Analyze how word choice affects meaning, emphasis, and clarity.
Core Idea
Swapping one word for a near-synonym can shift the emphasis, intensity, or implied judgment of an entire sentence — the SAT tests whether you can detect that shift.
Understanding
This concept zooms out from individual word meanings to ask: what does this word do to the sentence? Two words can be roughly synonymous but create different effects. "The team won" is neutral; "the team triumphed" adds emotion and grandeur; "the team scraped by" implies barely succeeding. Each version changes what the reader feels and focuses on.
On the SAT, this often appears as a question about a writer's revision or about which word best achieves a particular effect described in the passage. Focus on what the passage is trying to emphasize — urgency, neutrality, criticism, admiration — and pick the word that serves that purpose most effectively.
Worked Example
In her original draft, the journalist wrote that the factory "released chemicals into the river." Her editor changed the verb to "dumped," a revision that __________ the company's responsibility by implying deliberate, careless action rather than a neutral or accidental event.
Which choice completes the text with the most logical and precise word or phrase?
Select an answer to see the explanation