CBSE Class 11 Applied Mathematics · Unit 2 · Free MCQs, AR Questions, Solved Examples & Case Studies
Unit 2 carries 18 marks — the highest-weightage unit in Class 11. Complete free resources: 15 MCQs, 5 Assertion-Reason questions, 13 solved examples and 4 case studies. Covers Sets & Venn Diagrams, Relations, Mathematical Logic (Syllogism, Blood Relations, Coding-Decoding), and AP & GP — fully aligned to CBSE 2026-27.
This page covers all topics in Unit 2 of CBSE Class 11 Applied Mathematics — the highest-weightage unit in the syllabus, carrying 18 marks out of 80. You'll find 15 MCQs and 5 Assertion-Reason questions with step-by-step answers, 13 solved examples, and 4 case studies based on real-world contexts. It covers Sets (Venn Diagrams, De Morgan's Laws, Intervals), Relations and Ordered Pairs (Cartesian product, domain, range), Mathematical Logic (Syllogism, Blood Relations, Coding-Decoding), and Arithmetic and Geometric Progressions. Free CBSE 2026-27 aligned practice on De Morgan's laws with examples, Venn diagram word problems, syllogism reasoning questions, blood relations puzzles, and AP & GP nth term and sum formulas explained step by step. Note: P&C has moved to Unit IV in the 2026-27 syllabus.
Two sub-units, five topic areas. Highest-weightage unit in Class 11 Applied Maths. Note: P&C has moved to Unit IV in 2026-27.
Sub-Unit A: Sets & Relations
Well-defined collection of objects. Representation, types, operations, Venn diagrams and intervals.
Ordered pairs, Cartesian product, domain and range of a relation.
Reasoning-based — no formula. Read carefully and think logically step by step.
Sub-Unit B: Sequences & Series
Sequences with constant common difference d.
Sequences with constant common ratio r.
Click Show Answer after each question to check with a full step-by-step explanation. Five Assertion-Reason questions follow after the MCQs.
Four types of questions — no formula for any: Odd Man Out (find the element that breaks the pattern), Syllogism (draw valid conclusions from All/Some/No premises — visualise Venn diagrams), Blood Relations (build family tree step by step), and Coding-Decoding (find the shift or pattern, apply or reverse it).
Statement I is Assertion (A) and Statement II is Reason (R). Choose the correct option:
All Unit 2 formulas — and all 7 units — in one crisp, printable PDF.
Click Show Solution to reveal complete working for each question.
Get the Formula Deck — every formula for all 7 units in one printable PDF.
Board-pattern case questions across all Unit 2 topics. Click Show Answers for each case.
Find n(C), n(F) and n(C∩F).
How many like at least one sport?
How many like only Cricket and only Football?
How many like neither? Verify De Morgan's Law: (C∪F)' = C'∩F'.
Statements: All pens are stationery. No stationery is food. Conclusion I: No pen is food. Conclusion II: Some stationery is pen. Which follow?
A woman says "His mother is the only daughter of my father." How is she related to the man?
STRONG is written as VWURQJ. (a) Find the rule. (b) Encode BRIGHT using the same rule.
Write the AP and identify a and d.
What will his monthly salary be in the 8th year?
In which year will his salary first exceed ₹40,000?
Find total monthly salary earned across the first 10 years.
Identify a and r. Write the first five terms.
How many new cases on Day 7?
Total new cases over first 6 days?
Find GM of cases on Day 1 and Day 3. Verify it equals Day 2 cases.
Sets laws, De Morgan's, AP & GP — every formula organised topic-wise for quick revision.
What separates 16-mark answers from 12-mark answers in this unit.
Always draw and label the Venn diagram first. Even a rough sketch earns method marks. Label each region: only A, only B, A∩B, and neither. This prevents arithmetic errors and lets the examiner follow your working even if a final number is wrong.
Always write the formula before substituting. Write aₙ = a+(n−1)d or Sₙ = n/2×[2a+(n−1)d] explicitly — this earns the formula mark even if your arithmetic is wrong. Many students lose 1 mark by jumping straight to the calculation.
Visualise Venn diagrams mentally before answering. "All A are B" = circle A inside circle B. "No A are B" = two non-overlapping circles. This makes valid conclusions obvious and prevents the most common Syllogism errors on exam day.
Always write out the chain step by step. Don't solve Blood Relation questions in your head — write each link: "X is Y's ___", then trace the full chain to the final answer. One missed step leads to a wrong answer every time.
Questions students ask most about Class 11 Applied Maths Unit 2 Algebra.
Free study material for every unit of CBSE Class 11 Applied Maths 2026-27.
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