figure: A triangle pointing right with a dot on its left side. Mirror image: Triangle pointing left with a dot on its right side.
Trap: The answer choices often differ only slightly (dot on wrong side, direction slightly off). Trace the left-right swap carefully for every element.
Water Images
A water image is the reflection of a figure as seen in a horizontal mirror placed below it.
- Top and bottom are swapped; left and right stay the same.
- A letter like
Abecomes an upside-downA;Tbecomes⊥.
Type 3 — Embedded Figures
A small shape (the "key figure") is hidden inside a larger, more complex figure. You must identify which option contains the key figure.
How to find embedded figures:
- Study the key figure — count its sides, note angles, mark distinctive features.
- In the complex figure, trace lines that could form the key figure.
- Check that the traced shape uses existing lines only — you cannot add new lines.
Worked Example: Key figure: A right-angled triangle. Complex figure: A large rectangle divided by diagonal lines.
Look for a right-angle corner + two sides meeting at that angle within the complex figure. The top-right section of the rectangle, when cut by one diagonal, forms a right-angled triangle. → Key figure IS embedded.
Strategy: Rotate your mental image of the key figure (0°, 90°, 180°, 270°) — it may appear rotated inside the complex figure.
Type 4 — Paper Folding and Hole Punching
A square sheet of paper is folded one or more times, then a hole is punched. When unfolded, how many holes appear and where?
Rules:
- Each fold reflects the punched holes across the fold line.
- If folded once: 2 holes when unfolded (1 punch + its reflection).
- If folded twice: 4 holes (each fold doubles the count).
- If folded three times: 8 holes.
Worked Example: Step 1: Square paper. Step 2: Fold in half vertically (left half folds over right half). Step 3: Punch one hole in the upper-right area. When unfolded: The hole appears once on the right half (original punch) and once on the left half (reflection) → 2 holes, symmetrical about the vertical fold line.
Two-fold worked example: Fold 1: Fold in half vertically. Fold 2: Fold the result in half horizontally. Punch: One hole in the center of the folded paper. Unfold: 4 holes, one in each quadrant.
Tip: Draw the fold lines. After each fold, ask: "Where does this hole reflect to?" Reflect across the fold line to find the new hole position.
General Non-Verbal Strategy
- Isolate one feature at a time (shape, position, shading, size).
- Name the rule in words before looking at answer choices.
- Eliminate wrong options — often 2–3 can be ruled out quickly.
- Mentally manipulate (rotate/flip) rather than guessing by look.
Quick check
- In a figure series, a circle gains one extra dot each step: 1 dot, 2 dots, 3 dots. What comes next?
- What is the mirror image of the letter "S"?
- If paper is folded twice (once vertically, once horizontally) and one hole is punched, how many holes appear when fully unfolded?
- In embedded figures, can you draw extra lines to find the key figure? Why or why not?
- A square rotates 90° clockwise each step. After 4 steps, what is its orientation compared to the start?
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Non-Verbal Reasoning.
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