IELTS speaking and writing is a challenge for many test takers, especially who are expecting to get a high score in academic IELTS test. The secret of the good reading mark is you must have a huge vocabulary. If you have built a strong vocabulary already, study these words/difficult words will enrich your speaking and writing skill and increase the chance to shoot an excellent mark in IELTS.
Vocabulary For IELTS
This blog has more than 1500 difficult words with their meanings, explanation, and usage with example sentences to improve vocabulary and speaking, writing skill. These are unusually used in daily but common in topics of IELTS academic (Speaking, writing and reading). We call these words as difficult words IELTS vocabulary that is very valuable for students who want to enhance their speaking, writing and reading skill and score. These words are indispensable for IELTS Exam and you need to use these words in your speaking and writing test of IELTS. These words will greatly impact your IELTS Score. You will be able to impress your examiner with these words in writing and speaking test.
IELTS Difficult Words Meanings
These difficult words are divided into four parts for easy use so one by one you can learn and use these easily. All the parts can be found from below of every post so you can visit easily where you want to go between the parts.
Intense
|
Extreme or forceful
|
Entirely
|
Completely
|
Spontaneous
|
Happening or done in natural
|
Influence
|
The power to have an effect on people
|
Implication
|
When you seem to suggest something without saying it directly
|
Pragmatic
|
Solving problems in a realistic way which suits the present
conditions
|
Subjugate
|
To defeat people or a country & rule them in a way which allows
them no freedom
|
Synch
|
Informal for synchronization | are suited to and show an
understanding of
|
Temporize
|
To delay making a decision or stating your opinion in order to get an
advantage
|
Potency
|
Strength, influence or effectiveness
|
Crawl
|
To move slowly or with difficulty | e.g. the child crawled across the
floor
|
Modest
|
Not large in size or amount, or not expensive | e.g. they live in a
fairy modest house
|
Disorientating
|
To do confuse about the way | e.g. He is doing disorientating me
|
Solemn
|
Serious or without any humour (Humour is the ability to find things
funny) | e.g. everyone looked very solemn
|
Futuristic
|
Strange and very modern or seeming to come from some imagined time in
the future
|
Flora & Fauna
|
The flora & fauna of a place are its plants and animals
|
Tend
|
To be likely to behave in a particular way or have a particular
characteristics
|
Dawn & Dusk
|
|
Perhaps
|
Use to show that something is possible or that you’re not certain
about something | e.g. He hasn’t written to me recently – perhaps he’s lost
my address (URDU: Shayad)
|
Diurnal
|
Happening over a period of day
|
Nocturnal
|
Happening over a period of night
|
Forage
|
To go from place to place searching, especially for food
|
Benign
|
Pleasant and kind | a benign old lady | A policeman smiled benignly
at the motorist
|
Suffer
|
To experienced physical or mental pain | I think he suffered quite a
lot when his wife left him
|
Breach
|
An act of breaking a law, promise, agreement or relationship
|
Extended
|
Long or longer than usual | they’re going on an extended holiday to
Australia
|
Malleable
|
Describe a substance that is easily changed into a new shape | easily
influenced, trained or controlled e.g. He had an actor’s typically malleable
features
|
Demonstrate
|
To show or to make clear (research has demonstrated that babies can
recognize their mother’s voice soon after birth.
|
Humidity
|
A measurement of how much water there is in the air
|
Warmth
|
e.g. I have put a T-shirt on under my sweater for extra warmth
|
Myth
|
Disapproving a commonly believed but false idea | Statistic disprove
the myth that women are worse drivers than men
|
Though
|
1 Despite the fact that (She hasn’t phoned, even though she said she
would. 2 but (they’re coming next week, though I don’t know which day). 3 as
if (you look as though you have had a bad time).
|
IELTS Difficult Words and Vocabulary Part 1
Reviewed by Unknown
on
August 31, 2017
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