Transitions

Choosing the right transition word to connect ideas (support, contrast, cause-effect, sequence)

Two sentences need connecting. The question asks: which transition word fits the relationship?

Why this matters

Transition questions appear on every Digital SAT. Students who rely on "what sounds right" get burned because the SAT deliberately pairs plausible-sounding words with wrong relationships. The real skill: read the two sentences, name the relationship, then pick the word. There are five relationship types, each with its own set of correct transitions and its own set of pitfalls.

The five patterns

The biggest trap: confusing sequence with cause and effect. Just because Event B happened after Event A doesn't mean A caused B. "Afterward" places events in time; "As a result" claims a causal link. The SAT loves offering "Consequently" when the relationship is purely chronological — and "Subsequently" when there's a real cause-and-effect chain.

Learn the pattern. Then lock it in.

The SAT repeats question patterns. Miss them, and you lose points. Recognize them fast, and you gain points. JustLockedIn shows you which patterns are hurting your score and gives you focused practice to fix them.

Start practicing →