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Learn to cross off wrong answers by spotting words that have nothing to do with the question.
Have you ever taken a multiple-choice test and thought, "Wait, some of these answers don't even make sense!" You're right! Test makers put in wrong answers on purpose. These wrong answers are called distractors because they try to distract you — like a magician waving one hand to keep you from seeing the other.
The ISEE test has been used for many years to help schools find great students. Over time, test makers got better and better at writing tricky wrong answers. But here's the good news: once you know their tricks, you can beat them!
The big question is: how do you spot those sneaky distractors? That's exactly what this lesson will teach you. Let's dive in!
On the ISEE, you will see two types of Verbal Reasoning questions. Synonym questions give you a word in CAPITAL LETTERS and ask you to find the word with the closest meaning. Sentence completion questions give you a sentence with a blank, and you pick the best word to fill it. Both types have four answer choices (A through D).
Here are the key ideas that will help you cross off wrong answers quickly.
Let's look at a picture that shows how elimination works. Imagine you have four answer choices. You pour them into a funnel. The wrong answers get caught and tossed out. Only the best answer makes it through!
Notice how we didn't even need to be 100% sure about the right answer at first. By crossing off the choices that clearly don't fit, we narrowed it down. That's the power of elimination!
Let's look at the sneaky ways test makers create wrong answers. Once you know these tricks, they won't fool you anymore!
Sometimes one answer choice has nothing to do with the question word at all. If the question word is SWIFT (meaning fast), and one choice is "purple," that's a color — it has zero connection to speed. Cross it off right away!
Some distractors look or sound like the question word. For example, SORE and SOAR sound the same but mean totally different things. "Sore" means hurting. "Soar" means to fly high. Don't let your ears trick your brain!
Test makers love to include an antonym (a word that means the opposite). If the question word is BRAVE, they might include "timid" (which means shy or fearful). Remember, you need a synonym — a word that means the same thing, not the opposite!
This is the trickiest one. The word might be related to the same topic but doesn't actually mean the same thing. If the question word is CHEF, the word "kitchen" is related — but a chef is a person, and a kitchen is a room. They aren't synonyms!
Let's put all four distractor types side by side so you can spot them fast on test day. Study the diagram below. It shows how to sort each answer choice into the right category.
Here's a helpful tip: always start by eliminating the totally unrelated answers first. They're the easiest to spot. Then look for opposites. Finally, check the tricky "related but wrong" choices. This order saves you time!
Let's walk through two real ISEE-style questions together. Follow along and see how elimination works in action!
There are different ways students try to answer ISEE questions. Let's compare them so you can see why elimination is the best strategy!
| Strategy | How It Works | Strengths & Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|
| Just Guess | Pick any letter without reading carefully | Only a 1 in 4 chance (25%) of getting it right. Use this only when you have no idea at all. |
| Pick the First Good One | Choose the first answer that seems okay | Risky! You might miss a better answer that comes later. Always check all four choices. |
| Eliminate Then Choose | Cross off wrong answers, then pick from what's left | Best strategy! Even eliminating one choice raises your odds. Eliminating two gives you a 50/50 shot. |
Here's something tricky that the ISEE loves to test: many English words have more than one meaning. The word "bat" can mean a flying animal or a thing you hit a baseball with. The word "light" can mean not heavy or it can mean brightness. Test makers use this to create extra-tricky distractors.
| Tricky Word | Meaning They Want | Distractor Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| BARK | The outer covering of a tree | The sound a dog makes — if "howl" is a choice, it's a trap! |
| RING | A circle shape | Jewelry for your finger — if "bracelet" is a choice, it's a trap! |
| SPRING | To jump or leap | A season of the year — if "summer" is a choice, it's a trap! |
When you see a word with multiple meanings, use the sentence clues (for sentence completions) to figure out which meaning the question is asking about. For synonyms, try plugging each answer back into a simple sentence to see which one fits.
Now it's your turn! Try these five problems. For each one, practice crossing off the unrelated or wrong answers before choosing. Remember: eliminate first, then pick!
You now know how to beat tricky ISEE questions by using elimination! Remember the four types of distractors: unrelated meanings (words that have nothing to do with the question), look-alike traps (words that sound similar but mean different things), opposite meanings (antonyms disguised as answer choices), and related-but-wrong words (same topic, different meaning).
Always follow the four-step process: read carefully, predict your own answer, cross off distractors, and then choose the best match. Start by eliminating the easiest wrong answers first — the totally unrelated ones. And remember, there's no penalty for guessing on the ISEE, so never leave a question blank! You've got this!