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True False Not Given

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True False Not Given is a common question type in the Reading section of the IELTS exam.

Candidates read statements and decide whether each statement:

  • True – matches the information in the passage
  • False – contradicts the information in the passage
  • Not Given – the passage does not clearly say

This question type tests careful reading and evidence-based decision-making.

Where It Appears

True False Not Given questions usually appear in:

  • IELTS Academic Reading
  • IELTS General Training Reading

What It Tests

This task checks your ability to:

  • Understand exact meaning
  • Recognize paraphrasing
  • Compare statements with text
  • Distinguish contradiction from missing information
  • Avoid using personal knowledge

Meaning of Each Answer

True

The statement agrees with the passage.

Example

Passage: The museum opens at 9 a.m.
Statement: The museum opens at 9 a.m.

Answer: True

False

The statement contradicts the passage.

Example

Passage: The museum opens at 9 a.m.
Statement: The museum opens at 10 a.m.

Answer: False

Not Given

The statement information is not stated clearly in the passage.

Example

Passage: The museum opens at 9 a.m.
Statement: The museum is popular with tourists.

Answer: Not Given

(No information about popularity.)

Why It Is Difficult

Many candidates confuse:

  • False = opposite information is stated
  • Not Given = no clear information stated

This is the biggest challenge.

Common Clues

Statements often use paraphrasing, not identical wording.

Example:

Passage: increased rapidly
Statement: grew quickly

Same meaning.

High-Scoring Strategy

Read the Statement Carefully

Identify key words.

Find Relevant Text

Locate matching part of passage.

Compare Meaning

Do not match words only.

Decide by Evidence

Use text only.

If No Clear Evidence

Choose Not Given.

Common Mistakes Candidates Make

Using Outside Knowledge

Only the passage matters.

Guessing From Logic

Reasonable assumptions may still be wrong.

Confusing False and Not Given

Check whether opposite information is actually written.

Reading Too Fast

Small words like some, all, never, often matter.

Example Mini Practice

Passage

Many students prefer studying in the morning because they feel more focused.

Statement 1

Some students like studying in the morning.

Answer: True

Statement 2

Most students study at night.

Answer: False

Statement 3

Morning study improves exam results.

Answer: Not Given

Useful Language Signals

Watch for:

  • all / some
  • always / sometimes
  • more / less
  • only / mainly
  • before / after

These can change meaning.

Quick Tips

  • True = same meaning
  • False = opposite meaning
  • Not Given = missing information
  • Never rely on opinion

Why Strong Candidates Perform Well

Top scorers compare ideas precisely and stay disciplined by using only written evidence from the passage.

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