Every SAT passage was written for a reason. Every sentence in that passage plays a role. This session teaches you to see both — and to describe them in the language the SAT expects.
Every SAT R&W passage has one dominant purpose. Identifying it before reading answer choices is the fastest path to the correct answer.
When asked about a specific sentence's function, the correct answer uses one of these verbs (or a close synonym). Learning these gives you the vocabulary to pre-answer before reading the choices.
| Function Verb | What the Sentence Does | Typical Position in Passage |
|---|---|---|
| introduce | Presents the topic or main claim for the first time | First sentence |
| establish | Sets up context, a definition, or a baseline fact | Opening sentences |
| support / illustrate | Provides evidence, an example, or a detail that backs the main claim | Middle sentences |
| concede | Acknowledges a counterargument or opposing view the author will address | After main claim |
| contrast | Highlights a difference between two things or ideas | After a comparison is set up |
| qualify | Adds a limitation, exception, or condition to a claim | After the main claim |
| transition | Moves the passage from one topic or point to another | Between paragraphs or sections |
| conclude | Draws together the passage's argument or wraps up the discussion | Final sentence |
| define | Gives the meaning of a term or concept | Near introduction of term |
| challenge | Questions or pushes back against a previously accepted claim | After establishing the conventional view |
| synthesize | Brings together multiple ideas or findings into a unified point | Concluding or mid-passage |
| anticipate | Raises a question, problem, or objection the passage will then answer | Opening or after the main claim |
Example passage sentence: "The early settlers faced brutal winters, scarce food supplies, and widespread disease."
The question: "The underlined sentence primarily serves to…"
Which choice best states the main purpose of the text?
Key insight: A is wrong because the author presents critics' views but never personally argues. D is wrong because the passage is balanced — it also presents the Indigenous sovereignty critique. B is correct because it accurately names the neutral, informative purpose.
The underlined sentence primarily serves to:
Key insight: A is the content trap — accurate but answers "what does it say?" not "what does it do?" B is correct because it uses a function verb (provide) and describes the sentence's role (supporting evidence). Always check whether the answer uses a function verb.
14 questions mixing whole-passage purpose and sentence function across all four genres. Timed section includes harder passages where purpose and function are more subtly distinguished.
Open Session 4 Exercises →