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5.0 out of 5 stars How To Double Your Vocabulary
How To Double Your Vocabulary

Despite advertising hype, no ONE book will double your vocabulary, but reading several vocabulary-building books can double your vocabulary. Different vocabulary-building books have different words and different explanations. If you don't learn a word from one book, you can learn it from another book.

Any vocabulary-building book will...

Published on Oct 27 2003

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars Not Quite Enough
At first I thought this book would help me increase my score of 650. But I soon found the book lacking in more difficult words. Words such as gainsay and mundane are words that I seem to use in my so-called coloquial language.

I only recommend this book to those who want to reinforce their vocabulary or have trouble recalling things under pressure.

Published on July 14 2003 by alise27


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5.0 out of 5 stars How To Double Your Vocabulary, Oct 27 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Vocabulary Cartoons: Building an Educated Vocabulary with Visual Mnemonics (Paperback)
How To Double Your Vocabulary

Despite advertising hype, no ONE book will double your vocabulary, but reading several vocabulary-building books can double your vocabulary. Different vocabulary-building books have different words and different explanations. If you don't learn a word from one book, you can learn it from another book.

Any vocabulary-building book will have many words, a fourth to half the book, that you already understand. You can always skip or skim the easy-to-you words.

Varied, incomplete word selection is another reason for using several books. Some books just take words used on past-standardized tests, neglecting other words. Other books, limit their words to words based on word roots, neglecting others. Often authors have thrown in personal favorite words, even if others rarely use the words. If you see a word in two or three books, it's generally a need-to-know word.

Cartoon/Mnemonic vocabulary books have their fans who like the mnemonic memory aids, which are useful before tests. If you don't like cartoons with mnemonic reminders, don't buy this book. The main weakness of Vocabulary Cartoons is with only one word and one cartoon per page, these books may only have a few hundred words and are expensive per word. Audio vocabulary books such as Elite Word Power, let you hearing each word pronounced correctly, helpful for improving speaking vocabulary.

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5.0 out of 5 stars if you wanna learn fast sats words, Oct 6 2003
By 
Nide Delva (Alpharetta, GA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Vocabulary Cartoons: Building an Educated Vocabulary with Visual Mnemonics (Paperback)
this book is awesome from the first time i had i study 50 in two hours and thirty and i actually remember all of them what is really helpful is the review wheneva you done with the ten words they quiz that also helps alot on remembering and such overall this book is the best im about to buy the second one on this one so if you guys wanna learn sat words then this book is for you
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3.0 out of 5 stars Not Quite Enough, July 14 2003
By 
"alise27" (Hockessin, DE) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Vocabulary Cartoons: Building an Educated Vocabulary with Visual Mnemonics (Paperback)
At first I thought this book would help me increase my score of 650. But I soon found the book lacking in more difficult words. Words such as gainsay and mundane are words that I seem to use in my so-called coloquial language.

I only recommend this book to those who want to reinforce their vocabulary or have trouble recalling things under pressure.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Very effective method, not too advanced, Sep 22 2002
By 
Jeffrey Sauro (Denver, CO United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Vocabulary Cartoons: Building an Educated Vocabulary with Visual Mnemonics (Paperback)
This is the best mnemonic vocabulary book I've come across. Most vocabulary books expect the reader to simply memorize dozens of words from a definition, an etymology and a sentence, then use fill-in-the-blank and multiple choice to reinforce and test you. As most know, it quickly becomes overwhelming. Vocabulatoons visual representations are truly memorable and I still remember the picture for the word for fjord (tourists looking at Ford cars in a Fjord).

The words are definitely geared toward high-school vocabulary and the SAT (as the book cover suggests) so I found myself already knowing about 75% of the words (e.g. gloat, legacy, phobia, vocation, ajar, aftermath).

I'm hoping the sequel to this book will have more advanced words, however, it never hurts to reinforce what words you *think* you already know.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Extremely Helpful, July 14 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Vocabulary Cartoons: Building an Educated Vocabulary with Visual Mnemonics (Paperback)
I absolutely loved this book. Not only have I learned the 250 words effeciently in a fun way, but I also developed the ability to use menomic device for other words as well.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Good book using mnemonics, July 25 2001
This review is from: Vocabulary Cartoons: Building an Educated Vocabulary with Visual Mnemonics (Paperback)
Like many of you, I have used lots of other methods in memorizing vocabularies, and only found that it is totally useless. Even though you have learned those new words one day, you forgot them the next day. It is because we do not make the best use of our brain in memorization. If you know psychology, you know that human memorize by association, that is, you link up a new fact with the old information already contained in your mind. The success of this book is to help you to form association with other English words that you have already known. For example, according the book, the word "Giddy" is associated with an easier word "City", because they have similar pronounciation. Then a picture showing a village farmer getting dizzy with all the complicated roads in the city remind you the meaning of "giddy": dizzy, frivolous. The mnemonic method are based on psychological research, and that is why it is a good source in learning new words. I have tried Princeton Review Word Smart Cassette Programme before, and found that I forgot those learned words within a few days. This book has better methods, and the cartoon makes the whole learning experience less stressful.
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5.0 out of 5 stars THE SINGLE MOST IMPORTANT BOOK FOR THE SAT, May 23 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Vocabulary Cartoons: Building an Educated Vocabulary with Visual Mnemonics (Paperback)
You can sit down for 15 minutes a day and learn 30 SAT words. There is no other book like this anywhere. Buy it. It is really amazing..
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Excellent Resource, April 22 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Vocabulary Cartoons: Building an Educated Vocabulary with Visual Mnemonics (Paperback)
This book offers a much easier, funner, faster, and better way to learn and to *REMEMBER* vocabulary than most other vocabulary books (including those by Kaplan, Princeton Review, *for Dummies, Arco, and Barrons). What makes this book an excellent buy is the unique method that is employed in teaching vocabulary: humorous CARTOONS that serve as visual mnemonics! You will rarely find this strategy utilized anywhere else! Verbal mnemonics for each word are also incorportated into the book. This ensures that you will not forget the words you've learned!

The words used in this resource emphasize focus on attaining a better score on the verbal section of the SAT I. I have come across most of the 300 words in this book on sample SAT Is. I would recommend this title to those who would like to effectively increase their vocabulary in a short amount of time, especially to those with weak vocabularies.

A sample word used in this book is "ubiquitous". The verbal mnemonic is "as big as us". The visual mnemonic is a cartoon that features two extremely heavyset people who claim: When you're "as big as us" you feel "ubiquitous". (Ubiquitous, by the way, refers to the quality of being everywhere at once.)

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5.0 out of 5 stars Ramtastic, July 12 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Vocabulary Cartoons: Building an Educated Vocabulary with Visual Mnemonics (Paperback)
The best book i have ever read. It made me laugh, it made me cry, it made me want to eat a face. What can i say, if you are a Ram, either on or off vacation, then this book is for you!
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5.0 out of 5 stars STUDENTS LEARNED THREE TIMES MORE WITH MEMORY AIDS, Feb 27 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Vocabulary Cartoons: Building an Educated Vocabulary with Visual Mnemonics (Paperback)
I was one of the Florida teachers who tested Vocabulary Cartoon study aids in actual classroom tests in 1997. In double blind tests, my eighth grade students with the vocabulary cartoon books learned three times more than in the control class with traditional rote memory vocabulary books. Both classes studied the same words and were given the same study time. I highly recommend the memory aid format found in the vocabulary books to both parents and teachers. Diane Woolley Port Charlotte Middle School Port Charlotte, Florida
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