<p>So does/did anybody here use wordlywise3000.com to learn for the verbal section?</p>
<p>If so, which book(s) should I learn?</p>
<p>I don't really have time now (the SSAT is in 2 weeks!!!), so I don't think I have time to go through each book and learn the words I don't know!!!!</p>
<p>So which book(s) do you think is best for SSAT?</p>
<p>Thanks in advance :)</p>
<p>P/S If you can, give me about 2 books because I won't have time to learn from Book 8 to 12 or something like that T_T .</p>
<p>Kaplan and The Princeton Review have pretty good word lists. If you’re taking the test in 2 weeks and you’re freaking out, my advice is to cram. Yup. Try to memorize 20 or 30 words each day and you’re ready for the verbal section!</p>
<p>But I think I’ll have finished memorising those 889 words by the end of this week. That’s why I am asking for advice on the website wordlywise3000.com since many have recommended it too.</p>
<p>I don’t know about wordlywise3000.com, but what?! You learned 93 words today? I’m totally blown away.
Since you can’t buy PR or Kaplan in your country, I’d suggest you Google! Book it. That’s when Google comes in handy.
Where do you come from?</p>
<p>i totally didn’t revise and everyone on here was making me feel really paranoid about not having studied but I was fine. I reckon you’ve either got it or not… I know this is easy for me to say with my SSAT score in hand but I think obsessive studying beyond the practice tests is a waste of time.</p>
<p>Well, the SSAT verbal section is words you <em>should</em> know by (insert age here), and honestly, you should probably know 60-70% of the words in that 499 word list via reading, other exposure, BUTTT because you have the SSAT in 2 weeks, you should have time to learn a good amount of them by then, if not, cram greek/latin roots, trust me, it helps</p>
<p>piggy1402, there is no “e-books” for Kaplan and PR on google.com, but there is a service from Google that scans book and stores them in its digital database. Most of the time you can’t view the whole book, only bits and pieces of it. Since you can’t purchase Kaplan and PR from your country, Google Books should help. You can get free snippet previews for most of Kaplan and PR’s SSAT preparation books, which often include the word and root lists.
Good luck!</p>