Core
Blood Relations (Advanced): Core
Core
Blood Relations (Advanced)
What you'll learn
- Solve family relationship puzzles using given clues.
- Trace relationships across generations (grandparents, parents, siblings, cousins, in-laws).
- Use relationship charts/family trees as a solving tool.
Key concepts
- Common relationship terms: father's brother = uncle, mother's sister = aunt, brother's son = nephew, sister's daughter = niece.
- Cousin = child of your uncle or aunt.
- Build a simple family tree diagram while solving — write names/symbols and connect them with relationship labels as you read each clue.
- Pay attention to gender clues ("she", "his", "her") to correctly assign relationships (e.g., "father's mother" is always grandmother, regardless of the pronoun used elsewhere).
Worked example
A is B's father. B is C's sister. How is A related to C?
A is B's father -> A is a parent of B.
B is C's sister -> B and C are siblings (same parents).
So A, being B's father, is also C's father.
Answer: A is C's father.
Common mistakes
- Confusing "nephew" (brother's/sister's son) with "cousin" (uncle's/aunt's child).
- Forgetting to check gender when the puzzle depends on it (e.g., "father's sister" = aunt, always).
- Not drawing a simple diagram, which can cause errors in multi-step relationship chains.
Quick check
- If P is Q's mother and Q is R's brother, how is P related to R?
- What do you call your father's brother's son?
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Blood Relations (Advanced).
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
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