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  1. PSAT Reading and Writing
  2. Words in Context

PSAT READING AND WRITING • CRAFT AND STRUCTURE

Words in Context

Learn to determine the precise meaning of a word based on how it functions in a passage.

SECTION 1

Why Context Has Always Mattered

Language has always been slippery. A single English word can carry dozens of meanings, and the only reliable way to pin down which meaning a writer intended is to look at the surrounding text — the context. This idea is not new; scholars, translators, and test-makers have wrestled with it for centuries. Understanding how the concept of contextual meaning developed helps explain why it is now a cornerstone of the PSAT/NMSQT.

350 BCE
Aristotle's Rhetoric
Aristotle taught that a word's meaning depends on its use in a sentence, not just its dictionary entry. He distinguished between literal and figurative language, laying the groundwork for contextual analysis.
1755
Johnson's Dictionary
Samuel Johnson published the first major English dictionary that included illustrative quotations showing how words are actually used. He recognized that definitions alone cannot capture a word's full range of meaning.
1926
First SAT Administered
The original Scholastic Aptitude Test included vocabulary sections that tested isolated word knowledge through analogies and sentence completions, pushing students to memorize long word lists.
2016
Redesigned SAT Launches
College Board replaced obscure vocabulary questions with Words in Context items. Instead of testing rare words in isolation, the new format asks students to determine meaning from short passages — a skill closer to real-world reading.
2023
Digital SAT Suite Debuts
The PSAT/NMSQT moves to a fully digital, adaptive format. Words in Context questions now use brief passages of 25–150 words, each paired with a single question, making contextual reading skill more important than ever.

The shift from memorizing obscure vocabulary to analyzing words in context reflects a deeper truth: in college, in careers, and in daily life, you encounter unfamiliar word uses far more often than unfamiliar words. The PSAT tests whether you can figure out what a word means right here, right now — not whether you memorized a flashcard. That is the skill this lesson will build.

SECTION 2

Core Principles of Words in Context

Words in Context questions on the PSAT ask you to choose the word or phrase that best completes a short passage. The passage provides all the clues you need — you are never expected to know a rare definition from memory. Instead, you must apply a handful of reliable principles to zero in on the correct answer.

1

Context Clues Rule

The passage always contains enough information to determine the intended meaning. Look for synonyms, antonyms, examples, and explanations near the blank or target word.
2

Tone & Register Match

The correct word must match the passage's tone (formal, neutral, critical, celebratory) and register (academic, conversational, literary). A word that means the right thing but sounds wrong is incorrect.
3

Precision Over Familiarity

All four answer choices usually have similar general meanings. The test rewards the most precise fit — the word whose specific shade of meaning aligns exactly with what the passage describes.
4

Logic of the Sentence

Pay attention to transition words and logical connectors (however, therefore, despite). These signal whether the blank should continue an idea or contrast with one.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of a Words in Context question like fitting a puzzle piece. Every answer choice has a similar shape (general meaning), but only one piece has exactly the right edges (precise meaning) and colors (tone and logic) to snap into place. The surrounding pieces — the sentences around the blank — tell you which piece fits.
SECTION 3

How Context Clues Work — A Visual Guide

Context clues come in several distinct forms. The diagram below illustrates the four major types you will encounter on the PSAT, with examples showing how each type signals the meaning of an unknown word. Recognizing the type of clue helps you read strategically rather than guessing.

PSAT / NMSQT · CRAFT AND STRUCTURE Four Types of Context Clues 1 DEFINITION / RESTATEMENT The author directly defines or restates the word's meaning in the same sentence. EXAMPLE "The ruins were ancient, meaning they dated back thousands of years." Signal words: meaning, that is, in other words, or defined as, which is, also called 2 EXAMPLE / ILLUSTRATION Specific examples nearby reveal what the unknown word means. EXAMPLE "She collected mementos — old photos, ticket stubs, and letters." Signal words: such as, for example, including like, for instance, especially 3 CONTRAST / ANTONYM An opposite idea nearby tells you what the word does NOT mean, revealing its sense. EXAMPLE "Unlike his timid sister, Jake was bold and outspoken." Signal words: but, however, unlike, whereas instead, on the other hand, although 4 INFERENCE / GENERAL No single clue word exists; you must infer meaning from the passage's overall logic. EXAMPLE "After the long drought, the farmers felt despondent." Strategy: Read the full passage, then ask: "What feeling or idea logically fits?"
The four context clue types range from explicit (definition/restatement) to implicit (inference). On the PSAT, most questions rely on types 3 and 4, requiring you to read carefully and reason from surrounding ideas rather than spot a direct definition.

Notice that the first two types — definition and example — hand you the meaning almost directly. The third type, contrast, requires you to flip the meaning of a nearby word. The fourth type, inference, demands the most active reading because you must piece together meaning from the passage's overall situation and tone. PSAT questions most frequently use contrast and inference clues, so practice with those types pays off the most.

SECTION 4

The Four-Step Strategy

Words in Context questions follow a predictable pattern, so you can attack them with a consistent strategy. The steps below work for every question of this type, whether the passage is about science, literature, history, or social studies. Think of this strategy as a repeatable process — the more you practice it, the faster and more automatic it becomes.

Step 1 — Read the Full Passage First

Resist the urge to jump straight to the answer choices. PSAT passages are short (25–150 words), so reading the whole thing takes under a minute. As you read, focus on the main idea and the tone. Is the author praising something, criticizing it, explaining it neutrally, or comparing two things? The overall direction of the passage limits which words could logically fill the blank.

Step 2 — Predict Before You Peek

Before looking at A through D, come up with your own word or phrase for the blank. Your prediction does not need to be fancy — a simple synonym or description like "feeling hopeless" or "very detailed" is enough. This step prevents you from being swayed by tempting but incorrect choices. If you cannot predict, re-read the sentences immediately before and after the blank for additional clues.

Step 3 — Match Your Prediction to the Choices

Scan the four options and look for the one that aligns most closely with your prediction. Eliminate choices that are clearly off in meaning or tone. On most questions, you can narrow the field to two contenders quickly. If two options seem similar, ask yourself which word is more precise — which one captures not just the general idea but the specific shade of meaning the passage requires?

Step 4 — Plug In and Verify

Insert your chosen answer into the blank and re-read the complete sentence (and the sentence before it, if relevant). Does the passage flow logically? Does the tone stay consistent? If something feels off, go back and try your second-best choice. This final check catches careless errors and ensures your answer truly fits.

THE FOUR-STEP STRATEGY WORDS IN CONTEXT · CRAFT & STRUCTURE STEP 1 1 Read the full passage & note context clues STEP 2 2 Predict your own word before looking STEP 3 3 Match your prediction to the answer choices STEP 4 4 Verify plug it in & re-read the sentence Fits? ✓ YES Select that answer! YES NO ✗ Doesn't Fit Re-examine & try again LOOP BACK 📖 💭 🎯 🔍 Dashed lines show the re-check loop. Most questions resolve on the first pass throug…
The four-step flowchart shows a linear path from reading the passage through selecting your answer. The dashed loop back to Step 2 reminds you that if your answer doesn't sound right when plugged in, you should revise your prediction rather than force a choice.
SECTION 5

Shades of Meaning — Why Close Isn't Close Enough

The trickiest Words in Context questions give you four answer choices that all seem roughly correct. They share a general meaning but differ in their connotation (the emotional associations of a word) or their denotation (the specific dictionary meaning). Learning to distinguish these shades of meaning is the single most effective way to improve your score on this question type.

Four words that all mean "careful with money" but carry very different connotations
WordGeneral MeaningSpecific Shade / Connotation
thriftycareful with moneyPositive — wise and resourceful
frugalcareful with moneyNeutral — simply not wasteful
stingycareful with moneyNegative — selfishly unwilling to spend
miserlycareful with moneyStrongly negative — hoarding wealth to an extreme

If a passage describes a character admiringly — praising her ability to stretch a budget and save wisely — then thrifty would be the best fit. Choosing "stingy" would clash with the passage's positive tone, even though both words relate to being careful with money. The PSAT exploits exactly this kind of distinction.

Connotation Spectrum: "Careful with Money"
Miserly
Stingy
Frugal
Thrifty
Most NegativeMost Positive
💡 PSAT TIP
When two answer choices seem equally correct, re-read the passage and identify its attitude. Is the author being positive, negative, or neutral? The connotation of the correct word will always match the author's attitude.
SECTION 6

Worked Example — Full PSAT-Style Question

Let's walk through a complete Words in Context question exactly as it would appear on the PSAT. Follow the four-step strategy and notice how each step narrows the choices.

📖 SAMPLE PASSAGE
Marine biologist Dr. Anika Patel has spent over a decade studying coral reef ecosystems in the Pacific Ocean. Her research has revealed that even minor increases in water temperature can _______ the delicate balance of nutrients that corals depend on, leading to widespread bleaching events that threaten biodiversity across entire ocean regions.

Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word?

  • A) affect
  • B) disrupt
  • C) change
  • D) alter

Applying the Four-Step Strategy

Step 1 — Read the Full Passage

The passage describes a scientist studying coral reefs. Even small temperature increases do something harmful to the nutrient balance, which causes bleaching and threatens biodiversity. The overall tone is serious and concerned — the passage frames this as a negative outcome.

Step 2 — Predict Your Own Word

Based on the context — a "delicate balance" being thrown off, leading to "widespread bleaching" — the blank needs a word meaning something like "mess up" or "throw into disorder." The passage is not simply saying the balance is changed; it is saying the balance is damaged or broken.
Prediction: "throw off" or "upset"

Step 3 — Match to Choices

Option A, "affect," is too vague — it just means "to have an impact on" without specifying whether the impact is positive or negative. Option C, "change," is similarly neutral. Option D, "alter," means to modify but does not carry a sense of damage. Option B, "disrupt," means to throw into disorder or interrupt the normal function of something — this matches our prediction precisely.
Best match: B) disrupt

Step 4 — Plug In and Verify

Reading the sentence with "disrupt" inserted: "even minor increases in water temperature can disrupt the delicate balance of nutrients that corals depend on." This flows naturally and accurately captures the negative, destabilizing effect described by the passage. The word's connotation — something being thrown out of order — aligns perfectly with the consequence of bleaching and biodiversity loss.
Answer: B) disrupt ✓
SECTION 7

Common Traps and How to Avoid Them

The PSAT's Words in Context questions are designed by professional test-writers who understand how students think. The wrong answer choices are not random — they are carefully crafted traps. Knowing the most common traps gives you a significant advantage because you can recognize and eliminate them quickly.

Four common trap types on PSAT Words in Context questions
Trap TypeHow It WorksHow to Beat It
Too VagueA word that technically works but is so general it could fit almost any blank. Examples: "affect," "relate to," "involve."Ask: "Is there a more specific option that captures the passage's meaning better?" If yes, the vague word is wrong.
Wrong ConnotationA word with the right general meaning but the wrong emotional charge. E.g., using "notorious" (negative) when the passage is admiring someone.Identify the passage's tone (positive, negative, neutral) before looking at choices. Eliminate words whose connotation clashes.
Topic MagnetA word that relates to the passage's subject but does not fit the blank. E.g., in a passage about music, "harmonize" might appear even when it does not fit the sentence logically.Focus on what the sentence says, not what the passage is about. Plug the word into the blank and check if the sentence makes logical sense.
Too ExtremeA word that is far stronger or weaker than the passage warrants. E.g., "obliterate" when the passage describes mild inconvenience.Match the intensity of your answer to the intensity of the passage. Look for degree words like "slightly," "somewhat," or "extremely" as calibration signals.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of wrong answers like knock-off sneakers. From a distance they look right — same general shape, similar colors. But when you examine the details — the stitching, the logo, the material — the differences become obvious. On the PSAT, "examining the details" means checking connotation, precision, and tone, not just whether a word vaguely relates to the passage.
SECTION 8

Connection to SAT, College, and Beyond

Words in Context is not just a PSAT skill — it appears in nearly identical form on the SAT and reflects the kind of close reading that college professors expect. The table below compares how this skill appears at different levels so you can see where your PSAT preparation is heading.

How Words in Context scales from PSAT to college-level reading
FeaturePSAT/NMSQTSATCollege-Level Reading
Passage Length25–150 words25–150 wordsEntire chapters or articles
Vocabulary LevelGrade-level academic wordsSlightly more advanced academic and literary wordsDiscipline-specific jargon and nuanced vocabulary
Core Skill TestedChoosing the most precise word for a blankChoosing the most precise word for a blankInterpreting complex vocabulary from extended context
Why It MattersNational Merit qualification; building foundational skillCollege admissions; scholarship opportunitiesSuccess in academic reading across all majors

The good news is that the strategy you learn for the PSAT transfers directly to the SAT — the question format is identical. Beyond standardized tests, the ability to determine word meaning from context is one of the most transferable academic skills you can develop. Every college textbook, scientific paper, and legal document you will ever read requires this skill. Mastering it now pays dividends for years to come.

SECTION 9

Practice Problems

Apply the four-step strategy to each of the following PSAT-style questions. Each question includes a short passage and four answer choices. After making your selection, read the explanation to check your reasoning.

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
The town's annual harvest festival has been a _______ tradition for over a century, bringing together residents of all ages each October to celebrate the season's bounty. Local families pass down recipes for the communal feast, while children learn traditional folk dances from their grandparents. The festival committee works year-round to preserve the authentic customs that make this celebration so meaningful to the community. Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word? A) token B) cherished C) sporadic D) mundane
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC CALCULATION
In a recent archaeological study, researchers uncovered pottery fragments that _______ the region's earliest known human settlement by nearly two thousand years, suggesting that communities existed there far earlier than previously believed. Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word? A) predate B) surpass C) predict D) counter
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Although the novelist's early works were praised for their inventive plots and vivid characters, critics have noted that her most recent book is surprisingly _______, relying on familiar themes and predictable story arcs that offer little to surprise longtime readers. Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word? A) conventional B) inadequate C) token D) accessible
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
Neuroscientist Dr. Kenji Yamamoto studies how the brain processes music. His research has demonstrated that musical training does not merely refine auditory perception; it also _______ neural pathways associated with memory and language, suggesting that learning an instrument offers cognitive benefits that extend well beyond music itself. Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word? A) maintains B) identifies C) strengthens D) produces
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
Literary scholar Ananya Desai argues that the poems of Phillis Wheatley, who was enslaved in colonial America, should be read not as expressions of passive acceptance but as acts of subtle _______ : by mastering the literary conventions prized by her white audiences, Wheatley simultaneously demonstrated her intellectual equality and exposed the hypocrisy of a society that considered enslaved people inferior. Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word? A) compliance B) artistry C) defiance D) ambition
SUMMARY

Words in Context — Key Concepts Review

Words in Context questions ask you to select the word that best completes a short passage. Success depends on mastering the four-step strategy: read the full passage, predict your own word for the blank, match your prediction to the answer choices, and plug in to verify. The four types of context clues — definition, example, contrast, and inference — give you specific signals to look for as you read. When two choices seem close, the deciding factor is almost always precision: the PSAT rewards the word whose specific shade of meaning and connotation align exactly with the passage's content and tone.

Watch out for common traps: answers that are too vague, carry the wrong connotation, act as topic magnets (related to the subject but not the sentence), or are too extreme for the passage's tone. This skill transfers directly to the SAT and to college-level reading across every discipline. The more you practice reading for context, the sharper your instincts will become.

Varsity Tutors • PSAT Reading and Writing • Words in Context