Boost Your Academic Success with Expert Advice!
Get the best study tips, test prep strategies, and academic insights delivered straight to your inbox.
Prepped and Polished has been featured on:
SSAT Instructor Terri shows you how to recognize some common analogy relationships that will help you solve analogies on the SSAT.
This analogy tests your knowledge of part-to-whole relationships.
Chapter is to book as:
f. note is to letter
g. scene is to play
h. story is to novel
i. writer is to director
j. reader is to audience
Now, remember the whole key is to make a sentence to test the relationship between the stem words. Apply that to the answer choices so you can eliminate incorrect answers.
Let’s see how that works.
So, a chapter is a division of a book. Let’s try that on the answer choices. The note is a division of a letter; that’s not right. The scene is a division of a play; that is true. A scene is a part of a play, a division of a play. The story is a division of a novel, no. A writer is a division of a director, no, and a reader is a division of an audience. That’s not true.
So the only one that works is g. So, the chapter is to book as the scene is to play.
For more information, visit: Prepped and Polished.com.
Please rate, review and subscribe to the show on iTunes!
What was your biggest takeaway from this podcast about Common Analogy Relationships on the SSAT? Do you have any questions for Terri and Alexis Avila?
Post your comments below: