Reading Comprehension (Prose, Poem & Drama) • Topic 3 of 4

Vocabulary in Context

CTET vocabulary questions are not dictionary tests — they ask what a word or phrase means AS IT IS USED in this passage. A word like 'fine' can mean excellent, thin, or a penalty; only the surrounding sentence tells you which. The method is to cover the target word, read the sentence, and slot in your own simple substitute that keeps the meaning intact, then pick the option closest to it. This skill includes synonyms (a word with nearly the same meaning — happy/glad), antonyms (a word with the opposite meaning — ancient/modern), and the meaning of phrases and idioms in context ('to break the ice' means to ease initial awkwardness, not to shatter ice). The topic also covers reference words: pronouns such as it, they, this, those and words like the former/the latter point back to something named earlier, and CTET loves to ask 'the word it in line 4 refers to ___'. To answer, trace the pronoun back to the nearest sensible noun it can stand for. Match the part of speech too — if the underlined word is a verb, the answer must be a verb.

✅ Solved examples

1. Passage: 'After the long drought, the first rain was a real blessing for the farmers.' In this sentence the word 'blessing' most nearly means:
A great relief / something very welcome. Context (long drought, farmers) fixes the meaning, not any religious sense.
2. Passage: 'The path was narrow, but the view from the top was vast.' The word 'vast' is the OPPOSITE (antonym) of:
Tiny / limited. 'Vast' means very large, so its antonym is small or narrow in extent.
3. Passage: 'The new student was nervous, so the teacher told a joke to break the ice.' The phrase 'break the ice' here means to:
Ease the initial awkwardness and make people feel relaxed — an idiom, not a literal action.
4. Passage: 'Meera bought a kite and a spool of thread. She flew it from the rooftop.' In the second sentence, 'it' refers to:
The kite — trace the pronoun back to the nearest noun it can sensibly stand for (you fly a kite, not a spool).

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. Passage: 'He gave a brief but bright reply.' Here 'brief' most nearly means:
Think of the opposite of long.
Use the sentence, not the law sense.
Short
2. A word that means nearly the SAME as another word is called a:
Happy and glad.
Synonym
3. Passage: 'The room was spotless before the guests arrived.' 'Spotless' is the opposite of:
Antonym needed.
Spotless = very clean.
Dirty / filthy
4. Passage: 'Anil and Ravi came. The latter carried an umbrella.' 'The latter' refers to:
The former vs the latter.
The latter = the second one named.
Ravi
5. The idiom 'once in a blue moon' means something that happens:
Not literal about the moon.
Think frequency.
Very rarely

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

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