Tuesday, October 30, 2012


Informal & Formal Vocabulary

The informal words below are best avoided in Academic IELTS. The neutral words are ‘fine’ for the Speaking module, but you really should learn the formal equivalents if you want to score highly in the Academic Writing module.
Informal (Avoid)
Neutral (Spoken)
Formal (Written)
Stuff
Things
Items, Possessions
Folks
Family
Relatives
Kids (younger)
Babies, Children
Infants, Offspring
Kids (older)
Teenagers
Adolescents, Youths
Guy
Man
Male
Old people
Elderly people
Senior citizens, Retirees
-
Boss, Manager
Supervisor, Superior
Cops
Police
Law enforcement
Crooks
Criminals
Offenders, Lawbreakers
OK, Alright
Fine
Acceptable, Satisfactory
Great, Awesome
Good
Preferable, Desirable
Rubbish, Useless
Bad, Poor
Unsatisfactory, Unacceptable
-
Nice, Polite
Considerate, Agreeable
-
Kind, Friendly
Sociable, Neighbourly
Nasty, Cheeky (person)
Rude, Impolite
Abusive, Disagreeable
Stupid, Crazy, Dumb (idea)
-
Misguided, Questionable
Stupid, Crazy, Dumb (person)
-
Misguided, Mistaken
-
Happy (person)
Satisfied, Delighted
-
Happy (situation)
Satisfying, Delightful
-
Sad (person)
Regretful, Distressed
-
Sad (situation)
Regrettable, Distressing
Sick of, Fed up with
Tired of
Dissatisfied with
-
Poor (country)
Developing, Poverty-stricken
-
Poor (person)
In poverty, Underprivileged
-
Rich (country)
Wealthy, Developed
-
Rich (person)
Wealthy, Privileged
Contractions such as don’t are fine in IELTS Speaking but it is better to use do not in the Academic Writing module. Casual forms such as gonna and dunno should only ever be used in the Speaking test and NEVER in Writing.

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