In the "Word within the Word" analogy list, the answers typically involve identifying smaller words or roots within larger words. For instance, in the word "analogy," one might find "log" as a smaller word. Other examples include "bio" in "Biology" or "graph" in "photograph." If you provide specific words from your list, I can help identify the smaller words or concepts within them.
Angry is to happy as sad is to cheerful. Cat is to kitten as dog is to puppy. Smart is to intelligent as fast is to swift. Day is to night as whisper is to shout. Laugh is to joke as cry is to tragedy.
No, the word "list" is singular. The plural form of "list" is "lists."
Depending on the context, list can already be a verb. For example "to list something or someone" is an action and therefore a verb.
The word list has a short I, as in the rhyming words mist and fist.
No, numbered lists within a sentence do not need to be capitalized. Each item in the list should start with a lowercase letter, unless it is a proper noun or the first word of a complete sentence.
I'm sorry, but I don't have access to specific lists or documents, including the "word within the word analogies list 13." However, if you provide me with the words or context from that list, I can help you analyze or create analogies based on them.
euphony is to cacophony
vociferous : sotto voce loud : soft
You can find lists of analogies in books about writing, grammar, or rhetoric. Additionally, educational websites and resources often feature collections of analogies for different purposes such as education or entertainment.
Angry is to happy as sad is to cheerful. Cat is to kitten as dog is to puppy. Smart is to intelligent as fast is to swift. Day is to night as whisper is to shout. Laugh is to joke as cry is to tragedy.
it will be1234
A list of medical analogies can be found on this page: http://www.altoonafp.org/analogies.htm
hard is to easy as calm is to excited glove is to hand as paint is to wall
The "Word within the Word" program is a vocabulary curriculum designed to help students learn the meanings and origins of common prefixes, roots, and suffixes in English. In list 6 of the program, students are likely to encounter words such as "port," "cede," "miss," "scrib/script," "ject," and "pend." Understanding these word parts can help students decipher the meanings of unfamiliar words they encounter in their reading and writing.
One way of working out analogies is to compare one situation over another. A way to do this is to list the positive and negative factors of each situation.
without withhold within
The word master test is hard. It is really a bunch of analogies, and as you get older they get MUCH HARDER. You would really think analogies are easy but word master's analogies not so easy. It is not just yellow:bannah:purple:grape. It is more like Painter: Musem_______:_____ . Then in the blanks you would have to fill in the answer, for example doctor: hospital, kitchen: cook, writer: Library, photographer: camera's, architect: ruler. The answer would be kitchen: cook. Then to add, on you have to learn list of 25 words including:besmirch, archipelago, throng. Those are only 3 examples of 25 words. They only give GATE students and opportunity to do this. Believe it or not the examples of words I gave you came straight from the word masters list. Word masters is also hard because you have to take a test based on fitting in your word masters words into the analogy.