Toggle navigation
Exam Word
Home
SAT/ACT
Test Online
Help
Privacy
Support
Sign On
ACT Vocabulary Test Online
This is a pure web app that evaluates your ACT vocabulary skills. The app has a built-in basic level ACT vocabulary of 1200 words, which can help you devise a vocabulary-building plan to prepare for the test.
Page Link
Share By Email
Ads-free VIP
Free Online Vocabulary Test
K12, SAT, GRE, IELTS, TOEFL
Introduction
Test Sheet
Report
Action Panel
Go Previous
Go Next
Submit Answers
Reset Answers
Data of current test:
Not submit yet.
Save to Server
Show Examples
Questions & Answers
Show
ACT Vocabulary Test
New test sheet
Show report
aghast
(1)
a. E.g.
The film grabs you by the throat so that any feeling of being aghast is contained – and you hold on to that feeling up to the very last scene.
Select answer:
marked by energy and vigor; manly; able to copulate, as for male
occurring or taking place in person's mind rather than external world; unreal
overjoyed; extremely happy and excited
struck by shock, terror, or amazement
large in volume or bulk; large in number or quantity, especially of discourse
Don't select.
bereft
(2)
a. E.g.
The foolish gambler soon found himself bereft of funds.
Select answer:
leading a wandering life with no fixed abode; changeable; unsettled
long and thin; slender; having little substance
deprived of; lacking; desolate because of loss
huge; of a tremendous size, volume, degree
able to pay all debts; capable of meeting financial obligations
Don't select.
convoluted
(3)
a. E.g.
His argument was so convoluted that few of us could follow it intelligently.
Select answer:
difficult to use or handle because of size or weight or shape; lacking grace in movement or posture
plowed but left unseeded during a growing season; uncultivated
coiled around; highly involved; intricate
long and thin; slender; having little substance
open to two or more interpretations and often intended to mislead
Don't select.
disjointed
(4)
a. E.g.
His remarks were so disjointed that we could not follow his reasoning.
Select answer:
peaceful; tranquil; calm or quiet
leading a wandering life with no fixed abode; changeable; unsettled
separated at joints; out of joint; lacking order or coherence
influential in original way; providing basis for further development; creative
impossible to remove, erase, or wash away; permanent
Don't select.
ewe
(5)
n. E.g.
An ewe has been missing from the flock of sheep.
Select answer:
large cage, building, or enclosure in which birds are reared or kept
tendency to keep together
act of supposing; something supposed; assumption
tender affection; love; act of showing affection
female sheep, especially when full grown
Don't select.
impale
(6)
v. E.g.
His adversary hurled a spear to impale him.
Select answer:
establish by evidence; make firm or solid; support
attack from all sides; trouble persistently; hem in
enrage; make furious or mad with anger
pierce; kill by piercing with a spear or sharp
move or cause to move energetically and busily; teem
Don't select.
incapacitate
(7)
v. E.g.
During the winter, respiratory ailments incapacitate many people.
Select answer:
disable or disqualify; deprive of capacity or natural power
destroy courage or resolution by exciting dread; cause to lose enthusiasm
be unsteady in purpose or action, as from loss of courage or confidence
luxuriate; take pleasure in warmth
make impossible, as by action taken in advance; prevent; eliminate
Don't select.
ostentatious
(8)
a. E.g.
Donald Trump's latest casino in Atlantic City is the most ostentatious gambling palace in the East.
Select answer:
well-bred; marked by refinement in taste and manners
winding; bending in and out; not morally honest
behaving like slave; subordinate in capacity or function
showy; pretentious; trying to attract attention
able to live both on land and in water
Don't select.
peripheral
(9)
a. E.g.
We lived, not in central London, but in one of those peripheral suburbs that spring up on the outskirts of a great city.
Select answer:
located in outer boundary; unimportant; auxiliary
demanding great effort or labor; difficult
composed of elements from a variety of sources
marked by imposing physical strength; firmly built; firm and resolute
indefensible; not able to be maintained
Don't select.
seismic
(10)
a. E.g.
The Richter scale is a measurement of seismic disturbances.
Select answer:
throw into confusion; deeply involved especially in something complicated
caused by earthquake or earth vibration; earthshaking
advanced in development; appearing or developing early
open to view; not secret or hidden
existing or lasting only a short time; short-lived or temporary
Don't select.
soliloquy
(11)
n. E.g.
The soliloquy is a device used by the dramatist to reveal a character's innermost thoughts and emotions.
Select answer:
act of sustaining; something, especially food, that sustains life or health
interjection; word or phrase having no independent meaning; expression usually of surprise or anger
science of sound; quality that makes a room easy or hard to hear in
talking to oneself; act of a character speaking to himself so as to reveal his thoughts to audience
cluster or close group of bushes, trees; mass; sound of heavy treading
Don't select.
traverse
(12)
v. E.g.
When you traverse this field alone, be careful of the bull.
Select answer:
restore to proper condition; help to re-adapt, as to former state of health or good repute
expel; eject from a position or place; force out
disable or disqualify; deprive of capacity or natural power
destroy courage or resolution by exciting dread; cause to lose enthusiasm
go through or across, often under difficult conditions
Don't select.