A section of the English User Guides that attempts to clarify differences in meaning between words which, because they look or sound very similar, tend to cause confusion among both foreign students of English and native speakers alike.
A website that contains worksheets for writing for different types of audiences, fact vs. opinion, capitalization, punctuation, subject/predicate, subject-verb agreement, pronouns\ antecedent, and run-on sentences.
There are many different types of analogy relationships: use or function, part-to-whole, classification, proportion or degree, cause and effect, similarity or difference. In each of these verbal analogies, you will be given a set of two related words, followed by a third word and four answer choices.