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Master the analogy pattern that links a thing to what it is designed to do.
Analogies have been a cornerstone of reasoning and language for thousands of years. Ancient Greek philosophers like Aristotle relied on analogical reasoning to classify the natural world, noting that understanding the purpose of a thing was just as important as understanding its form. When Aristotle asked "What is an eye for?" and answered "for seeing," he was establishing a function or purpose relationship — a link between an object and the role it was designed or evolved to fulfill.
Standardized tests adopted analogy questions in the early twentieth century as a way to measure not just vocabulary but also logical reasoning. The idea was simple: if you can identify the precise relationship between two words, you demonstrate both linguistic knowledge and the ability to think in structured patterns. Among the many analogy types — part-to-whole, cause-and-effect, degree, synonym, antonym — the function or purpose relationship stands out as one of the most common on the SSAT Upper Level.
The central question this lesson addresses is straightforward: when you see two words on the SSAT, how do you recognize that the relationship between them is one of function or purpose, and how do you use that recognition to pick the correct answer from five choices?
A function or purpose relationship exists when one word names an object, tool, person, or structure, and the other word names what that thing is primarily designed or used to do. Think of it as answering the question: "What is this thing for?" For example, a thermometer is for measuring temperature. A shovel is for digging. The relationship is not incidental — it captures the primary reason the thing exists.
The diagram below maps out how to think about function/purpose relationships visually. On the left side, you see the object or agent — the thing that performs the action. An arrow points to the right side, which shows the function, purpose, or goal — the action or result that the object was designed to achieve. The connecting arrow represents the core question you should always ask: "What is this for?"
Notice that in every row, the connection is not accidental or secondary. A telescope can also be heavy or expensive, but its defining relationship is to magnification. When you encounter an analogy on the SSAT, mentally place the two given words into this "is for" template. If the sentence sounds natural and captures the primary reason the object exists, you are likely dealing with a function/purpose pair.
On the SSAT, analogy questions follow the format: Word A is to Word B as Word C is to Word D. You are given the stem pair (A and B) and one word of the answer pair (C), and you must find D from five choices. The key to success is a reliable, repeatable decision process — a mental algorithm you can follow on every question.
Not all function/purpose analogies look the same. The SSAT draws from several variations of this relationship, and recognizing the sub-type helps you stay precise. The diagram below categorizes these sub-types and shows how they branch from the core "is for" idea.
| Sub-Type | Stem Example | Sentence Template | What to Watch For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tool → Action | PEN : WRITE | "A pen is a tool used to write." | Don't confuse with maker/product (PEN : INK would be a different type). |
| Agent → Duty | JUDGE : ADJUDICATE | "A judge's duty is to adjudicate." | Don't confuse with place of work (JUDGE : COURTROOM is a location relationship). |
| Structure → Role | LIGHTHOUSE : WARN | "A lighthouse exists to warn sailors." | Don't confuse with characteristic (LIGHTHOUSE : TALL is a characteristic). |
| Substance → Effect | FERTILIZER : NOURISH | "Fertilizer is used to nourish plants." | Don't confuse with cause/effect (DROUGHT : FAMINE is cause/effect, not purpose). |
Let's walk through a full SSAT-style analogy question from start to finish, applying the three-step decision process.
Notice how the wrong answers each represent a different type of relationship: (A) is an associated object, (B) is a location, (D) is a characteristic, and (E) is a part or component. The test writers deliberately include these to see if you can distinguish function/purpose from other relationship types.
The biggest challenge with function/purpose analogies is not recognizing them in isolation — it's distinguishing them from relationships that look similar. The table below lays out the most commonly confused analogy types and gives you a diagnostic question to tell them apart.
| Relationship Type | Example Pair | Diagnostic Question | Why It's Different from Function/Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Function / Purpose | STOVE : HEAT | "Is the stove used to heat?" → Yes | This IS function/purpose — the baseline for comparison. |
| Characteristic | SUGAR : SWEET | "Is sugar used to sweet?" → No (ungrammatical) | Sweet describes what sugar IS, not what it DOES. Characteristics are adjectives, not actions. |
| Cause / Effect | VIRUS : ILLNESS | "Is the virus designed to cause illness?" → No (unintended) | Cause/effect happens naturally or accidentally; function/purpose is intentional or by design. |
| Part / Whole | WHEEL : CAR | "Is a wheel used to car?" → No (ungrammatical) | A wheel is a component of a car, not the car's purpose. Part/whole is structural, not functional. |
| Location | DOCTOR : HOSPITAL | "Is a doctor used to hospital?" → No (ungrammatical) | A hospital is where a doctor works, not the doctor's purpose. (DOCTOR : HEAL would be function/purpose.) |
| Degree | WARM : HOT | "Is warm used to hot?" → No | These are two intensities of the same quality — no function involved at all. |
On more difficult SSAT questions, the function/purpose relationship may be disguised by sophisticated vocabulary, reversed word order, or abstract concepts. Being prepared for these variations can mean the difference between a good score and a great one.
| Variation | What It Looks Like | Example | Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reversed Order | The action comes first, the object second: ILLUMINATE : LANTERN | ILLUMINATE : LANTERN as AMPLIFY : ? | Reorder mentally: "A lantern is for illuminating." Match the same reversed structure in the answer. |
| Abstract Nouns | Both words are abstract rather than concrete objects. | DIPLOMACY : RESOLUTION as LEGISLATION : ? | Apply the same test: "Diplomacy is used to achieve resolution." "Legislation is used to achieve _____" → REGULATION. |
| Uncommon Vocabulary | One or both words are advanced vocabulary. | TOURNIQUET : STANCH as SPLINT : ? | Use root words and context clues. Tourniquet relates to blood; stanch means to stop flow. A splint is used to IMMOBILIZE. |
| Multiple Meanings | A word has more than one definition, and only one creates a function/purpose pair. | CRANE : LIFT (machine, not bird) | Try all meanings of the stem word. Pick the meaning that creates a clear, primary function relationship. |
As you continue through your SSAT preparation, you will encounter analogies that blend function/purpose with other relationships. For example, a question might tempt you with a cause/effect pair that is superficially similar to function/purpose. The key is to always return to the core question: was this object or concept intentionally designed, created, or evolved to perform this action? If the answer is yes, function/purpose is your relationship.
A function or purpose relationship connects an object, person, structure, or substance to the primary action or goal it was designed to perform. On the SSAT, this is one of the most frequently tested analogy types. The four major sub-types are Tool → Action (scissors : cut), Agent → Duty (teacher : instruct), Structure → Role (bridge : connect), and Substance → Effect (adhesive : bond).
To identify and solve these analogies, follow the three-step decision process: (1) build a sentence using phrases like "is used to" or "exists to"; (2) test that sentence on all five answer choices; and (3) eliminate by choosing the answer that reflects the primary, defining function rather than a secondary use, characteristic, location, or part. Watch out for distractors that share the same topic but express a different relationship type — these are the test writers' most effective traps.