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  1. SAT Reading and Writing
  2. Function of a Word or Phrase

SAT READING & WRITING • CRAFT & STRUCTURE

Function of a Word or Phrase

Learn to identify why an author chose specific words or phrases and what role they play in a passage.

SECTION 1

Historical Context & Motivation

For centuries, scholars of language and literature have understood that words do more than simply convey surface-level meaning. Every word an author selects carries a function — a specific job it performs within the larger structure of a sentence, paragraph, or passage. The study of how language functions in context is rooted in rhetoric, the ancient art of effective communication, and in literary analysis, the discipline of interpreting an author's choices. Understanding function-of-a-word-or-phrase questions on the SAT means becoming a skilled reader who can look beneath the surface of a text.

~350 BCE
Aristotle's Rhetoric
Aristotle formally studied how speakers use specific words and phrases to persuade, inform, and move audiences — laying the groundwork for analyzing language function.
1925
The Rise of New Criticism
Literary scholars began "close reading" — examining individual words and phrases in a text to determine how they contribute to meaning, tone, and structure.
1926
The First SAT
The College Board introduced the SAT, and its reading section has always tested a student's ability to understand how language works in context.
2016
Redesigned SAT
The College Board overhauled the SAT, placing greater emphasis on evidence-based reading and the function of words and phrases within passages.
2024
Digital SAT (Craft & Structure)
The current digital SAT features Craft & Structure questions that explicitly ask about the function of specific words and phrases, making this skill essential for a strong score.

The core question that this skill addresses is deceptively simple: Why did the author use this particular word or phrase? On the SAT, you won't just be asked what a word means — you'll be asked what it does in the passage. Does it introduce an example? Qualify a claim? Signal a shift in argument? Mastering this distinction is the key to conquering Craft & Structure questions.

SECTION 2

Core Principles & Definitions

Before diving into strategies, you need a solid understanding of the foundational ideas behind "function" questions. These questions are not about vocabulary definitions — they are about the role a word or phrase plays in the author's argument, narrative, or explanation. Think of a passage as a machine: every word is a gear, and function questions ask you to identify what each gear does to keep the machine running.

1

Function ≠ Definition

The SAT isn't asking what a word means in a dictionary. It's asking what the word accomplishes in the passage — how it shapes meaning, advances an argument, or affects the reader.
2

Context Is Everything

A word's function depends entirely on the sentences around it. The word "however" might signal a contrast in one passage and a concession in another. Always read the surrounding lines.
3

Common Functions

Words and phrases typically serve one of several functions: illustrate, qualify, emphasize, contrast, transition, introduce, or support the author's ideas.
4

Author's Purpose Drives Function

Every passage has a purpose — to argue, inform, narrate, or persuade. The function of a word or phrase is always connected to that larger purpose. Ask: how does this word serve the author's goal?
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
KEY TAKEAWAY
SECTION 3

Visual Explanation — The Function Spectrum

Words and phrases in a passage don't exist in isolation. They relate to the ideas around them in predictable ways. The diagram below maps out the most common functions that the SAT tests, organized by the type of relationship the word or phrase creates with the surrounding text.

Common Functions of Words & Phrases on the SATAUTHOR'SPURPOSEEMPHASIZEILLUSTRATECONTRASTQUALIFYSUPPORTTRANSITIONINTRODUCECONCEDEEvery word or phrase serves the author's central purpose through one of these functions.
This diagram shows eight common functions that words and phrases serve on the SAT. Each function radiates outward from the author's purpose at the center. When you encounter a function question, your goal is to determine which of these roles the highlighted word or phrase is playing.

Notice how each function is a different way of serving the author's central goal. A word that emphasizes draws attention to an important idea, while a phrase that qualifies softens or limits a claim. A transitional word moves the reader from one idea to another, and a contrasting phrase sets up a difference between two ideas. Recognizing these categories will help you eliminate wrong answers quickly on test day.

SECTION 4

How It Works — The Function Analysis Process

Since function-of-a-word-or-phrase questions are about reading strategy rather than math, there's no equation to memorize. Instead, you need a reliable analytical process — a step-by-step method you can apply to any passage. Below is the framework that top scorers use to approach these questions consistently and accurately.

The RIFE Method

1

R — Read the Context

Read the full passage or at minimum the paragraph containing the highlighted word or phrase. Never look at the word in isolation. The sentence before and after the highlighted portion often reveal its function.
2

I — Identify the Author's Purpose

Ask: What is the author trying to do in this passage? Are they arguing for a position, explaining a concept, narrating an event, or comparing ideas? The function of any word connects back to this larger purpose.
3

F — Find the Relationship

Determine how the highlighted word or phrase relates to the idea immediately around it. Does it add detail? Shift direction? Provide evidence? Limit a sweeping statement? Name the relationship in your own words before looking at the answer choices.
4

E — Evaluate the Choices

Compare your prediction with the answer choices. Eliminate any that describe what the word means rather than what it does. The correct answer will describe a rhetorical or structural function, not a vocabulary definition.

Signal Words That Reveal Function

Certain words act as signposts in a passage. When you spot them, they immediately tell you the function of the phrase that follows. For example, "however" signals a contrast, "for instance" introduces an illustration, and "admittedly" marks a concession. Learning to recognize these signal words is like having a cheat code for function questions — they point directly to the answer.

Signal words and their corresponding rhetorical functions
FunctionCommon Signal Words / PhrasesWhat It Does
Contrasthowever, but, yet, on the other hand, whereas, althoughSets up a difference between two ideas
Illustratefor example, for instance, such as, specifically, considerProvides a concrete example of a general claim
Qualifysomewhat, to some extent, in certain cases, arguably, perhapsLimits or softens a broad claim
Emphasizeindeed, in fact, certainly, notably, cruciallyDraws special attention to an important idea
Concedeadmittedly, granted, of course, while it is true thatAcknowledges an opposing viewpoint before countering it
Transitionfurthermore, moreover, consequently, therefore, as a resultConnects ideas or moves the argument forward
SECTION 5

Detailed Breakdown — Categories of Function

SAT function questions fall into predictable categories. Understanding these categories before test day means you can quickly classify what a question is really asking. The diagram below organizes the most common question types into three broad families: structural functions (how a word connects to the passage's organization), rhetorical functions (how a word persuades or affects the reader), and tonal functions (how a word shapes the mood or attitude of the passage).

Three Families of Word/Phrase FunctionSTRUCTURALHow it organizes ideasIntroduce a topicTransition between ideasSignal a conclusionProvide an exampleSet up a contrastRHETORICALHow it persuades or arguesStrengthen a claimQualify a statementConcede a counterpointAppeal to authorityChallenge a positionTONALHow it shapes mood/attitudeConvey enthusiasmExpress skepticismCreate urgencySuggest ironyMaintain objectivityClassify the function before evaluating answer choices.
The three families of word/phrase function: Structural functions organize the passage, Rhetorical functions shape the argument, and Tonal functions influence mood and attitude. Most SAT questions fall neatly into one of these families.

When you encounter a function question, try to classify it into one of these three families first. If the question asks about a transitional phrase like "as a result," you're dealing with a structural function. If it asks about a phrase like "critics have long argued," it likely involves a rhetorical function. And if it highlights a loaded adjective like "astonishing" or "troubling," you're probably looking at a tonal function. This initial classification step narrows your thinking and keeps you from chasing irrelevant answer choices.

SECTION 6

Worked Example — Applying the RIFE Method

SAMPLE PASSAGE

Step 1 — Read the Context

The passage begins with a bleak fact: the northern white rhino is "functionally extinct" with only two females left. Then the highlighted word "Nevertheless" appears, followed by information about scientists creating embryos. There is a clear shift from a negative situation to a hopeful development.

Step 2 — Identify the Author's Purpose

The author's purpose is to inform the reader about both the dire status of the northern white rhino and the hopeful scientific efforts to save it. The passage is explanatory, presenting a problem and then a potential solution.

Step 3 — Find the Relationship

"Nevertheless" is a contrast signal. It tells the reader that what follows will push back against or complicate what came before. The first sentence establishes near-certain doom; "Nevertheless" introduces a counter-narrative of scientific hope. In your own words, the function is: "It signals a shift from a hopeless situation to a hopeful one."

Step 4 — Evaluate the Choices

(A) "define a scientific term" — "Nevertheless" is not a scientific term, and it doesn't define anything. Eliminate. (C) "provide an example of extinction" — The word introduces hope, not an example of extinction. Eliminate. (D) "summarize the passage's main argument" — The word appears in the middle of the passage, not in a summary position, and it introduces new information. Eliminate. (B) "introduce a contrasting development that offers hope" — This matches our prediction exactly.
Correct Answer: (B) introduce a contrasting development that offers hope
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
WHY THIS WORKS
SECTION 7

Common Traps & How to Avoid Them

The SAT is carefully designed, and wrong answer choices on function questions are not random — they are crafted to exploit common mistakes. Understanding these traps is just as important as understanding the content itself. Below is a comparison of the most frequent traps and the strategies that defeat them.

Five common SAT traps on function questions
Common TrapWhat It Looks LikeHow to Avoid It
Definition TrapAn answer choice gives the dictionary meaning of the word rather than its function in the passage.Ask "What does this word DO?" not "What does this word MEAN?" Function answers use verbs like "introduce," "contrast," "emphasize."
True-but-Irrelevant TrapAn answer choice describes something that is true about the passage but doesn't relate to the specific word or phrase in question.Always re-read the exact word or phrase the question highlights. The answer must describe the function of THAT specific language, not a general truth about the passage.
Too Broad / Too Narrow TrapAn answer is either so vague it could apply to anything ("develops the argument") or so specific it misrepresents the passage.The best answer is specific enough to capture the unique function of the word but broad enough to be fully supported by the text.
Wrong Direction TrapAn answer says the word contrasts when it actually supports, or says it qualifies when it actually emphasizes.Identify signal words carefully. "However" signals contrast; "moreover" signals addition. Don't confuse these directions.
Tone Mismatch TrapAn answer assigns an extreme tone ("angrily criticizes") when the passage is moderate, or vice versa.Match the intensity of the answer to the intensity of the passage. SAT passages are rarely extreme — look for moderate, precise language.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
KEY TAKEAWAY
SECTION 8

Connection to Advanced Reading & College Writing

The skill of identifying word and phrase function doesn't end when you finish the SAT. In college courses, you'll encounter close reading assignments, rhetorical analyses, and critical essays that demand the exact same ability at a deeper level. Understanding function now will give you a serious head start in college-level reading and writing.

SAT function skills as a foundation for college-level analysis
Skill on the SATAdvanced Version in College
Identifying the function of a single word or phraseAnalyzing how an author's diction patterns create sustained rhetorical effects across an entire essay
Recognizing contrast and concession signalsMapping the dialectical structure of an academic argument (thesis, antithesis, synthesis)
Choosing the best function from four answer choicesWriting your own rhetorical analysis explaining how an author's language choices achieve a specific effect
Understanding tone through word choicePerforming discourse analysis — studying how language reflects and shapes power, identity, and culture

The critical takeaway is that analyzing word function is not a "test trick" — it's a fundamental reading skill. Every time you read a news article, a scientific paper, or a persuasive editorial, you're unconsciously evaluating the function of the author's language. The SAT simply asks you to make that process conscious and deliberate. The better you get at it now, the stronger your reading comprehension will be in every college course you take.

SECTION 9

Practice Problems

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
The initial results of the clinical trial were promising, suggesting that the new treatment could significantly reduce symptoms in patients. However, the researchers found significant flaws in the methodology, raising doubts about whether the early findings could be trusted.Which choice best describes the function of the word "however" in the passage?
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC
Read the following passage excerpt: "Marine biologists have long studied coral bleaching, but the sheer speed of recent declines has been, in the words of one researcher, 'staggering.'" What is the primary function of the phrase "in the words of one researcher" in this sentence? (A) To define the term "coral bleaching" (B) To lend credibility to the claim by citing an expert voice (C) To contrast the researcher's view with that of marine biologists (D) To summarize the passage's main argument
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Admittedly, the new policy has reduced wait times at the clinic. Yet this improvement has come at the cost of rushed appointments and lower patient satisfaction scores. What is the primary function of the word "Admittedly" at the beginning of the passage, and how does it relate to the word "Yet" in the second sentence?
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
A science passage reads: "The prevailing theory — elegant in its simplicity — fails to account for the anomalous data collected from deep-sea thermal vents." What is the primary function of the phrase "elegant in its simplicity" as it is used in the passage? (A) To praise the theory before noting its limitations (B) To suggest that the theory is too simplistic to be useful (C) To introduce new evidence that supports the prevailing theory (D) To compare the prevailing theory favorably to a rival theory
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
Passage A: Green spaces are, without question, essential to urban well-being. Cities that invest in parks and natural areas see measurable improvements in residents' physical health, mental health, and overall quality of life. Every urban planner should prioritize green space development. Passage B: Green spaces may contribute to urban well-being, though the evidence remains mixed. Some studies indicate benefits for mental health, while others show minimal impact depending on access and usage patterns. Further research is needed before sweeping conclusions can be drawn. How does the phrase "without question" in Passage A compare in function to the phrase "though the evidence remains mixed" in Passage B?
SUMMARY

Lesson Summary

Varsity Tutors • SAT Reading & Writing • Function of a Word or Phrase

Function of a Word or Phrase

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