What You’ll Learn
🚫 The Myth
“Using sophisticated vocabulary demonstrates intellectual depth and strong language skills. Essays with words like ‘ubiquitous,’ ‘paradigm,’ ‘quintessential,’ and ‘multifaceted’ will impress evaluators. Simple words make you look average. Big words make you look smart.”
Candidates memorize lists of “impressive” words before WAT. They force-fit words like “plethora,” “myriad,” “ameliorate,” and “paradigm shift” into essays regardless of context. Some even practice inserting one “big word” per paragraph as a scoring strategy. The result: essays that sound like thesaurus explosions—awkward, unclear, and often grammatically incorrect.
🤔 Why People Believe It
This myth has deep roots in how we learn to write:
1. School Conditioning
Remember being praised for using “big words” in school essays? Teachers often rewarded vocabulary display. “Good use of ‘metamorphosis’!” became a proxy for intelligence. This conditioning makes us believe evaluators still think this way.
2. GRE/CAT Verbal Hangover
Candidates spend months memorizing obscure vocabulary for competitive exams. After learning 3,000 words like “pusillanimous” and “perspicacious,” it feels wasteful NOT to use them. But exam vocabulary and communication vocabulary serve different purposes.
3. “Sound Smart” Anxiety
WAT creates pressure to impress. When you’re trying to stand out among thousands of candidates, using unusual words feels like a differentiator. “Anyone can write ‘many’—I’ll write ‘myriad’ to show I’m different.”
4. Misunderstanding What “Good Writing” Means
Good writing isn’t about vocabulary range—it’s about clarity of thought. But candidates often conflate the two. They think: “Smart people use complex words → I’ll use complex words → I’ll seem smart.”
✅ The Reality: Clarity Beats Complexity Every Time
Here’s what evaluators actually experience when reading vocabulary-heavy essays:
What Evaluators Actually Think
- “This candidate is trying too hard”
- “They’re hiding weak ideas behind fancy words”
- “This word doesn’t mean what they think”
- “Reading this is exhausting”
- “Lacks authentic communication ability”
- “This candidate thinks clearly”
- “Strong ideas expressed efficiently”
- “Professional communication skills”
- “Easy to follow and evaluate”
- “Would communicate well in business settings”
The Three Ways Complex Vocabulary Backfires
“Plethora of problems” (plethora implies excess, not just “many”). “Literally decimated” (decimated means reduced by 10%). “Very unique” (unique means one of a kind—no degrees).
Misused vocabulary is worse than simple vocabulary.
When you insert a word you don’t naturally use, the sentence bends around it awkwardly. Grammar suffers. Flow breaks. The evaluator stumbles.
Awkward writing = lower readability = lower scores.
Every complex word forces a micro-pause. “Ameliorate”—pause—”oh, improve.” These pauses accumulate. Your essay takes longer to read and understand.
Slow reading = frustrated evaluator = lower scores.
Real Examples: Before and After
The Vocabulary-Stuffed Essay Scoring Pattern
0-1 complex words per paragraph: Average score 7.2/10
2-3 complex words per paragraph: Average score 6.5/10
4+ complex words per paragraph: Average score 5.8/10
The more vocabulary-stuffing, the lower the score—without exception in my batches.
⚠️ The Impact: How Vocabulary Obsession Hurts Your Essay
| Problem | Vocabulary-Stuffing Effect | Clear Writing Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Reading speed | Evaluator slows down, re-reads sentences, gets frustrated | Evaluator flows through smoothly, comprehends instantly |
| Idea visibility | Good ideas buried under verbal clutter | Ideas are front and center, impossible to miss |
| Credibility | Looks like trying too hard; “performing” not communicating | Looks confident and professional; natural communication |
| Error risk | High—complex words often misused or misspelled | Low—familiar words are used correctly |
| Writing speed | Slower—searching for “impressive” words takes time | Faster—natural vocabulary flows automatically |
Here’s what vocabulary-stuffing actually communicates to evaluators:
❌ “This candidate doesn’t trust their ideas to stand on their own”
❌ “They’re compensating for weak content with fancy packaging”
❌ “They don’t understand their audience—evaluators want clarity, not complexity”
❌ “In a business setting, they’d confuse colleagues with unnecessary jargon”
Complex vocabulary doesn’t hide weak ideas—it highlights them. Evaluators immediately wonder: “If the idea was strong, why did they need to dress it up?”
Common Vocabulary Mistakes
“Plethora” — Means excess/overabundance, not just “many.” “A plethora of benefits” is wrong unless you mean TOO MANY benefits.
“Literally” — Means actually/exactly. “Literally dying of hunger” means actually dying. Don’t use for emphasis.
“Unique” — Means one of a kind. Can’t be “very unique” or “somewhat unique.” Either it’s unique or it isn’t.
“Paradigm” — A conceptual framework or model. Not a synonym for “example” or “situation.”
“Begs the question” — A logical fallacy term. Does NOT mean “raises the question.”
“Decimated” — Originally meant reduced by one-tenth. Don’t use for “completely destroyed.”
When in doubt, use the simple word. “Many” is always better than misused “plethora.”
💡 What Actually Works: The Right Approach to WAT Language
Here’s how to write essays that evaluators actually appreciate:
The “Clarity First” Framework
If you wouldn’t use a word in professional conversation, don’t use it in WAT. Your natural vocabulary is sufficient for any WAT topic. Forced formality creates distance, not impressiveness.
Test: Would you say this aloud without feeling awkward?
“Cut” is often better than “truncate.” “Use” beats “utilize.” “Begin” beats “commence.” Choose words that exactly fit your meaning, not words that sound sophisticated.
Precise simple words > impressive vague words.
If your argument is solid, simple words will convey it powerfully. If your argument is weak, complex words won’t save it. Focus your energy on WHAT you’re saying, not HOW sophisticated you sound saying it.
Content is evaluated, not vocabulary range.
Mix short sentences with longer ones. Use different structures: statements, questions, examples. This creates engaging writing without reaching for a thesaurus.
Good writing varies pace and structure, not just word choice.
The Vocabulary Substitution Guide
| Context | Avoid | Use Instead |
|---|---|---|
| Meaning “many” | “Plethora,” “myriad,” “multitudinous” | “Many,” “several,” “numerous” |
| Meaning “use” | “Utilize,” “employ,” “leverage” | “Use” |
| Meaning “help” | “Facilitate,” “ameliorate,” “expedite” | “Help,” “improve,” “speed up” |
| Meaning “show” | “Elucidate,” “exemplify,” “demonstrate” | “Show,” “reveal,” “illustrate” |
| Meaning “important” | “Paramount,” “quintessential,” “indispensable” | “Important,” “crucial,” “key” |
| Meaning “complex” | “Multifaceted,” “labyrinthine,” “convoluted” | “Complex,” “complicated,” “difficult” |
When Complex Words ARE Appropriate
Use technical/complex words ONLY when:
✅ The word has a specific technical meaning you need (e.g., “inflation,” “GDP,” “sustainability”)
✅ No simpler word captures the exact meaning
✅ You know the word well enough to use it correctly
✅ The word naturally fits your sentence
For example: “Externalities” is appropriate in an economics essay because it has a precise meaning. “Ameliorate” is rarely appropriate because “improve” works just as well.
Rule of thumb: If a simpler word works, use the simpler word. Reserve complex vocabulary for when it’s genuinely necessary.
The Editing Check for Vocabulary
- Words you paused to remember how to spell
- Words you wouldn’t use in a work presentation
- Words you looked up in a thesaurus
- Words that made the sentence longer
- Words you’re not 100% sure you’re using correctly
- Words that flow naturally from your thinking
- Technical terms with precise meanings
- Words you use regularly in professional settings
- Words that make sentences shorter and clearer
- Words you’re confident about using correctly
🎯 Self-Check: Are You a Vocabulary Stuffer?
Complex vocabulary doesn’t improve WAT scores—clarity does. Evaluators reading 200+ essays reward writing that’s easy to understand, not writing that sounds impressive. Data shows an inverse correlation: more “big words” = lower scores. Complex vocabulary backfires through misuse, awkward sentences, and slower comprehension. The smartest communicators—business leaders, effective writers—use simple words to express complex ideas. Use your natural vocabulary. If you wouldn’t say it aloud, don’t write it. Let your ideas do the work. Precise simple words beat impressive vague words every time. When in doubt, simplify.