01 April 2026 · 9–10 min read
Introduction
Vocabulary is one of the fastest ways to raise 11+ scores because it quietly powers everything: VR synonyms/antonyms, cloze passages, comprehension inference, and even creative writing quality. The goal isn't to "collect" words like Pokémon. The goal is to recognise them instantly and use them accurately under time pressure.
This April Batch A set is designed to be practical: each word includes a clean meaning, exam-friendly synonyms/antonyms, and then you'll see how to apply the words in the kind of sentences that show up in real 11+ reading passages.
Word List
GLECTA Vocabulary Builder (April Batch A)
| Word | Meaning | Synonyms | Antonyms |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zealous | Showing great energy or enthusiasm in pursuit of a cause | Passionate, eager, devoted | Apathetic, indifferent |
| Mitigate | To make something less severe, serious, or painful | Alleviate, reduce, ease | Aggravate, worsen |
| Urbane | Polished and refined in manner; smoothly courteous | Sophisticated, courteous, suave | Rude, uncultured |
| Vigilant | Keeping careful watch for possible danger or difficulties | Alert, watchful, attentive | Careless, inattentive |
| Whimsical | Playfully unusual or fanciful; unpredictably imaginative | Playful, quirky, fanciful | Serious, dull |
| Yearning | A deep, persistent emotional desire or longing | Longing, craving, desire | Indifference, dislike |
| Zenith | The highest point reached; the peak of achievement or power | Peak, summit, height | Nadir, lowest point |
| Jaded | Tired out and lacking enthusiasm, typically from too much experience | Weary, bored, fatigued | Energised, fresh |
| Nimiety | An excess or superabundance of something | Excess, surplus, abundance | Lack, scarcity |
| Transcend | To go beyond the limits of; to surpass or rise above | Surpass, exceed, outdo | Fall short, remain |
| Unwavering | Steady and resolute; not changing in purpose or commitment | Firm, steadfast, constant | Uncertain, wavering |
| Quell | To put an end to a rebellion or feeling; to suppress firmly | Suppress, calm, subdue | Encourage, incite |
| Revere | To feel deep respect or admiration for someone or something | Respect, admire, honour | Disrespect, despise |
| Ruthless | Showing no pity or compassion; relentlessly harsh | Cruel, merciless, harsh | Kind, compassionate |
| Tangible | Able to be touched or clearly understood; real and definite | Concrete, real, definite | Abstract, vague |
| Keen | Showing eagerness or sharpness of mind; intensely interested | Eager, enthusiastic, sharp | Indifferent, dull |
| Lament | To express sorrow, regret, or mourning over something lost | Mourn, grieve, regret | Rejoice, celebrate |
| Mundane | Ordinary and lacking excitement; everyday and routine | Dull, routine, common | Exciting, extraordinary |
| Opaque | Not able to be seen through; difficult to understand or explain | Cloudy, unclear, obscure | Transparent, clear |
| Pivotal | Of crucial importance in relation to the development of something | Crucial, vital, key | Trivial, unimportant |
| Sporadic | Occurring at irregular intervals; not continuous or steady | Occasional, scattered, infrequent | Frequent, constant |
| Validate | To confirm that something is true, accurate, or justified | Confirm, verify, support | Refute, invalidate |
| Wane | To decrease gradually in size, strength, or importance | Diminish, decline, fade | Grow, increase |
| Yielding | Giving way under pressure; flexible or submissive | Flexible, submissive, compliant | Resistant, firm |
| Zany | Amusingly unconventional and idiosyncratic; comically odd | Silly, quirky, eccentric | Serious, sensible |
Did You Know?
- VR Choosing the Best Answer tip: comprehension questions often have more than one answer that seems correct — but only one is the best fit. Examiners reward precision. The correct answer usually matches the passage exactly, while distractors are slightly exaggerated or too vague. Students who go back and match wording carefully score higher than those who rely on memory alone.
- NVR Shading Patterns tip: examiners often use shading (black, white, striped) as the key change — not the shape itself. Many students miss this by focusing only on outlines. The best approach is to check shading separately as its own pattern. Training your brain to isolate one feature at a time significantly boosts accuracy in complex pattern questions.
Usage Examples
- Zealous: "She was zealous in her revision, spending every spare moment perfecting her technique."
- Mitigate: "The teacher tried to mitigate the pupil's anxiety by explaining the exam format clearly."
- Ruthless: "The ruthless competitor refused to slow down even when his rivals fell behind."
- Tangible: "After months of practice, her improvement was finally tangible — visible in every timed test."
- Urbane: "The ambassador's urbane charm put even the most nervous diplomats at ease."
- Vigilant: "Travellers were advised to remain vigilant in busy areas where pickpockets operate."
- Whimsical: "The story's whimsical narrator described talking clouds and colour-coded rain."
- Yearning: "There was a deep yearning in his eyes as he stared at the old photograph."
- Zenith: "At the zenith of her career, she had won four national titles in a single year."
- Jaded: "After visiting twelve museums in three days, even the most curious tourist felt jaded."
- Keen: "She was keen to understand not just the answer, but why it was correct."
- Lament: "He would often lament the time lost to poor preparation in the early months."
- Mundane: "The passage was full of mundane details that made the sudden dramatic ending even more shocking."
- Nimiety: "The chef was criticised for a nimiety of seasoning that overwhelmed every dish."
- Opaque: "His explanation was so opaque that the class left more confused than before."
- Pivotal: "The third chapter is pivotal — remove it and the whole plot collapses."
- Quell: "The head teacher managed to quell the rising panic before it spread through the hall."
- Revere: "The villagers had long revered the elder for her wisdom and calm judgement."
- Sporadic: "His attendance was sporadic, making it difficult for his tutor to track his progress."
- Transcend: "Her performance seemed to transcend technique — the audience felt every note personally."
- Unwavering: "Despite pressure from all sides, her unwavering focus carried her through to the final round."
- Validate: "The experiment was repeated three times to validate the original findings."
- Wane: "Enthusiasm began to wane as the project stretched into its fifth delayed week."
- Yielding: "The yielding branches bent in the wind but did not snap."
- Zany: "The zany plot twists kept readers guessing right until the final paragraph."
5-Minute Drills
- Synonym sprint (90 seconds): Choose 5 words. For each, say one synonym out loud instantly. If you hesitate, that word goes back into tomorrow's set.
- Antonym snap (60 seconds): Parent says the word. Student replies with the antonym. No "sort of…" answers. Clean, exact opposites.
- Cloze builder (90 seconds): Write 3 short sentences with blanks and swap with a parent/sibling. Example: "Her ______ commitment never faltered even under exam pressure." (unwavering)
- Comprehension transfer (60 seconds): Pick any reading book page. Replace one basic word with a stronger word from this list (without changing meaning).
- Exam trap drill (60 seconds): Say the difference clearly:
- Zealous vs apathetic
- Tangible vs abstract
- Sporadic vs constant
Quick quiz (10 points)
- Zealous most nearly means…
- Antonym of mitigate?
- Vigilant is closest to…
- Transcend means…
- Antonym of jaded?
- Unwavering most nearly means…
- Sporadic is the opposite of…
- Validate means…
- Wane is closest to…
- Antonym of tangible:
Score: 0/0
Parent Playbook
- Keep it tiny and daily: 6 minutes a day beats 60 minutes once a week (and it annoyingly works).
- Stop "kind of" answers: push for exact synonyms/antonyms. Precision is what examiners reward.
- Use "because": ask "Why is that word correct?" This trains exam-style explanation and eliminates guessing.
- Rotate contexts: one day use the words in a story sentence, another day in a "school rules" sentence, another day in a "mystery" sentence.
- Mini-tests: every Sunday, do a 10-question quick quiz (like the one above) and track score improvement.
GLECTA Advantage
At GLECTA, we don't just hand out word lists and hope for the best. We build vocabulary into the full 11+ journey: the learning plan, the timed technique, the mock feedback, and the parent support that keeps the whole machine moving.
We support families through Year 3 foundation, Year 4 core, Year 5 advanced, and high-intensity phases like intensive and half-term courses. We also run free webinars to guide parents on planning, exam boards, mock interpretation, and confidence-building — and we support families right through to National Offer Day.
- 11+ Courses (Overview)
- 11+ Year 3 (Foundation)
- 11+ Year 4 (Core)
- 11+ Year 5 (Advanced)
- 11+ Intensive / Half-Term Courses
- 11+ Mastery Courses
- 11+ Mock Tests
Reviews:
- 4.9★ Trustpilot: uk.trustpilot.com/review/glecta.com
- 5★ Google: g.page/r/CYwJSPULjEtDEBM
Related Guides
- 11+ Vocabulary Booster – January Batch A
- 11+ Vocabulary Booster – November Batch A
- 11+ Prefixes & Suffixes That Unlock Cloze Passages
FAQs
How many new words should my child learn each week for 11+?
A strong target is 10–12 words per week, but only if they're reviewed. If recall is weak, reduce new words and increase repetition.
Are these words useful for GL, FSCE, CEM, CSSE and independent exams?
Yes. Vocabulary powers comprehension and reasoning across boards. The exact paper format changes, but strong word knowledge transfers everywhere.
My child memorises meanings but can't use the word. What should we do?
Switch to sentence production. One word = one sentence = one reason why it fits. That turns memory into usable skill.
What's the quickest way to improve synonyms and antonyms?
Daily 60-second drills: parent says the word, child replies instantly with a synonym or antonym. Speed matters because the exam is timed.
How do these words help with cloze passages?
Cloze questions test whether a word fits meaning and tone. Knowing synonyms/antonyms helps children sense what "sounds right" and eliminates weak options.
What's the biggest vocabulary mistake in 11+?
Vague understanding. Example: knowing "vigilant" means "careful" isn't enough — it means "keeping careful watch for danger". Precision wins marks.
Should we learn words in alphabetical order?
Not needed. Learn in theme clusters (personality, emotions, conflict, movement) because stories and comprehension passages use clusters.
How can parents test vocabulary without turning home into a prison?
Keep it light: 2-minute quiz at dinner, 3 questions in the car, or a Sunday 10-question recap. Short and frequent works best.
Do stronger words always mean higher creative writing marks?
Only if accurate. One perfectly used word beats three misused "fancy" words that feel forced.
What if my child keeps mixing similar meanings?
Teach contrast pairs: zealous vs apathetic, tangible vs abstract, sporadic vs constant. Contrast makes memory stick.