This How-To Guide is excerpted from “ Upper Level ISEE Prep Guide with 6 Full-Length Practice Tests, 3rd Edition” by Stephen Hayes and the Staff of General Academic. If you want to simulate actual timing, you should limit yourself to 20 minutes. The sample quiz below includes 20 synonym questions, 2 of which are easy, 2 of which are hard, and 16 of which are of medium difficulty. You can use questions already on Piqosity or upload your own. Piqosity allows you to take free practice quizzes and receive analysis of your performance including details on question difficulty level and a comparison to how your peers did on the same question. Table of Popular Stems/ Roots Stems/Roots (body) Table of Popular Prefixes Prefixes (beginning) Suffixes attach to the end of the word and alter its meaning, make it grammatically correct, or create a new word.įor example, the word “amorphous” contains the prefix “a-,” the stem “morph,” and the suffix “-ous.” The prefix “a-” means “not,” the stem “morph” means “shape,” and the suffix “-ous” means “possessing” or “full of.” Thus, the word parts for “amorphous” state it means “possessing no shape.”īe careful not to mix up the stem “morph” with the actual word “morph.” Morph means “to change or transform.” You then might confuse the definition of “amorphous” to be “no change,” which is very different from the true definition of “amorphous.” It is always changing shape, much like an amoeba. Prefixes attach to the beginning of the word and alter its meaning or create a new word. All words contain a root, but the root itself is not the word it must contain a prefix, a suffix, or some mixture of the two. Roots are the basic building blocks of words. Words begin with their parts: prefixes, suffixes, and root (or stem) words. To understand advanced math, you must understand the basics and the many rules and properties that accompany these basics. There are more aspects to positive and negative words, but you will get a better feeling for these aspects after studying more words.īig words are kind of like math problems. In the same sense, entering a room is positive while exiting a room is negative.īasically, a word is positive if it moves forward or toward something, adds or increases, is the primary focus of the sentence, or compliments something.Ī word is negative if it moves back or away from something, takes away or decreases, is the secondary focus of the sentence, or contrasts something. A negative word can be a word where the action is moving away from something, such as “descend”. A positive word can be a word where the action is moving towards something, such as “ascend”. It is important to note that a positive word does not necessarily mean “good”, and a negative word does not necessarily mean “bad”. Thus, you need a systematic approach to answering every question, whether you recognize the word or not.įor example, if you are asked to find the synonym for the word “ANTITHESIS,” follow the approach: Plus, it is likely several of the Synonyms questions will be words that do not appear among the 1200+ words found on Piqosity. You do not receive any context for these words. With 20 capitalized words and 4 answer choices paired with each capitalized word, you must potentially define 100 vocabulary words on the Synonyms portion of the ISEE’s Verbal Reasoning section. ( Skip this how-to guide and go straight to practicing – free log-in required)įor Synonyms, you must know the definition of the word in all capital letters as well as the definition of each answer choice. These questions test your knowledge of vocabulary and your ability to apply that knowledge. You will have 20 minutes to answer 20 Synonym Questions and 20 Sentence Completion Questions. The Upper Level ISEE Verbal Reasoning section is composed of two parts – synonyms and sentence completions.
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