Hi all,
A question -- I am studying for the GREs (especially the verbal/analytical).
What books would you recommend to really improve vocabulary?
some suggestions I heard were books by melville (moby dick), dickens..
Thanks..
capacityplanner
Hi all,
A question -- I am studying for the GREs (especially the verbal/analytical).
What books would you recommend to really improve vocabulary?
some suggestions I heard were books by melville (moby dick), dickens..
Thanks..
capacityplanner
what's GRE?
dead on the inside, i've got nothing to prove
keep me alive and give me something to lose
Increased vocabulary?.......Crossword puzzles, and lots of 'em!!Originally Posted by capacityplanner
ooohhh..good call. i try the new york times one every day, havent completely finished one yet, but have been getting closer! perseverance, right?
Then we sat on the edge of the earth, with our feet dangling over the side, and marvelled that we had found each other.
Victorian Literature or Terry Pratchett - everytime you get to a word you don't know, look it up, that's how I improved my vocabulary.
And not by 'reading the dictionary' as my cruel brother suggests!
Raven
Very detailed comparison of top GRE books extending pluses/minuses of each book such as Kaplan's, Barron's, Cracking GRE (Princeton's Review(PR)),
and GRE Prep book by ETS on http://www.fpilus.com/undergraduates.html
Many of the Victorian authors will certainly be worth exploring with a view to improving your vocabulary as well as sentence structure, and I would recommend Macaulay especially.
Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent.
Three words a day would be mediocre enough.
I shoud take this test in two months. I really don`t get why they ask about vocabulary. I feel it will be a nightmare for me, because i`m not a nativespeaker...I try to learn words, but it`s also pretty boring, especially when you know that nobody going to undestand them in everyday talks... I see no perpose in such questions.
Memorize Keat's poems. His vocabulary is fantastic, and it is actually rewarding to read him anyway.
http://www.freerice.com/index.php
Learn vocabulary and feed the world.
Et l'unique cordeau des trompettes marines
Apollinaire, Le chantre
You can start with root words by going through the book word power made easy by Norman lewis.You can also have Barron's For more words.
There is lot of material avaiable in many sites:
http://www.vocabularywiki.com/
Reading the OED is the best way - when you don't know something, you look it up - when you don't know the exact meaning of a word in the meaning, you look that up, and eventally, you keep tracing until you know thousands of words and numerous ways to use them.
Of course, the best way to build vocabulary is through poetry over prose, if someone wants to read something. Poetry is closer to language than prose, and plays more with meaning and vocabulary, and really puts diction central, moreso than prose does. The best starting point is probably Wordsworth, but one gets a lot from reading Tennyson, or, for a modern example, Richard Wilbur, who is a true master of word manipulation.
Reading Joyce though, builds vocab - but one has to really know loads before embarking on that.
The two suggestions at the bottom are good ones. I think 19th C novels are a generally fantastic sources of new language. Thomas Hardy, George Eliot, and the Brontes might also help you. If you want something more contemporary, maybe you could Jonathan Franzen's The Corrections which had quite a broad vocabulary. I would read widely, though, instead of focusing on an author or two. Everyone has their own set of words and phrases that might be new at first, but by the time you're three or four novels into reading them they might seem less unique.
You might also consider cramming. I know it sounds less inspired, but it does work. I take it you're going to take the test next fall--which leaves you a lot of time--but it's a slow process trying to read your way into vocabulary. With a vocab list you can go a little faster. Also, practice tests are useful. That way you'll know what you're in for.
Hope it goes well.
"Par instants je suis le Pauvre Navire
[...] Par instants je meurs la mort du Pecheur
[...] O mais! par instants"
--"Birds in the Night" by Paul Verlaine (1844-1896). Join the discussion here: http://www.online-literature.com/for...5&goto=newpost
Life is either a daring adventure or nothing.
To keep our faces toward change and behave like free spirits
in the presence of fate is strength undefeatable.”
Helen Keller