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Learn to hear the feeling behind the words and figure out what an author really thinks.
Have you ever read a text message and couldn't tell if your friend was joking or being serious? That confusion happens because you can't hear the person's voice. When we read, we face the same challenge. We can't hear the writer speaking, so we have to figure out their feelings from the words on the page. This skill is called identifying author's tone — the attitude or feeling a writer has toward a subject.
People have been studying how writers express feelings through language for thousands of years. Let's look at some key moments in that history.
So, how do you figure out what an author really feels about their subject? That's exactly what this lesson will teach you. By the end, you'll be able to spot tone like a detective spots clues.
Before you can identify tone, you need to understand what it is and where it hides. Tone is the author's attitude or feeling toward the subject they are writing about. It's not what the author says — it's how the author says it. Here are the four main clues you can use to figure out tone.
The diagram below shows the four-step process you can use every time you need to figure out an author's tone. Think of it as a toolkit — you check each tool, and together they point you toward the answer.
No single clue is enough on its own. You need to look at all four together, like pieces of a puzzle. If most clues point in the same direction — say, negative words, gloomy details, and dark imagery — you can feel confident about naming the tone.
Let's see how the same subject can sound completely different depending on the author's tone. Imagine two authors both writing about a rainstorm. Read each mini-passage below and notice how the feeling changes.
Notice the clues? The word "danced" makes the rain sound fun. Details like "laughing" and "silver rivers" are cheerful. The imagery of the world celebrating paints a happy picture. The tone is joyful.
Now the word "hammered" makes the rain sound harsh. Details like "heads down" and "muddy rivers" are dreary. The phrase "without mercy" and "relentless" add to the grim feeling. The tone is gloomy or somber.
Both passages describe a rainstorm. The facts are the same — water falling from the sky. But the author's choices about words, details, and imagery create entirely different feelings. That difference is tone.
On the SSAT, the answer choices for tone questions will often be single words. If you don't know what the words mean, it's hard to pick the right one. Here is a chart of common tone words sorted into three groups: positive, negative, and neutral. Study these so they feel familiar on test day.
Question: What is the author's tone toward the old library?
Students often mix up tone and mood. They're related, but they are not the same thing. Tone is how the author feels. Mood is how the reader feels. Here's a quick comparison.
| Feature | Tone | Mood |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | The author's attitude toward the subject | The feeling the reader gets from the passage |
| Who feels it? | The author | The reader (you) |
| Question it answers | "How does the writer feel about this?" | "How does this passage make me feel?" |
| Example | The author's tone is critical (the author disapproves) | The mood is tense (the reader feels on edge) |
| How to spot it | Word choice, details, sentence structure, imagery | Setting, atmosphere, pacing, emotional language |
Sometimes tone isn't simple. An author might mix feelings or change tone partway through a passage. The SSAT likes to test these trickier situations. Let's look at two advanced ideas.
| Tricky Situation | What It Means | How to Handle It |
|---|---|---|
| Mixed Tone | The author has two feelings at once (e.g., admiring but worried). | Look for an answer choice that captures both feelings, like "cautiously optimistic" or "respectful but concerned." |
| Tone Shift | The tone changes partway through (e.g., starts hopeful, ends disappointed). | Read the whole passage before deciding. Watch for words like "but," "however," or "unfortunately" — they often signal a shift. |
| Sarcasm / Irony | The author says the opposite of what they mean (e.g., "What a brilliant plan" when the plan is terrible). | Ask yourself: "Does the author really mean this, or are they being ironic?" Context clues and exaggeration are your best hints. |
| Understated Tone | The author keeps feelings hidden beneath calm language. | Look for small but meaningful word choices. Even one carefully placed word (like "merely" or "unfortunately") can reveal a strong feeling. |
As you move into harder reading passages in high school, you'll encounter even more complex tones. Authors might use a satirical (making fun of something to make a point) or ambivalent (having mixed, uncertain feelings) tone. For now, mastering the basics — positive, negative, neutral, and recognizing shifts — will give you a strong foundation.
Tone is the author's attitude or feeling toward a subject. To identify it, use four main clues: word choice (diction), details and examples, sentence structure, and imagery and figurative language. Combine all four clues before deciding on your answer. Start by asking whether the tone is positive, neutral, or negative — that narrows your choices quickly.
Remember that tone (the author's feeling) is different from mood (the reader's feeling). Watch out for tone shifts (signaled by words like "but" or "however") and sarcasm or irony (where the author says the opposite of what they mean). Build your vocabulary of tone words so you can quickly recognize them in answer choices. With practice, spotting tone will become second nature!