Classification
What you'll learn
- Identify the item that does not belong in a group
- Recognize grouping by category, property, function, and structure
- Apply four types of classification to both word and number problems
- Eliminate distractors using logical reasoning
Key concepts
What is Classification?
Classification means putting items into groups based on a shared property. In reasoning problems, you are given a set of items — usually four or five — and asked to find the odd one out: the one item that does NOT share the common property.
Core rule: Three (or more) items share ONE specific property. The odd one out lacks that exact property. Always name the property before eliminating.
Type 1 — Classification by Category (Semantic Group)
Items belong to a recognizable real-world category.
| Group | Members | Odd One Out | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fruits | Mango, Apple, Carrot, Banana | Carrot | Carrot is a vegetable |
| Planets | Mars, Venus, Moon, Jupiter | Moon | Moon is a natural satellite |
| Mammals | Tiger, Whale, Eagle, Dolphin | Eagle | Eagle is a bird |
Worked Example:
Rose, Lily, Cactus, Tulip
- Rose, Lily, Tulip are flowering plants → Cactus does not produce typical flowers → Cactus is the odd one out.
Type 2 — Classification by Property
Items share a mathematical or physical property.
| Property | Group | Odd One Out |
|---|---|---|
| Even numbers | 12, 18, 24, 27, 36 | 27 (odd number) |
| Perfect squares | 4, 9, 16, 25, 28 | 28 (not a perfect square) |
| Multiples of 3 | 9, 12, 18, 22, 27 | 22 (not a multiple of 3) |
| Prime numbers | 2, 3, 5, 7, 9 | 9 (9 = 3 × 3, not prime) |
Tip: For number sets, always check: even/odd, prime, square, cube, multiple of a number. One of these will usually reveal the pattern.
Type 3 — Classification by Function
Items are grouped by what they do or are used for.
| Function | Group | Odd One Out | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| Writing tools | Pen, Pencil, Chalk, Eraser | Eraser | Used to erase, not write |
| Transport | Car, Bus, Train, Bridge | Bridge | Bridge is infrastructure, not a vehicle |
| Measuring tools | Ruler, Thermometer, Scale, Hammer | Hammer | Hammer is a striking tool, not for measuring |
Worked Example:
Knife, Axe, Saw, Needle
- Knife, Axe, Saw all cut → Needle does not cut, it pierces/stitches → Needle is the odd one out.
Type 4 — Classification by Structure or Letter Pattern
For word-based problems, look at spelling patterns or letter counts.
| Pattern | Group | Odd One Out |
|---|---|---|
| 4-letter words | COAT, BOAT, STAR, BREAD | BREAD (5 letters) |
| Contains a vowel pair | BOOT, COOL, RAIN, SEAL | SEAL has E-A, but check the vowel sequence carefully |
| All have double letters | BERRY, BUTTER, HAPPY, BATON | BATON (no double letter) |
Important: A word group may look like a semantic category, but the actual trick is the letter pattern. Always check BOTH meaning and spelling.
How to Approach Any Classification Problem
- List the possible property: category, physical property, function, or structure.
- Check each item against that property.
- If all four seem to fit, look for a more specific sub-property.
- State the odd one out and give the reason — this trains you to avoid guessing.
Common traps:
- Colour (all red fruits — one might be green)
- Origin (things from water vs land)
- Number of syllables in a word
Quick check
- Find the odd one out: Chair, Table, Stool, Bench, Sofa → Which one does NOT have four legs?
- Find the odd one out: 36, 49, 64, 75, 81
- Find the odd one out: Surgeon, Nurse, Teacher, Pharmacist
- Find the odd one out: BEAK, DEAL, FEAT, LEMON
- What type of classification is being tested when you group items as "things that fly"?
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Classification.
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