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WORD
SMART
BUILDING AN 
EDUCATED VOCABULARY
WORD
SMART
BUILDING AN 
EDUCATED VOCABULARY 
Random House, Inc. 
New York 
www.PrincetonReview.com
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The Princeton Review, Inc. 
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Copyright © 2006 by The Princeton Review, Inc. 
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copy right 
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New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada 
Limited, Toronto. 
eISBN: 978-0-375-72334-6 
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Production Editor: Katie O’Neill 
Production Coordinator: Ryan Tozzi 
www.PrincetonReview.com 
v1.0
CONTENTS
Introduction  ......................................................................................1
Chapter 1:  Learning New Words ................................................7
Chapter 2:  The Words  ............................................................... 39
Chapter 3:  The Final Exam.......................................................255
Chapter 4:  The SAT Hit Parade  .............................................. 287
Chapter 5:  The GRE Hit Parade............................................... 297
Chapter 6:  Word Roots You Should Know ............................. 305 
Chapter 7:  Common Usage Errors ......................................... 331
Chapter 8:  Abbreviations.........................................................339
Chapter 9:  The Arts................................................................... 343 
Chapter 10:  Computers and Technology ................................. 347
Chapter 11:  Finance....................................................................353
Chapter 12:  Foreign Words and Phrases ................................ 359 
Chapter 13:  Science ...................................................................365 
Chapter 14:  The Answers .......................................................... 371
About the Author  ..................................................................................383
INTRODUCTION
Y  V  H  B  T  A  Y  B
OUR OCABULARY AS EEN ALKING BOUT OU EHIND 
Y  B
OUR ACK 
The words you use say a lot about you. Some words say that 
you are smart, persuasive, and informed. Others say that 
you don’t know what you are talking about. Knowing which 
words to use and understanding how to use them are keys 
to getting the most out of your mind. 
People often say in frustration, “I know what I mean, but 
I don’t know how to say it.” If the right words aren’t there, 
the right ideas can’t get through. 
Your vocabulary is the foundation of your ability to share 
your thoughts with other people. When you im prove your 
vocabulary, you improve your abil i ty to bring your intelli
gence to bear on the world around you. 
B  I ’  N  B
IGGER SN T ECESSARILY ETTER 
When people say that someone has a “good vocabulary,” they 
usually mean that he or she uses a lot of important-sound ing 
words—words like jac ti ta tion, demulcent, and saxicolous. But 
a vocabulary con sist ing of words like these isn’t nec es sar i ly 
a “good” vocabulary. 
Why? 
Because almost no one knows what jactitation, demulcent, 
and saxi colous mean. If you used these words in conversa
tion, the chances are that no one listening to you would 
know what you were talking about. Big, difficult words have 
im por tant uses, but improving a vo cab u lary involves much 
more than merely decorating your speech or your writing 
with a few polysyllabic zingers. 
The goal of communication is clarity. We write and speak 
in order to make ourselves understood. A good vocabulary 
is one that makes com mu ni ca tion easy and efficient. One 
mark of an effective speaker or writer is his or her ability to 
express complex ideas with rel a tive ly simple words. 
Most discourse among educated people is built on words 
that are fairly ordinary—words you’ve heard before, even if 
1 
INTRODUCTION
you aren’t exactly certain what they mean. The best way to 
improve your vocabulary isn’t to comb the dict io nary for a 
handful of tongue-twisters to throw at unsuspecting strang
ers. Instead, you need to hone your understanding of words 
that turn up again and again in intelligent communication. 
A person who had a clear un der stand ing of every word in 
an issue of The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, or 
Harper’s would have a powerful vo cab u lary—a vo cab u lary 
so phis tic at ed enough to im press almost any teach er, ad mis 
sions officer, colleague, or em ploy er. 
A  E  V
N DUCATED OCABULARY 
An educated vocabulary is one that enables you to convey 
ideas easily. Do you know what inveterate means? Do you 
know the difference between flaunt and flout? Do you know 
why an artist might be insulted if you called his or her work 
artful? 
None of these words is particularly difficult. But each has 
its own mean ing or meanings. If you misuse these words, 
you communicate that you are in over your head. Using them 
cor rect ly can identify you as a member of that most elite of 
elites: people who know what they’re talking about. 
W ’  P ? 
HAT S THE ROBLEM
When people get into trouble with words, it usually isn’t 
because they don’t know the meaning of a seldom-used word 
like ter ma gant but because they are confused about the mean
ing of a much more common word—a word they hear, read, 
and even use with reg u lar i ty. 
Peruse,  for  example.  Many  people  think  that  it  means 
“skim” or “glance over.” But it doesn’t. In fact, it means 
very nearly the op po site. To peruse a document is to read it 
carefully. Misuse of this useful word is one of the most com
mon vocabulary errors we encounter in our SAT-prep a ra tion 
students. 
The number of words you know is less important than 
the care you have taken in learning the ones you really use. 
Speaking or writing well doesn’t require an enormous vo
cab u lary—but it does require a confident one. And the way 
to gain confidence in your voc ab u lary is to buckle down 
2 
WORD SMART
Description:Publisher: Princeton Review.Date : 2006.Pages : 392.The words people use say a lot about them. Some words say that they are smart, persuasive, and informed. Others say that they don't know what they're talking about. Knowing which words to use and how to use them are keys to getting the most from on