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Learn to identify why an author chose a specific word or phrase and what role it plays in a passage.
Long before standardized tests existed, scholars understood that the power of writing lies not just in what an author says, but in how they say it. Ancient Greek rhetoricians like Aristotle studied the art of persuasion, dissecting individual words to understand how they shaped a listener's emotions and beliefs. The study of rhetoric—the art of effective communication—has always depended on analyzing the function of language at the most granular level. Today, the PSAT tests this same skill by asking you to determine what role a specific word or phrase plays within a passage.
The central question behind every 'Function of a Word or Phrase' item on the PSAT is deceptively simple: Why did the author use this particular language here, and what does it accomplish in the passage? Answering this requires more than knowing what a word means—it demands that you understand the word's purpose in context. This lesson will give you a systematic approach to mastering this question type.
Before tackling PSAT questions, you need to understand several foundational ideas about how words and phrases work within a text. Every word an author selects serves at least one rhetorical function—a specific job within the passage. Recognizing these functions is the key to answering these questions correctly.
The diagram below maps the major functions that a word or phrase can serve in a passage. Think of this as your mental checklist when you encounter a function question on the PSAT. The central question—What does this word or phrase DO here?—branches into six primary function categories that cover virtually every answer choice you will see on test day.
Notice that these categories are not mutually exclusive—a single word might set a tone while also emphasizing a point. However, PSAT answer choices are designed so that one function is clearly the primary function in context. Your goal is to identify the most dominant role the word or phrase plays in the specific sentences surrounding it.
Because this is a reading and writing skill rather than a math-based concept, you won't use formulas—but you will use a repeatable analytical process. Think of it as a four-step algorithm that you apply every time you encounter a function question. Following this process consistently will help you avoid the most common traps.
A helpful way to internalize the distinction between meaning and function is to imagine explaining the word's role to a friend. If you find yourself saying, "This word is here to..." followed by a verb like show, emphasize, contrast, introduce, clarify, or suggest, you are describing function. If you find yourself saying, "This word means..." you are describing meaning, and you need to redirect your thinking.
Now let's examine the specific function types in greater detail. The diagram below shows how different function types map to common PSAT answer-choice language, along with signal words that help you identify each function in a passage.
Study the middle column of the chart closely. The PSAT uses remarkably consistent language in its answer choices, and learning to recognize phrases like "to underscore the significance of" or "to introduce a caveat" will dramatically speed up your process of elimination. When you see answer-choice language that matches one of these patterns, compare it to the function you identified in Step 3 of the process to confirm your answer.
Let's walk through a complete example using the four-step process. Read the following passage carefully, then follow each step as we determine the function of the underlined phrase.
The question asks: Which choice best describes the function of the underlined phrase "despite these remarkable cognitive abilities" in the text?
Understanding the function categories is only half the battle. The PSAT is carefully designed with distractor answers that can fool even well-prepared students. The table below outlines the most common traps and how to avoid them.
| Trap Type | What It Looks Like | How to Avoid It |
|---|---|---|
| Meaning vs. Function | An answer choice restates what the word means or paraphrases the underlined section without explaining its role. | Ask yourself: does this answer tell me WHY the author used it, or just WHAT it says? If the latter, eliminate. |
| Too Broad / Too Narrow | An answer might describe the function of the entire paragraph rather than the specific word/phrase, or it might focus on only part of the phrase. | Reread the exact phrase underlined and ensure the answer describes that specific phrase's function, not something larger or smaller. |
| Plausible but Unsupported | An answer makes a reasonable-sounding claim about the passage that isn't actually supported by the text. | Ground every answer in specific evidence from the passage. If you can't point to text that supports the choice, it's likely wrong. |
| Right Function, Wrong Target | The answer correctly identifies the function type (e.g., contrast) but misidentifies WHAT is being contrasted. | Check both parts: Is the function type correct AND are the specific ideas described in the answer actually present in the passage? |
The skill of identifying word and phrase function doesn't end with the PSAT. It is a foundational reading skill that scales to every level of academic and professional work. Understanding how this PSAT skill connects to more advanced analysis will deepen your grasp and prepare you for college-level work.
| PSAT Level | SAT / AP Level | College Level |
|---|---|---|
| Identify the function of a single word or phrase in a short passage | Analyze how rhetorical choices develop an argument across multiple paragraphs | Evaluate how diction, syntax, and figurative language collectively construct meaning in full texts |
| Distinguish between meaning and function | Analyze how a word's connotation shapes the reader's perception of an argument | Perform discourse analysis examining how language constructs power, identity, and ideology |
| Recognize basic categories: emphasize, qualify, illustrate, contrast | Identify complex functions: concession, rebuttal, rhetorical questions, irony | Analyze how authors subvert conventions, use unreliable narration, and employ metafiction |
On the SAT (which you'll take after the PSAT), function questions are longer and more nuanced. AP Language and Composition goes further, asking you to write essays analyzing how authors use rhetorical strategies—which requires the same identification skills you're building here. Mastering function analysis on the PSAT gives you a head start for these more challenging assessments and, ultimately, for critical reading in college courses across every discipline.