Here are some analogies from Word Masters you might want to try: (Scroll down after you try to them to find the answers. Find the BEST answer whose relationship matches most closely the relationship of the first pair of words.)
1. tree : fir : : _____________________ (branch : leaf / oak : acorn / flower : tulip / nest : bird / trunk : bark)
2. backpack : crammed : : bucket : ________________________ (brimming, mum, gleaming, hollow, gnarled)
3. dollars : wallet : : ______________________ (strands : rope / blossoms : garden / bristles : brush / arrows : quiver / prongs : fork)
4. orphan : family : : ________________________ (fork : prong / pauper : money / speaker : tirade / blossom : stem / quill : feather)
5. glance : gaze : : ___________________________ (gorge : nibble / insist : relent / sip : quaff / shrink : augment / bounce : carom)
6. air : balmy : : lake : _______________________ (tempestuous, mottled, torrential, placid, alluring)
Answers:
1. flower : tulip
2. brimming
3. arrows : quiver
4. pauper : money
5. sip : quaff
6. placid
Continental Math League Problems:
1. Paul can buy a dozen cookies for $3.60. If he spends $18.00 for cookies and sells them for $27.00, how much did he charge for each cookie?
2. Find the number that Y equals in this problem: 3 x 7 x Y = 63
5
3. Use 6 of the digits 1-7, each once, to make two 3-digit numbers whose sum is 670 and whose difference is 376.
Scroll down for answers:
1. 45 cents
2. 15
3. 523, 147