Context Clue Inference
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SSAT Upper Level: Reading › Context Clue Inference
Read the passage. What does the word **reticent** mean based on the context?
At the book club, the discussion moved from plot to motive, and the members spoke over one another with cheerful certainty. Jonah, however, remained **reticent**. He held his paperback open but did not offer an opinion, even when the group turned toward him and waited. When someone asked whether he liked the ending, he answered with a brief, careful sentence and then fell silent again.
“He’s not upset,” the host whispered, noticing Jonah’s calm expression. “He just doesn’t volunteer much.” To ease the pressure, she gave an example of the kind of comment he might make: a small observation about a character’s choice, not a long speech. Jonah nodded, grateful, and listened as others filled the room with their theories.
Later, as the chairs scraped back, Jonah admitted that he preferred to think before speaking. His quietness was not confusion; it was a habit of holding words in reserve.
Unwilling to speak much; reserved with opinions and words
Eager to debate loudly and dominate the conversation
Angry and openly insulting toward the other club members
Unable to understand the discussion because of confusion
Explanation
This question tests SSAT Upper Level reading skills, specifically the ability to infer the meaning of vocabulary using context clues. Context clues are words or phrases in the surrounding text that help deduce the meaning of an unfamiliar word. They can include definitions, examples, restatements, or descriptions. In this passage, the word 'reticent' is used to describe Jonah's behavior, with context clues provided through descriptions like 'did not offer an opinion,' 'answered with a brief, careful sentence and then fell silent,' and the host's explanation that 'He just doesn't volunteer much.' Choice A is correct because it aligns with these descriptions of someone who is reserved with words and unwilling to speak much, demonstrating the reader's ability to infer meaning accurately. Choice B is incorrect because it suggests eagerness to debate loudly, which contradicts Jonah's quiet, reserved behavior throughout the discussion. To support students, encourage them to identify and underline potential context clues as they read. Practice with diverse texts that use varied context clue types, ensuring students can recognize and apply these strategies across different contexts.
Read the passage. What does the word **lucid** mean based on the context?
In her civics class, Ms. Patel asked students to summarize a Supreme Court decision without copying the textbook. Many students produced paragraphs that were accurate but tangled, as if their ideas had been poured into a drawer and shut. Then Eli read his summary aloud. He explained the case in a few orderly sentences, first stating the question, then the ruling, and finally the reason.
Ms. Patel called his explanation **lucid**. She restated her praise so the class would understand: “Your meaning is clear, and your reasoning is easy to follow.” She pointed to specific examples, such as how Eli defined key terms before using them and how he avoided unnecessary details that would blur the main point.
The class grew quieter, not from boredom, but from recognition. Eli’s words did not dazzle with fancy phrases; instead, they made a complicated decision seem understandable.
Clear and understandable, with reasoning that is easy to follow
Carelessly written, with many errors and missing information
Humorous and sarcastic, meant to entertain more than teach
Full of obscure words that make ideas hard to grasp
Explanation
This question tests SSAT Upper Level reading skills, specifically the ability to infer the meaning of vocabulary using context clues. Context clues are words or phrases in the surrounding text that help deduce the meaning of an unfamiliar word. They can include definitions, examples, restatements, or descriptions. In this passage, the word 'lucid' is used to describe Eli's explanation, with Ms. Patel providing a direct restatement: 'Your meaning is clear, and your reasoning is easy to follow.' Choice B is correct because it aligns perfectly with this explicit definition and the examples of Eli's orderly presentation and clear definitions, demonstrating the reader's ability to infer meaning accurately. Choice A is incorrect because it suggests obscurity and difficulty, which contradicts the teacher's praise for clarity and the description of how Eli made 'a complicated decision seem understandable.' To support students, encourage them to identify and underline potential context clues as they read. Practice with diverse texts that use varied context clue types, ensuring students can recognize and apply these strategies across different contexts.
Read the passage. What does the word **capricious** mean based on the context?
Mira rehearsed her violin solo in the old auditorium, where the curtains hung like tired flags and the stage lights hummed softly. She had practiced the same passage for weeks, yet the sound in that room behaved strangely. One day, her notes rang out bright and confident; the next, the same notes seemed thin, as if the air had decided to swallow them. The custodian explained that the heating system sometimes turned on unexpectedly, and the shifting temperature altered the acoustics.
“This place is **capricious**,” Mira’s teacher said, tapping the music stand. “It changes without warning.” To prove the point, he clapped once near the back wall; the echo returned quickly. Then he clapped again after a draft slipped under the doors, and the echo lingered longer, as though the room had changed its mind. Mira adjusted her bowing, but she could not control the building’s moods.
By the end of rehearsal, she understood that her preparation must include flexibility. She could not rely on the hall to behave consistently, because its sound shifted in sudden, unpredictable ways.
Quiet and controlled, with sound that stays the same
Changing suddenly and unpredictably, as if by whim
Carefully designed to produce perfect echoes every time
Extremely loud, making music difficult to hear clearly
Explanation
This question tests SSAT Upper Level reading skills, specifically the ability to infer the meaning of vocabulary using context clues. Context clues are words or phrases in the surrounding text that help deduce the meaning of an unfamiliar word. They can include definitions, examples, restatements, or descriptions. In this passage, the word 'capricious' is used to describe the auditorium, with context clues provided through the teacher's direct explanation 'It changes without warning' and examples of how the sound behaves differently from day to day without predictable patterns. Choice B is correct because it aligns with these descriptions of sudden, unpredictable changes, demonstrating the reader's ability to infer meaning accurately. Choice A is incorrect because it suggests consistency and control, which directly contradicts the examples of the room's changing acoustics and unpredictable behavior. To support students, encourage them to identify and underline potential context clues as they read. Practice with diverse texts that use varied context clue types, ensuring students can recognize and apply these strategies across different contexts.
Read the passage. What does the word **austere** mean based on the context?
The museum’s new wing surprised visitors who expected bright banners and dramatic music. Instead, the rooms were **austere**. The walls were plain white, the labels were printed in simple black type, and the benches were unpadded wood. A guard explained that the design was meant to keep attention on the artifacts rather than on decoration.
Some guests missed the warmth of the older galleries, which had patterned carpets and soft lighting. Others appreciated the restraint. “Nothing here is flashy,” one visitor said, “but that’s the point.” The director agreed, adding a definition through contrast: “We avoided comfort and ornament so the objects could speak for themselves.”
As people moved quietly from case to case, the spare setting made even small details—a scratched coin, a faded letter—seem more serious and important.
Colorful and festive, filled with ornaments and music
Old and broken down, needing repairs before opening
Crowded and noisy, making it hard to view exhibits
Plain and strict, lacking comfort or decoration
Explanation
This question tests SSAT Upper Level reading skills, specifically the ability to infer the meaning of vocabulary using context clues. Context clues are words or phrases in the surrounding text that help deduce the meaning of an unfamiliar word. They can include definitions, examples, restatements, or descriptions. In this passage, the word 'austere' is used to describe the museum's new wing, with context clues provided through specific examples: 'plain white' walls, 'simple black type,' 'unpadded wood' benches, and the director's contrast definition stating they 'avoided comfort and ornament.' Choice A is correct because it aligns with these descriptions of plainness and lack of decoration or comfort, demonstrating the reader's ability to infer meaning accurately. Choice B is incorrect because it suggests colorful and festive decoration, which directly contradicts the descriptions of plain, simple, and unadorned spaces throughout the passage. To support students, encourage them to identify and underline potential context clues as they read. Practice with diverse texts that use varied context clue types, ensuring students can recognize and apply these strategies across different contexts.
Read the passage. What does the word **proliferate** mean based on the context?
After a mild winter, the gardener noticed that weeds began to **proliferate** along the edges of the school’s courtyard. At first there were only a few thin shoots near the fence. Within two weeks, they appeared in new places: between bricks, beside the fountain, and even in the planters where students had sown herbs.
The science teacher used the courtyard as an example of rapid growth. “When conditions are favorable,” she explained, “some plants multiply quickly.” She gave examples of those conditions—warm days, frequent rain, and soil left undisturbed—and then offered a restatement: “They spread fast, producing more and more.”
By the time the groundskeeper arrived with tools, the weeds were no longer isolated. They had expanded across the courtyard, showing how quickly a small beginning can turn into a widespread presence.
To remain in one place without changing at all
To be cut back carefully into neat shapes
To spread or increase rapidly in number
To disappear gradually as the weather becomes warmer
Explanation
This question tests SSAT Upper Level reading skills, specifically the ability to infer the meaning of vocabulary using context clues. Context clues are words or phrases in the surrounding text that help deduce the meaning of an unfamiliar word. They can include definitions, examples, restatements, or descriptions. In this passage, the word 'proliferate' is used to describe the weeds' behavior, with context clues provided through examples of rapid expansion from 'a few thin shoots' to appearing 'in new places' within two weeks, and the teacher's restatement: 'They spread fast, producing more and more.' Choice A is correct because it aligns with these descriptions of rapid multiplication and spreading, demonstrating the reader's ability to infer meaning accurately. Choice D is incorrect because it suggests no change, which contradicts the explicit examples of weeds expanding from isolated shoots to widespread presence throughout the courtyard. To support students, encourage them to identify and underline potential context clues as they read. Practice with diverse texts that use varied context clue types, ensuring students can recognize and apply these strategies across different contexts.
Read the passage. What does the word **ubiquitous** mean based on the context?
In a unit on modern life, Mr. Chen asked students to list inventions that seem ordinary only because they are everywhere. Several students mentioned electricity, which is noticed mainly when it fails. Others cited digital clocks, which appear in kitchens, cars, and classrooms without anyone thinking twice. Then the class turned to smartphones.
Mr. Chen called them **ubiquitous**. He supported the word with examples rather than a direct definition: students used phones to check homework, parents used them to coordinate schedules, and commuters used them to read news on trains. He also restated the idea through comparison, noting that a century ago a telephone was rare and fixed to one location, while now communication devices appear in nearly every pocket.
By the end of the discussion, students understood that the word described something so widespread that it is difficult to imagine daily routines without it.
Extremely expensive, affordable only for wealthy families
Broken often, requiring constant repair to keep working
Unusually rare, found only in a few special locations
Present almost everywhere; widespread in many places at once
Explanation
This question tests SSAT Upper Level reading skills, specifically the ability to infer the meaning of vocabulary using context clues. Context clues are words or phrases in the surrounding text that help deduce the meaning of an unfamiliar word. They can include definitions, examples, restatements, or descriptions. In this passage, the word 'ubiquitous' is used to describe smartphones, with context clues provided through multiple examples of their widespread presence in 'nearly every pocket' and use by students, parents, and commuters, plus the description of something 'so widespread that it is difficult to imagine daily routines without it.' Choice A is correct because it aligns with these descriptions of being present almost everywhere and widespread in many places, demonstrating the reader's ability to infer meaning accurately. Choice B is incorrect because it suggests rarity, which directly contradicts the examples of smartphones being everywhere and the comparison to how telephones evolved from rare to commonplace. To support students, encourage them to identify and underline potential context clues as they read. Practice with diverse texts that use varied context clue types, ensuring students can recognize and apply these strategies across different contexts.
Read the passage. What does the word **enervate** mean based on the context?
The hiking club expected the trail to be challenging, but they did not anticipate the heat. By midday, the sun pressed down with a steady weight, and even the birds seemed quieter. As the group climbed, conversation faded into short, tired remarks. One student stopped to drink water and said the weather was beginning to **enervate** him.
The leader understood immediately and restated the idea: “It’s draining your energy.” She pointed to examples that matched his complaint, such as slower steps, heavier breathing, and the way shoulders sagged under backpacks that had seemed light in the morning. She reminded everyone to rest in shade and to eat, because the body needs fuel when conditions weaken it.
After a break, the group continued, still careful. They knew the heat was not merely uncomfortable; it was sapping their strength little by little.
To protect someone from harm during difficult conditions
To drain strength or reduce someone’s energy
To energize and make someone feel more active
To confuse directions so a person gets lost easily
Explanation
This question tests SSAT Upper Level reading skills, specifically the ability to infer the meaning of vocabulary using context clues. Context clues are words or phrases in the surrounding text that help deduce the meaning of an unfamiliar word. They can include definitions, examples, restatements, or descriptions. In this passage, the word 'enervate' is used when a student describes the heat's effect, with the leader providing a direct restatement: 'It's draining your energy,' followed by examples like 'slower steps, heavier breathing, and the way shoulders sagged.' Choice B is correct because it aligns with these descriptions of energy being drained or reduced, demonstrating the reader's ability to infer meaning accurately. Choice A is incorrect because it suggests energizing effects, which contradicts all the examples of tiredness, weakness, and the explicit statement that the heat was 'sapping their strength little by little.' To support students, encourage them to identify and underline potential context clues as they read. Practice with diverse texts that use varied context clue types, ensuring students can recognize and apply these strategies across different contexts.
In a persuasive essay, a student argued that reading widely improves writing. She admitted, however, that some evidence was anecdotal. The author clarified this by giving a definition in context: it came from personal stories rather than careful studies. For example, she wrote, “My cousin started reading mysteries and his grades rose,” but she also noted that one person’s experience cannot prove a rule for everyone. She restated the caution: “A story can suggest, but it cannot confirm.” The essay compared anecdotes to “single snapshots that cannot show the whole movie.”
20. Read the passage. What does the word anecdotal mean based on the context?
Based on statistics collected from many carefully designed studies
Based on personal stories, not on systematic research evidence
Based on fictional mysteries written only for entertainment
Based on rules that apply to every person without exception
Explanation
This question tests SSAT Upper Level reading skills, specifically the ability to infer the meaning of vocabulary using context clues. Context clues are words or phrases in the surrounding text that help deduce the meaning of an unfamiliar word. They can include definitions, examples, restatements, or descriptions. In this passage, the word anecdotal is used in a sentence that provides a clear clue through a definition, such as 'it came from personal stories rather than careful studies.' Choice A is correct because it aligns with the context provided by the example of the cousin's experience, demonstrating the reader's ability to infer meaning accurately. Choice B is incorrect because it mistakenly relies on systematic research, which is a common error when students focus on stronger evidence types without the caution about anecdotes. To support students, encourage them to identify and underline potential context clues as they read. Practice with diverse texts that use varied context clue types, ensuring students can recognize and apply these strategies across different contexts.
A historical account of the Underground Railroad included an excerpt from a conductor’s diary: “We traveled by moonless roads, and every lantern felt like a shout.” The narrator explained that secrecy was essential, yet the group’s courage was intrepid. The text clarified this with a restatement: they were fearless even when danger was close enough to hear. An example followed: when a patrol approached, the conductor did not flee alone; she calmly guided families into a hollow behind a thicket and waited until hoofbeats faded. The author added a metaphor, calling such bravery “a flame that refuses wind.”
4. What can be inferred about the word intrepid from its use in the passage?
Angry and violent, ready to fight the patrol
Quiet and hidden, like traveling on moonless roads
Fearless and brave, especially in dangerous situations
Careless and unplanned, with no attention to risk
Explanation
This question tests SSAT Upper Level reading skills, specifically the ability to infer the meaning of vocabulary using context clues. Context clues are words or phrases in the surrounding text that help deduce the meaning of an unfamiliar word. They can include definitions, examples, restatements, or descriptions. In this passage, the word intrepid is used in a sentence that provides a clear clue through a restatement, such as 'they were fearless even when danger was close enough to hear.' Choice B is correct because it aligns with the context provided by the description of courage in dangerous situations, demonstrating the reader's ability to infer meaning accurately. Choice A is incorrect because it mistakenly relies on a negative connotation like carelessness, which is a common error when students focus on risk without considering bravery. To support students, encourage them to identify and underline potential context clues as they read. Practice with diverse texts that use varied context clue types, ensuring students can recognize and apply these strategies across different contexts.
A cultural studies reading described a community festival held each spring. Elders taught children songs and dances, and families cooked recipes passed down for generations. The author called the event a ritual, then explained through example: certain steps were repeated each year in the same order, such as lighting candles at sunset and sharing the first bowl of soup with neighbors. The passage restated the meaning: “It is a practiced tradition with symbolic actions.” The author noted that the repetition did not make it dull; instead, it made participants feel anchored, as if the calendar itself had a heartbeat.
19. Read the passage. What does the word ritual mean based on the context?
A repeated traditional practice with meaningful, symbolic actions
A private argument that divides families during festivals
A random event that changes completely from year to year
A new invention that replaces older songs and dances
Explanation
This question tests SSAT Upper Level reading skills, specifically the ability to infer the meaning of vocabulary using context clues. Context clues are words or phrases in the surrounding text that help deduce the meaning of an unfamiliar word. They can include definitions, examples, restatements, or descriptions. In this passage, the word ritual is used in a sentence that provides a clear clue through a restatement, such as 'It is a practiced tradition with symbolic actions.' Choice A is correct because it aligns with the context provided by repeated steps like lighting candles and sharing soup, demonstrating the reader's ability to infer meaning accurately. Choice B is incorrect because it mistakenly relies on randomness, which is a common error when students focus on variety without noting the repetition. To support students, encourage them to identify and underline potential context clues as they read. Practice with diverse texts that use varied context clue types, ensuring students can recognize and apply these strategies across different contexts.