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Making Inferences

Reading Comprehension: Making Inferences

Making Inferences

Making Inferences

What you'll learn

  • An inference is a smart guess based on clues in the passage — it is not stated directly, but the clues point to it.
  • Good readers combine clues with what they already know to figure out the "hidden" meaning.
  • To answer "what can you tell", "what is likely true", or "why did this happen" questions.
  • To find the specific clue (evidence) that supports an inference.

Key concepts

Level 1 — Reading between the lines

Verbal: Some things in a passage are never said directly, but the details make them clear.

Clue in passageWhat we can infer
"She wore a sweater, gloves, and a cap."The weather is cold.
"The plate was empty with crumbs on it."Someone already ate the food.

Level 2 — Combining multiple clues

Verbal: Sometimes you need more than one clue together to make a good inference.

Example: "The dog wagged its tail and ran to the door, barking happily." → Combining "wagged tail" (happy) + "ran to the door" (excited about someone arriving) tells us someone the dog loves has come home.

Real-life: When your friend keeps looking at the clock and packing again and again, you can infer they are excited about going somewhere soon — even if they don't say it.

Worked example

Passage: "The ground was wet with puddles everywhere, but the sun was now shining brightly."

What can you infer?

Step 1 — Wet ground and puddles suggest water fell recently.
Step 2 — Sun shining now means the weather has since cleared.
Answer: It had rained earlier, and the weather has now cleared up.

Common mistakes

MistakeWhy it happensFix
Choosing an idea not supported by any clueGuessing randomlyBase every inference on a clue in the text
Using only outside knowledge, ignoring the passageRelying on personal experience aloneCombine passage clues with what you know
Picking the most dramatic answerDistracted by exciting optionsChoose the answer the clues actually support
Confusing a direct statement with an inferenceNot noticing what is directly saidAn inference is never directly stated in the text

Quick check

  • Passage: "He wore a raincoat and carried an umbrella." What can you infer about the weather?
  • Passage: "The trophy shone on the shelf, and everyone clapped for her." What can you infer happened?
  • Name one clue that helps you infer someone is happy.
  • Stretch: Write two sentences with clues, then ask a friend to infer what is happening.

Revision tip: After reading any short passage, ask "What does this tell me that isn't written directly?"

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Making Inferences.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example
  • Common mistakes

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