Lesson Overview
Vocabulary development is crucial for mastering English. WAEC English requires students to have wide-ranging vocabulary: words used in everyday life, specialized domains, idiomatic expressions, and figurative language. A strong vocabulary enhances comprehension, writing, speaking, and summary skills, making communication precise and effective.
Lesson Objectives
By the end of this chapter, students should be able to:
- Define vocabulary and explain its importance in communication and WAEC English.
- Identify and use vocabulary in daily life contexts: home, school, and society.
- Understand specialized vocabulary in commerce, politics, science, religion, sports, and technology.
- Recognize and use idiomatic expressions in context.
- Understand collocations and phrasal verbs and use them accurately.
- Identify and interpret figurative language: similes, metaphors, hyperboles, and personification.
- Apply strategies for acquiring and expanding vocabulary for WAEC success.
Lesson Notes
1. Vocabulary: Definition and Importance
- Vocabulary: All the words known and used by a person in reading, writing, listening, and speaking.
- Importance:
- Improves comprehension of passages.
- Enhances expression in essays, letters, and narratives.
- Helps in answering lexis and structure questions.
- Makes writing precise, clear, and interesting.
2. Vocabulary of Daily Life
These are words commonly used in home, school, and society.
a) Home Vocabulary: Furniture, appliances, family members, daily chores.
- Examples: sofa, refrigerator, uncle, washing, cooking, broom.
b) School Vocabulary: Subjects, classrooms, school activities.
- Examples: teacher, principal, laboratory, mathematics, assignment, timetable.
c) Society Vocabulary: Places, professions, social roles, events.
- Examples: hospital, lawyer, festival, government, marriage, election.
Tips: Learn these words in context. For example, instead of memorizing refrigerator, use it in a sentence: The milk is in the refrigerator.
3. Specialized Vocabulary
Certain fields require specific terms. WAEC often tests these in comprehension and lexis questions.
a) Commerce/Finance: stock, capital, profit, invoice, tax, insurance
b) Politics/Government: democracy, election, legislature, executive, referendum
c) Science/Technology: experiment, photosynthesis, algorithm, microscope, energy
d) Religion: sermon, ritual, worship, sacred, altar
e) Sports: referee, goal, track, championship, tournament
Tip: Relate words to real-life contexts and examples for easier recall.
4. Idiomatic Expressions
- Idioms are phrases with figurative meanings different from literal meanings.
- Common examples:
- Hook, line, and sinker → completely or blindly
- Every Tom, Dick, and Harry → everybody
- Bite the bullet → face a difficult situation bravely
- Break the ice → start a conversation
Practice tip: Always learn idioms in context; make sentences to understand usage.
5. Collocations and Phrasal Verbs
a) Collocations: Words that commonly go together.
- Examples:
- Make a decision
- Do homework
- Take a risk
- Heavy rain
b) Phrasal Verbs: Verbs combined with prepositions or adverbs creating new meanings.
- Examples:
- Look after → take care of (She looks after her younger brother.)
- Put off → postpone (The meeting was put off until Monday.)
- Run into → meet unexpectedly (I ran into my teacher at the market.)
Tips: Learn collocations and phrasal verbs in groups and practice using them in sentences.
6. Figurative Language
Figurative language makes writing expressive and vivid.
a) Simile: Compares two things using like or as.
- She is as brave as a lion.
b) Metaphor: Direct comparison without like or as.
- Time is a thief.
c) Hyperbole: Exaggeration for effect.
- I have told you a million times.
d) Personification: Giving human qualities to non-human objects.
- The wind whispered through the trees.
Tips: Identify figurative language in comprehension passages and use it in creative writing for style marks.
Key Points / Summary
- Vocabulary is essential for all WAEC English skills.
- Learn daily life, school, and society words to express everyday experiences.
- Specialized vocabulary helps in comprehension and lexis questions.
- Idioms, collocations, phrasal verbs, and figurative language enrich your writing and speaking.
- Context and practice are crucial for vocabulary retention.
Practice Questions (30)
Section A – Short Answer
- Define vocabulary.
- Give five examples of home vocabulary.
- List five school-related vocabulary words.
- Mention five society-related vocabulary words.
- Give three commerce/finance vocabulary words.
- List three politics/government vocabulary words.
- Give three science/technology terms.
- List three religious vocabulary words.
- Mention three sports vocabulary words.
- Explain the idiom hook, line, and sinker.
Section B – Multiple Choice
- Which of the following is a school vocabulary word?
a) Principal
b) Stock
c) Sermon
d) Tournament - Take a risk is an example of:
a) Idiom
b) Collocation
c) Phrasal verb
d) Figurative language - Break the ice means:
a) Shatter ice
b) Start a conversation
c) Freeze water
d) End a fight - Which is a phrasal verb?
a) Look after
b) Principal
c) Festival
d) Microscope - The phrase as brave as a lion is an example of:
a) Metaphor
b) Simile
c) Hyperbole
d) Idiom - Time is a thief is:
a) Metaphor
b) Hyperbole
c) Personification
d) Collocation - Heavy rain is an example of:
a) Idiom
b) Collocation
c) Phrasal verb
d) Metaphor - Which is an example of a society vocabulary word?
a) Teacher
b) Festival
c) Microscope
d) Algorithm - Put off means:
a) Cancel
b) Postpone
c) Start
d) Ignore - Which of these is a sports vocabulary word?
a) Referee
b) Capital
c) Altar
d) Sermon
Section C – Sentence Correction
- I ran into my teacher unexpectedly at the market yesterday.
- She always makes her home work on time.
- The wind whispers through the trees every morning.
- He told me to bite the bullet and face the challenge.
- The project was put off due to heavy rain.
Section D – Essay / Application
- Write five sentences using daily life vocabulary.
- Write five sentences using specialized vocabulary from commerce and politics.
- Use three idioms in sentences of your own.
- Create three sentences using phrasal verbs.
- Identify and explain figurative language in the following sentence: The sun smiled down on the children playing in the park.
Answer Key to Practice Questions
Section A – Short Answer
- Vocabulary is the set of words known and used by a person in speaking, writing, reading, and listening.
- Sofa, refrigerator, broom, uncle, cooking.
- Teacher, laboratory, timetable, assignment, classroom.
- Hospital, lawyer, festival, government, election.
- Stock, capital, profit.
- Democracy, election, legislature.
- Experiment, microscope, photosynthesis.
- Sermon, altar, worship.
- Referee, goal, tournament.
- Hook, line, and sinker → completely or blindly.
Section B – Multiple Choice
- a) Principal
- b) Collocation
- b) Start a conversation
- a) Look after
- b) Simile
- a) Metaphor
- b) Collocation
- b) Festival
- b) Postpone
- a) Referee
Section C – Sentence Correction
- Correct as is.
- Homework → She always does her homework on time.
- Correct as is.
- Correct as is.
- Correct as is.
Section D – Essay / Application
26–30: Answers will vary; mark based on correct usage of vocabulary, idioms, phrasal verbs, collocations, and figurative language.