Master Analogical Inference - Beginner Level Problems Analogical Inference BEGINNER

Excel in competitive exams with this skill builder ⚡ worksheet on Analogical Inference. Worksheet 3 of 10 contains 20 beginner-level problems. Target your step-by-step problem solving skills while practicing analogical inference practice, analogical inference for competitive exams, and how to solve analogical inference.

📝 Worksheet 3 of 10 • 20 questions • ⏱️ Estimated time: 20 minutes • 🎯 Beginner level

What you'll learn in this worksheet:
Your progress through Analogical Inference
Worksheet 3 of 10 (22% complete)

Question 1

Analogical reasoning: "The CEO guides a company like a captain guides a ship." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: The CEO guides a company like a captain guides a ship.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: The CEO is responsible for the company's direction and safety, just as a captain is for a ship

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 2

Analogical reasoning: "Books store knowledge. Libraries store books." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Books store knowledge. Libraries store books.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Libraries are repositories of knowledge (by storing books, libraries indirectly store the knowledge within them)

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 3

Analogical reasoning: "Plants need water to survive. Fish live in water." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Plants need water to survive. Fish live in water.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Fish have abundant access to what they need to survive (water provides oxygen and habitat like soil provides water and nutrients for plants)

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 4

Analogical reasoning: "Plants need water to survive. Fish live in water." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Plants need water to survive. Fish live in water.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Fish have abundant access to what they need to survive (water provides oxygen and habitat like soil provides water and nutrients for plants)

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 5

Analogical reasoning: "The CEO guides a company like a captain guides a ship." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: The CEO guides a company like a captain guides a ship.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: The CEO is responsible for the company's direction and safety, just as a captain is for a ship

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 6

Analogical reasoning: "Plants need water to survive. Fish live in water." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Plants need water to survive. Fish live in water.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Fish have abundant access to what they need to survive (water provides oxygen and habitat like soil provides water and nutrients for plants)

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 7

Analogical reasoning: "Birds build nests for their young. Bees build hives." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Birds build nests for their young. Bees build hives.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Bees build hives for their young (the hive serves the same protective function as a nest)

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 8

Analogical reasoning: "Students study to pass exams. Athletes train to win competitions." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Students study to pass exams. Athletes train to win competitions.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Training serves the same preparatory function for athletes as studying does for students

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 9

Analogical reasoning: "Birds build nests for their young. Bees build hives." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Birds build nests for their young. Bees build hives.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Bees build hives for their young (the hive serves the same protective function as a nest)

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 10

Analogical reasoning: "Birds build nests for their young. Bees build hives." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Birds build nests for their young. Bees build hives.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Bees build hives for their young (the hive serves the same protective function as a nest)

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 11

Analogical reasoning: "Books store knowledge. Libraries store books." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Books store knowledge. Libraries store books.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Libraries are repositories of knowledge (by storing books, libraries indirectly store the knowledge within them)

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 12

Analogical reasoning: "Learning a language is like learning an instrument." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Learning a language is like learning an instrument.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Both require consistent practice, feedback loops, and progressive skill building

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 13

Analogical reasoning: "A heart pumps blood through the body. A water pump circulates water through a system." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: A heart pumps blood through the body. A water pump circulates water through a system.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: The heart is the body's central circulatory pump

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 14

Analogical reasoning: "Learning a language is like learning an instrument." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Learning a language is like learning an instrument.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Both require consistent practice, feedback loops, and progressive skill building

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 15

Analogical reasoning: "The CEO guides a company like a captain guides a ship." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: The CEO guides a company like a captain guides a ship.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: The CEO is responsible for the company's direction and safety, just as a captain is for a ship

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 16

Analogical reasoning: "Books store knowledge. Libraries store books." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Books store knowledge. Libraries store books.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Libraries are repositories of knowledge (by storing books, libraries indirectly store the knowledge within them)

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 17

Analogical reasoning: "Plants need water to survive. Fish live in water." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Plants need water to survive. Fish live in water.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Fish have abundant access to what they need to survive (water provides oxygen and habitat like soil provides water and nutrients for plants)

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 18

Analogical reasoning: "Learning a language is like learning an instrument." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Learning a language is like learning an instrument.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Both require consistent practice, feedback loops, and progressive skill building

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 19

Analogical reasoning: "Students study to pass exams. Athletes train to win competitions." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Students study to pass exams. Athletes train to win competitions.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Training serves the same preparatory function for athletes as studying does for students

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.

Question 20

Analogical reasoning: "Students study to pass exams. Athletes train to win competitions." What is the most reasonable inference by analogy?
This uses analogical reasoning: Students study to pass exams. Athletes train to win competitions.

The analogy maps relationships from the source domain to the target domain, suggesting: Training serves the same preparatory function for athletes as studying does for students

Analogical inferences are suggestive but not logically certain; the strength depends on the relevance and similarity of the mapped features.
Previous Worksheet Next Worksheet