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#1
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High Frequency Words
In order to learn how to speak and write Standard English you should learn the High Frequency Words of English. These are the words which are highly used in printed materials. Such High Frequency Words are also asked in exams. Here is the list of High Frequency Words.
Abolish Abrupt Absolute Absolution Absolutism Abstain Abuse Acquaint Acquiesce Acquiescence Acquire Acquisition Adapt Adequate Adhere Adolescence Adolescent Adopt Adore Adorn Advocate (v) Affinity Affirmation Affluent Agglomerate Aggravate Aggravate Agitate Ailment Align Allegation Alleged Allegiance Alleviate Allied Allude Ally Alternative Amalgamated Ambassador Ambiguity Ameliorate Amicability Ample Animus Annihilate Annul Anomaly Anticipate Antithesis Apathy Appealing Appeasement Appoint Apprehend Apprehension Apprise Approve Apt Aristocracy Arrogance Arsenal Articulate Assail Assault Assert Assess Assess Assume Assure Astonish Aura Authentic Autonomy Avenue Banish Befitting Belly Beneficial Benevolent Bereavement Bestow Betray Betray Betrayal Betterment Beware Bewitching Bifurcate Bilateral Bizarre Blaze Blur Blush Boast Bramble Breed Breed Brink Bureaucracy Bureaucrat Cabinet Caliph Casual Cease Censorship Certain, Certainty Chore Chronological Civilian Clamorous Climate Climax Clue Coerce Cognitive Cohabit Collaborate Collaboration Commence Commission (verb) Commodity Communism Compel Competence Complementary Compliance Comply, Concede Conceive Concern Conclude Concrete Confer Confess Conform Conformity Confront Connotation Connote Conscience Conscious Console Conspiracy Conspire Constitute Constitution Constraint Contaminate Contemplate Contempt Contiguous Contingency Contrary Convalescence Convene Convention Convict Conviction Coordinate Cope Cordial Counsel Crackle Creak Creed Cripple Crippled Crisis Criterion Critic Critical Criticize Crucial Culminate Culpable Culprit Curb Curious Cynical Damp Damsel Dare Dart poke Deadlock Dearth Debate Decay Decency Deceptive Declaration. |
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ahmedsarah (Saturday, May 10, 2014), M T M (Sunday, May 11, 2014), meritoriousme (Saturday, May 10, 2014), Zain Ahmed Zaman (Saturday, May 10, 2014) |
#2
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can you elaborate what are high frequency words exactly??
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Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit, wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad |
#3
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excellent. i have been working in office and such words are really much helpful for official correspondence. thanks.
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namaal (Saturday, May 10, 2014) |
#4
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High-Frequency Words
High-frequency words are the words that appear most often in printed materials. According to Robert Hillerich, "Just three words I, and, the account for ten percent of all words in printed English." "High-frequency words are hard for my students to remember because they tend to be abstract," says first grade teacher Kathy Chen. They can't use a picture clue to figure out the word with. And phonics clues don't always work either." Learning to recognize high-frequency words by sight is critical to developing fluency in reading. Kathy explains, "Recognizing these words gives students a basic context for figuring out other words. Once they recognize the, they can predict with amazing accuracy what the next word will be." What are High Frequency Words? High frequency words are quite simply those words which occur most frequently in written material, for example, "and", "the", "as" and "it". They are often words that have little meaning on their own, but they do contribute a great deal to the meaning of a sentence. Some of the high frequency words can be sounded out using basic phonic rules, e.g. "it" is an easy word to read using phonics. However, many of the high frequency words are not phonically regular and are therefore hard to read in the early stages. These words are sometimes called tricky words, sight words or camera words. In addition to being difficult to sound out, most of the high frequency words have a rather abstract meaning which is hard to explain.It's easy to learn words like "cat" and "house" because they can easily be related to a real object or a picture, but how do you represent the word "the" or "of". |
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batoolbaloch (Saturday, May 10, 2014), Mazhar Ali Khokhar (Saturday, May 10, 2014), Rana Osman (Saturday, May 10, 2014) |
#5
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Quote:
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The Following User Says Thank You to Zain Ahmed Zaman For This Useful Post: | ||
namaal (Tuesday, May 13, 2014) |
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