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Learn to read between the lines and uncover hidden meaning in any passage.
Have you ever watched a movie where a character walks in from outside with a dripping umbrella, even though nobody says the word "rain"? You instantly know it's raining. That's an inference (a conclusion you reach using clues and your own thinking). People have been studying how readers make inferences for a long time.
Authors rarely spell out every single detail. They leave clues for you to piece together. Good readers act like detectives—they notice details, connect them to what they already know, and figure out what the author really means. This skill is one of the most important abilities tested on the SSAT Reading section.
So here's the big question: how do you figure out something an author means without the author coming right out and saying it? That's exactly what this lesson will teach you.
Making an inference is like solving a mini-puzzle. You combine two ingredients: text clues (what the passage actually says) and background knowledge (what you already know about the world). When you put these together, you reach a conclusion that the author hints at but never directly states.
Let's see the inference process as a diagram. Every time you make an inference, your brain follows a path from clues to conclusion.
Notice that the inference in the green box is not wild speculation. It follows logically from the clue the author gives us. The text says "empty chair" and "stared," and we know from experience that staring at an empty place where someone used to be suggests sadness or missing that person. That's a supported inference.
On the SSAT, inference questions have certain signal words and phrases. Learning to recognize these signals will help you know exactly what the question is asking you to do.
When you see words like infer, imply, suggest, or conclude, that's your signal. The answer will NOT be stated word-for-word in the passage. You'll need to figure it out from clues.
Not all inferences are the same. On the SSAT, you'll encounter different kinds of inference questions. Knowing the types helps you prepare for what to look for in the passage.
| Type of Inference | What It Asks | Clues to Look For |
|---|---|---|
| Character Feelings | How does a character feel? What motivates them? | Actions, facial expressions, dialogue, body language |
| Cause and Effect | Why did something happen? What caused an event? | Sequence of events, reactions, consequences described |
| Author's Purpose | Why did the author write this? What's the author's attitude? | Word choice (positive or negative), tone, what's included or left out |
| Setting / Situation | Where or when does this take place? What is the atmosphere? | Descriptions of surroundings, weather, time markers, technology mentioned |
| Predictions | What will likely happen next? | Patterns, foreshadowing, unresolved problems |
Let's look at a quick example of each type. Imagine a passage that says: "Lena checked her watch for the third time and tapped her foot against the tile floor. The waiting room smelled like rubbing alcohol."
None of these conclusions are stated directly in the passage. But every one of them is strongly supported by the text clues the author provides.
Let's work through a full SSAT-style passage and question together. Read the short passage below, then follow along as we use the 3-Step Inference Method.
Question: It can be inferred from the passage that the letters are most likely —
Many students lose points on inference questions not because they can't think logically, but because they fall into common traps. Here's a comparison of mistakes and strategies.
| Common Mistake | Why It Fails | Better Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Choosing an answer stated word-for-word in the passage | Inference questions ask for unstated conclusions. If it's copied from the text, it's not an inference. | Look for the answer that goes one step BEYOND what the text says. |
| Going too far beyond the evidence | A huge leap might feel creative, but it's unsupported. Example: "He frowned" → "He hates everyone." | Pick the most moderate, well-supported conclusion. |
| Using only outside knowledge, ignoring the passage | Your answer must come from THIS passage's clues, not just general ideas. | Always point to a specific line or detail as your evidence. |
| Rushing and picking the first "good-sounding" answer | Wrong answers are designed to sound tempting. If you stop too soon, you may miss a better choice. | Read ALL five choices before deciding. Eliminate clearly wrong ones first. |
| Confusing inference with opinion | An inference is based on evidence. An opinion is personal preference with no text support. | Ask: "Could anyone reading this passage reach the same conclusion?" |
Inference doesn't exist alone. It connects to other reading skills you'll use throughout school and on the SSAT. Understanding how inference relates to these skills will make you a stronger reader overall.
| Skill | What It Means | How Inference Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Finding the Main Idea | Identifying the central message of a passage | Sometimes the main idea is implied, not stated. You must infer it from the overall pattern of details. |
| Determining Tone | Figuring out the author's attitude (serious, humorous, critical) | Authors rarely say "I feel angry about this." You infer tone from word choice and emphasis. |
| Vocabulary in Context | Using surrounding sentences to figure out an unfamiliar word | Context clue questions are a type of inference—you're deducing meaning from nearby text. |
| Analyzing Character | Understanding who a character is and why they act a certain way | Character traits are almost always inferred from actions, speech, and choices—not stated outright. |
As you move toward more advanced reading—in high school and beyond—inference becomes even more central. Literary analysis, persuasive writing, and even scientific research all depend on the ability to draw conclusions from evidence. The skills you're building now will serve you for years to come.
Try these five inference questions. For each one, read the short passage carefully, then choose the best answer. Remember: use the 3-Step Method—find the clues, connect to what you know, and pick the most supported answer.
An inference is a conclusion you reach by combining text clues with your own background knowledge. On the SSAT, inference questions use signal words like infer, imply, suggest, and conclude. A strong inference is always a small, logical step supported by specific details in the passage—never a wild guess or an extreme leap.
Use the 3-Step Inference Method every time: (1) find the clues in the passage, (2) connect them to what you know, and (3) choose the most supported answer while eliminating choices that are too extreme, unsupported, or contradicted by the text. You can infer character feelings, causes and effects, author's purpose, settings, and predictions. Practice this skill and you'll become a confident, detective-level reader!