Dictionary
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Vocabulary Materials
- Academic Vocabulary - lists of academic
words. You can click the links for definitions, example sentences,
pronunciations and Chinese translations.
- Academic Vocabulary Crossword
- Academic Word List hangman game
- Beliefs, opinions and
attitudes
- Beliefs, opinions and attitudes crossword
- Change and continuity:
nouns and verbs table
- Change and continuity: nouns and verbs
gap fill
- Change and continuity: nouns and verbs
multiple choice
- Collocation: Set Phrases
- Collocation: Verbs and
Nouns 1
- Collocation: Verbs and
Nouns 2
- Formal verbs
- General Service List vocabulary
- General Service List
vocabulary hangman
- Genetic Engineering Vocabulary -
you can click the links for definitions, example sentences, pronunciations and
Chinese translations.
- Replacing 'get'
- Idioms: replacing them with
formal verbs
- Important or Importance? Explanation and
exercise on which word to use.
- Importance and
Unimportance
- Investment Phrases - matching
exercise
- ITC Vocabulary Hangman
- Design Styles
- Kinds of Clothing
- Kinds of Textile
- Surprise Me
- Key Words in University Study -
Nouns - Crossword -
area, aspect, category, class, component, compound, division, domain, element, entity, field, group, portion, sphere
- Key Words in University Study -
Whole and Parts
- Mortgage Phrases - matching
exercise
- Mortgage vocabulary -
definitions and a gap fill exercise
-
Names - Informal English names;
e.g. Bill=William
-
Names - List of other names
- Precise Words
- Prefix Meanings - a
matching exercise
- Prefixes Crossword
- Satisfaction - choosing between 'satisfy',
'satisfied', 'satisfying' and 'satisfactory', etc.
- Staff or Staffs? Using the right part of
speech for 'staff '.
- Suffixes
- Suffixes for Meaning
and Word Class
- Suffixes for New Words
- Synonyms for nouns
- Synonyms for verbs
- Trends - this exercise introduces the
vocabulary and grammar needed to describe trends. Includes an exercise.
- Verbs of Academic Communication -
Crossword - categorise, classify, compose, comprise, consist, constitute,
cover, embrace, encompass, incorporate, form, include, involve, make up.
- Vocabulary: Common Confusions - a
developmental quiz with feedback
- Vocabulary Tests - find out
what level you should be studying at
-
Vocabulary to express similarity and difference - fill in the blanks
-
Vocabulary to express similarity and difference - common mistakes
-
Word Roots
- gap fill
-
Word
Roots - matching
- The
2000
commonest words in English. You can click on the words for their meanings, examples,
pronunciation and grammar.
- Hangman for the 2000 most common
words in English
- The commonest words in English - word 2001 to word
5000
- Hangman for the 2000-5000th
most common words in English
- How to Study Vocabulary - by
the LEP staff
- Vocabulary
Resources for English Language Learners - links to vocabulary sites. Includes British
and American English, idioms, a collection of slang terms (especially technical terms),
daily words on weekly themes (includes digitized pronunciation) and vocabulary quizzes
- Vocabulary Games - Word search,
hangman, matching and crosswords
- Vocabulary building - free and
donates rice to charity
- Self-Study English
Vocabulary Quizzes
Concordancer
Finds example sentences containing the word you type in this box:
Phrase comparison - compare example
sentences for two phrases
Needs Analysis
There are four stages in needs analysis: what you need to know about a language, your present problems, your future needs, your needs for your course.
Click here for a Needs Analysis / Planning / Studying / Assessment Form that you can print out and fill in.
Problems
Make a list of the problems that you have about vocabulary, and the situations where you have these problems. For example:
Example Problem 1: I don't know enough vocabulary about my course subject.
Example Problem 2: I can't remember all the different things about a word, like how to pronounce it, is it a verb or a noun, what preposition goes with it, is it formal or informal etc.
Future Needs
Think about what English you will need in future, for example for your job. Here are some examples:
Example Future Need 1: I will need to know vocabulary about my field.
Example Future Need 2: I want to work for an international company, so my English, including my vocabulary, must be very good.
Needs for Your Course
If you are a student you probably need to study English to help you with your course work; eg. for listening to lectures. Some example needs are:
Example Course Need 1: I need to listen to lectures and know the vocabulary.
Example Course Need 2: I need to listen and speak in seminars, so I need to be able to speak the vocabulary.
(Click here to see the English courses that most full-time HKPU students do.)
Planning what to learn
You need to decide:
- what materials and resources you want to use
- whether you want to work alone or with other people
- when you want or need to finish studying; e.g. in time for an assignment deadline
- how much improvement is necessary
Materials and Resources
Materials can be books, newspapers, magazines, videos and audio tapes, or the Internet sites above.
Resources can be teachers, classmates, computers, learner pathways,
etc.
Working Alone or With Other People
Reasons for learning vocabulary with other people are:
- You get more ideas from the other people
- They can tell you if you make a mistake
- They can encourage you to do better
- Sharing the work helps you do it quicker
- You can share your thoughts and feelings
Reasons for learning vocabulary alone are:
- If you share a task then you might learn only your part of the task, not how to do all of it. Your aim is to learn, not to finish quickly.
- Other people may want to learn different vocabulary from you.
How to Practise Vocabulary
Use your CILL portfolio as a vocabulary book.
Write down everything you know about new words that will be useful for you. Decide if you
will need to know how to write and speak a word, or if you just have to know the meaning
when you hear of read it. If you will need to write or speak the word, you need to know
more about it, such as the pronunciation, and the grammar. You can find this in one of the
dictionaries.
If you are a member of CILL, you can use our tapes, CDs and vocabulary exercise books.
Vocabulary Strategies
- Contextualisation: This means putting
new vocabulary words into sentences to help you remember them and to test if you are using
them correctly. You can use these sentences when talking to an English-speaker to see if
they understand, you can write these sentences in your learner portfolio for the tutors to
see, or you can e-mail the tutors and ask them to check these words in your sentences. The
most independent ways are talking to an English speaker, and searching
the Internet to find examples of the word being used in sentences.
- Elaboration: this
means relating new information to information you already know. For example, if you know
the meaning of 'information', it is easy to remember that the verb is 'to inform', and
that 'informative' is an adjective, and that 'an informant' is someone who gives
information.
- Inferencing: This means using available
information to predict or guess the meanings of; e.g. new vocabulary items. For example, if
you know that you are reading about football, and you know that a field is often a large
area covered in grass, then you can guess that a football field is a large, grassy area
for playing football.
- Translation: You can read a story in a newspaper
in your own language first, then read the same story in an English newspaper. Most of the story will probably be
the same, so the story in your own language will help you to prepare for reading in
English. For example, it will give you vocabulary, and when you read the English story and
there is some vocabulary that you don't know, then you can use your knowledge of the story
to guess what the new vocabulary is.
- Personalisation: you can write down why the vocabulary
item (i.e. the word or phrase) is important to you, where you first saw it, and
when you used it, for example, you may have heard the item in a movie you liked
(click here for list of
movies and famous phrases in them), and used the item when you talked about
the movie with your friends.
- Keeping your own dictionary
/ vocabulary book: Writing entries for the
dictionary will help you to learn words, and using your own dictionary can be
faster than a normal dictionary. Click here for
more details and examples.
- Grouping: you can group words into different areas,
such as words in the different courses you study. For example, business students
could group vocabulary items into marketing vocabulary, accounting vocabulary,
and human resources vocabulary.
Testing
You can test your vocabulary by reading or listening to something, and
learning the vocabulary you think will be useful. You can also write questions for
yourself on the meaning of the vocabulary. Keep the reading or listening text, and a few
days later go over it again, seeing if you can remember the vocabulary and answer the
questions.
Vocabulary Tests - find out what level you should be studying at.
If you are a member of CILL, you can use our tapes, CDs and vocabulary exercise books.
Further Planning
When you have finished your plan you need to test or assess yourself to
see if you have fulfilled your need. Can you do what your Needs Analysis and your plan aimed for?
- If you can, then you can plan to learn another point from your Needs Analysis, or you
can change it because of some new thing that you want to learn. Don't forget to come back
and revise later.
- If you can't, you need to study more, so change your plan. You could, for example, do
some of the Alternative Materials or Extra Materials if you are following a learner pathway. If you
are bored you can do something else and come back later.
For more details on how you can test yourself, click
here. The learner pathways also have details on how you can
test yourself. Click here for an example.
Last updated on: Tuesday, January 17, 2012Hits: 915460 visited