Opening subject page...
Loading your content
Learn how to connect a tool with the action it performs to solve analogy questions on the SSAT.
People have been using analogies (comparisons that show how two pairs of words are related in the same way) for thousands of years. Ancient Greek philosophers used them to explain hard ideas by comparing them to simple, everyday things. Over time, teachers realized that analogies are a great way to test whether students truly understand how words connect to one another.
So here is the big question: when you see two words on the SSAT, how do you figure out exactly how they are connected? One of the most common patterns is the tool-to-action relationship. In this lesson, you will learn what that relationship is, how to spot it, and how to use it to pick the right answer every time.
A tool-to-action relationship connects a tool (an object or instrument) with the action it is used to perform. For example, a broom is used to sweep. The broom is the tool, and sweeping is its action. On the SSAT, you need to find another pair that shares this same kind of connection.
The diagram below shows how a tool-to-action analogy works. On the left, you see the given pair. On the right, you see the correct answer choice. The colored arrows show that both pairs share the same relationship: the first word is a tool used to perform the second word's action.
Notice how the sentence "A ___ is used to ___" works for both pairs. This sentence is called a sentence bridge because it bridges the two words together. When you find a sentence bridge that fits the given pair, you just plug in each answer choice to see which one also fits.
Here is a simple method you can follow every time you see an analogy question on the SSAT. Think of these four steps as your recipe for success.
The SSAT loves to test tool-to-action relationships using everyday objects, scientific instruments, and artistic tools. The table below shows common pairs organized by category. Studying these examples will help you recognize the pattern quickly on test day.
| Category | Tool | Action | Sentence Bridge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Household | Broom | Sweep | A broom is used to sweep. |
| Household | Knife | Cut | A knife is used to cut. |
| Writing | Pen | Write | A pen is used to write. |
| Science | Telescope | Magnify | A telescope is used to magnify. |
| Music | Drum | Beat | A drum is used to beat. |
| Construction | Saw | Cut | A saw is used to cut. |
| Art | Brush | Paint | A brush is used to paint. |
| Cooking | Oven | Bake | An oven is used to bake. |
Notice that some tools share the same action. Both a knife and a saw are used to cut. That is okay! On the SSAT, you are not asked to find a unique action. You just need to make sure the relationship type matches between the given pair and the answer pair.
Let's walk through a complete SSAT-style analogy question together. Follow along with each step to see how the four-step method works in action.
One tricky part of analogy questions is that several relationship types can look similar at first glance. The table below helps you tell them apart. Knowing the differences will keep you from falling into common traps.
| Relationship Type | Example Pair | Sentence Bridge | How It Differs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tool-to-Action | Hammer : Pound | A hammer is used to pound. | The first word is a tool; the second word is the action it performs. |
| Worker-to-Tool | Carpenter : Hammer | A carpenter uses a hammer. | The first word is a person; the second is the tool that person uses. |
| Worker-to-Action | Teacher : Educate | A teacher educates. | The first word is a person; the second word is the action that person does as their job. |
| Part-to-Whole | Blade : Knife | A blade is part of a knife. | Both words are things, but one is a piece of the other. No action involved. |
| Object-to-Quality | Knife : Sharp | A knife is sharp. | The second word is a describing word (adjective), not an action. The tool is described, not performing. |
As you get more comfortable with tool-to-action analogies, you will start to notice some harder versions on the SSAT. Here are a few tricky twists and how to handle them.
| Tricky Variation | Example | Why It's Tricky | How to Handle It |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reversed Order | CUT : SCISSORS | The action comes first and the tool comes second. | Flip your sentence bridge: "To cut, you use scissors." Then match that order in the answer. |
| Less Obvious Tools | LEVER : LIFT | A lever is a simple machine, not a common household tool. | Remember that tools include machines, instruments, and devices—not just things in a toolbox. |
| Multiple Meanings | BAT : HIT | "Bat" can mean a flying animal or a baseball bat. | Let the second word guide you. "Hit" tells you this is the tool (baseball bat), not the animal. |
| Close Distractors | SHOVEL : DIG | A distractor might be DIRT : HOLE, which reminds you of digging but is not tool-to-action. | Always apply the sentence bridge. "Dirt is used to hole" does not work, so eliminate it. |
As you move to the SSAT Upper Level and beyond, analogy questions may use more advanced vocabulary. But the tool-to-action pattern stays exactly the same. The skills you build now will carry forward. Just keep practicing the sentence bridge technique, and these trickier variations will become second nature.
Try these five problems on your own. For each one, build a sentence bridge, test each answer choice, and then check your answer. The problems get harder as you go.
In a tool-to-action analogy, the first word is a tool (an object, instrument, or device) and the second word is the action it performs. To solve these problems, use the sentence bridge technique: say "A [tool] is used to [action]" and then test each answer choice with that same sentence. The correct answer will fit the bridge perfectly.
Remember to watch out for distractors — wrong answers that use words related to the topic but do not follow the tool-to-action pattern. Always check the direction of the pair (tool first or action first), and make sure the action is the primary purpose of the tool. With these strategies, you will be ready to tackle tool-to-action analogies confidently on the SSAT.