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USTET Abstract ReasoningAbstract Reasoning Question TypesCheat Sheet

Abstract Reasoning Question Types cheat sheet — the reference card you wish you had on exam day. Condensed from the full study notes, this is the high-yield core of Abstract Reasoning Question Types for USTET Abstract Reasoning. Download, print, revise.

Exam context

The University of Santo Tomas Entrance Test is conducted by University of Santo Tomas and is scheduled for Early Q4 2026. The Abstract Reasoning subtest is marked as "Core" in the official pattern, and Abstract Reasoning Question Types appears in position 1st of 5 in the USTET Abstract Reasoning review rotation. Passing mark: Competitive overall score. Recent USTET 2026 papers have drawn roughly a meaningful share of questions from this subject.

Abstract Reasoning Question Types - Cheat sheet

Your last-minute revision companion for mastering Abstract Reasoning patterns, analogies, and problem-solving strategies before the UPCAT and other college entrance tests.

Sections

Section Title

3-Step Problem Solving Method

Important Facts

  • Never guess immediately - always use the systematic 3-step approach
  • Focus on one building block at a time during inventory
  • The first rule you find often leads to discovering other rules
  • You may not need all rules - eliminate after each discovered rule
  • Transformations include rotation, reflection, size changes, and position shifts

Key Definitions

Term

Inventory

Example

Count triangles, circles, shaded areas, and their positions before finding patterns

Definition

Systematic identification of all building blocks in abstract figures (shapes, colors, numbers, orientations)

Term

Rule-Finding

Example

Large shape sides equals number of small shapes in each figure

Definition

Identifying transformations and relationships between building blocks across figures

Term

Elimination

Example

Use each rule to cross out options until only one remains

Definition

Applying discovered rules to systematically eliminate wrong answer choices

Common Values

Value

90° increments

Symbol

Quantity

Standard Rotation

Value

Clockwise direction

Symbol

Quantity

Common Movement

Section Title

Visual Pattern Types

Important Facts

  • Lines can fall progressively (becoming more horizontal each step)
  • Multiple independent elements can operate simultaneously
  • Dots and shapes often follow circular or linear paths
  • Shading patterns frequently alternate based on position rules
  • Elements can move in opposite directions within same figure

Key Definitions

Term

Progressive Movement

Example

Black dot moves clockwise around square corners: upper-left → upper-right → lower-right → lower-left

Definition

Objects move in consistent directions across figures (clockwise, linear, diagonal)

Term

Alternating Properties

Example

Shapes alternate between shaded/unshaded or horizontal/vertical orientations

Definition

Elements switch between two states in regular patterns

Term

Rotation Patterns

Example

Line rotates 90° counterclockwise each time or horseshoe rotates 90° counterclockwise

Definition

Objects rotate by fixed angles (90°, 180°, 270°) in each step

Diagrams To Know

  • Clockwise movement around square corners
  • Alternating diagonal orientations
  • Progressive line falling patterns
  • Multi-element independent movements

Section Title

Word Analogies

Important Facts

  • Always identify the relationship type before looking at answer choices
  • Common relationships: part-to-whole, cause-effect, synonym-antonym
  • Tool-to-user and function-to-purpose are frequent relationship types
  • Location relationships connect objects to their typical places
  • Degree relationships show intensity differences (hot-warm, large-huge)

Key Definitions

Term

Category Relationship

Example

Oxygen : Gas (oxygen is a type of gas)

Definition

First word belongs to category described by second word

Term

Measurement Relationship

Example

Distance : Mile (distance is measured in miles)

Definition

First word is measured using unit in second word

Term

Professional Relationship

Example

Heart : Cardiologist (cardiologist specializes in hearts)

Definition

Second word describes specialist who deals with first word

Common Values

Value

A, E, I, O, U

Symbol

V

Quantity

Vowels

Value

A=1, B=2...Z=26

Symbol

#

Quantity

Alphabet Positions

Section Title

Letter Analogies

Important Facts

  • Count positions from start of alphabet (A=1, B=2, C=3...)
  • Look for skipping patterns between consecutive letters
  • Vowels are A,E,I,O,U - all others are consonants
  • Mirror patterns and reversals are common transformations
  • Position shifts (moving letters forward/backward) create patterns

Key Definitions

Term

Alphabetical Order

Example

CD:FG :: PQ:UV (skip one letter between pairs)

Definition

Letters follow natural sequence patterns in the alphabet

Term

Vowel-Consonant Pattern

Example

ATL:EVX :: IPR:ORS (first letters are consecutive vowels A,E then I,O)

Definition

Letters alternate between vowels and consonants or group by type

Term

Reversal Pattern

Example

LAIN:NAIL :: EVOL:LOVE (reverse letter order)

Definition

First term becomes second term when letters are reversed

Section Title

Number Analogies

Important Facts

  • Always check for basic arithmetic operations first (+, -, ×, ÷)
  • Look for digit manipulation (sum, product, reversal)
  • Square and cube relationships are common
  • Prime number patterns occasionally appear
  • Remainder patterns when dividing by small numbers

Key Definitions

Term

Even-Odd Pattern

Example

84:51 :: 72:37 (first numbers even, second numbers odd)

Definition

Numbers alternate between even and odd properties

Term

Digit Sum

Example

234:9 :: 136:10 (2+3+4=9 and 1+3+6=10)

Definition

Sum of individual digits creates the relationship

Term

Multiplication Pattern

Example

3:21 :: 5:35 (multiply by 7: 3×7=21 and 5×7=35)

Definition

Second number is first number multiplied by constant

Common Values

Value

A=1, B=2, C=3...Z=26

Symbol

L→#

Quantity

Letter Values

Section Title

Mixed Analogies

Important Facts

  • Convert letters to numbers using A=1, B=2, C=3 system
  • May involve combining letter positions into multi-digit numbers
  • Can include mathematical operations on letter positions
  • Sometimes involves ASCII values or other coding systems

Key Definitions

Term

Letter-Number Mapping

Example

AB:12 :: CD:34 (A=1,B=2 gives 12; C=3,D=4 gives 34)

Definition

Letters correspond to their alphabetical position numbers

Must Remember

  • Always use the 3-step method: Inventory → Rule-Finding → Elimination
  • Never guess immediately - systematic approach saves time
  • One building block at a time during inventory phase
  • Clockwise movement: upper-left → upper-right → lower-right → lower-left
  • Standard rotations are 90°, 180°, 270° increments
  • Letter positions: A=1, B=2, C=3...Z=26 for mixed analogies
  • Common word relationships: category, measurement, professional, part-whole
  • Alternating patterns often involve two-state cycles
  • Multiple independent elements can move simultaneously
  • Eliminate answer choices after discovering each rule

Last Minute Tips

  • If stuck on visual patterns, focus on just one shape/element and ignore the rest temporarily
  • For analogies, say the relationship out loud: 'A is to B as C is to what?'
  • When time is short, look for the most obvious transformation first (rotation, reflection, movement)
  • In letter analogies, immediately check if it's simple alphabetical progression or reversal
  • For number analogies, always try multiplication by small numbers (2,3,4,5,7) before complex operations

Comparison Tables

Rows

Values

  • Track one element at a time
  • Rotation, movement, alternation
  • Eliminate after each rule

Property

Visual Series

Values

  • Identify relationship first
  • Category, measurement, professional
  • Think of obvious connection first

Property

Word Analogies

Values

  • Check alphabetical positions
  • Skip patterns, reversals
  • Convert to numbers when stuck

Property

Letter Analogies

Values

  • Try basic operations
  • Multiplication, digit sum
  • Start with simple math

Property

Number Analogies

Columns

  • Question Type
  • Key Strategy
  • Common Patterns
  • Time-Saving Tip

Table Title

Common Abstract Reasoning Question Types

Rows

Values

  • Circular motion following clock direction
  • Dot moves around square corners
  • Return to starting position

Property

Clockwise

Values

  • Straight line movement
  • Object slides left to right
  • Boundary limits

Property

Linear

Values

  • Switches between two positions/states
  • Top-bottom-top pattern
  • Two-state cycle

Property

Alternating

Values

  • Object spins around its center
  • Shape rotates 90° each step
  • Multiple of standard angles

Property

Rotating

Columns

  • Movement Type
  • Description
  • Example
  • Watch For

Table Title

Pattern Movement Types

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