SAT Vocabulary Test Online

This is a pure web app that evaluates your SAT vocabulary skills. The app has a built-in basic level SAT vocabulary of 1200 words, which can help you devise a vocabulary-building plan to prepare for the test.
Want to test your SAT vocabulary skills by level? Vocabulary Test by Level
Free Online Vocabulary Test
K12, SAT, GRE, IELTS, TOEFL
 Action Panel
 Questions & Answers
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 SAT Vocabulary Test by Dynamic Sheets
1. Overview

The SAT General Test is for high school students who plan to apply to colleges and universities in the USA. To get better scores, some students enhance their vocabulary skills as a part of the effort to prepare for the SAT exam because vocabulary level plays a vital role in all SAT sections, whether reading or writing.

The SAT Vocabulary Test Online web app provides SAT word question sheets to help test-takers build a more robust vocabulary.

Its primary function is to produce SAT vocabulary question sheets dynamically and randomly; it also provides online SAT vocabulary test sheets to host questions and your answers. The test questions are based on an essential SAT word list of 1200, a high-frequency word collection that has proven helpful for SAT test-takers.

If you think the built-in words don't fit your scenario or need a broader range to evaluate your SAT vocabulary skills, you can try English Vocabulary Quiz & Test Online. It's a generic online word test tool for K12 and some English exams. For SAT takers, it offers three levels of options: (The built-in words in the app are similar to Level 1.)

Level 1 Level 2 Level 3

2. Test Sheet Demo

By Create Test Sheet, you can create a full SAT vocabulary test sheet to answer and submit. Below is a sample test sheet to give you a quick experience; however, you cannot submit answers here. Besides, you must have an account and log in to save your results for future reference. Details are in Questions and Answers.

anguish
 
 
(1)
n.  E.g. Visiting the site of the explosion, the governor wept to see the anguish of the victims and their families.
Select answer:
trick; use of artifice or trickery; deceptive maneuver, especially to avoid capture
propriety in manners and conduct; good taste in manners; conventions or requirements of polite behavior
most essential or most vital part of some idea or experience; central idea
authority to act for another; agent or substitute
agonizing physical or mental pain; extreme suffering
Don't select.
cache
 
 
(2)
n.  E.g. The detectives followed the suspect until he led them to the cache where he had stored his loot.
Select answer:
hiding place; secret store of valuables or money
subtle or slight degree of difference; small difference in meaning
sudden downfall; complete disaster
moderation or limitation; controlling force; loss of freedom; control of feelings
gap; interruption in duration or continuity; pause
Don't select.
comatose
 
 
(3)
a.  E.g. We would expect a reasonable adult, if a kid is in comatose, to call an ambulance.
Select answer:
notoriously bad; having exceedingly bad reputation
being of vital or central importance; crucial
made of or containing inferior material; not genuine; of low rank; poor quality or craft
in coma; extremely sleepy; unconscious
relating to stars; star-shaped
Don't select.
elusive
 
 
(4)
a.  E.g. Trying to pin down exactly when the contractors would be finished remodeling the house, Nancy was frustrated by their elusive replies.
Select answer:
intended to attract notice and impress others; making unjustified claims; overly ambitious
firmly established by nature or habit
very important; of outstanding significance or consequence
difficult to describe; difficult to detect or grasp by mind
yielding; lenient; forbearing or tolerant
Don't select.
garner
 
 
(5)
v.  E.g. And, of course, that urge to garner is one way in which power ultimately corrupts.
Select answer:
gather; store up; amass; acquire
view with scorn or contempt; feel with aversion
imitate; mimic, as an ape imitates human actions
fasten together; join at the ends; join by interweaving strands
scold; express objections or criticisms in bitter, harsh, or abusive language
Don't select.
imperative
 
 
(6)
n.  E.g. Every man has his own destiny: the only imperative is to follow it, to accept it, no matter where it leads him.
Select answer:
natural talent or aptitude
forecasted course of a disease; forecast or prediction; likelihood of recovery from a disease
having power command or control; critically importance; some duty that is essential and urgent
gift giver; person who gives people or institutions with financial help
something apparently contradictory in nature; statement that looks false but is actually correct
Don't select.
lethal
 
 
(7)
a.  E.g. In a decision the court upheld the use of all three drugs in lethal injections.
Select answer:
deadly; causing or capable of causing death
repeated too often; over familiar through overuse; worn out by use
intensely cold; lacking warmth; stiff and formal in manner
not able to be corrected or repaired
flagrant; conspicuously obvious; loudly offensive
Don't select.
morbid
 
 
(8)
a.  E.g. He suffered much from a morbid acuteness of the senses.
Select answer:
caused by disease; pathological or diseased; unhealthy or unwholesome
composed, and dignified in character or manner
far in space or time; cold in manner
serving as model; outstanding; typical
tending to spread aggressively; tending to invade
Don't select.
penchant
 
 
(9)
n.  E.g. There is a certain penchant in true believers to ignore input which conflicts and contradicts that belief.
Select answer:
strong inclination; definite liking
use of force to get someone to obey
pretense of strength; mislead or deceive
extreme rigor; strictness; rigidity; harshness
secret meeting; agreement, as between lovers, to meet at a certain time and place
Don't select.
resilient
 
 
(10)
a.  E.g. Based on its highly resilient, the steel is good to make excellent bedsprings.
Select answer:
everlasting; continuing without interruption
open to doubt; unsettled; questionable; difficult to solve
open and unrestrained; free from traditional social or moral constraints
overconfident; going beyond what is right or proper; excessively forward
elastic; having power of springing back or recover readily
Don't select.
shimmer
 
 
(11)
v.  E.g. This rope is woven with a maximum amount of reflective tracers--which will make it shimmer in the night.
Select answer:
shine with a weak or fitful light; glimmer intermittently
focus toward; determine position with reference to another point; locate to face the east
foreshadow; indicate by signs; be an omen of; predict
beg for urgently; make an earnest appeal
pierce with numerous holes; perforate; permeate or spread throughout
Don't select.
vent
 
 
(12)
v.  E.g. The angry teacher will vent his wrath on his class.
Select answer:
recover; return to health or strength; recover from financial loss
darken; make dim or indistinct; conceal in obscurity
express, especially forcefully; release or discharge through an opening; rise to surface of water to breathe
multiply, grow, or expand rapidly
process fast and efficiently; execute quickly and efficiently
Don't select.
Create my Test Sheet 

3. Result and Statistics

Through the app, you can challenge the built-in 1200 basic words and familiarize yourself with them; every practice will improve your SAT vocabulary level. The app also offers other fantastic merits; for example, you can save each test's result and then analyze or compare it with previous data to evaluate your progress. Such as:

SAT vocabulary test result report
SAT vocabulary test result report
SAT vocabulary test mark distribution
SAT vocabulary test mark distribution
SAT vocabulary test time distribution
SAT vocabulary test mark distribution
SAT vocabulary test mark and time
SAT vocabulary test mark and time
Want to try more and learn more? Please create an account, sign in, and run this free SAT vocabulary test app!