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DOST Scholarship

Verbal Reasoning

"DOST-SEI Verbal Reasoning! Logic through language - analogies, relationships, at critical analysis. Sharpen your verbal intelligence, iskolar! This section tests your ability to understand word relationships, draw logical conclusions, and analyze arguments using language-based reasoning."

1. Verbal Analogies 🔄

Analogies test your ability to recognize relationships between words. The format is: A is to B as C is to ____. You must identify the relationship and apply it to find the answer.

Relationship Type Description Example
Synonym Words with similar meanings Happy : Joyful :: Sad : Melancholy
Antonym Words with opposite meanings Hot : Cold :: Light : Dark
Part : Whole Component is part of a larger thing Petal : Flower :: Finger : Hand
Whole : Part Larger thing contains the component Tree : Branch :: House : Room
Cause : Effect One thing leads to another Fire : Smoke :: Rain : Flood
Tool : Function Object used for specific purpose Hammer : Nail :: Saw : Wood
Worker : Tool Professional uses specific equipment Carpenter : Hammer :: Chef : Knife
Degree/Intensity Same quality at different levels Warm : Hot :: Cool : Cold
Category : Example General class and specific member Fruit : Apple :: Vegetable : Carrot
Object : Characteristic Thing and its quality Sugar : Sweet :: Lemon : Sour

💡 Analogy Solving Strategy:

  1. Create a sentence describing A's relationship to B
  2. Apply the same sentence to C and the answer choices
  3. The answer that fits the sentence pattern is correct

Example: "A PETAL is part of a FLOWER" → "A FINGER is part of a HAND"

2. Sentence Completion 📝

These questions test vocabulary and logical reasoning. You must choose the word or phrase that best completes the sentence.

Signal Words to Watch:

  • However, but, although, despite: Expect contrast
  • Therefore, thus, consequently: Expect result
  • Moreover, furthermore, also: Expect addition
  • Because, since, due to: Expect cause

Solving Steps:

  1. Read the entire sentence
  2. Identify signal words
  3. Predict what type of word fits
  4. Eliminate wrong choices
  5. Check grammatical fit

Common Patterns:

Contrast: "Although he was tired, he remained _____" → Answer: energetic/alert (opposite of tired)
Cause-Effect: "Because of the drought, crops _____" → Answer: withered/died (effect of drought)
Definition: "A _____, or fear of heights, can be debilitating" → Answer: acrophobia

3. Logical Arguments & Critical Reasoning 🧠

These questions test your ability to analyze arguments, identify assumptions, and draw valid conclusions.

Question Type What It Asks Strategy
Main Conclusion "What conclusion can be drawn?" Find what the premises support
Assumption "Which assumption is made?" Find unstated but necessary premise
Strengthen "Which strengthens the argument?" Find evidence supporting conclusion
Weaken "Which weakens the argument?" Find counterevidence or flaw
Inference "What can be inferred?" Find what must be true based on given info

Argument Structure:

  • Premise: The evidence or facts given
  • Conclusion: The point being argued (often after "therefore," "thus," "so")
  • Assumption: Unstated belief connecting premise to conclusion

4. Common Logical Fallacies ⚠️

Recognizing flawed reasoning helps you evaluate arguments and avoid incorrect answers.

Fallacy Description Example
Ad Hominem Attacking the person, not the argument "You can't trust his research; he's too young."
Hasty Generalization Drawing broad conclusion from few examples "I met two rude locals, so everyone there is rude."
False Cause Assuming correlation equals causation "Sales increased after the ad ran, so the ad caused it."
Appeal to Authority Citing unqualified authority as proof "This actor says the medicine works, so it must."
Circular Reasoning Using conclusion as premise "He's trustworthy because he always tells the truth."
False Dilemma Presenting only two options when more exist "You're either with us or against us."

5. Syllogisms & Deductive Reasoning 📐

Syllogisms are logical arguments with two premises and a conclusion. Understanding valid syllogistic forms is crucial for verbal reasoning.

Valid Syllogism:

Premise 1: All mammals are warm-blooded.

Premise 2: Dogs are mammals.

Conclusion: Therefore, dogs are warm-blooded. ✓

Invalid Syllogism:

Premise 1: All cats have fur.

Premise 2: My dog has fur.

Conclusion: Therefore, my dog is a cat. ✗

Key Terms:

  • All A are B: Universal affirmative - every single A is B
  • No A are B: Universal negative - not a single A is B
  • Some A are B: Particular affirmative - at least one A is B
  • Some A are not B: Particular negative - at least one A is not B

💡 Tip: Use Venn Diagrams!

Drawing circles to represent categories helps visualize relationships and test whether conclusions are valid.

6. Word Classification & Odd One Out 🎯

These questions ask you to identify which word doesn't belong to a group based on meaning, category, or relationship.

Classification Bases:

  • Category: Apple, Banana, Carrot, Orange (Carrot = vegetable)
  • Part of speech: Run, Jump, Beautiful, Swim (Beautiful = adjective)
  • Meaning relationship: Happy, Joyful, Sad, Elated (Sad = antonym)
  • Degree: Warm, Hot, Boiling, Cold (Cold = opposite direction)
  • Association: Doctor, Hospital, School, Nurse (School = different setting)
  • Function: Car, Bus, Train, Helicopter (Helicopter = air travel)

7. Practice Questions 📝

Question 1: Analogy

AUTHOR : BOOK :: COMPOSER : ?

A) Music B) Orchestra C) Symphony D) Instrument

Answer: C) Symphony

Explanation: An author creates a book; a composer creates a symphony. Both are creator : creation relationships.

Question 2: Sentence Completion

"Despite her _____ manner, she was actually quite nervous about the presentation."

A) anxious B) confident C) worried D) timid

Answer: B) confident

Explanation: "Despite" signals contrast. Her outward manner must be opposite of nervous (confident).

Question 3: Logical Conclusion

All scholarship recipients maintain good grades. Maria is a scholarship recipient. What can we conclude?

Answer: Maria maintains good grades.

Explanation: Valid syllogism: All A are B. Maria is A. Therefore, Maria is B.

Question 4: Strengthen the Argument

Argument: "Studying in groups improves test scores. Students should form study groups."

Which strengthens this argument?

A) Some students prefer studying alone.

B) A study found group learners scored 20% higher than solo learners.

C) Study groups require more time.

Answer: B) A study found group learners scored 20% higher.

Explanation: This provides empirical evidence supporting the claim.

Question 5: Odd One Out

Which word does NOT belong: Surgeon, Nurse, Teacher, Pharmacist

Answer: Teacher

Explanation: All others are healthcare professionals. Teacher works in education.

Test Your Knowledge! 🧠

Ready ka na ba? Take the practice quiz for Verbal Reasoning to reinforce what you just learned.

Start Practice Quiz 📝

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