Word Puzzles
Analogies Worksheets
Complete word analogies — A is to B as C is to ___ — with a curated bank of relationships.
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What this tool does
A printable word-analogies worksheet. Each item follows the classic "A is to B as C is to ___" pattern, drawn from a curated bank that spans synonyms, antonyms, part-to-whole, category, and function relationships. Choose fill-in-the-blank or four-option multiple choice, set how many analogies you want, and download an A4 or US Letter PDF with an optional answer key.
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Ready-made Analogies Worksheets printables — free PDF downloads
No setup needed — download these print-ready analogies worksheets as free PDFs. Each one was made with the generator above, so you can recreate or fully customize any of them.

Analogies Worksheets
Print-ready analogies worksheets as a free PDF — made with the generator above so you can tweak and reprint.
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12 fill-in-the-blank analogies on A4, plus an answer key.
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Create Printable Analogies Worksheets for Vocabulary and Reasoning
Generate free printable analogies worksheets built around the classic “A is to B as C is to ___” pattern. Every sheet is drawn from a curated bank of word relationships, so the analogies stay fair, solvable, and age-appropriate.
Download A4 or US Letter PDFs for classroom, homework, and home-learning use. Pick fill-in-the-blank or multiple-choice format, choose how many analogies you want, and an optional answer key prints on a following page for fast marking.
Analogy practice builds vocabulary and verbal reasoning at the same time, which is why it appears in comprehension lessons, gifted-and-talented programmes, and entrance-exam prep alike.
Why use this analogies generator?
Analogies ask students to spot the relationship between the first pair of words and apply the same relationship to complete the second pair. That single skill quietly strengthens vocabulary, categorisation, and logical thinking. Use these worksheets for:
- vocabulary and word-relationship lessons
- verbal reasoning and critical-thinking practice
- 11-plus, SAT, and entrance-exam preparation
- reading-comprehension warm-ups and starter tasks
- gifted-and-talented enrichment activities
- homeschool language-arts routines
- tutor-led one-to-one sessions
Because the bank is reshuffled on every generate, you can print a fresh sheet each week without repeating the same order.
The five relationship types
The built-in bank spans five kinds of analogy, so a single sheet exposes students to varied reasoning rather than one trick repeated:
- Synonyms — big is to large as tiny is to small.
- Antonyms — hot is to cold as up is to down.
- Part to whole — finger is to hand as toe is to foot.
- Category or member — rose is to flower as oak is to tree.
- Function or use — pen is to write as knife is to cut.
Naming the relationship out loud is a great teaching prompt: once a child can say “these are opposites” or “this is a part of that”, the missing word usually follows.
What you can customise
The generator keeps the options focused:
- Mode: fill-in-the-blank (write the word) or multiple-choice (circle one of four options)
- Analogy count: six to twenty-four items, spread neatly across as many pages as needed
- Answer key: include following pages that print the correct word for every item
- Name and date fields: turn on for classwork and homework
- Paper type: download as A4 or US Letter PDF
- Worksheet title: set your own heading
In multiple-choice mode the engine adds three plausible distractors from the word bank so each question has one clear best answer and three tempting decoys.
How to use the tool
- Choose the mode: fill-in-the-blank or multiple-choice.
- Set how many analogies you want on the sheet.
- Toggle the answer key on or off.
- Decide whether to show the name and date fields.
- Pick A4 or US Letter.
- Click Generate and check the live preview.
- Download or print the PDF.
Worked example
For a Year 6 reasoning warm-up, choose multiple-choice, twelve analogies, answer key on. One item might read “petal is to flower as leaf is to ?” with options such as (a) branch, (b) tree, (c) garden, (d) seed. The student circles (b) tree because a leaf is a part of a tree in the same way a petal is a part of a flower. On the answer-key page, each numbered item lists the correct choice, so the whole class can be marked in a single pass.
Notes and limitations
- The engine draws from a fixed curated bank of fifty original analogies, so very technical or rare vocabulary is not included.
- Some words could arguably fit more than one relationship; the answer key prints the intended answer for each item.
- Multiple-choice distractors are sampled from the bank and reshuffled each time, so repeated sheets look different even with the same items.
- Larger counts flow onto extra pages automatically; twelve or fewer sit comfortably on one sheet.
- Printed output varies slightly by printer and browser margin settings; print at 100% scale.
Teaching tip: read the bridge sentence
The fastest way to solve an analogy is to turn the first pair into a short “bridge” sentence and reuse it on the second pair. For “oven is to bake as freezer is to ___”, the bridge is “you use an oven to bake”, so “you use a freezer to freeze”. Teaching this one habit turns analogies from guesswork into a reliable, repeatable method, and it transfers straight to the verbal-reasoning sections of most entrance exams.
Designed for A4 and US Letter printing
This worksheet generator supports both A4 and US Letter paper sizes. Up to a dozen analogies fit comfortably on a single sheet in either format, and larger sets simply continue onto clean extra pages, so there is always enough room to write or circle answers.
FAQs
Quick answers
What is a word analogy?
A word analogy shows a relationship between two words and asks you to complete a second pair with the same relationship, as in "big is to large as tiny is to small".
What relationship types are covered?
Five: synonyms, antonyms, part-to-whole, category or member, and function or use. Each generated sheet mixes items from across the bank.
What is the difference between the two modes?
Fill-in-the-blank asks the student to write the missing word on a line. Multiple-choice gives four options — the answer plus three distractors — to circle.
How many analogies fit on a page?
Up to twelve sit comfortably on one sheet. Choose more and the worksheet flows onto extra pages automatically, up to twenty-four.
Is there an answer key?
Yes. Toggle the answer-key option to add following pages that print the correct word for every numbered item.
How do the multiple-choice distractors work?
The engine samples three other words from the curated bank as decoys, then shuffles them with the correct answer so its position varies each time.
Can I add my own analogies?
Not yet — the tool uses a fixed curated bank of original, age-appropriate analogies to keep every answer key reliable.
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