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.

amulet
 
 
(1)
n.  E.g. In Thailand, the Jatukam Ramathep amulet is popular with everyone from Bangkok bankers to village taxi drivers.
Select answer:
implied comparison; one thing conceived as representing another; symbol
lacking restraint or control; feeling of extreme emotional intensity; unbounded enthusiasm
mixture; combination of diverse things
object worn, especially around neck, as a charm against evil or injury; charm
social outcast; person who is rejected from society or home
Don't select.
caliber
 
 
(2)
n.  E.g. Einstein's cleaning the blackboards again? Albert, quit it! A man of your caliber shouldn't have to do such tasks.
Select answer:
place to discuss public concerns; meeting or medium for open discussion
ability; degree or grade of excellence or worth; diameter of tube or gun barrel
knowing how to avoid embarrassment or distress; trait of judging wisely and objectively
pain of a guilty conscience; feeling of deep regret
travel; journey or leg of a journey, especially when slow or difficult
Don't select.
conundrum
 
 
(3)
n.  E.g. For this reason, the best way out of this conundrum is a political compromise.
Select answer:
trick; use of artifice or trickery; deceptive maneuver, especially to avoid capture
psychological disorder by delusions; extreme, irrational distrust of others
riddle; difficult problem; dilemma
road or passage having no exit; deadlock
quack; one who pretends to knowledge, skill, or importance
Don't select.
detached
 
 
(4)
a.  E.g. A psychoanalyst must maintain a detached point of view and stay uninvolved with his or her patients' personal lives.
Select answer:
emotionally removed; calm and objective; apart from others; separate
negligent; careless in performing duty or business
no longer useful; outmoded; antiquated
theoretical; not concrete; not applied or practical; difficult to understand
flexible; moving and bending with ease
Don't select.
foil
 
 
(5)
v.  E.g. In the end, Skywalker is able to foil Vader's diabolical schemes.
Select answer:
set resolution or proposal for future consideration; hold back to a later time
assimilate or incorporate; suck or drink up; occupy full attention
prevent from being successful
let off hook; relieve of requirement or obligation
rear; promote the growth of; help develop
Don't select.
impasse
 
 
(6)
n.  E.g. One possibility to resolve the impasse is a new candidate.
Select answer:
unthankful; ungrateful; one who rewards favors with enmity
compulsive physiological and psychological need for a substance; being abnormally dependent on something
breaking of contract or duty
lack of consistency; difference
road or passage having no exit; deadlock
Don't select.
irate
 
 
(7)
a.  E.g. One idea that has left many parents and other residents irate is a plan to cut at least 22 teachers by changing class schedules.
Select answer:
feeling or showing extreme anger; enraged
stubbornly wrongheaded; directed away from what is right or good
fleshly; of or relating to body or flesh; bodily
pertaining to the universe; vast
closely and firmly united or packed together; briefly giving gist of something
Don't select.
morose
 
 
(8)
a.  E.g. Though we feel sad at someone's pain and sorrow, feeling morose is difficult while actively wishing the person to be happy.
Select answer:
deeply agitated, as from emotional conflict; mad; insane
easily influenced; having little resistance, as to a disease; receptive to
excessively or hypocritically pious; possessing sanctity; sacred; holy; saintly; religious
ill humored; sullen; depressingly dark; gloomy; persistent
hesitant; not fully worked out or developed; experimental; not definite or positive
Don't select.
purge
 
 
(9)
v.  E.g. So it shouldn't be a surprise that county voter registrars received a list of 29,000 alleged felons to purge from the rolls.
Select answer:
cut off from a whole; set or keep apart; divide or separate
adjust or settle by making mutual concessions; endanger the interests or reputation of
beg; plead with; ask for or request earnestly
remove or get rid of something unwanted; free from blame or guilt; cleanse or purify
darken; make dim or indistinct; conceal in obscurity
Don't select.
resentment
 
 
(10)
n.  E.g. That Gerry finally has let go of his resentment is an enormous relief to me.
Select answer:
outward decorations; ornamental covering or harness for horse
condition or quality of being completely forgotten; official overlooking of offenses; amnesty
arrangement of parts so that balance is obtained; congruity
indignation; deep sense of injury; strong displeasure
group of trees smaller than a forest; orchard
Don't select.
smirk
 
 
(11)
n.  E.g. A smirk is really a terrible habit for any politician.
Select answer:
ornament, hanging from a necklace; one of a matched pair; a companion piece
smile expressing scorn instead of pleasure; smile in affected, often offensively self-satisfied manner
use of force to get someone to obey
small waterfall; sudden downpour
homesickness; bittersweet longing for things of past.
Don't select.
wary
 
 
(12)
a.  E.g. Many teachers remain wary of linking test scores to paychecks.
Select answer:
very cautious; on guard; watchful
contrary to nature, reason, or common sense; ridiculous
uncertain; risky; dangerously lacking in security or stability
overconfident; going beyond what is right or proper; excessively forward
cheap in nature or appearance; tastelessly showy; shameful or indecent
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!