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Table of Content

  • Why "Analyse" matters for your Mains score
  • What "Analyse" demands
  • Step-by-step method for "Analyse" answers
  • Sample outline: 10-mark "Analyse" answer
  • Sample outline: 15-mark "Analyse" answer
  • PYQ example
  • Do not confuse "Analyse" with these directives
  • Common mistakes with "Analyse"
  • Practice routine
  • Frequently asked questions
  • What does "Analyse" mean in UPSC Mains?
  • How is "Analyse" different from similar directives?
  • How many words for a 10-mark answer?
  • Should I underline the directive in the exam?
  • Can I use the same introduction for every directive?
HomeBlogsHow to Answer "Analyse" in UPSC Mains

How to Answer "Analyse" in UPSC Mains

UPSC "Analyse" directive explained — meaning, answer structure, PYQ example, and common mistakes for Mains GS papers. Practice on UPSCYatra.

UPSCYatra Team1 JUL 20265 min read
Table of contents▼
  • Why "Analyse" matters for your Mains score
  • What "Analyse" demands
  • Step-by-step method for "Analyse" answers
  • Sample outline: 10-mark "Analyse" answer
  • Sample outline: 15-mark "Analyse" answer
  • PYQ example
  • Do not confuse "Analyse" with these directives
  • Common mistakes with "Analyse"
  • Practice routine
  • Frequently asked questions
  • What does "Analyse" mean in UPSC Mains?
  • How is "Analyse" different from similar directives?
  • How many words for a 10-mark answer?
  • Should I underline the directive in the exam?
  • Can I use the same introduction for every directive?

When UPSC uses "Analyse", your answer must match a specific intellectual demand — not a generic essay. Break the topic into components and show how they relate — causes, effects, interconnections, and underlying logic. Misreading the directive is one of the fastest ways to lose marks even when your facts are correct.

Quick answer

"Analyse" means: Break the topic into components and show how they relate — causes, effects, interconnections, and underlying logic. Examiner tip: Structure body subheads around the components you identify.

Why "Analyse" matters for your Mains score

Examiners read hundreds of scripts per day. The directive tells them what shape to expect. If the question says "Analyse" but your answer reads like a different directive, the examiner may stop reading deeply after the introduction — you get credit for facts but not for meeting the question's intellectual demand.

Across GS papers, "Analyse" questions typically carry 10 or 15 marks. That is 4–6 marks at stake per misaligned answer. Over four GS papers, directive discipline alone can swing your service allocation.

What "Analyse" demands

AspectWhat to do
Core demandBreak the topic into components and show how they relate — causes, effects, interconnections, and underlying logic.
Examiner tipStructure body subheads around the components you identify.
Typical marks10 or 15 (occasionally 20 in GS IV)
Word budget (10-mark)~150 words in ~7 minutes
Word budget (15-mark)~250 words in ~12 minutes

Step-by-step method for "Analyse" answers

  1. Underline the directive in the question paper before you plan.
  2. Plan in 90 seconds — jot intro anchor, two or three body dimensions, conclusion direction in the margin.
  3. Write the introduction (2–3 sentences for 10 marks) — define or contextualise; do not start the body early.
  4. Build the body with subheads that match what "Analyse" demands — not generic syllabus headings.
  5. Add one anchor per subhead — Article, judgment, scheme, committee report, or statistic.
  6. Close with synthesis — answer what "Analyse" asked; name a reform instrument where appropriate.

See the complete Mains answer writing guide for mark-wise templates and the 10-mark and 15-mark guides.

Sample outline: 10-mark "Analyse" answer

BlockContent sketch (~150 words)
IntroductionOne-line definition + link to question keyword
Body subhead 1First dimension with one anchor (fact/judgment/scheme)
Body subhead 2Second dimension with counter-view or limitation if needed
ConclusionBalanced synthesis + one forward-looking line

Sample outline: 15-mark "Analyse" answer

BlockContent sketch (~250 words)
IntroductionContext + why the issue matters now
Body subhead 1Dimension A with evidence
Body subhead 2Dimension B with evidence
Body subhead 3Dimension C or critical layer
ConclusionVerdict or synthesis + named way forward

PYQ example

Question: The incidence and intensity of poverty are more important in determining poverty based on income alone. In this context, analyse the latest United Nations Multidimensional Poverty Index Report. (GS II, 2020)

Weak approach: Bullet list of poverty indicators without showing how dimensions interconnect.

Strong approach: Breaks MPI into health, education, and living standards; links each to policy gaps and regional variation.

→ Open this PYQ on UPSCYatra

The difference is not vocabulary — it is structure aligned to "Analyse".

Do not confuse "Analyse" with these directives

Often confused withHow it differs
DiscussCover multiple dimensions fairly — arguments for and against, or different facets of the i…
ExamineInvestigate the issue in detail from different angles — causes, features, implications, an…
EvaluateJudge significance, success, or validity using explicit criteria and evidence. Weigh pros …

Read comparison guides: Discuss vs Examine · Directive words hub

Common mistakes with "Analyse"

  • Treating "Analyse" like every other directive and using the same template.
  • Listing facts without matching the directive's required depth.
  • Missing a conclusion that answers what "Analyse" specifically asked.
  • Writing past the word limit on 10-mark questions — time lost on other questions.
  • No specific anchors — generic prose that could fit any question.

Practice routine

DayActivity
Day 1Find 3 PYQs with "Analyse" on Mains PYQs — decode directive only, outline in margin
Day 2Write one 10-mark answer under timer
Day 3Self-score with checklist on How to write answers (UPSCYatra)
Day 4Rewrite the same answer after comparing with a topper copy
Day 5Write one 15-mark "Analyse" question

Next step

Continue with the Answer Writing Hub, Mains PYQs, or the annotated practice guide on UPSCYatra (How to write answers, topper copies).

Frequently asked questions

What does "Analyse" mean in UPSC Mains?

Break the topic into components and show how they relate — causes, effects, interconnections, and underlying logic.

How is "Analyse" different from similar directives?

Each directive expects a different answer shape. See the comparison table above and our directive guides.

How many words for a 10-mark answer?

About 150 words in ~7 minutes, including ~90 seconds of planning.

Should I underline the directive in the exam?

Yes — it keeps your structure aligned with what the examiner expects.

Can I use the same introduction for every directive?

No — the intro sets context, but the body shape must change with the directive.

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