9 Ways to Build Your Vocabulary


When you leave school or college, someone will inevitably point out that it is not the end but only the beginning of learning. The speaker is right, of course. No educational process is the end. It is always the beginning of more learning and more living.
And that is the case here. What has happened to you as a result of your reaction to the material and suggestion in this site is only the beginning of your development. To stop increasing your vocabulary is to stunt your intellectual growth. But to continue to grow intellectually as long as you remain alive with the momentum that your weeks of hard work have provided will not be at all difficult.

You can maintain a clever, astute and erudite persona whether you're adolescent or octogenarian. This article will spell out how to find, learn, and use, ostentatious words so other people will kick up their estimates of the level of your intelligence. And here is a little secret: If you can learn to utilize words of this ilk, you doubtless are pretty sharp to begin with.


Steps


  1. Become actively receptive to new words. Every time you read, there are opportunities to increase your vocabulary. Don't ignore these opportunities. Many of us tend to skip unknown words and gain general understandings of phrases or paragraphs from their overall context. If you're used to doing this, it may require additional effort to remember to note down the words that are unusual or of which you really don't know the meaning. Train yourself to be on constant lookout when reading and listening to others, and remember the words that are not known to you. Look them up later.
    • Consider keeping a small notebook with you and quickly jot down unknown words as you come across them, for checking later. If you hear someone using a word you don't know, be sure to look it up.
    • Let new words percolate in your mind. Learn the meanings and then add them into everyday speech as regularly as possible. Provided you're using each new word in context and accurately, it will begin to become second nature.

  2. Read more. Once you leave school, you won't get the new word drills and reading becomes a large part of the way in which you increase the range of words in your vocabulary. As well as aiming to read well written magazines, essays, and online material, read as many books as you have time and inclination for. Seek out the tomes of Dickens, Austen, and Hawthorne. Deliberately find books that are hard to read such as William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury and James Joyce's Ulysses.
    • Try nonfiction and technical books: these will rapidly teach you not only new ways to talk, but new ways to think.
    • There are many erudite books to ponder visually at Project Gutenberg[1], or auditorily at LibriVox[2].
    • If your reading today is largely restricted only to the quick perusal of daily newspapers, then change your habits. Try the long, difficult stories in national, international and business newspapers and magazines. A magazine, such as the Economist[3] is a great option where few newspapers are available because a subscription can be mailed anywhere...economically. Also try to read at least one book and several magazines every week. Not just this week and the next week, but every week for a long time. As well as improving your vocabulary, you'll also keep updated and backdated, your general knowledge will increase, and you'll be a well-rounded person who knows a lot more than many other people do.

  3. Add the new words you meet in your reading to your own vocabulary. When you see an unfamiliar word in a book, magazine, manual, etc., do not skip over it impatiently. Instead, pause for a moment and say it to yourself. Get used to its sound and its appearance. At first, try to puzzle out its possible meaning in the context of the sentence. Whether you come to the right conclusion or not, whether indeed you're even able to come to any intelligent conclusion at all is of no importance. What is important is that, by that process, you're becoming super conscious of the new word. As a result, you will suddenly notice that this very word pops up unexpectedly again and again in all sorts of places. For now your mind has been alerted to notice it. Once you've tried this exercise, look it up in the dictionary and confirm its meaning. After you've seen each newly learned word a few times, you will know fairly accurately not only what it means but the many ways in which it can be used; best of all, it'll now form a part of your natural vocabulary.
  4. Write more. The more you write, the more your vocabulary increases as you're forced into a position of expanding your word usage to convey precisely what it is that you wish to get across to the reader. When writing, aim to replace commonly used words with less used and more descriptive and interesting words; get out the thesaurus and use more challenging words. Doing this can improve your fiction, biographical, and some forms of work writing a great deal.
    • Most material written for public dissemination aims to avoid the use of words that the average reader would not know. Keep this in mind when flexing your new vocabulary – you'll still need to keep your plain English in good usage for everyday writing, especially in most work environments.
    • Try to avoid falling back on buzzwords. You can still say what you mean without resorting to them and people will probably have a far clearer understanding of your point.

  5. Read the dictionary. Expanding your vocabulary will always be improved by regularly diving into the dictionary and reading entries for words you aren't yet familiar with. This requires the ownership of a quality dictionary to make it more interesting, so look for a dictionary that has lengthy explanations on the origins and uses of words, as these will go a long way to helping you remember the word and enjoy using your dictionary.
    • Sign up to be emailed a 'Word of the Day' using one of the many online dictionaries. You can also procure for yourself a Word of the Day calendar; be sure to read the word on the page each day and aim to remember each day's word and even use it somewhere in your day.
    • Visit word building sites such as freerice.com and construct an expansive vocabulary while nourishing the hungry or doing something else useful.
    • There are many online sites devoted to compiling alphabetical lists of unusual, weird, old-fashioned, and difficult words. Avail yourself of the search engine to find these sites and to learn from them. This is a great way to while away time waiting for a bus or in the bank queue.

  6. Do word puzzles and play word games. Word puzzles are an excellent source of increasing your word knowledge because the puzzle creators will often need to resort to an array of unusual words to ensure that the words fit into their puzzles and that they are interesting for the puzzle doer. There are many varieties of vocabulary puzzles, including crosswords, find-a-word and hidden word puzzles. As well as strengthening your word knowledge, puzzles are also good for improving your critical thinking skills. For word games, try such games as Scrabble, Boggle, and Cranium to extend your vocabulary.
  7. Learn a little Latin. Although it might seem like a dead and done language, knowing a bit of Latin is an excellent way to learn the roots of many words in the English language and can help you figure out the meaning of a wide range of words that you don't yet know without having to resort to the dictionary. There are online Latin learning resources, as well as plenty of texts (check out your favorite used books bookstore).
  8. Read outside your usual realm of interest
    Read outside your usual realm of interest
    Open your mind to new ideas. Every word you see is the translation of new idea. Think for few minutes of the areas of human knowledge that may possibly be unknown to you - psychology, semantics, anthropology, science, art, music, management, etc. Then, attack one of these areas methodically, by reading books on that particular subject. In every field, from the simplest to the most abstruse, there are several books for the average, untrained lay reader, right through to those for experts in the field. Push yourself with the reading as far as you can, to expose yourself to new ways of using the vocabulary and forming ideas; doing this will give you both a good grasp of the subject and, at the same time, add new vocabularies to your existing knowledge.
  9. Learning is forever
    Learning is forever
    Set a goal. If you do nothing about your vocabulary, you will learn, at most, twenty-five to fifty new words in the next twelve months. With a conscious effort, you can learn several thousands of new words. Set your self a goal of finding and remembering several new words every day. While this may sound ambitious, you will discover as soon as you start actively looking for new words in your reading, and actively doing reading of a more challenging type, that new words are all around you and that this is an exciting goal to fulfill. And understand this – vocabulary building snowballs. The results of each new day search will be greater and greater. Once you provide the necessary initial push, once you gain momentum, once you become addicted to looking for new words, for finding new words and for taking possession of new words, you'll find you can't stop.

Video


Tips


  • The more obscure the words you employ, the better - a slighter number of people will discern the odd malaprop you may happen to launch.
  • Use flash cards for new words. These can aid with meaning and pronunciation. Also, you can purchase pre-attached small blank vocabulary cards which you can throw into your bag and carry anywhere. Write the new words you're learning on them and pull out the flashcards while you're on the bus, in a queue, waiting to collect someone, etc., and brush up your learning.
  • There are many websites devoted to improving vocabulary. Find your favorites and make the most of them.
  • Using protracted and lengthened words to deride others will function superbly, if you are given to this kind of mischief. After all, it gives you a ten to twenty minute lead time to egress before the enemy party can ascertain that you've directed a pretty spot of impertinence its way.

Warnings


  • Never become obsessed with vocabulary. Vocabulary building should be a fun activity, not something that you feel you have to do but don't enjoy.
  • People with choice vocabularies will not be caught unawares, and might call you out, so don't be a pretender. Internalize the terms you seek to utter and speak them well, and even more so, know how to use them accurately with the correct context.
  • Big words can, via various vicissitudes, become fascinating and addictive.
  • Using big words as invective against your nemesis won't ameliorate your mood, nor will it mend your own insecurities, however ephemerally gratifying their consternation.
  • People with large, more constructed vocabularies do not resort to saying things such as 'like' and 'so' and 'um' and 'ain't' a lot, so stay away from the unnecessary words and contractions.
  • Keep an open mind. Read and listen to little words as well as big ones. Everything that can really make sense in big words can make sense in little ones, although it may take many, many more of them and not sound quite so elegant. Don't be afraid to ask questions and to ask more (perhaps to someone else, and do research) if you suspect someone is trying to confuse or embarrass you.

Things You'll Need


  • Dictionary
  • Word cards and marker
  • Notebook and marker
  • Classic novels, difficult reads
  • Wide range of reading material