MAT Practice Questions: Miller Analogies Test Prep

MAT practice questions with answer explanations for all analogy types. Free Miller Analogies Test prep covering semantic, association, and logical analogies.

MAT Practice Questions: What You Need to Know

MAT practice questions are the single most effective way to prepare for the Miller Analogies Test. The MAT is unusual among graduate admissions exams — it tests pure analogical reasoning across a massive range of content areas, and the only real way to get good at it is to do lots of analogies under timed conditions.

This guide covers the types of MAT practice questions you'll encounter, how to approach each analogy type strategically, and what to do when you don't know the content behind the question (which will happen — the MAT is designed that way).

What Do MAT Practice Questions Look Like?

Every MAT question follows the same four-term format: A : B :: C : D. You're given three of the four terms and must select the fourth from four answer choices. The trick is that the relationship can exist between any pair of terms — not just A:B and C:D.

Specifically, the MAT tests four relationship positions:

  • A : B :: C : ? — Most common. Find what completes the second pair based on the A:B relationship.
  • A : ? :: C : D — Find the missing second term. The C:D relationship drives the answer.
  • ? : B :: C : D — Least common. Work backward from both pairs.
  • A : B :: ? : D — Understand both pairs and infer the missing third term.

Before you answer any MAT practice question, always identify which position is missing and what relationship type connects the pairs. That two-second analysis prevents a huge number of careless errors.

The 6 Main Types of MAT Analogy Relationships

The Miller Analogies Test uses a consistent set of relationship categories across all content areas. Learning to recognize these quickly is the core skill for MAT prep:

1. Semantic Relationships

These involve word meaning — synonyms, antonyms, and degree of meaning. Example: COLD : FRIGID :: WARM : scorching. The relationship is degree (cold and frigid are the same thing, but frigid is more extreme). Same pattern applies to the second pair.

2. Classification Relationships

Things that belong to categories or classes. Example: ROBIN : BIRD :: SALMON : fish. The first term is a type of the second. Or reversed: MAMMAL : DOG :: REPTILE : lizard.

3. Association Relationships

Items connected by function, location, or cultural association. Example: HAMMER : NAIL :: NEEDLE : thread. A hammer works with a nail; a needle works with thread. These are among the most common MAT question types.

4. Part-Whole Relationships

One term is a component of the other. Example: CHAPTER : BOOK :: VERSE : poem. A chapter is part of a book; a verse is part of a poem.

5. Mathematical / Quantitative Relationships

Numerical patterns, ratios, or mathematical operations. Example: 4 : 16 :: 3 : 9. Four squared is 16; three squared is 9.

6. Logical Relationships

Cause and effect, characteristic attributes, or definitional relationships. Example: DROUGHT : FAMINE :: INFECTION : illness. A drought causes famine; an infection causes illness.

MAT Practice Question Strategy: A Step-by-Step Approach

When you sit down with MAT practice questions, work through each one systematically. Here's the process that high scorers use:

  1. Identify the missing position — Is it A, B, C, or D that's missing? This determines which relationship you're solving.
  2. State the relationship out loud (or in your head) — Before looking at the answer choices, form a sentence: "A is to B as C is to ____" or whatever fits the position. This prevents answer choices from anchoring your thinking.
  3. Apply the relationship to the known pair — Confirm that your sentence works for the complete pair before applying it to find the answer.
  4. Check all four answer choices — Even if one seems immediately right, always glance at the others. MAT distractors are designed to exploit common mistakes.
  5. Use content knowledge when you have it; use logic when you don't — If you don't know what a word means, eliminate answer choices that clearly don't fit the relationship pattern and guess from what remains.

MAT Content Areas: What Knowledge Do You Need?

The MAT tests knowledge across five broad content areas, each accounting for roughly 20% of the exam:

  • Humanities — Literature, art, architecture, music, mythology, philosophy
  • Social science — History, economics, anthropology, politics, geography
  • Natural science — Biology, chemistry, physics, astronomy, earth science
  • Mathematics — Arithmetic, algebra, geometry, statistics
  • Language and vocabulary — Definitions, etymology, word relationships

You won't know everything in every content area — that's expected. The MAT includes some questions designed to be answered only by specialists in particular fields. Your job is to maximize your score in the areas where you're already knowledgeable and use strong reasoning skills to pick up points in unfamiliar territory.

Common Mistakes on MAT Practice Questions

These are the errors that cost test-takers the most points:

  • Assuming A:B is always the key relationship — Sometimes the core analogy is A:C or B:D. Always check all possible pairing patterns before committing to an answer.
  • Ignoring part of speech — If A is a noun, the answer in the same position should usually also be a noun. MAT answer choices sometimes include the right word in the wrong form, and those are distractors.
  • Spending too long on hard questions — The MAT gives you 60 minutes for 120 questions — 30 seconds per question. If you can't crack a question in 60–90 seconds, mark it and move on. Come back if time allows.
  • Not studying across all five content areas — Most test-takers study hardest in their field. If you're a biology student, your humanities knowledge is probably weaker — which means the humanities questions are where you'll gain the most points from targeted prep.

How to Use MAT Practice Questions Effectively

Here's what separates productive MAT practice from wheel-spinning:

  • Timed practice from day one — Don't practice without a timer. The 30-second-per-question pace of the real MAT requires muscle memory, not just knowledge.
  • Review every wrong answer — For each miss, identify whether you failed due to content knowledge (didn't know the word/concept) or reasoning (misidentified the relationship type). These require different fixes.
  • Build vocabulary systematically — MAT vocabulary questions favor uncommon words and archaic meanings. Spend 15 minutes per day on vocabulary in addition to analogy practice.
  • Use released MAT questions — Pearson publishes real MAT sample questions. These are more valuable than third-party practice sets because they match the actual difficulty and format exactly.

Review our MAT exam prep guide for a full breakdown of scoring, registration, and how graduate schools use MAT scores. For the Miller Analogies Test overview, including what differentiates the MAT from GRE and other grad admissions tests, start there before drilling individual practice sets.

Building Your MAT Practice Routine

A consistent daily practice routine does more for your MAT score than any single long study session. Here's what works for most test-takers:

  • Daily analogy sets — Do 30–40 timed MAT-style questions every day. Keep track of your accuracy by relationship type and content area.
  • Vocabulary study — Spend 15 minutes per day learning 10–15 new words from a graduate-level vocabulary list. Focus especially on words that appear in multiple definitions or have unexpected meanings (these are MAT favorites).
  • Weekly content review — Once a week, spend 30–45 minutes reviewing a content area you're weak in. If humanities is your weak spot, read about art history, mythology, or classical literature. You don't need to become an expert — just reduce your total unfamiliarity.

Take our free MAT association and function practice questions to drill one of the highest-tested relationship categories. Work through the analogies practice questions to build general analogy fluency before moving to MAT-specific content. Consistent practice over 4–6 weeks will show up in your score — the MAT rewards preparation more than most graduate admissions tests because the skills it measures can genuinely be developed.

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.