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  • Hello, and welcome to Study English, IELTS Preparation. I'm Margot Politis.

  • Today we'll look at some strategies for meeting the requirements of vocabulary, one of the

  • criteria used to assess IELTS candidates.

  • When writing, you can expand what you want to say by adding words that give more detail,

  • or are more specific and descriptive.

  • This is a good way of showing the extent of your vocabulary.

  • Take this sentence for example:

  • Collection services can reduce rubbish.

  • What can you say to make this sentence more specific and descriptive?

  • First, look at 'collection services'. Ask yourself who, what, why and where?

  • What sort of collection services reduce rubbish?

  • They could be 'weekly collection services' or 'better collection services'. You could

  • also say 'more frequent collection services':

  • More frequent collection services can reduce rubbish.

  • You can do more than just use words in front of 'collection services'. You can also add

  • a phrase after it.

  • Ask yourself the same sort of questions: 'what is collected, who is collecting it'?

  • So you can add:

  • More frequent collection services for recyclables can reduce rubbish.

  • You don't have to stop at just one phrase. You might also want to say who does the collecting.

  • So:

  • More frequent collection services for recyclables by councils can reduce rubbish.

  • You can also add words to the verb in the sentence. We know more collection can reduce

  • rubbish - but by how much?

  • It can substantially reduce rubbish.

  • So:

  • More frequent collection services for recyclables by councils can substantially reduce rubbish.

  • Substantially is an adverb. It's one of the forms of the word substantial.

  • Adverbs often end with '-ly'

  • Other words that mean a large amount are vast, considerable and great.

  • Their adverbs are vastly, considerably and greatly.

  • Any of these words could be used instead of 'substantially'.

  • A good vocabulary is not simply the number of words you know. It's being able to use

  • all the forms of a word correctly.

  • For instance 'reduce' means to become smaller or to lessen. Listen to how it's used in this

  • clip from a story about sealing roads:

  • In Asia the cost of re-doing roads is very high. We can address that issue and give them

  • a tightly bound surface, which will reduce the costs for the regional councils.

  • Will reduce the costs. Reduce - that's the base form of the verb. Reduce is a regular

  • verb with the forms reducing and reduced. He uses one of these here:

  • Here you have a car that is travelling along an untreated section of road and then hitting

  • a treated section of the road. You can see that the dust is reduced by a significant

  • amount.

  • Is reduced by a significant amount. That's a verb form. But what form of reduce would

  • you use as an adjective?

  • Our product very effectively binds the soils and particles that make up the materials for

  • the roads. This means you can have a reduced cost in terms of the number of times that

  • road authorities have to maintain and repair that road over a long period of time.

  • A reduced cost. The -ed form can also be used as an adjective like this.

  • reduced price reduced pressure

  • Reduce has a noun form. Listen: One of the problems of driving on an unsealed

  • road is the amount of dust that comes off the surface. With our treatment, we find there's

  • a dramatic reduction in that dust problem.

  • The noun is reduction. You'll find that -ion endings for nouns, -ly for adverbs and -ed

  • for adjectives are very common.

  • When you learn new words it is important that you know all their forms and practise using

  • them. It's a good strategy for building your vocabulary.

  • So learn word forms.

  • Another good strategy is to know which prepositions are normally used with particular words.

  • Let's look at the word 'reason', a word you're likely to use in an IELTS essay.

  • What preposition is reason used with?

  • Listen to this woman talking about a famous road in Australia:

  • The Great Ocean road is probably the most spectacular coastal drive in the world. I

  • think the reason for that is that it's got such a variety of scenery from cool temperate

  • rainforests to the cliffs and rock stacks around the Twelve Apostles.

  • She says, "the reason for that is…". Reason can be followed by the preposition

  • 'for'. You can say, reason for leaving … or reason for arguing …

  • Look at 'know' for instance. With the verb form 'know' we use the preposition 'about',

  • know about, like this woman when explaining why she makes a scrapbook of her life:

  • I'm creating something that gives me a chance to put something about who I am onto that

  • page. I often think when I'm working on a project, "What would my kids like to know

  • about me in 20 or 40 years time?

  • Know about me. But with the noun form 'knowledge', we use 'of', 'knowledge of'. Listen to this

  • man use 'knowledge of' to talk about an art collection that students are studying:

  • We have students from overseas in the course. They get to get this first-hand knowledge

  • of this terrific collection, but also they can take that back with them to the countries

  • they come from.

  • So let's recap.

  • You can add detail about who, what and where to sentences like this.

  • The dragon is paraded.

  • The colourful dragon is paraded. The colourful dragon is noisily paraded.

  • The colourful dragon with people inside it is noisily paraded.

  • The colourful dragon with people inside it is noisily paraded down the street.

  • To do this you need to know that the adjective of the word colour is colourful and the adverb

  • of noise is noisily.

  • And you need to correctly use phrases such as 'with people inside it' and 'down the street'.

  • This is the kind of vocabulary the examiners are looking for.

  • You also need to be aware of the prepositions that go with certain words.

  • You say that you know about something:

  • I'm creating something that gives me a chance to put something about who I am onto that

  • page. I often think when I'm working on a project, "What would my kids like to know

  • about me in 20 or 40 years time?

  • But have knowledge of something:

  • We have students from overseas in the course. They get to get this first-hand knowledge

  • of this terrific collection, but also they can take that back with them to the countries

  • they come from.

  • And you say that you have a reason for doing something:

  • The Great Ocean road is probably the most spectacular coastal drive in the world. I

  • think the reason for that is that it's got such a variety of scenery from cool temperate

  • rainforests to the cliffs and rock stacks around the Twelve Apostles.

  • That's all for now.

  • To find more information about vocabulary visit our Study English website at: australianetwork.com/studyenglish.

  • Good luck with your studies.

Hello, and welcome to Study English, IELTS Preparation. I'm Margot Politis.

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