The easy mistake is to pick the fanciest-sounding word. The smarter version of it, the one that catches high scorers, is the "they're basically the same" fallacy. You see a contrast coming and think, "However, Nonetheless, Despite this, they all just mean 'but,' right?" On this test, "basically the same" is where correct answers go to die. Transition words are road signs for an argument, and putting up the wrong one is like a "Welcome to Cleveland" sign on the highway to Miami.
Every transition has one of four jobs
Stop thinking about individual words and start thinking about the job a transition needs to do. Almost all of them do one of four things.
| The job | What it does | The team |
|---|---|---|
| Continue | Adds to and reinforces the previous idea. Piles on more of the same. | Furthermore, Moreover, In addition, Also, Similarly, Likewise |
| Contradict | Makes a hard turn against the previous idea. | However, Nonetheless, Nevertheless, In contrast, On the other hand |
| Cause & effect | Shows that because A happened, B followed. | Therefore, Thus, Consequently, As a result, Accordingly |
| Clarify | Zooms in with a specific example or stronger emphasis. | For example, For instance, In fact, Indeed, Specifically |
The Two-Sentence Test
The "sounds smart" trap works by seducing you with the choices before you've diagnosed the problem. Block that.
- Cover the answer choices. They're poison until you're ready. Read only the sentence before the blank and the sentence after it.
- Describe the relationship in your own words. Be blunt. The band practiced for months; their first concert was a disaster. "That's a contrast — a good thing followed by a bad thing. The logic is a turn."
- Hire the right word for that job. Now look at the choices as a hiring manager. You need a Contradictor; Therefore (cause), In addition (continue), and For instance (clarify) are all the wrong résumé. Nonetheless gets the job.
The nuance check: when two teammates show up
The final trap is putting two words from the same job category in front of you. You correctly decide you need a Contradictor, and then you see both However and Nevertheless. This is where you check the fine print.
- However vs. Nevertheless. "However" is a plain, neutral "but." "Nevertheless" means "in spite of the previous fact" — it concedes the first point is true and asserts the second matters more. A city Wi-Fi rollout that was buggy at first but became indispensable wants "Nevertheless": the success happened in spite of the early problems.
- For example vs. In fact. "For example" introduces a typical case. "In fact" introduces a detail that emphasizes or escalates, often with a touch of surprise. A poet known for minimalism whose collection contains a twelve-page poem made of a single word — that's not a routine example, it's an escalation, so "In fact" beats "For example."
- Furthermore vs. Similarly. "Furthermore" adds another point about the same subject. "Similarly" makes a comparison to a new subject. If the second sentence switches from Emily Dickinson's dashes to Walt Whitman's free verse, that's a new subject, so "Similarly" is right.
Once you run the Two-Sentence Test, these turn into quick, mechanical points — you're matching a logical relationship to the one word that performs it, not weighing four words by feel. Forge can show you whether transitions are a reliable strength or a place you're guessing, and whether your misses come from naming the relationship wrong or from missing the nuance between two teammates.