In science, a catalyst would be a substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction; however, the definition when discussing language would be "someone or something spurring an event or action".
Do you have options
that would help me out a lot
Analogies are a staple of standardized tests. The PSAT, ACT, GRE, TOEFL exam, SAT, and FCAT, to name a few, contain significant analogy sections on the tests.
Answer: There in that cupboard are ants among the biscuits.
Explanation: I had that same question and got it right lol
<u>Answer:</u>
Slow is too quick as always is to never.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Slow is the antonym of quick. ‘Slow’ means less than the expected speed whereas ‘quick’ means doing something at great speed. An antonym is a word that is opposite in meaning to the given word.
A synonym is a word similar in meaning to the given word. The same relation of ‘opposites’ works between the other two words too. Always means ‘forever’ whereas ‘never’ means ‘not in the present, past or future’.
So, the analogy explains the relation between the two words of the two groups very well.