Paddy is cultivated in a field (place of growth). In the same relational sense, steel is produced in which place?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: Factory

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Analogy questions ask you to preserve a relationship while shifting domains. Here, “paddy → field” encodes a place-of-production/growth relation. Paddy (rice crop) is grown in a field. We must map “steel → ?” by keeping the same relation. The correct target is the place where steel is produced at scale.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Paddy is an agricultural product grown in fields.
  • Steel is an industrial material produced by processing iron ore with specific methods.
  • The query focuses on place-of-production, not raw inputs or end uses.


Concept / Approach:
Identify the relation type (item → typical place of production). Replace the agricultural domain with the industrial one. For steel, the standard place is a factory/steel plant/steel mill. Options mentioning inputs (ore, iron) or upstream sites (mine) do not match the required “place” relation.


Step-by-Step Solution:

1) Parse the stem: paddy is grown in a field → item-to-place relation. 2) Transfer to steel: where is steel made? → factory/steel mill. 3) Select the option that names the place, not a material or input.


Verification / Alternative check:
Steel-making (e.g., basic oxygen furnace, electric arc furnace) happens in industrial factories/mills. A mine yields ore, not finished steel. Iron is an element/raw material, not a place. Warehouses store goods; they are not production sites.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • Mine / Ore: Upstream extraction/input, not the production site of steel.
  • Iron: Material, not a location.
  • Warehouse: Storage, not manufacturing.


Common Pitfalls:
Confusing raw-material sources with manufacturing locations. The analogy preserves “place”, not “ingredient”.


Final Answer:
Factory

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