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SAT Vocabulary

SAT Vocabulary . Week 1. Vocabulary Requirements. 1 Composition Notebook 2. Write down memory tips in your notebook underline or highlight word roots, prefixes, or letter clusters 3. Create your won memory devices.

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SAT Vocabulary

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  1. SAT Vocabulary Week 1

  2. Vocabulary Requirements • 1 Composition Notebook • 2. Write down memory tips in your notebook • underline or highlight word roots, prefixes, or letter clusters • 3. Create your won memory devices. • 4. Clip out vocabulary words (clip the entire sentence or phrase , so you have the context that the word is used in) you see when you read magazines, newspapers and paste them into your notebook. • 5. Make your vocabulary notebook colorful!. • 6. Read through your notebook at least once per day. • 7. If you need to hear the pronunciation of a word go to dictionary.com and listen. • 8. Add ACADEMIC words to you Vocabulary Notebook!

  3. Vocabulary Quiz - Weekly • Unless otherwise told you will have an SAT Vocabulary quiz weekly. • The Quiz will include: • Matching • 1. brevity (n) a. using a few words in speaking or writing • 2. concise (adj) b. briefness or conciseness in speech or writing • Sentence completion • 3. Far from a blabber mouth, Tina is as _____ a young lady as one can find. • (succinct, pithy, taciturn, concisely, acquiescent) • Using words in context • 4. Since space was limited, the advertising executive instructed copywriters • to write concise photo captions.

  4. Week 1 Words – what is the theme? • Brevity (n) – briefness or conciseness in speech or writing. • Concise (adj) – using few words in speaking or writing. • Laconic (adj) – using few words in speech. • Pithy (adj) – brief and full of meaning and substance; concise. • Quiescent (adj) – quiet; still; inactive. • Reticent (adj) – not talking much; reserved. • Succinct (adj) – clearly and briefly stated; concise. • Taciturn (adj) – silent; sparing of words; close-mouthed. • Terse (adj) - using only the words that are needed to make the point; very concise, sometimes to the point of rudeness.

  5. Memory Tips • BREVITY • Connect this word to a related word that you most likely already know: abbreviate. Notice how both words share the letter cluster brev! • PITHY • Think of just the pit (central part) of the topic and nothing more. Remember that pithy expressions are substantial and to the point. • QUIESCENT • Did you notice that the word quiet is within quiescent? Use this to see the definition within the word: still; inactive; quiet. In your Vocabulary Notebook, underline or highlight q-u-i-e-t in quiescent. Another SAT-level word, acquiesce, is related to quiescent. Acquiesce means “to peaceably agree or quietly give in to. • TACITURN • In Latin tacitus means silent. Tacit means implied or expressed without words, as in a “tacit agreement.”

  6. Examples • For the sake of brevity, choose your words with care. • A Concise explanation is preferable to a long-winded one. • Because Bush’s laconic reply lacked specificity, it raised more questions than it answered. • For the yearbook, Jenny searched through Bartlett’s for a pithy quotation about courage. • Never one to make waves, Leo quiescently followed the coach’s orders. • Tom and Molly are a mismatched pair; he’s shy and reticent, but she never stops talking. • The title succinctly conveys the point of my paper. • Next to me on the bus sat a taciturn girl who said nothing during the four-hour ride. • The principal’s terse reply was clear: “Skipping class is not allowed.”

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