Is Vocabulary Important?

Is Vocabulary Important?

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Updated on Aug 10, 2010 12:28 IST
In this article, we shall discuss Vocabulary. Although direct Vocabulary-based questions may not make an appearance in CAT.

In this article, we shall discuss Vocabulary. Although direct Vocabulary-based questions may not make an appearance in CAT (though it definitely does in other entrance exams such as FMS, IIFT etc as discussed later) in the sense that you are usually not asked to choose the correct meaning of a difficult or less-known word or its antonym or synonym from among the options, a good Vocabulary is still quite crucial for doing well in the English section.

It is important to note that CAT does test your Vocabulary indirectly. Often questions have appeared in which you need to choose the correct usage of simple, every day words. Quite often, these common words have multiple meanings, depending on the context of their use, and the CAT has tested whether you understand which all possible uses a common word can be put to. An example will serve to illustrate my point.

Consider a word such as ‘book'. The most common use of the word perhaps is when we use it in the sense of referring to a textbook or story book (fiction or non-fiction). But the word ‘book' does have other usages. For example, we can say that ‘He booked a ticket'. Similarly, you can say that a show was ‘fully booked'. Another usage is when we say "The policeman booked the errant driver for over-speeding'.

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In addition to being prepared for such kind of questions, a decent Vocabulary will be important to do well in the Reading Comprehension section. Your failure to understand or misinterpretation of a particular word could result in your having greater difficulty in understanding the passage as a whole and answering the questions based on it. This is especially true for phrases or aphorisms that the writer may use-very often, these short aphorisms convey a lot in a few words, something which would have otherwise taken several sentences to explain. For example, if the author of a particular passage states that "the chickens have come home to roost", what does he mean? Similarly, he may state that a particular situation was a ‘Catch-22' situation. Rather than explain in long sentences what the situation entailed, the usage of the single phrase ‘a Catch-22 situation', conveys a lot to a reader who knows the meaning of the phrase. Incidentally, this phrase was the title of a famous novel by Joseph Heller.

Of course, the answer options may contain some words which test your Vocabulary to some extent. This is particularly true when you are asked to choose the ‘tone of the passage'. And you shall be in a real soup if you do not know the meaning of words in the answer option!

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