English
›
Language Skills
›
Reading Comprehension
›
Inference
Advertisement
-
-
-
-
-
Homonyms 5
-
Homophones 10
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Nouns 85
-
Pronouns 88
-
Verbs 155
-
Adjectives 63
-
Adverbs 22
-
Prepositions 69
-
-
-
Past Tense 80
-
Future Tense 29
-
-
-
-
-
-
Quantifiers 11
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
6th Grade Inference Quizzes, Questions & Answers
Spark curiosity and test your child’s 6th grade Inference knowledge with our engaging quizzes! Read more
Perfect for practice at home or in the classroom—encourage learning through play and exploration.
Read less
Top Trending Inference Quizzes
Recent Inference Quizzes
This INFERENCES: BIBLICAL OR OTHERWISE quiz tests the ability to draw conclusions from given scenarios. It assesses critical thinking and comprehension skills, relevant for educational and personal development.
Questions: 22 | Attempts: 1603 | Last updated: Aug 22, 2025
-
Sample QuestionWhen a poem's speaker describes beautiful flowers, bright sunshine and a happy childhood, you might conclude that he or she
Use the selections of text and your ideas/thoughts about the text to make inferences.
Questions: 10 | Attempts: 1140 | Last updated: Mar 21, 2025
-
Sample Question"I do not always feel colored. Even now I often achieve the unconscious Zora of Eatonville before the Hegira. I feel most colored when I am thrown against a sharp white background."I can infere that:
Do you know how to make an inference? If yes, start playing this making inferences quiz and give answers to the questions asked below and evaluate how good are you at this. Making inferences is a comprehension strategy used by...
Questions: 12 | Attempts: 43081 | Last updated: Jul 15, 2025
-
Sample QuestionNot too long ago, two women sat down at a French Roast restaurant on Broadway in New York. The women were not alone. They had their dogs with them. One had a golden retriever, the other a rookie. At one time, the women would have been shown the door by the manager because, except for guide dogs used by the blind, dogs were not allowed in restaurants. Such rules about dogs and other pets, however, may well be becoming a thing of the past as more and more people insist that their dogs are necessary to their emotional well-being. When the manager at French Roast questioned the dogs' presence, that is precisely what he was told: The dogs were providing their owners with emotional support. One of the women even had a letter from her doctor saying just that: She needed the dog nearby to function. Two years before the restaurant episode, tenants had used the same strategy to force their landlords into accepting the presence of dogs in two New York apartment buildings. Dog owners have become bolder about insisting on the presence of their pets ever since a 2003 ruling by the Department of Transportation stating that people with emotional ailments like depression or anxiety should be allowed to have dogs present on airplanes. In short, they should be treated like other disabled people and allow the company of a service animal. Whatever the Department of Transportation's original intentions, the chances are good that the ruling will be abused, and some people will want to bring their dogs to a restaurant or concert simply because of a bad day at work. (Source of information: Beth Landman, "Wagging the Dog, and a Finger," The New York Times, May 14, 2006, section 9, p.1)
Advertisement