SAT Vocabulary Test Online

This is a pure web app that evaluates your SAT vocabulary skills. The app has a built-in basic level SAT vocabulary of 1200 words, which can help you devise a vocabulary-building plan to prepare for the test.
Want to test your SAT vocabulary skills by level? Vocabulary Test by Level
Stories of USA Today
Materials for Reading & Listening Practice
 Action Panel
 Questions & Answers
Show  
 SAT Vocabulary Test by Dynamic Sheets
1. Overview

The SAT General Test is for high school students who plan to apply to colleges and universities in the USA. To get better scores, some students enhance their vocabulary skills as a part of the effort to prepare for the SAT exam because vocabulary level plays a vital role in all SAT sections, whether reading or writing.

The SAT Vocabulary Test Online web app provides SAT word question sheets to help test-takers build a more robust vocabulary.

Its primary function is to produce SAT vocabulary question sheets dynamically and randomly; it also provides online SAT vocabulary test sheets to host questions and your answers. The test questions are based on an essential SAT word list of 1200, a high-frequency word collection that has proven helpful for SAT test-takers.

If you think the built-in words don't fit your scenario or need a broader range to evaluate your SAT vocabulary skills, you can try English Vocabulary Quiz & Test Online. It's a generic online word test tool for K12 and some English exams. For SAT takers, it offers three levels of options: (The built-in words in the app are similar to Level 1.)

Level 1 Level 2 Level 3

2. Test Sheet Demo

By Create Test Sheet, you can create a full SAT vocabulary test sheet to answer and submit. Below is a sample test sheet to give you a quick experience; however, you cannot submit answers here. Besides, you must have an account and log in to save your results for future reference. Details are in Questions and Answers.

allegiance
 
 
(1)
n.  E.g. They didn't want to salute the flag, saying that kind of allegiance is only for God.
Select answer:
over-regulated administrative system
privilege; unquestionable right; exclusive power to command
loyalty to a nation, sovereign, or cause; fidelity to any person or thing; devotion
action taken in return for an injury or offense; revenge
great mass of falling snow and ice
Don't select.
asinine
 
 
(2)
a.  E.g. Your asinine remarks prove that you have not given this problem any serious consideration.
Select answer:
disagreeably damp or humid; cold moisture; unpleasant humidity
utterly stupid or silly; inanely foolish
physical rather than spiritual or intellectual; affecting any of senses or sense organ; sensory
gloomy; feeling of thoughtful sadness; affected by depression
having precise or logical relevance; pertaining or relating
Don't select.
check
 
 
(3)
v.  E.g. "Young man," she said, "you'd better check your temper.".
Select answer:
draw back, as with fear or pain
stop motion; curb or restrain
admit; yield; give up physical control of another
shuffle; fight or struggle confusedly at close quarters; wrestle in a rough fashion
abandon; disown; turn away from; give up
Don't select.
discrepancy
 
 
(4)
n.  E.g. The police noticed an obvious discrepancy in his description of the crime and did not believe him.
Select answer:
lack of consistency; difference
readiness to yield; happy friendly agreement
model of excellence or perfection; peerless example
singing or chanting of magic spells; magical formula; verbal charm or spell
refusal to yield; readiness to contend or resist
Don't select.
fret
 
 
(5)
v.  E.g. Further reason not to fret is that Obama volunteers have been doing grass roots organizing in Texas for quite some time.
Select answer:
cause to be uneasy; wear away
trespass; enter as an uninvited person
provide extensive explanation for words or phrases
combine; mix; make less pure; lessen or moderate
wander or stray; turn aside sharply; climb or move upward
Don't select.
incentive
 
 
(6)
n.  E.g. Another incentive is the tax and duty-free importation of raw materials to be used for book publishing.
Select answer:
untrained person who pretends to be a physician; charlatan
agreement of opinions; harmonious state of things
moderation, especially regarding indulgence in alcohol; seriousness; gravity in manner or treatment
faithfulness to obligations, duties, or observances
something, such as the fear of punishment or the expectation of reward
Don't select.
irrational
 
 
(7)
a.  E.g. We know that markets can get swept away in irrational waves of optimism and pessimism.
Select answer:
extremely small; short note
very important; of outstanding significance or consequence
illogical; lacking reason; insane
lying under or beneath something; basic; implicit; taking precedence; prior
stubbornly and often recklessly willful; unyielding
Don't select.
mushroom
 
 
(8)
v.  E.g. Between 1990 and 1999, the population of Silicon Valley kept to mushroom; with the rapidly increasing demand for housing, home prices skyrocketed as well.
Select answer:
delay till later; put off; hold back to a later time
multiply, grow, or expand rapidly
unlawfully enter boundaries of some else's property; commit an offense or a sin
place in grave or tomb; bury; place in earth and cover
shrivel; decay; lose freshness, vigor, or vitality; loss of moisture
Don't select.
pristine
 
 
(9)
a.  E.g. He has opposed building dirty coal-fired power plants in pristine landscapes.
Select answer:
relating to man and the planet earth, physical as opposed to spiritual; experienced in human affairs
dried out by heat; toasted or roasted slightly
not practical or applied; hypothetical; of or based on theory
uncorrupted by civilization; primitive; remaining free from dirt or decay
divided into squares; diversified in color; marked by great changes or shifts in fortune
Don't select.
reserve
 
 
(10)
n.  E.g. The bank had put $3.9 billion in reserve to cover such costs.
Select answer:
dilemma; state of uncertainty or perplexity
shallow area in a waterway; break in friendly relations; narrow fissure in rock
condition in which blood lacks red corpuscles; deficiency of red blood cells; lack of vitality
clients of professional person; body of customers or patrons
lack of enthusiasm; skeptical caution; something saved for future use; self-restraint in expression
Don't select.
sluggish
 
 
(11)
a.  E.g. Technological advance is also a major factor in sluggish wage growth in the United States.
Select answer:
tiresome by reason of length, slowness, or dullness; progressing very slowly
represented by graph; described in vivid detail; clearly outlined
precisely and clearly expressed; definite; outspoken
lazy; with little movement; very slow
differing in some characteristics; various
Don't select.
valid
 
 
(12)
a.  E.g. He said the large number of people surveyed and the lack of corrupting factors mean certain valid conclusions can be drawn from the results.
Select answer:
utterly stupid or silly; inanely foolish
logically convincing; sound; legally acceptable; well grounded
near at hand; close in time; about to occur
in opposing direction; harmful or unfavorable; acting or serving to oppose
not able to be entered; beyond understanding
Don't select.
Create my Test Sheet 

3. Result and Statistics

Through the app, you can challenge the built-in 1200 basic words and familiarize yourself with them; every practice will improve your SAT vocabulary level. The app also offers other fantastic merits; for example, you can save each test's result and then analyze or compare it with previous data to evaluate your progress. Such as:

SAT vocabulary test result report
SAT vocabulary test result report
SAT vocabulary test mark distribution
SAT vocabulary test mark distribution
SAT vocabulary test time distribution
SAT vocabulary test mark distribution
SAT vocabulary test mark and time
SAT vocabulary test mark and time
Want to try more and learn more? Please create an account, sign in, and run this free SAT vocabulary test app!