CCAT Verbal Ability (English Section): Question Types, Examples & Strategy (2026)

Updated: May 2026 | Used by 10,000+ Learners Globally

The CCAT Verbal Ability section tests how quickly and accurately you understand words, relationships, and sentence meaning under time pressure.

The vocabulary itself is not extremely advanced.

The challenge is making correct decisions in seconds.

This guide explains:

  • How many verbal questions appear on the CCAT

  • What types of verbal questions to expect

  • Sample CCAT verbal questions with explanations

  • Proven strategies to improve speed and accuracy

πŸ‘‰ β€œThe CCAT also tests your Numerical Ability and Abstract Reasoning. In this guide, we’ll focus on Verbal Ability β€” but you can also check out our CCAT NumericalΒ  Ability Guide and CCAT Abstract Reasoning Guide for complete preparation.”

For a full overview of the CCAT structure and scoring system, see our CCAT Guide.

How Many Verbal Questions Are on the CCAT?

The CCAT typically includes around 11–13 verbal reasoning questions, although the exact breakdown is not officially published.

Since the entire test contains 50 questions in 15 minutes, you have less than 20 seconds per verbal question on average.

Speed matters more than perfection.

CCAT verbal questions focus on:

  • Common but less frequently used English words

  • Professional vocabulary

  • Relationship-based reasoning

  • Context-driven meaning

The test does not require advanced literature knowledge.

It requires fast recognition of word relationships.

CCAT Verbal Question Types

Below are the main formats you can expect.

1️⃣ Antonyms (Opposite Meaning)

These questions ask you to choose the word closest in meaning to the opposite of the target word.

You can usually expect 3–4 antonym questions.

Example – Choose the word that is most nearly OPPOSITE to the word in capital letters.
LENGTHEN

A. abdicate

B. truncate

C. elongate

D. stifle

E. resist

Correct Answer: B

Explanation: β€œTruncate” β€” which means to shorten or cut something off β€” is the best choice here as the opposite of β€œLengthen.” β€œElongate” is a synonym of β€œLengthen,” and we’re looking for antonyms. β€œAbdicate,” β€œStifle,” and β€œResist” all relate to stopping something in one way or another, but none of them refer to a physical dimension the way that both β€œTruncate” and β€œElongate” do. Since you’re looking for the opposite of lengthen, choose β€œTruncate.”

Strategy

  • Eliminate unrelated words first.

  • Watch for near-synonyms designed to trap you.

  • Do not overthink β€” your first instinct is often correct.

Want more like this under timed pressure?Β Try the free 5-minute CCAT test β†’

2️⃣ Analogies (Word Relationships)

Analogy questions test your ability to identify relationships between word pairs.

You can typically expect 4–5 analogy questions.

Format:

A is to B as C is to ?

Example : CULPABLE is to BLAME as …

A)EDIBLE is to TASTE

B)MALLEABLE is to CENSURE

C)MENIAL is to DISGUST

D)PENAL is to INCARCERATION

E)LAUDABLE is to PRAISE

Correct Answer:Β D

Β 

The relationship between β€œCULPABLE” and β€œBLAME” is that culpable means deserving blame or responsible for wrongdoing. Similarly, the analogy is looking for a pair where the second word conveys the action or consequence associated with the first word.

Among the given options:

Β 

D) PENAL is to INCARCERATION

Explanation:

  • β€œPENAL” is related to punishment or relating to penalties.
  • β€œINCARCERATION” is the action or consequence associated with wrongdoing or breaking the law.

This pair reflects the relationship between β€œCULPABLE” and β€œBLAME” in terms of the action or consequence resulting from culpability.

Β 

let’s explore the relationships in the other options:

Β 

A)Β EDIBLE is to TASTE:Β This relationship is more about the nature of the item (something that can be eaten) and the associated sensory experience, rather than a connection between culpability and its consequence.

Β 

B)Β MALLEABLE is to CENSURE:Β β€œMALLEABLE” means capable of being shaped or influenced easily, while β€œCENSURE” means strong disapproval or criticism. The relationship here is more about susceptibility to influence rather than culpability and its consequences.

Β 

C)Β MENIAL is to DISGUST:Β β€œMENIAL” refers to tasks that are considered lowly or degrading, and β€œDISGUST” is a feeling of intense dislike or revulsion. The relationship is more about the nature of the tasks rather than a connection between culpability and its consequences.

Β 

E)Β LAUDABLE is to PRAISE:Β β€œLAUDABLE” means deserving praise, and β€œPRAISE” is the expression of approval or admiration. This relationship is more about positive qualities deserving positive feedback, rather than culpability and its consequence.

Β 

In summary, option D (PENAL is to INCARCERATION) is the most fitting analogy as it reflects the relationship between culpability and the consequential action or penalty.

Common Analogy Relationships

  • Synonym

  • Antonym

  • Part-to-whole

  • Cause-and-effect

  • Function

  • Degree

  • Category

Strategy

Rephrase the relationship as a sentence:

β€œCulpable means deserving blame.”

Then test which option matches that same structure.

Want more like this under timed pressure?Β Try the free 5-minute CCAT test β†’

3. Sentence Completion

These questions test contextual understanding.

You can usually expect 4–5 sentence completion questions.

You must choose the word or phrase that best fits the meaning of the sentence.

Choose the word or words that, when inserted in the sentence to replace the blank or blanks, best fits the meaning of the sentence.

Rather than improving the team’s performance, the new strategy actually __________ their ability to compete, leading to multiple losses.

A)stabilized

B)hindered

C)enhanced

D)nullified

E)invigorated

Key phrase:Β  β€œRather than improving…” and β€œleading to multiple losses” β€” this implies a negative effect.

Β 

So we’re looking for a word that means the strategy hurt or weakened their performance.

Β 

Let’s examine the choices:

A) hindered βœ…

  • Means obstructed or held back β€” perfectly fits.
    βœ”οΈ Correct meaning and tone

B) enhanced ❌

  • Means improved β€” the opposite of what we want.
    βœ–οΈ Contradicts the sentence.

C) nullified

  • Means completely canceled out. Possible, but slightly too strong or absolute for this context.
    βž– Not the best fit.

D) invigorated ❌

  • Means energized or strengthened β€” again, opposite of the intended meaning.
    βœ–οΈ Doesn’t fit the sentence.

E) stabilized ❌

  • Means made steady or consistent, not aligned with β€œmultiple losses”.
    βœ–οΈ Doesn’t convey harm or decline.

Β 

βœ… Correct answer: A) hindered

It best fits the contrast with β€œimproving” and aligns with the outcome of β€œmultiple losses.”

Strategy

  • Read the sentence once carefully.

  • Predict the missing word before looking at options.

  • Eliminate grammatically incorrect answers first.

Want more like this under timed pressure?Β Try the free 5-minute CCAT test β†’

Is the CCAT Verbal Section Hard?

The verbal section feels difficult if:

  • You lack vocabulary exposure

  • You second-guess yourself

  • You reread sentences repeatedly

The questions are not long.

The pressure comes from speed and decision-making.

Can You Improve CCAT Vocabulary Quickly?

Yes.

Strong performers:

  • Review common antonym pairs

  • Practice analogy relationship types

  • Learn root words and prefixes

  • Train under timed conditions

To help with this, we’ve created a Free CCAT Speed Cheatsheet that includes:

  • High-frequency CCAT vocabulary

  • Common analogy relationship patterns

  • Alphabetical series reference

  • Quick elimination strategies

πŸ‘‰ For the full CCAT vocabulary list with synonyms, antonyms and word categories β€” see our CCAT Tips and Tricks Cheatsheet.

Timing Strategy for Verbal Questions

With limited time:

  • Do not reread sentences multiple times.

  • Eliminate 2–3 wrong options quickly.

  • If unsure after 20 seconds, guess and move on.

There is no negative marking.

Never leave blanks.

Common Verbal Mistakes

  • Choosing near-synonyms instead of true opposites

  • Misidentifying analogy relationships

  • Overthinking simple sentence completions

  • Spending too long debating two options

Confidence and decisiveness are critical

7-Day CCAT Verbal Practice Plan

Day 1–2: Antonym drills
Day 3: Analogy relationship practice
Day 4: Sentence completion sets
Day 5: Timed mixed verbal set
Day 6: Review vocabulary weaknesses
Day 7: Full-length timed mock

Timed practice improves accuracy more than passive reading.

How Verbal Ability Affects Your CCAT Score

Verbal reasoning typically makes up about one-fifth to one-quarter of the exam.

Improving just 3–4 verbal questions can significantly increase your overall percentile.

Accuracy under pressure matters more than memorizing long word lists.

Check what score you need for your target role:Β CCAT Score Guide β†’Β Β·Β 

SeeΒ which companies use the CCAT β†’

Β 

Full Preparation Course

CCAT Practice Test Course

6 full-length mocks · 300 questions

247 candidates preparing this week
  • 6 timed full-length mock exams
  • 300 questions with worked solutions
  • Immediate answer explanations
5.0 · 10,000+ candidates prepared

"Went from scoring 19 to 34 in one week. Got the offer at Zendesk."

β€” Sarah K., hired at Zendesk
Start Full Course →
Avg. score improvement +10 points
CCAT Full Course
6 mocks · 300 questions
View Course