COMPREHENSIVE REVISION TEST BANK
EXTENDED EDITION
75 Multiple-Choice Questions | 15 Passages | 30 Essay Prompts
4 Full Sample Essays with Annotations | Complete Answer Keys
Expert Strategies | Planning Templates | Self-Assessment Rubric
Legal Vocabulary Glossary (40+ Terms) | University Profiles
Reading Comprehension Drills | Timed Mock Exam Guidance
Prepared by Expert LNAT Tutors .
Covering Philosophy · Politics · Law · Ethics · Science · Economics · Social Issues ·
Technology
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PART I Expert Strategy Guide & Exam Overview
PART II Section A — Multiple-Choice Questions (15 Passages, 75 Questions)
PART III Section A — Complete Answer Key & Detailed Explanations
PART IV Section B — Essay Prompts (30 Prompts, organised by topic)
PART V Section B — Sample High-Scoring Essays with Full Annotations
PART VI Time Management Frameworks & Mock Exam Guidance
PART VII Essay Planning Templates & Self-Assessment Rubric
PART VIII Common Mistakes Analysis — Section A & Section B
PART IX Reading Comprehension Skill Drills
PART X Legal & Philosophical Vocabulary Glossary (40+ terms)
,PART XI University-by-University LNAT Guidance
PART XII Final Revision Checklist & Exam Day Guidance
, PART I: EXPERT STRATEGY GUIDE & EXAM
OVERVIEW
What is the LNAT?
The Law National Aptitude Test (LNAT) is a computer-based admissions examination used by leading UK law
schools including Oxford, Cambridge, UCL, King's College London, Durham, Nottingham, Bristol, and Glasgow.
The exam is taken at a Pearson VUE test centre and consists of two sections. Section A presents five reading
comprehension passages, each followed by three multiple-choice questions (42 questions total), to be
completed in 95 minutes. Section B requires candidates to write one argumentative essay from a choice of
three prompts in 40 minutes. The Section A score is computer-marked and reported on a scale of 0–42. Section
B essays are read by university admissions tutors and are not separately scored by LNAT.
What Does the LNAT Test?
The LNAT tests aptitude for legal reasoning, not prior legal knowledge. Section A assesses: reading
comprehension accuracy, the ability to identify main arguments and distinguish them from supporting detail,
logical inference from textual evidence, understanding of an author's tone and purpose, and vocabulary in
context. Section B assesses: the ability to construct a clear argumentative thesis, the quality of reasoning and
evidence, engagement with counterarguments, and clarity and precision of written expression. Background
knowledge of law, politics, or philosophy is useful but not tested directly. What is tested is the quality of your
thinking.
Section A: Five Core Strategies
1. QTBR — Questions Then Passage Reading
Before reading each passage, skim the questions (not the options). This primes your attention on what the
examiner wants you to notice. It takes 30 seconds per passage but saves minutes in re-reading.
2. Active Argument Mapping
As you read, identify: (i) the main claim, (ii) evidence or reasons, (iii) counterarguments, (iv) the author's conclusion
and tone. Use annotations if working on paper. In the real exam, note key paragraph functions mentally as you
read.
3. PACE Elimination
P — Pick off clearly wrong answers. A — Assess remaining options against the specific text. C — Choose the
answer most directly grounded in the passage. E — Exit; do not second-guess without a specific textual reason.
Changing an answer based on feeling rather than evidence usually leads to error.
4. Question-Type Awareness
Main idea: avoid too-narrow (detail) or too-broad (beyond the passage) options. Inference: the answer must be
logically entailed, not merely consistent. Tone/attitude: look for evaluative language. Vocabulary in context:
substitute each option into the sentence and test for semantic fit. Strengthen/weaken: ensure the option directly
targets the specific argument—not merely the topic.
5. Time Discipline
Allocate 8–9 minutes per passage. If you spend 12 minutes on one passage, you are stealing time from easier
ones. Flag uncertain questions and return at the end. In 95 minutes, you have approximately 2 minutes per
question.
, Section B: Five Core Strategies
1. Choose Wisely — The 90-Second Decision
Read all three prompts before committing. Choose the prompt where you have the strongest argument, not the
most knowledge. It is better to write a brilliant essay on an unfamiliar topic using first principles than a mediocre
one on a familiar topic using memorised points.
2. TREAT Framework
T — Thesis (qualified, clear, in the opening paragraph). R — Reasoning (the strongest argument supporting your
position). E — Evidence (specific examples, cases, thinkers, data). A — Against (the strongest counterargument,
presented fairly and rebutted). T — Total (a synthesising conclusion, not a summary).
3. Thesis Calibration
The most common essay error is failing to take a position. The best LNAT essays state a clear, qualified thesis in
the opening paragraph. Good thesis formulations include: 'To a significant extent, but subject to the following
qualification...'; 'This claim is defensible only if we distinguish...'; 'The strongest argument supports this conclusion,
but the conditions under which it holds are more limited than the prompt suggests.'
4. Steelmanning
Engage counterarguments at their strongest, not their weakest. A student who dismisses the opposing view without
engaging it signals that they have not understood it. A student who presents it fairly and explains why their position
nonetheless prevails demonstrates intellectual maturity.
5. Conclusion as Synthesis
Do not restate your introduction in the conclusion. Instead, draw together the threads of your argument into a
synthesising insight: what does your analysis reveal about the underlying principle at stake? Alternatively, identify
the most important unresolved tension that further inquiry would need to address.