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  1. SSAT Upper Level Reading
  2. Interpret analogies or comparisons used by the author.

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SSAT-UPPER-LEVEL-READING • READING

Interpret analogies or comparisons used by the author.

Unlock the deeper meaning behind an author's figurative comparisons to master SSAT reading passages.

SECTION 1

Why Authors Compare: A Brief History of Figurative Language

Humans have been using analogies and comparisons to communicate complex ideas for thousands of years. From Homer's epic similes describing warriors as lions to modern scientists comparing DNA to a spiral staircase, figurative language bridges the gap between the unfamiliar and the familiar. On the SSAT, authors embed these comparisons within passages not merely for decoration—they use them to clarify arguments, evoke emotions, and reveal attitudes toward their subjects.

~800 BCE
Homeric Similes
Homer's Iliad and Odyssey introduced extended similes comparing battlefield events to natural phenomena, setting the standard for figurative comparison in Western literature.
~350 BCE
Aristotle Defines Analogy
In his Rhetoric and Poetics, Aristotle classified types of comparison—simile, metaphor, and analogy—arguing that mastering figurative language was the mark of true genius.
1600s
Scientific Analogy Emerges
Writers like Francis Bacon began using analogy to explain natural philosophy. Comparing the heart to a pump, for example, helped readers grasp William Harvey's theory of circulation.
1900s–Today
Figurative Language in Standardized Testing
Modern reading assessments like the SSAT test whether students can identify why an author chose a particular comparison and what it reveals about the author's meaning and purpose.

The core question this lesson addresses is straightforward but powerful: when you encounter a comparison in an SSAT passage, how do you determine what it means, why the author chose it, and what it reveals about the passage's larger argument? Answering these questions reliably is the skill we will build.

SECTION 2

Core Principles: Understanding Comparisons

Before you can interpret a comparison, you need to recognize the different forms it can take and understand the logic that connects its two sides. Every comparison has a tenor (the subject being described) and a vehicle (the image or idea it is compared to). The relationship between them is the ground—the shared quality that makes the comparison work. Identifying all three parts is the foundation of interpretation.

1

Simile

A direct comparison using "like" or "as." Example: "The city was like a beehive, buzzing with activity." The signal words make similes the easiest comparisons to spot.
2

Metaphor

A comparison that states one thing IS another, without "like" or "as." Example: "The city was a beehive." Metaphors are bolder and require you to infer the shared quality.
3

Analogy

An extended comparison that explains one concept by mapping it onto another. Example: "Just as a captain steers a ship through storms, a governor must guide a state through crisis." Analogies often span multiple sentences.
4

Personification

A comparison that gives human qualities to non-human things. Example: "The wind whispered through the canyon." This is a special type of metaphor that maps human behavior onto nature or objects.
5

Implied Comparison

A comparison embedded in the word choice without an explicit statement. Example: "The senator barked his reply." The author never says the senator is like a dog, but the verb 'barked' creates the comparison implicitly.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of interpreting a comparison like translating between two languages. The author "speaks" in images (vehicles), and your job is to translate back into the literal meaning (the ground). For example, if a passage says a character's mind was "a tangled forest," you translate: the character's thoughts were confused, overgrown, and hard to navigate. The forest is the vehicle; confusion is the ground.
SECTION 3

Anatomy of a Comparison: A Visual Guide

ANATOMY OF A COMPARISONTENORThe subject beingdescribede.g. "the city"VEHICLEThe image usedfor comparisone.g. "a beehive"GROUNDshared quality: "buzzing activity"AUTHOR'S PURPOSEWhy did the author choose this vehicle?To emphasize crowdedness, productivity, organized chaosINTERPRETATION: "The city was busy, productive, and crowded."
This diagram shows how every comparison has three parts: the tenor (what is being described), the vehicle (the image chosen), the ground (shared quality), and the author's purpose that ties it all together.

When you encounter a comparison on the SSAT, trace these four elements in order. Start by identifying the tenor—what is the author actually talking about? Then find the vehicle—what image or concept has the author borrowed? Next, determine the ground—what specific quality do the tenor and vehicle share? Finally, consider the author's purpose: does the comparison clarify a difficult idea, create an emotional response, reveal the author's attitude, or make an abstract concept concrete? The answer to an SSAT question about a comparison almost always tests one of these four elements.

SECTION 4

How Comparisons Function in SSAT Passages

The Four Functions of Author Comparisons

Authors do not use comparisons randomly. On the SSAT, every analogy or figurative comparison serves at least one of four specific functions. Understanding these functions gives you a framework for answering questions accurately, because the correct answer choice will almost always align with one of them.

1

Clarification

The comparison makes an abstract or complex idea concrete. Common in science and social studies passages. Example: comparing electrical current to water flowing through a pipe.
2

Emphasis

The comparison intensifies a quality the author wants you to notice. Common in literary and persuasive passages. Example: "The silence was a heavy blanket" emphasizes how oppressive the quiet felt.
3

Tone & Attitude

The vehicle reveals how the author feels about the tenor. If a politician is compared to a fox, the author implies slyness. If compared to a lighthouse, the author implies guidance. The vehicle choice IS the opinion.
4

Argumentation

An analogy supports or extends the author's argument by drawing on the reader's prior knowledge. Example: "Censoring this book is like banning a tool because someone might misuse it" borrows the logic of one scenario to argue for another.
DECISION FLOWCHART: Interpreting a ComparisonYou find a comparison in the passage.Step 1: Identify TENOR and VEHICLEStep 2: Determine the GROUNDStep 3: Ask—WHY this vehicle?ClarificationMakes idea concreteEmphasisIntensifies a qualityTone / AttitudeReveals author's viewArgumentationSupports a claimStep 4: Match your analysis to the answer choices.
Follow this four-step flowchart every time you encounter a comparison question. Identifying the tenor and vehicle first, then the ground, then the function, will lead you reliably to the correct answer.

Notice that Step 3 is where the real interpretive work happens. Many students correctly identify the tenor and vehicle but then jump straight to the answer choices without asking why the author chose that particular vehicle. The SSAT frequently tests this deeper layer: not just "what two things are being compared" but "what does this comparison reveal about the author's meaning or attitude?" Always pause at Step 3 before scanning the choices.

SECTION 5

Types of SSAT Comparison Questions & Common Traps

SSAT reading questions about comparisons come in several distinct forms. Recognizing the question type tells you exactly which part of the comparison to focus on. Below is a classification of the most common question stems you will encounter, along with the traps test-makers set for each type.

Five common question types about author comparisons on the SSAT
Question TypeTypical StemFocus Your Analysis OnCommon Trap
Identification"The author compares X to Y in order to…"The function (clarification, emphasis, tone, argument)Choosing an answer that restates the comparison instead of explaining its purpose
Interpretation"What does the author mean by the phrase '…'?"The ground (shared quality between tenor and vehicle)Taking the vehicle literally rather than identifying the figurative meaning
Tone / Attitude"The comparison suggests the author views X as…"The connotation of the vehicle—is it positive, negative, or neutral?Ignoring connotation and picking an answer that matches denotation only
Extension"Which of the following best extends the analogy in lines…?"The logic of the analogy—what corresponds to what?Choosing an extension that fits the vehicle's world but breaks the correspondence to the tenor
Effect on Reader"The simile in line X creates a feeling of…"The emotional associations of the vehicleConfusing the emotion the comparison evokes with the overall mood of the passage
⚠️ WATCH OUT: The Literal-Reading Trap
The most frequent mistake students make is interpreting a figurative comparison literally. If a passage says "the library was a sanctuary," a trap answer might say "the library provided religious services." The correct interpretation focuses on the connotation of "sanctuary"—safety, peace, refuge—not its literal meaning. Always ask: what quality is being transferred, not what the vehicle literally is.
SECTION 6

Worked Example: Interpreting a Passage Comparison

📖 SAMPLE PASSAGE EXCERPT
"The old growth forest stood as a cathedral of green, its canopy arching overhead like vaulted ceilings, its silence demanding the same reverence one might feel upon entering a sacred space. Yet the logging company's proposal treated this ecosystem as little more than a warehouse of raw materials, reducing centuries of biological complexity to board-feet of lumber."

Question: The author's comparison of the forest to a "cathedral" and a "warehouse" primarily serves to

  • (A) describe the architectural features of old growth forests
  • (B) contrast the author's reverence for the forest with the logging company's utilitarian view
  • (C) argue that forests should be converted into places of worship
  • (D) explain the economic value of timber harvesting
  • (E) show that the logging company respects the forest's complexity

Step-by-Step Solution

Step 1 — Identify the Tenors and Vehicles

There are two comparisons here. In the first, the tenor is the old growth forest and the vehicle is a cathedral. In the second, the tenor is the same forest (as seen by the logging company) and the vehicle is a warehouse. Noticing that the same tenor has two different vehicles is critical—the author is deliberately contrasting two views.
Tenor: the forest. Vehicle 1: cathedral. Vehicle 2: warehouse.

Step 2 — Determine the Ground for Each Comparison

For the cathedral comparison, the ground is reverence, awe, and sacredness—the author describes the canopy as vaulted ceilings and the silence as demanding reverence. For the warehouse comparison, the ground is cold utility—the forest is reduced to a storage space for commodities. Notice the emotional charge: "cathedral" carries deeply positive connotations while "warehouse" carries neutral-to-negative ones.
Ground 1: sacred awe. Ground 2: cold utility.

Step 3 — Identify the Author's Purpose

The author uses the contrasting vehicles to show two opposing attitudes toward the same forest. The author clearly sides with the "cathedral" view (note the positive language: reverence, centuries of complexity). The "warehouse" comparison is attributed to the logging company and is presented critically ("little more than," "reducing"). The function here is both tone/attitude and argumentation—the contrast strengthens the author's case for preservation.
Purpose: contrast the author's reverence with the logging company's utilitarian perspective.

Step 4 — Match to Answer Choices

Choice (A) is a literal-reading trap—the author is not describing architecture. Choice (C) is absurd—no one is suggesting worship. Choice (D) contradicts the passage; the author criticizes the economic view. Choice (E) is the opposite of what the passage says. Choice (B) perfectly captures the contrast between the author's reverence and the company's utilitarian view.
Correct answer: (B)
SECTION 7

Strengths and Pitfalls of Different Interpretation Strategies

Students often develop personal strategies for handling comparison questions, but not all approaches are equally reliable. The table below compares three common strategies, noting when each works well and when it can lead you astray.

Comparison of three student strategies for interpreting figurative comparisons
StrategyHow It WorksStrengthsPitfalls
SubstitutionReplace the figurative language with a literal paraphrase, then see which answer matches.Fast and effective for simple similes and metaphors; forces you to translate.Can miss the emotional connotation; may oversimplify extended analogies.
Connotation CheckAsk: is the vehicle positive, negative, or neutral? Match that charge to the answer choices.Excellent for tone/attitude questions; quick way to eliminate two or three wrong choices.Does not work when the question asks about the specific quality being compared rather than overall tone.
Full Tenor-Vehicle-Ground AnalysisSystematically identify the tenor, vehicle, ground, and purpose before looking at answers.Most reliable; works for every question type including extension and argumentation questions.Takes more time; under pressure students may skip steps and lose the benefit.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of these strategies like tools in a toolbox. The substitution method is your screwdriver—quick and useful for most small jobs. The connotation check is your level—it tells you whether you are tilting positive or negative. The full tenor-vehicle-ground analysis is your power drill—it takes a moment to set up, but it handles every job reliably. For the SSAT, default to the full analysis on hard questions and save the shortcuts for simpler ones.
SECTION 8

Connecting to Advanced Reading and Rhetoric

The skill of interpreting comparisons does not stop at the SSAT. In AP English, SAT Evidence-Based Reading, college-level literary analysis, and even scientific writing, you will encounter increasingly sophisticated uses of analogy. The table below shows how the same fundamental skill scales up as you advance.

How comparison-interpretation skills scale from SSAT to college
Skill LevelWhat You're Asked to DoExample
SSAT LevelIdentify the comparison and explain its purpose or meaning in context."The author compares migration to a river to emphasize its continuous, unstoppable nature."
SAT / AP LevelEvaluate whether a comparison effectively supports the argument and identify its limitations."The river analogy breaks down because rivers follow predictable paths, while migration patterns shift with policy changes."
College LevelAnalyze how recurring metaphors create a text's symbolic framework and shape its ideological commitments."The persistent use of natural-flow metaphors in immigration discourse naturalizes human movement, implicitly arguing against restriction."

Mastering the foundational skill of identifying tenor, vehicle, ground, and purpose at the SSAT level gives you the toolkit you need for all future levels. The analysis becomes more nuanced, but the core logic remains the same. Every time you practice interpreting a comparison now, you are building a skill that will pay dividends across standardized tests and academic writing for years.

SECTION 9

Practice Problems

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
A passage states: "The new tax policy was a Band-Aid on a bullet wound." What is the author's most likely attitude toward the tax policy? (A) The policy is an effective short-term solution. (B) The policy is a necessary medical intervention. (C) The policy is woefully inadequate for the scale of the problem. (D) The policy will lead to physical harm. (E) The policy addresses the root cause of the issue.
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC
Consider this passage excerpt: "The committee's report, like a lighthouse beam cutting through fog, provided the clarity that shareholders had been seeking for months." The simile in this sentence primarily serves to (A) describe the physical appearance of the report (B) suggest that the committee operates near the ocean (C) emphasize how the report illuminated a confusing situation (D) imply that the committee's work was slow and repetitive (E) indicate that the shareholders were literally lost at sea
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
A science passage reads: "DNA replication is often compared to unzipping a zipper, but this analogy breaks down when we consider that both separated strands serve as templates for new complementary strands—something no zipper has ever done." The author's purpose in discussing this analogy is most likely to (A) reject the use of analogy in scientific writing entirely (B) show that DNA replication is too simple for analogy (C) demonstrate that while the zipper comparison is partly useful, it fails to capture the full complexity of replication (D) argue that zippers should be redesigned to mimic DNA (E) prove that DNA replication cannot be understood by non-scientists
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
Read the following passage excerpt: "In the early days of the internet, information spread like seeds scattered by the wind—randomly, unpredictably, landing wherever conditions allowed. Today, algorithms act as meticulous gardeners, deciding exactly which seeds reach which plots of soil, cultivating information ecosystems tailored to each user's preferences." The shift from the first comparison to the second primarily serves to (A) show that the internet has become less natural over time (B) illustrate the transition from uncontrolled to curated information distribution (C) argue that gardeners are more efficient than wind (D) suggest that internet users are passive recipients of content, like soil (E) prove that algorithms have made the internet more beautiful
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
A literary passage states: "Mrs. Dalton moved through the party like a current beneath still water—unseen by those chatting on the surface, yet responsible for drawing everyone slowly, inevitably, in the direction she chose." Which of the following best describes both the meaning of this comparison AND the quality it attributes to Mrs. Dalton? (A) She is energetic and the center of attention, like a strong wave. (B) She is manipulative and dangerous, like a deadly undertow. (C) She is quietly influential, exerting control without calling attention to herself. (D) She is unimportant to the party, hidden and powerless beneath the surface. (E) She moves physically below the other guests, who are standing on a raised platform.
SUMMARY

Lesson Summary: Interpreting Analogies & Comparisons

Every comparison you encounter on the SSAT has a tenor (the subject being described), a vehicle (the image or concept it is compared to), and a ground (the shared quality that makes the comparison meaningful). Comparisons take multiple forms—similes, metaphors, extended analogies, personification, and implied comparisons—but they all follow the same three-part structure.

Authors use comparisons to serve four primary functions: clarification (making abstract ideas concrete), emphasis (intensifying a quality), tone and attitude (revealing how the author feels), and argumentation (supporting a claim by borrowing logic from a parallel situation). To answer SSAT questions reliably, follow the four-step method: identify the tenor and vehicle, determine the ground, ask why the author chose that vehicle, and then match your analysis to the answer choices. Avoid the literal-reading trap by always focusing on the figurative quality being transferred, not the vehicle's literal meaning.

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