ellipsisA type of cohesive device. In this case, words are omitted when the phrase would otherwise be repeated. For example: The boy and the girl went to the shop where they bought an ice cream each. The boy bought a chocolate flavoured ice cream and the girl bought a caramel ^ one. He asked for his ^ in a cup, she ^ a cone. Afterwards, they went to the park. ^ The words flavoured, ice cream, and asked for hers in a have been omitted. |
flexibilityFlexibility means that that the student can use different words or phrases to describe the same thing (for example, synonyms). |
fluentIf the vocabulary is used fluently, it flows naturally, effortlessly, accurately, and eloquently. |
fully flexibleThe ability to use a wide range of sentence structures with ease. |
GRAGrammatical range and accuracy One of the four band descriptors for IELTS writing. |
inappropriacyInappropriacy is the opposite of appropriacy Appropriacy refers to whether a word is suitable for the context it is being used in. It is an important aspect of language but an extremely complex one, as decisions about how to say things depend on understanding exactly what is right for the context and the culture. Reference: http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/knowledge-database/appropriacy |
less common lexical itemThis is similar to less common vocabulary. Lexical items include not only words, but also parts of words, phrasal verbs, sayings, collocations, idioms, and expressions. |
less common vocabularyLess common vocabulary includes using such items as idioms and expressions. You can develop your “less common” vocabulary by reading widely in English. IELTS-Simon has a short but good post about this here: http://ielts-simon.com/ielts-help-and-english-pr/2011/06/ielts-advice-less-common-vocabulary.html |
lexical featuresLexical features include collocations, writing style, idioms, word form, and spelling. |
LRLexical Resource One of the four band descriptors for IELTS writing. |