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Word Connections

Find the relationship between word pairs.

1

What is Word Connections?

Word connection questions (also called verbal analogies) give you a pair of words with a specific relationship. You must find a word that has the same relationship with another given word.

For example, “hot is to cold as big is to ___” – the relationship is opposites, so the answer is “small”. These questions test your understanding of how words relate to each other.

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Step-by-Step Method

1

Identify the relationship

Look at the first pair and ask: how are these two words connected? Write the relationship in a simple sentence.

2

Name the relationship type

Is it: opposites, synonyms, part-to-whole, cause-and-effect, tool-to-user, or something else?

3

Apply to the second pair

Use the same relationship to work out what word completes the second pair.

4

Check it works

Read both pairs with your answer and confirm the relationship is the same.

3

Worked Examples

Example 1

Finger is to hand as toe is to ___

Working

  1. A finger is a part of a hand.
  2. Relationship: part to whole.
  3. A toe is a part of a… foot.
Answer: foot
Example 2

Author is to book as artist is to ___

Working

  1. An author creates a book.
  2. Relationship: creator to creation.
  3. An artist creates a… painting.
Answer: painting
Example 3

Bark is to dog as meow is to ___

Working

  1. Bark is the sound a dog makes.
  2. Relationship: sound to animal.
  3. Meow is the sound a… cat makes.
Answer: cat
4

Common Mistakes

Common error

Finding a word connected to the third word but not by the same relationship as the first pair.

Correct approach

Write down the relationship clearly (e.g. “X is a type of Y”) and apply it precisely.

Common error

Confusing the direction of the relationship (e.g. whole-to-part vs part-to-whole).

Correct approach

Pay attention to the order: if the first pair goes part-to-whole, the second pair must go the same way.

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Top Tips

  • Common relationship types: opposites, synonyms, part-whole, cause-effect, creator-creation, tool-user, young-adult.
  • Say the relationship as a sentence: “A ___ is the ___ of a ___.”
  • Make sure the relationship matches in the same direction.
  • If multiple answers seem possible, choose the one with the most direct parallel.

Ready to practise?

Put these techniques into action with our free practice papers.

Practise Verbal Reasoning Questions
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