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
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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:
isolation of person or ship to prevent spread of infection; condition of enforced isolation
agonizing physical or mental pain; extreme suffering
broken fragments; irregular pieces of rock
light quick blow or touch
promise or pledge; certainty; self-confidence; freedom from doubt
Don't select.
awe
 
 
(2)
n.  E.g. The tourists gazed with awe at the tremendous expanse of the Grand Canyon.
Select answer:
rolling, treeless plain in Siberia and arctic North America
examination of accounts; adjustment or correction of accounts
mixed emotion of reverence, respect, dread, and wonder; fear, as of something evil
wise saying; brief familiar proverb; expression of popular wisdom
goodness, moral excellence; good quality
Don't select.
decipher
 
 
(3)
v.  E.g. Lacking his code book, the spy was unable to decipher the scrambled message sent to him from the KGB.
Select answer:
wander or stray; turn aside sharply; climb or move upward
be unfaithful; reveal unconsciously or unwillingly
quote; adduce as an instance
convert code into ordinary language; read with difficulty
be thankful for; increase in worth; be thoroughly conscious of
Don't select.
devious
 
 
(4)
a.  E.g. The story of Byzantine art, though not precisely devious, is not straightforward either.
Select answer:
having a pale or sickly color; unnaturally pale, as from physical or emotional distress
spreading harmfully in a subtle manner; designed or adapted to entrap
departing from correct or accepted way; misleading; not straightforward
relating to a province; limited in outlook; unsophisticated
delightful; delicious; extremely pleasing to the sense of taste
Don't select.
extent
 
 
(5)
n.  E.g. Fortunately Persian, up to a certain extent, is an exceedingly easy language, more so even than Italian.
Select answer:
state of misfortune, hardship, or affliction; misfortune
extensive space or area; distance or area over which something extends; degree to which a thing extends
small waterfall; sudden downpour
fastening device; firm grip
having power command or control; critically importance; some duty that is essential and urgent
Don't select.
hiatus
 
 
(6)
n.  E.g. During the summer hiatus, many students try to earn enough money to pay their tuition for the next school year.
Select answer:
gap; interruption in duration or continuity; pause
utmost height; highest point of a mountain
disobedience; resistance to lawful authority
singing or chanting of magic spells; magical formula; verbal charm or spell
perceptiveness; intellectual activity; delicacy; quality or state of being subtle
Don't select.
lucid
 
 
(7)
a.  E.g. So in lucid moments, you structure your life to serve your own best interest.
Select answer:
offering fun and gaiety; joyous; celebratory
horrible; inspiring shock; extremely unpleasant or bad
unrestrained and violent; occurring without restraint
easily understood; clear; intelligible
hidden; secret; situated or operating beneath the earth's surface; underground
Don't select.
pariah
 
 
(8)
n.  E.g. Shortly Tom came upon the juvenile pariah of the village, Huckleberry Finn, son of the town drunkard.
Select answer:
someone chosen to judge and decide disputed issue; one having power to make authoritative decisions
social outcast; person who is rejected from society or home
opposite; something that has been reversed; conversation
over-regulated administrative system
narrow pass, especially between mountains
Don't select.
prolong
 
 
(9)
v.  E.g. In their determination to discover ways to prolong human life, doctors fail to take into account that longer lives are not always happier ones.
Select answer:
stop or slow down; catch someone's attention; take into custody
make longer; draw out; lengthen
utter suddenly and impulsively
frighten; make timid; fill with fear
pass into or through; penetrate with hostile intent
Don't select.
rendition
 
 
(10)
n.  E.g. The audience cheered enthusiastically as she completed her rendition of the aria.
Select answer:
translation, often interpretive; performance of a musical or dramatic work
original work used as a model; original type
something, such as the fear of punishment or the expectation of reward
burst of ill humor; display of temper; ill natured caprice
arrangement of parts so that balance is obtained; congruity
Don't select.
singular
 
 
(11)
a.  E.g. Though the young man tried to understand Father William's singular behavior, he still found it odd that the old man incessantly stood on his head.
Select answer:
lively; vigorous; inducing enthusiasm or excitement; stirring
questionable; filled with doubt
wise or keen; shrewd; with sharp intelligence
unique; extraordinary; being only one
present or potential but not evident or active; dormant; hidden
Don't select.
touchstone
 
 
(12)
n.  E.g. Who can tell if that mind, when the touchstone is applied to it, will not be found of a mean and vulgar character?
Select answer:
criminal act of capturing and carrying away by force
something invented, made up; imaginary thing
stone used to test the fineness of gold alloys; excellent quality used to test excellence or genuineness of others
good or just reason; condition or fact of being justified
dose of liquid; liquid mixture; liquid medicine
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!