Lexis · Vocabulary bankfunction · topic · band · registerFilter, then drill

Lexical resource: the right word, in the right register, for the right job.

A quarter of your mark is vocabulary, and it is rarely about knowing more words. It is about reaching for the precise one, pitched at the right level of formality, that does the exact job the sentence needs. This bank is built to be sliced four ways, so you can find the phrase you want and see the band it sits at and the everyday word it replaces.

How to use this. Pick a function (what you are trying to do, compare, concede, describe a trend) or a topic, then narrow by band or register if you want. Each entry shows the phrase, the band it typically signals, whether it is informal, neutral or formal, and a model sentence. The aim is not to memorise a list; it is to notice the upgrade, the move from a flat everyday word to the precise academic one, and start making it yourself.

01The lexical bank

Slice the vocabulary four ways.

Filter by function, topic, band or register, or type a word to search. Nothing is stored; the filtering happens in your browser.

Showing all phrases

02Upgrade by band

The same idea, climbing the band scale.

Lexical resource is most visible when one plain sentence is re-lexicalised upwards. Watch the verbs and noun phrases sharpen, the register lift, and the meaning grow more precise, without the content changing.

At Band 5

“Many people go to city for find work, and this make big problem like pollution and no enough house.” The meaning comes through, but the vocabulary is very general and there are errors (go to city, this make, no enough house); the register is spoken, not academic.

At Band 6

“A lot of people are moving to cities to find work, and this is causing big problems like pollution and not enough houses.” Clear, but the vocabulary is general (a lot of, big problems, not enough houses) and the register is conversational.

At Band 7

“Large numbers of people are migrating to urban areas in search of employment, which is contributing to problems such as air pollution and a shortage of affordable housing.” The same idea, now with precise collocations (migrating to urban areas, in search of employment, a shortage of affordable housing) and a neutral-to-formal register.

At Band 8+

“Rapid rural-to-urban migration, driven largely by the search for employment, has placed acute strain on cities, manifesting in worsening air quality and an acute housing shortage.” Now nominalised and dense (rural-to-urban migration, placed acute strain on, manifesting in), with precise, low-frequency word choice throughout.

The trap. Do not lift the register higher than the task wants. In Speaking Part 1, “I am rather fond of cinematic experiences” is worse than “I really like films”, it is stilted, not impressive. Precision is the goal, not formality for its own sake. For the full register ladder and the cohesive-device chart by function, work through vocabulary & cohesion →

03Basic to Band 7, at a glance

The upgrades worth making first.

If you replace nothing else, replace these. The left column is what most Band 6 writing reaches for; the right is the precise version that does the same job.

Instead of…Reach for…For example
a lot of / lots ofa significant proportion of, numerousA significant proportion of graduates work abroad.
big problema pressing issue, a major challengeCongestion is a pressing issue in most cities.
good / badbeneficial / detrimentalExcessive screen time can be detrimental to sleep.
get worsedeteriorate, worsenAir quality has deteriorated sharply.
because of thisconsequently, as a resultDemand fell; consequently, prices dropped.
more and morean increasing number of, a growingA growing number of firms allow remote work.
showdemonstrate, indicate, illustrateThe data indicate a steady upward trend.
very importantcrucial, vital, paramountEarly intervention is crucial.
04Try it

Eight to drill.

Choose the option that is more precise, or pitched at the right register. Press Check answers for your score and the reason. Nothing is sent anywhere.

  • 1In an essay: “Air quality has ___ over the past decade.” The Band 7 choice is:

  • 2Which is the more academic way to say “a lot of”?

  • 3Speaking Part 1: “Do you like sport?” The best-pitched answer is:

  • 4Cause and effect: “Heavy traffic ___ air pollution.”

  • 5To concede a point in a Band 8 essay: “___ the policy has some drawbacks, but…”

  • 6Health topic: the Band 7 phrase for “sitting down a lot and not exercising” is:

  • 7Task 1, a steep rise: “Demand ___ in the final quarter.”

  • 8Environment topic: the precise term for energy from the sun, wind and water is:

8 questions · not yet marked
From the bank to your own writing

A bank gives you the words. Reaching for the right one, mid-sentence, is the skill.

The gap between a Band 6 and a Band 7 vocabulary is rarely the size of someone’s word list; it is whether the precise word arrives when the sentence needs it, and at the right register. That is a habit, built by being corrected on the exact word you reached for.

In a lesson I read your writing and listen for the everyday word where a precise one belongs, and the over-formal word where a plain one would sound better, and we replace them until the upgrade is automatic. Lessons are £20 for fifty minutes, one to one, in proper British English; the first step is a free 25-minute introduction. This page is adapted from the vocabulary chapters of the forthcoming Ultimate Guide to IELTS Speaking.