fbpx

Articles Containing GRE Vocabulary [Part 1]

If you really want to improve your GRE verbal score, you must understand these words in context since GRE does not only test words – they test their usage.

Every GRE student has this question in mind: How to improve the vocabulary for the verbal section? Now I have already recommended a couple of good GRE word lists that contain nearly all the words that you would see on the GRE test day. But as I always say that one must not only learn words from lists. If you really want to improve your GRE verbal score, you must understand these words in context since GRE does not only test words – GRE tests their usage.

 

Therefore starting from this week, I will be posting a few articles for GRE preparation that I have read and culled from various online sources. These articles contain frequent words that are tested on the GRE exam.

 

Here are 6 articles with difficult GRE vocabulary (nearly 150 words in total). However, I have not chosen difficult articles for this part since I want you to focus more on building sound vocabulary and understanding the basic structure of these sentences. In next parts, I’ll try to choose a couple of hard GRE type articles which will not only have a convoluted structure, but they will also contain lots of arcane vocabulary.

 

Why Gatsby is so great?

This is a 4-page review of the successful novel “The Great Gatsby”. The sentence structure of this article is easy to understand as per GRE standards but it contains tons of GRE words. I will advise you to not look up for the meanings of the words initially. Try to extract the meaning from the context and then validate it from an online dictionary.

GRE Words in this article

frivolity
lurid
obscurity
impregnable
melodramatic
daunting
aphoristic
benign
profligacy
excursion
bespoke
fidelity
undefiled
plausible
conflates
ingrained
transitory
enchanted
aesthetic
contemplation
commensurate

 

The butterfly crusher

This is a small piece that was published in the Guardian. It is written by Jay McInerney and it talks about the 1936 interview of Scott Fitzgerald (author of The Great Gatsby) with the New York Post. This was not a pleasant interview for Fitzgerald. In typical Post style, the interview revealed a desperate, restless Fitzgerald, wandering and shaking with alcoholism.

GRE Words in this article

hatchet
nuanced
cloddish
gaudy
binge
flamboyant
indelible
retrospect
epitaph
prescient
flapper
fleeting
expatriate
giddy
proletariat
apocryphal
poignant
depantsing
intertwined
unseemly

 

Joy

This is a 6-page piece by Zadie Smith and talks about the small and big sources of pleasure in life. The article ends on a great note by saying that the end of a pleasure can always be replaced with another of more or less equal worth. As I have done for this post, this article is also easier to understand for a beginner level. But intense on GRE level vocabulary.

GRE Words in this article

discernment
gratitude
stilled
freckles
sashaying
gawker
gnarly
cavernous
fray
despairing
inebriation
mimicked
sublimity
jester
synapses
twanged
tedious
prosaic
fizzled
arduous
finitude

 

Generation Why?

Those of you who have watched the movie “The Social Network”, based on Facebook’s founder Mark Zuckerberg, will enjoy this. This article is a review, written by Zadie Smith, on this movie and it contains copious GRE words.

GRE Words in this article

ambiguities
regatta
pedantic
cynical
surmises
spurned
deposition
discreet
rucksack
eerie
countenance
imploring
ravishing
knack
hyperreality
paranoia
shimmies
lacquered
indifference
accrue
phony
patently
notorious
stab
berated
dispassionate
ingenious
articulate
affectless
disjunct
stoic
blandness
disingenuous
onerous
ubiquitous
stumped
denuded
protagonist
obsolete

 

Literature by the Numbers

Written by Jessica Gross, this 5-page article critiques a book by data journalist Ben Blatt. In his new book, “Nabokov’s Favorite Word Is Mauve”, Blatt examines the stylistic fingerprints of writers, whether Americans are “louder” than Brits in their writing, the differences between how men and women write, whether books are getting simpler, and many other curiosities.

GRE Words in this article

gambit
penchant
intrigue
imprudence
inquest
cliches
conjecture

 

Alexander Woollcott and Harpo Marx: A Love Story

Published on longreads and written by Ned Stuckey, this is a lengthy 8-page story that takes a closer look at the dynamics of a friendship, and the roles we play in each other’s lives. It is based on “Alexander Woollcott and Harpo Marx: A Love Story,” by Ned Stuckey-French. It contains tens of GRE words and other hard vocabulary.

GRE Words in this article

doldrums
thwart
wrangled
exasperating
pudgy
fastidious
dandy
unrequited
quintessential
nostalgia
aficionado
melancholy
appalled
chagrin
escapades
pretentious
putrid
entrenched
effeminate
consummated
partaken
neurotic
circuitous
infantile
heebiejeebies
succinctly
yapping
romping
ingenuity
ungenteel
snobbery
double­entendre
innuendo
emendation

SEE ALSO

10 Tips on How to Improve GRE Passages

One of the most common problems test takers face on GRE is time management. I have talked to many students in my work line, and they complain that they run out of time on the reading passages and have to rush their answers. This is a common occurrence, especially for...

read more

How Many Words Should I Learn for GRE?

  How Many Words Should I Learn for GRE?    This is perhaps the most important but also the most intimidating part of the GRE verbal section – memorizing a word list. Rote learning a list of unknown words is an extremely boring and the most ineffective...

read more

How to tackle the GRE Verbal Section

"V: Voilà! In view, a humble vaudevillian veteran cast vicariously as both victim and villain by the vicissitudes of Fate. This visage, no mere veneer of vanity, is a vestige of the vox populi, now vacant, vanished. Verily, this vichyssoise of verbiage veers most...

read more

20 Best Novels to Read for GRE Preparation

Should you read novels to improve your GRE verbal section? Don't if you plan to give the GRE within the next 2 to 3 months, but if you spend hours every day just staring at a wall, better to read something. However, if you plan to sit the GRE after at least six...

read more

10 Most Frequent GRE Words

Okay, so I have decided to start this initiative where I ask every single one of my GRE students who take the GRE test to tell me the words they remember seeing on the test. In my experience, every GRE test taker in Pakistan remembers 7-12 words on average and that...

read more

How to improve your GRE reading comprehension speed

In nearly all the GRE courses that I have conducted over these years, the one thing that I have found most students struggle with is the problem of time management on the GRE verbal section – and each time the culprit is the reading comprehension questions. We all...

read more

Does the GRE Verbal Score Matter?

We all know that the GRE is a standardized test aimed at helping graduate programs admissions committee evaluate students on a common benchmark. Many graduate schools in US and around the world (especially in Canada, Germany, Middle East etc.) use GRE scores to...

read more

How to Study for GRE Vocabulary?

At the end of the very first class of every new GRE batch, almost every student comes up to me and asks “Tell me a good book for learning GRE vocabulary?” This initiates the same discussion that I always have with every new GRE student and therefore I decided to write...

read more

Time Management on the GRE Verbal Section

Time management on the GRE verbal section is crucial to score above par. The GRE rewards those students who can manage their time effectively on the test. Almost always it is the case that students who do well on the GRE have mastered the technique of utilizing their...

read more

How to Improve GRE Reading Comprehension Score

While preparing for the GRE, most of the students in Pakistan, don’t pay enough attention on how to improve GRE reading comprehension score, as required. At a rough scale, reading comprehension makes 25% of the GRE verbal section. So guys, hold the fire on your social...

read more