Learn English – An analogy of “punish is to berate”

analogy

I was told this would probably be the most suitable forum for this question.

I found this analogy here. The correct answer is supposedly D, but I don't understand why. My reasoning went like this: meaning-wise, both punish and berate are members of the "misdeeds" family. Before you get punished, you most likely get berated (scolded). My thought was C. would be the right answer, because both those words are in the same family, meaning-wise (both mean to do an action that takes you up off the floor/ground). It wouldn't have been my favorite answer, if there had been a better one.

Can anyone explain why D. is the right answer?

Punish is to berate as

  • A. leafy is to green
  • B. deep is to ocean
  • C. jump is to leap
  • D. soak is to dampen
  • E. hike is to trek

Best Answer

You have checked dictionaries (good!) so you know the meanings of berate and punish.

Berating is a "telling off" and is just done with the voice. On the other hand, punishment could be physical (you could be beaten or imprisoned, for example).

So punishment is more intense than berating.

Let’s look at the options

A. leafy is to green (Being green may be an aspect of being leafy)
B. deep is to ocean (deep is a property of the ocean)
C. jump is to leap (A leap is a big jump)
D. soak is to dampen (soaking is a more intense action than dampening)
E. hike is to trek (synonyms or trek is a series of hikes)

Of these, (D) is the only one in which the first word represents a more intense version of the second. In (C) a leap is more intense than a jump and similarly a trek may be longer or more challenging than a hike. (A) and (B) are impossible as they aren't synonyms in which one means a more intense action, they are nouns and adjectives.

Related Topic