Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: Noon
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:
This verbal classification task asks you to detect the one time-related word that differs in nature from the rest. The most reliable strategy is to check categorical properties (duration vs. instant, general period vs. specific moment) rather than nuanced connotations (e.g., routines or feelings).
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:
Identify whether each term denotes a sustained period of the day or a single specific moment. Morning, Evening, and Night are broad spans of time. Noon, however, is conventionally a specific moment (12:00 midday), not an interval. That categorical difference isolates the odd term.
Step-by-Step Solution:
Classify Morning: an extended period from early to late a.m.Classify Evening: an extended period spanning twilight into night.Classify Night: an extended period after evening until dawn.Classify Noon: a specific time instant (12:00 midday), not a period.
Verification / Alternative check:
Another cross-check is replaceability in sentences: “at noon” (point-in-time) vs. “in the morning/evening/at night” (durations). Prepositions naturally reflect the semantic difference (point vs. span).
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Common Pitfalls:
Avoid overfitting to cultural routines (meals, work hours). Such associations vary but the core linguistic category (instant vs. period) remains consistent.
Final Answer:
Noon
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