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Digital SAT Information and Ideas: central ideas, evidence and inferences quiz quiz

12questions. Pick an answer and you'll see why right away.

  1. What should you write in your own words before viewing the choices on a central-idea question?

  2. A choice on a detail question states a true real-world fact that the passage never mentions. It is:

  3. A claim is that a bird sings at dawn to defend its territory. Which is the strongest support?

  4. When a stem says 'Which finding, if true, would most strongly support the claim?', you should:

  5. On a quantitative-evidence question, what should you read first?

  6. A line graph rises to a peak at hour 6, then falls. A text says the value 'peaked before declining.' Which is supported?

  7. Which best describes a good inference on the Digital SAT?

  8. Absolute words like 'always,' 'never,' 'all,' and 'only' in an inference choice usually signal:

  9. For a 'Which choice most logically completes the text?' question, the final connective ('therefore,' 'however,' 'because'):

  10. Why read the whole short passage rather than skim it?

  11. When two choices both seem partly right, the most reliable way to decide is to:

  12. A passage links a new dam to a yearly decline in a town's fishing catch and ends 'This suggests the dam ___.' Which completion is safest?