Advanced GRE Vocab Builder: Words, Usage, and Sentence Completion Tips
Overview
A focused study resource for high-difficulty GRE vocabulary emphasizing nuanced meanings, contextual usage, and sentence-completion strategies to improve accuracy on Text Completion and Sentence Equivalence.
What it covers
- Advanced word list: ~400–600 high-frequency, hard-level GRE words with concise definitions.
- Nuance & register: distinctions between near-synonyms, connotation, formality, and common collocations.
- Parts of speech & morphology: root analysis, prefixes/suffixes, and how word forms change meaning.
- Usage examples: sentence-level examples showing typical and tricky contexts.
- Sentence completion tactics: step-by-step methods for Text Completion and Sentence Equivalence.
- Practice sets: graded drills with explanations and answer strategies.
- Retention aids: mnemonic devices, spaced-repetition schedule, and suggested flashcard prompts.
Study structure (8 weeks — self-paced)
| Week | Focus |
|---|---|
| 1 | 50 core advanced words + roots and mnemonics |
| 2 | 50 words + practice sentence completions |
| 3 | 75 words + synonym/antonym nuance drills |
| 4 | 75 words + mixed Text Completion sets |
| 5 | 100 words + Sentence Equivalence strategy |
| 6 | 75 review words + timed practice |
| 7 | Full-length mixed sections + error analysis |
| 8 | Final review, spaced-repetition plan, and test-day tips |
Key strategies for sentence completion
- Predict before peeking: Read the sentence and mentally supply a neutral word or phrase.
- Identify signal words: Contrast (however, although), cause (because, since), degree (even, merely).
- Use part-of-speech constraints: Match grammar first—tense, number, required modifiers.
- Eliminate by nuance: Reject choices that are technically correct but clash in tone or degree.
- For Sentence Equivalence: Look for two choices that produce the same meaning and fit the sentence equally well; check for antonyms and subtle differences in connotation.
Example drill (single blank)
Sentence: “Her explanation was so __________ that even skeptics found it difficult to argue.” Choices: (A) abstruse (B) cogent © laconic (D) oblique (E) didactic (F) specious Answer: B — cogent (clear and convincing). Reject A/D because they imply obscurity; C is concise but not convincing; E/F have different senses.
Retention plan
- Daily: 20–30 new words or 40–50 review cards (spaced repetition).
- Weekly: one timed mixed practice (30–40 sentence completions).
- Monthly: full-length GRE verbal section simulation.
Quick resources to include
- Downloadable flashcard CSV (word, definition, root, example).
- 10 timed practice sets with full explanations.
- Mnemonic bank sorted by root and imagery.
If you want, I can: generate the first-week word list with mnemonics, create 10 practice sentence-completion items, or produce the flashcard CSV—tell me which.
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