Inferences

Drawing logical conclusions from what the text says or implies

The text gives you the pieces. The question asks: what logically follows?

Why this matters

Inference questions feel tricky because the answer is never stated outright. But the SAT doesn't want creative thinking — it wants airtight logic. There are four specific reasoning patterns the test uses, and each one has a predictable structure. Once you recognize which pattern is in play, the correct inference becomes obvious.

The four patterns

The biggest trap: choosing an answer that could be true over one that must be true. The SAT loves plausible-sounding options that go one step beyond what the text actually supports. Stick to what the evidence forces you to conclude — nothing more.

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.

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