ADRE 3.0 English Syllabus for Grades 3rd & 4th

ADRE / SLRC Assam 2026

ADRE English Syllabus 2026: Class 8 to Graduate Level – Complete Topic-Wise Guide (Grade 3 & 4)

The most comprehensive breakdown of General English for every ADRE exam level — Grade IV (Class 8 & HSLC) and Grade III (HSSLC & Graduate) — with grammar topics, vocabulary, reading comprehension, marks, and strategy.

📅 Updated: April 2026 🏛 Body: SLRC Assam 📖 4 Exam Levels ✍ RC (Graduate): 50 Marks

The ADRE (Assam Direct Recruitment Exam) English Syllabus is a key section across all Grade III and Grade IV posts conducted by the State Level Recruitment Commission (SLRC), Assam. General English appears in every paper — from the Class 8 (Grade IV) all the way up to the Graduate Level (Grade III) — making it one of the highest-scoring opportunities in the entire exam.

What makes the English section unique in ADRE is its progressive weightage: at the Graduate Level, the Reading Comprehension and English Language section carries a massive 50 marks (25 questions × 2 marks each), with negative marking of 0.5 marks per wrong answer. This makes it simultaneously the highest-scoring and highest-risk section of the entire Graduate Level paper.

This article gives you a complete, level-wise breakdown of every English topic tested in ADRE — Grammar, Vocabulary, Reading Comprehension, Writing Skills, and more — along with marks distribution, key grammar rules, recommended books, and a smart preparation strategy.

Exam Levels Covered
4 Levels
Grade IV (Class 8)
~20 English Qs
Grade IV (HSLC)
~25 English Qs
Grade III (HSSLC)
35 English Qs
Grade III (Graduate)
50 Marks (RC: 2×25)
Negative Marking
–0.25 / –0.50
Language of Paper
English / Assamese
Exam Mode
Offline OMR

ADRE English Weightage – All Levels at a Glance

English is tested across all 5 ADRE papers. The weightage and difficulty scale up significantly from Grade IV to Graduate Level. Below is the full overview of how English marks are distributed across each exam level:

Exam Level Grade Total Questions Total Marks English Questions English Marks Negative Marking
Class VIII Pass Grade IV 135 135 ~20 Qs ~20 Marks –0.25
HSLC (Class 10) Pass Grade IV 135 135 ~25 Qs ~25 Marks –0.25
HSSLC (Class 12) Pass Grade III 150 150 35 Qs 35 Marks –0.25
Bachelor’s Degree Grade III 150 175 25 RC Qs + Grammar 50 Marks (RC) –0.50 (RC)
HSLC – Driver Post Grade III 150 150 ~25 Qs ~25 Marks –0.25
Key Difference at Graduate Level: The Graduate Level paper is the only ADRE paper where English carries 2 marks per question for the Reading Comprehension & English Language section (25 questions = 50 marks total). A wrong answer here deducts 0.50 marks — double the penalty of all other sections. Attempt these questions with high confidence only.

ADRE English Syllabus – Class 8 Level (Grade IV)

The Class 8 level English section follows the SCERT Assam Elementary School curriculum (Classes 6–8). The questions test foundational grammar, basic vocabulary, and simple sentence construction. This is the easiest English paper in ADRE and focuses heavily on Parts of Speech, Basic Grammar Rules, and simple comprehension passages.

Grade IV – Class VIII Level ~20 English Questions ~20 Marks Difficulty: Basic / Elementary
Level 1
Class 8 (Grade IV) – English Topics
SCERT Assam Elementary Level | ~20 Questions
Basic Grammar
  • Parts of Speech – Noun, Pronoun, Verb, Adjective, Adverb
  • Prepositions – basic usage (in, on, at, by, for)
  • Conjunctions – and, but, or, so, because
  • Articles – a, an, the (correct usage)
  • Singular and Plural forms
Vocabulary
  • Simple Synonyms and Antonyms
  • Word meanings in context
  • Common Idioms (basic level)
  • Simple Spelling Correction
Sentence Skills
  • Sentence Types – simple, compound
  • Fill in the Blanks (grammar-based)
  • Spotting basic errors (wrong words)
  • Correct use of verbs (is/are/was/were)
Comprehension
  • Simple unseen passage (short)
  • Answer questions based on the passage
  • Find the meaning of underlined words
  • Identifying the main idea
Tenses
  • Present Tense – Simple & Continuous
  • Past Tense – Simple & Continuous
  • Future Tense – Simple
  • Identifying correct tense usage

ADRE English Syllabus – HSLC / Class 10 Level (Grade IV)

The HSLC-level English section follows the SEBA HSLC (Class 10) English syllabus. The difficulty steps up to include advanced grammar rules, more complex vocabulary, Active/Passive Voice, Direct/Indirect Speech, and slightly longer comprehension passages. This level tests real functional use of English grammar.

Grade IV – HSLC Level ~25 English Questions ~25 Marks Difficulty: Moderate / Class 10
Level 2
HSLC / Class 10 (Grade IV) – English Topics
SEBA HSLC Standard | ~25 Questions
Grammar
  • Parts of Speech – advanced usage
  • Tenses – all 12 forms with rules
  • Subject-Verb Agreement
  • Prepositions – advanced (despite, although, among)
  • Conjunctions – correlative and subordinating
  • Articles – advanced rules and exceptions
Voice & Speech
  • Active Voice to Passive Voice
  • Passive Voice to Active Voice
  • Direct Speech to Indirect Speech
  • Indirect Speech to Direct Speech
  • Reporting Verbs and their rules
Vocabulary
  • Synonyms and Antonyms (medium difficulty)
  • One-Word Substitution (basic–moderate)
  • Idioms and Phrases
  • Spelling errors and correction
  • Word Analogy
Sentence Skills
  • Spotting Errors in sentences
  • Sentence Correction
  • Fill in the Blanks (vocabulary & grammar)
  • Para Jumbles – sentence rearrangement
  • Phrase Replacement
Comprehension
  • Unseen passage (medium length)
  • Direct and inferential questions
  • Vocabulary from passage
  • Title / Main Idea questions
Word Forms
  • Word Formation – prefix & suffix
  • Degrees of Comparison
  • Gerunds and Infinitives
  • Confusing Words (affect/effect, then/than)

ADRE English Syllabus – HSSLC / Class 12 Level (Grade III)

The HSSLC-level exam for Grade III posts carries 35 English marks out of 150. The English section at this level aligns with the AHSEC HS (Class 11–12) English syllabus and competitive exam English. It includes all Class 10 topics plus advanced grammar, Cloze Tests, précis writing concepts, and more analytical comprehension questions.

Grade III – HSSLC Level 150 Total Questions / 150 Marks 35 English Questions / 35 Marks Difficulty: Class 12 / HS Level
Level 3
HSSLC / Class 12 (Grade III) – English Topics
AHSEC HS Standard + Competitive English | 35 Questions

All Class 10 topics are included, PLUS the additional topics below:

Advanced Grammar
  • Modals – should, would, could, might, must
  • Conditionals – Zero, First, Second, Third
  • Relative Clauses (who, which, that, whom)
  • Clauses – Noun, Adverb, Adjective
  • Complex sentence structures
  • Inversion – formal written English
Advanced Vocabulary
  • Synonyms & Antonyms (difficult level)
  • One-Word Substitution (HS level)
  • Idioms and Phrases (advanced)
  • Foreign words commonly used in English
  • Homonyms and Homophones
Comprehension
  • Longer unseen passages with 4–5 questions
  • Inferential and evaluative questions
  • Tone, attitude and purpose of author
  • Vocabulary in context (difficult words)
  • Short précis / summary of passage
Sentence Skills
  • Error Spotting in complex sentences
  • Cloze Test (fill multiple blanks in a passage)
  • Para Jumbles (longer paragraph level)
  • Sentence Improvement
  • Double Fillers
Writing Skills
  • Précis Writing (condensing a passage)
  • Letter and Report writing concepts
  • Formal vs Informal language distinction
  • Coherence and cohesion in writing
Applied Language
  • Figures of Speech – simile, metaphor, alliteration
  • Formal English expressions
  • Reading between the lines
  • Critical comprehension of editorials

ADRE English Syllabus – Graduate / Bachelor’s Degree Level (Grade III)

The Graduate Level English section is structured differently from all other levels. It is split into two distinct components: General English (grammar and vocabulary) and a special high-weightage Reading Comprehension and English Language section that carries 2 marks per question.

Grade III – Graduate Level 150 Questions / 175 Marks 25 RC Questions × 2 Marks = 50 Marks Negative: –0.50 for RC section

⭐ Reading Comprehension & English Language – 50 Marks (2 Marks Each)

This section is exclusive to the Graduate Level paper. There are 25 questions worth 2 marks each (total 50 marks). A wrong answer deducts 0.50 marks. This section alone accounts for nearly 28.5% of the total 175 marks in the Graduate paper — making it the single most valuable section in the entire exam. Mastering RC is not optional at this level; it is essential.

Level 4
Graduate / Bachelor’s Degree (Grade III) – English Topics
Graduation-Level + RC 2-Mark Questions | 50 Marks from English

All HSSLC-level topics are included, PLUS the advanced topics below:

Reading Comprehension (2 Marks)
  • Long unseen passages (academic / editorial / social)
  • Main idea & central theme questions
  • Inference and implicit meaning
  • Author’s tone, attitude and purpose
  • Vocabulary from context (2-mark questions)
  • Fact vs Opinion questions
  • Title / Heading selection
  • Critical evaluation questions
Advanced Grammar
  • Conditional sentences – all types
  • Subjunctive Mood
  • Ellipsis and Substitution
  • Advanced Passive constructions
  • Parallel Structure in sentences
  • Dangling Modifiers
Advanced Vocabulary
  • Synonyms & Antonyms (graduation level)
  • One-Word Substitution (difficult)
  • Literary Idioms & Phrases
  • Word-in-context (RC-based)
  • Collocations and Phrasal Verbs
English Language Skills
  • Cloze Test (paragraph-level)
  • Sentence Rearrangement (complex)
  • Coherence and cohesion in paragraphs
  • Connectives and transition words
  • Précis writing principles
Error Detection
  • Advanced Error Spotting (4–5 underlined parts)
  • Phrase Replacement (formal register)
  • Sentence Correction (complex clauses)
  • Double Fillers with context matching
Analytical English
  • Logical flow of ideas in a paragraph
  • Identifying irrelevant sentences
  • Paragraph completion
  • Inference from data-heavy passages
🎓
Graduate Level Strategy: At this level, Reading Comprehension is king. Spend 60–70% of your English prep time on RC practice. Read newspaper editorials (The Hindu, The Assam Tribune) daily to build reading speed, inference skills, and vocabulary simultaneously.

Level-Wise English Topic Comparison Table

Use this at-a-glance reference table to quickly understand which English topics appear at which exam level, and at what depth:

English Topic Class 8 HSLC (10) HSSLC (12) Graduate
Parts of SpeechBasicAdvanced
Tenses (all 12 forms)3 simple tensesAll tensesAll + nuanceAll + advanced
Subject-Verb AgreementBasic✅ (complex)
Articles (a/an/the)BasicAdvanced
PrepositionsBasicAdvanced
Active / Passive Voice✅ (advanced)
Direct / Indirect Speech
Synonyms & AntonymsSimpleModerateDifficultVery difficult
One-Word SubstitutionBasicModerateDifficult
Idioms & PhrasesBasicModerateAdvancedAdvanced
Spotting ErrorsBasic✅ (complex)✅ (expert)
Fill in the Blanks✅ (double)✅ (double)
Para Jumbles✅ (complex)
Cloze Test
Conditionals
Modals
Reading ComprehensionSimple (short)ModerateAnalyticalExpert (2 marks)
Précis / SummaryConcept-based
Figures of Speech
Phrasal VerbsBasic
Paragraph Coherence

Key Grammar Rules You Must Know for ADRE

These are the most frequently tested grammar rules across all ADRE levels. Revise these rules before your exam:

Subject-Verb Agreement
A singular subject takes a singular verb. “The team is” ✅ not “The team are” ✅ (in Indian English)
Active to Passive
Object + auxiliary + past participle. “She writes a letter” → “A letter is written by her”
Direct to Indirect Speech
Reporting verb tense change. “He said, ‘I am coming'” → “He said that he was coming”
Articles Rule
Use ‘an’ before vowel sounds. “An MBA”, “An honest man”. ‘The’ for specific nouns.
Conditional – Second
If + past simple + would + base. “If I were rich, I would travel” (unreal present)
Gerund vs Infinitive
After prepositions → gerund. “He left without saying.” After verbs like want → infinitive. “She wants to go.”
Degrees of Comparison
“Good → Better → Best”. Never use double comparatives: “more better” ❌ → “better” ✅
Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement
A pronoun must agree with its antecedent in number and gender. “Everyone should bring his/her book.”
Parallel Structure
Listed items must use the same grammatical form. “She likes reading, writing, and swimming” ✅ (not “to swim”)

Best Books for ADRE English Preparation

Choosing the right resources saves time and maximizes your score. Here are the most recommended books for ADRE English across all levels:

📘

Objective General English – S.P. Bakshi (Arihant)

The single best book for all ADRE English levels. Covers Grammar, Vocabulary, Error Detection, RC, and Cloze Test with exercises. Ideal for HSSLC and Graduate Level.

📗

High School Grammar & Composition – Wren & Martin

The gold standard grammar reference. Essential for mastering all grammar rules tested at HSLC, HSSLC, and Graduate levels. Use for concept clarity, not rote learning.

📙

Word Power Made Easy – Norman Lewis

The best vocabulary builder. Teaches root-based word learning — ideal for building Synonyms, Antonyms, and One-Word Substitution vocabulary for Graduate and HSSLC levels.

📕

SEBA/SCERT Class 8–10 English Textbooks

For Grade IV (Class 8 & HSLC) candidates — these textbooks form the exact syllabus base. Grammar exercises from SEBA Class 9–10 are highly relevant.

📓

ADRE Previous Year Question Papers

Essential for all levels. ADRE 1.0 and 2.0 previous papers reveal exact question types, difficulty, and frequency of topics. Solve at least 3 full papers under timed conditions.

🗞

The Assam Tribune / The Hindu (Daily Reading)

For Graduate Level RC preparation — read one editorial daily. Underline unknown words, guess meaning from context, then verify. This builds RC speed and vocabulary together.

Preparation Tips & Strategy for ADRE English 2026

Tip 01

Start With Grammar Foundations

Before tackling mock tests, ensure you understand the core rules — tenses, subject-verb agreement, voice, and conjunctions. One week of solid grammar study pays dividends across all English question types.

Tip 02

Build Vocabulary Systematically

Learn 10–15 new words every day using root words. Group them by prefix/suffix. Synonyms, antonyms, and one-word substitutions can be cracked with vocabulary roots — not random memorization.

Tip 03

Master Active/Passive Voice Rules

Voice transformation is tested at every level from HSLC onwards. Practice all 12 tense forms in active and passive. Pay special attention to modals in passive constructions (must, can, should).

Tip 04

Practice Reading Comprehension Daily

For Graduate Level, RC is worth 50 marks. Practice one RC passage daily (400–600 words). Time yourself — 6–7 minutes per passage is the target. Focus on identifying the main idea before reading questions.

Tip 05

Cloze Test Technique

Read the entire passage first to understand the theme. Then fill blanks based on context, grammar, and coherence — in that order. Grammar alone won’t help; the word must also “fit the meaning.”

Tip 06

Error Spotting Approach

Check in this order: (1) Subject-Verb Agreement, (2) Tense consistency, (3) Pronoun-Antecedent, (4) Article usage, (5) Preposition. This sequence catches 90% of errors in Spotting questions.

Tip 07

Memorize Common Idioms List

Idioms and Phrases are directly tested across all ADRE levels. Create a list of 50–75 common idioms with meanings and example sentences. Revise weekly using flash cards or handwritten notes.

Tip 08

Manage RC Negative Marking (Graduate)

The RC section has –0.50 per wrong answer. If you are unsure of the answer, skip it. Only attempt RC questions where you have read the passage and are at least 70% confident. Accuracy over attempts here.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Is English compulsory in all ADRE exam levels?
Yes. General English is a compulsory section in all ADRE papers — Grade IV (Class 8 and HSLC) and Grade III (HSSLC, Graduate, and Driver levels). Every candidate must attempt the English section.
How many marks does English carry in the ADRE Graduate Level paper?
At the Graduate Level, the Reading Comprehension and English Language section carries 50 marks — 25 questions at 2 marks each. This is the single highest-scoring section in the entire Graduate Level paper (175 marks total).
What is the negative marking for the RC section in the Graduate Level ADRE?
For the Reading Comprehension and English Language section in the Graduate Level paper, 0.50 marks are deducted per wrong answer. For all other 1-mark questions in ADRE (including other English questions), the negative marking is 0.25 marks.
What English topics are most important for ADRE HSSLC Level?
For the HSSLC Level, the highest-frequency English topics are: Synonyms & Antonyms, Fill in the Blanks, Spotting Errors, One-Word Substitution, Cloze Test, Idioms & Phrases, Active/Passive Voice, and Reading Comprehension. These collectively cover most of the 35-mark English section.
Is the Reading Comprehension in ADRE Graduate Level from books or current affairs?
RC passages in the ADRE Graduate Level are typically unseen passages — they can be based on social issues, science, history, economics, or general topics. They are not taken from specific books. Practicing a variety of editorial-style passages from newspapers is the best preparation.
Does the Class 8 level ADRE paper include Active/Passive Voice questions?
No. Active/Passive Voice is not included in the Class 8 level ADRE paper. Voice transformation is tested from the HSLC (Class 10) Level onwards. Class 8 English focuses on basic grammar, simple tenses, and short comprehension passages.
Which book is best for ADRE English preparation?
Objective General English by S.P. Bakshi (Arihant Publications) is the most recommended book for ADRE English across all levels. For grammar fundamentals, Wren & Martin is essential. For vocabulary, Word Power Made Easy by Norman Lewis is highly effective.
How much time should I give to English preparation for ADRE?
For Graduate Level: dedicate at least 30–35% of total study time to English (especially RC), given its 50-mark weightage. For HSSLC Level: allocate 20–25% of study time to English. For Grade IV (Class 8 & HSLC): 15–20% of study time is sufficient for English.
Final Word: The ADRE English section rewards consistent preparation, especially at the Graduate Level where Reading Comprehension alone accounts for 50 marks. Build your grammar foundation first, then work on vocabulary, and finally master RC passages. Read English newspapers daily, practice previous papers regularly, and approach the negative marking with disciplined caution. English can be your highest-scoring section if you prepare for it the smart way.
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