Vocabulary
Comprehensive notes, formulas, and practice questions for Vocabulary.
Vocabulary
Vocabulary
What you'll learn
- How context clues reveal meaning of unfamiliar words in passages and sentences.
- To use prefixes, suffixes, and roots for educated guesses on academic vocabulary.
- To distinguish denotation, connotation, and register (formal vs informal).
- To build Class 11 word power for comprehension, writing, and vocabulary-in-context MCQs.
Key concepts
Level 1 — Foundations
Verbal: Vocabulary questions ask what a word means here, not every possible dictionary sense.
Five context clue types:
| Clue | Pattern | Example fragment |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | word is…, means | "Arid, or extremely dry, soil" |
| Synonym | and, also | "Frugal and economical" |
| Antonym | but, unlike | "Not verbose but laconic" |
| Example | such as, including | "Citrus, such as oranges…" |
| General sense | Passage topic constrains | Medical passage → "acute" likely "severe" |
Word parts: mal- (bad), -ology (study), re- (again), -less (without) — combine with context to narrow options.
Level 2 — Exam depth
Connotation ladder: thin (neutral) → slender (positive) → scrawny (negative) — same denotation, different judgment.
Register: "Commence" (formal) vs "start" (neutral) — pick synonym matching passage formality.
One-word substitution: Requires precise nuance — "ephemeral" ≠ "temporary" in all contexts but often close in exams.
Collocations: "Heavy rain" not "strong rain" — reading builds collocation sense.
Revision habit: Maintain a passage log: word, sentence clue, your guess, confirmed meaning.
Worked example
Use antonym clue
"Unlike his **garrulous** sister, Rohan spoke only when necessary."
Antonym context: sister talks much → Rohan quiet → garrulous ≈ **overly talkative**.
Prefix + context
"The committee will **reconvene** after lunch."
re- = again; convene = assemble → **meet again**.
Context "after lunch" confirms timing, not new committee formation.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| First dictionary meaning always | Ignored sentence | Always use contextual sense |
| Synonym too far in meaning | Grab any positive word | Replace word in sentence to test fit |
| Missing connotation | Neutral synonym for charged word | Match positive/negative tone |
| Confusing spelling with meaning | Recognise word shape only | Read full clause for sense |
Quick check
- Name four types of context clues with your own mini-example each.
- Difference between denotation and connotation?
- "Benevolent ruler" vs "tyrannical ruler" — which connotation pairs with benevolent?
- Stretch: Guess meaning of "photosynthesis" using roots only; then verify.
Revision tip: Revisit adjacent topics in Reading Comprehension before mixed practice on Vocabulary.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Vocabulary.
Exam strategy
Build a weekly list of ten words from past papers, recording the sentence clue that revealed meaning — not dictionary definitions alone. On exam day, if two synonyms seem equal, check part of speech fit and positive/negative charge. Prefix/suffix guesses should narrow to two options, not pick blindly. Revise commonly tested pairs: affect/effect, complement/compliment, discreet/discrete.
Practice connections
Vocabulary mastery supports error correction (word form) and formal letter register simultaneously. Maintain a root card deck: Latin/Greek roots appearing in Class 11–12 anthologies ( bene, mal, chron, geo ). For unseen passages, pair vocabulary items with inference review — the same context sentence often anchors both. When writing creative pieces, deliberately reuse newly learnt words once to move them from recognition to production memory.
Keep a dedicated notebook spread for this topic: one page for methods, one for worked mistakes, and one for mixed drill from the Practice tab. Review weekly by explaining the core idea aloud in under sixty seconds without notes.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
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