GATE · General Aptitude · New York, USA
General Aptitude for the GATE Exam — New York candidates
15% of the GATE test plan. Verbal reasoning, numerical ability, and analytical reasoning — always 15 marks (10 questions) in every GATE paper regardless of engineering discipline. Calibrated for New Yorker candidates.
Examiners do not award marks for content alone — they award them for the ability to demonstrate competency in the precise format the test demands. General Aptitude sits at roughly 15% of the Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering content distribution — General Aptitude (GA) is the one section every GATE candidate shares. The 15 fixed marks can be scored reliably with targeted practice, making GA a score stabiliser — a strong GA score compensates for one or two technical errors. GA questions are time-efficient: verbal and numerical problems typically take 30–90 seconds each. Pass rates for the GATE are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For New York candidates preparing for GATE, the calibration of study to local context matters: New York is a top-3 state for NCLEX-RN, MCAT, and GRE candidates. NY State Education Department (NYSED) handles RN licensure differently from compact states.
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Spending too long on a single sentence-correction question at the expense of numerical aptitude marks
- !Misinterpreting "data sufficiency" questions — answering the embedded question rather than determining sufficiency
- !Percentage-change and compound-interest errors when problems chain two or three rate changes
- !Syllogism errors in categorical reasoning: affirming the consequent or denying the antecedent
- !Missing critical-path questions in network diagrams by drawing routes incorrectly
Study tips
- 1Allocate 25–30 minutes of your GATE exam time to GA — it should be the highest-ROI block. Complete it first or last; never let it bleed into technical time.
- 2For verbal ability, practise para-jumbles and reading comprehension from GATE PYQs. The grammar and vocabulary patterns are narrow.
- 3Drill percentage, ratio-proportion, time-work, and time-distance problems daily in the two weeks before the exam.
- 4Memorise the cube-root and square-root tables up to 20 for fast numerical aptitude.
- 5For data interpretation (tables/bar charts), always check the units and axis labels before calculating — misreading units is the most common DI error.
- 6For NCLEX-RN: NYSED is not part of the Nurse Licensure Compact, so a NY licence does not transfer to other states without endorsement. Consider this if you plan to work in NJ/CT after graduating.
- 7For MCAT: most NY medical schools (Columbia, Cornell, Mount Sinai, NYU) cap MCAT scores accepted at 3 years old — verify your target schools' exact policy.
- 8For CDL: NY DMV requires a 14-day permit-holding period before scheduling the CDL skills test; budget this gap into your training schedule.
Sample GATE General Aptitude questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real GATE questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
A train travels 600 km in 5 hours. If the speed is increased by 20%, the time taken for the same journey would be:
- A4 hours
- B4 hours 10 minutesCorrect
- C4 hours 30 minutes
- D3 hours 45 minutes
Why this answer?
(GATE CS style) Original speed = 600/5 = 120 km/h. New speed = 120 × 1.20 = 144 km/h. New time = 600/144 = 4.166... hours = 4 hours 10 minutes.
- 2
Choose the word that is most similar in meaning to "LACONIC":
- AVerbose
- BBriefCorrect
- CAmbiguous
- DPedantic
Why this answer?
(GATE CS style) 'Laconic' means using very few words; terse or concise. 'Brief' is the closest synonym. 'Verbose' is the antonym.
- 3
If the sum of three consecutive odd integers is 51, the largest integer is:
- A15
- B17
- C19Correct
- D21
Why this answer?
(GATE CS style) Let the integers be n, n+2, n+4. Sum = 3n + 6 = 51 → n = 15. The largest is n + 4 = 19.
Frequently asked questions
Is the General Aptitude syllabus the same for all GATE papers?
How much time should I spend preparing GA for GATE?
What is the GATE pass rate for New Yorker candidates?
How long should New Yorker candidates study General Aptitude for the GATE?
Practice GATE branch-specific questions free with Koydo.
CS, EE, ME, CE, ECE — full GATE syllabus with PYQs.
Related study guides
- Data Structures for GATE (New York, USA)Another GATE topic for New Yorker candidates
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- Theory of Computation for GATE (New York, USA)Another GATE topic for New Yorker candidates
- Computer Organization & Architecture for GATE (New York, USA)Another GATE topic for New Yorker candidates
- Operating Systems for GATE (New York, USA)Another GATE topic for New Yorker candidates
- General Aptitude for GATE — U.S. candidatesSame General Aptitude topic, different locale framing
- General Aptitude for GATE — U.K. candidatesSame General Aptitude topic, different locale framing
- General Aptitude for GATE — Indian candidatesSame General Aptitude topic, different locale framing
Regulatory citation: GATE 2024 Official Syllabus — General Aptitude: 15 marks, 10 questions (5 × 1-mark + 5 × 2-mark) common to all GATE papers.