This practice test covers all five major SSAT English sections. Each question matches the difficulty, style, and format of real Upper-Level SSAT exams.
Q 1–5
Synonyms (Vocabulary)
Q 6–10
Analogies
Q 11–14
Sentence Completion
Q 15–17
Reading Comprehension
Q 18–20
Critical Reasoning
Section 1 · Synonyms
Core Concept
A synonym is a word with the same or nearly the same meaning as another word. In SSAT synonyms, you select the answer that most closely matches the meaning of the given word. Focus on the primary meaning first.
High-Frequency SSAT Vocabulary
LOQUACIOUS — very talkative (syn: garrulous, verbose)
AMELIORATE — to improve or make better
EPHEMERAL — lasting a very short time (syn: transient, fleeting)
MAGNANIMOUS — generous and forgiving (syn: benevolent)
✓ Answer: (B) talkative — "loquacious" derives from Latin loqui (to speak).
Section 2 · Analogies
Core Concept
Analogies test your ability to recognize relationships between word pairs. The format is: A : B :: C : D ("A is to B as C is to D"). Always define the precise relationship in a sentence before looking at answers.
✓ Answer: (A) — "Scales are the outer covering of a fish; a shell is the outer covering of a turtle."
Section 3 · Sentence Completion
Core Concept
You must choose the word(s) that best complete a sentence. Look for context clues: contrast words (although, however, despite), support words (because, since, therefore), and the overall tone of the sentence.
Signal Words to Memorize
Contrast signals: although, however, despite, yet, but, while, even though → opposite idea
Support signals: because, since, therefore, thus, consequently → same idea
Emphasis signals: indeed, in fact, clearly → stronger version of same idea
Example
Although the scientist's research was ________, her conclusions were surprisingly ________. (A) flawed…inaccurate (B) thorough…shallow (C) groundbreaking…revolutionary (D) preliminary…definitive (E) rushed…careless
✓ Answer: (D) — "Although" signals contrast. Preliminary research → but surprisingly definitive conclusions.
Section 4 · Reading Comprehension
Core Concept
SSAT Reading passages test your ability to identify the main idea, draw inferences, determine author's purpose, understand vocabulary in context, and analyze tone and style.
Reading Strategy
Read questions first — know what to look for
Skim for structure — topic sentence of each paragraph
Find the evidence — every correct answer is supported by the text
Beware extreme answers — "always/never/all/none" are usually wrong
Section 5 · Critical Reasoning
Core Concept
Critical reasoning tests logical analysis of arguments. You may be asked to identify assumptions, find logical flaws, select statements that strengthen or weaken an argument, or draw valid conclusions.
Argument Structure
Premise: the evidence or reason given
Conclusion: the claim being made
Assumption: the unstated premise the argument depends on
Ask: "Does the conclusion follow logically from the premises?"
Test Information
⏱ Time Limit: 30 minutes
📝 Questions: 20 multiple choice
💡 Instant feedback with explanations after each question