Strategies for working out meaning from context

A key strategy to help you improve your overall reading comprehension, reading speed and to build up your vocabulary is being able to work out the meanings of new words from context – context refers to the phrases and words surrounding the word that you do not understand.

When you are reading and there is a word you do not know which of the following do you usually do?

Click on the one(s) you do below.

Look it up in the dictionary
Ignore it
Try to ‘work out’ the meaning from the context


To help you work out the meaning of an unknown word you need to be like a detective and use clues to help you guess what the word means.

PART ONE

Consider common knowledge and the title as a guide in narrowing down the guesses of unknown words.

  1. Ask yourself what the article is going to be about. What do you know about how popular music is made?
    BBC News - When vintage tech makes modern music       

  2. Look at the unknown word and identify its part of speech. Is it a noun, verb, adjective or adverb? Knowing this information will help you to establish what its role is in the sentence.
  3. Look at the sentence to locate any words that signal a relationship between parts of the sentence. Sometimes the relationship is signaled by a linking word such as ‘while, however, but’, which shows a contrast and can help you think logically about the meaning.
  4. Look at the previous sentences. The often give information which can be useful in working out the meaning of a word.

Use these skills to find the clues and work out the meanings of the unknown words in the text below.

  1. In the table below write the part of speech and the clues you can see. (see example)
  2. Click on the underlined word to check your answers.
  3. Write a possible meaning for the word in the table.
  4. Check the possible meanings at the end of each part.

BBC News - When vintage tech makes modern music                       
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-19818425

 

While many singers rush to adopt the latest software to create tracks that sell millions, recording studios are finding that an older-school hardware approach to music production remains in demand.

 

Rihanna's single Umbrella, which reached number one in the US and UK charts in 2007, is reported to include a loop from Apple's Garageband music creation software, which is freely included in Apple's operating systems. The software contains synthesised instruments, beats and loops which can be mixed and sampled freely. Artists like Courtney Love, Nine Inch Nails and Erasure are also said to have embraced it, offering up their own music to be remixed on it by fans.


Unknown word Part of speech Clues Possible Meaning
Vintage
Adopt
Tracks
Older-school
A loop
Synthesised
Embraced

Click here :

Unknown word Possible Meaning
Vintage Old
Adopt Use/choose
Tracks Songs
Older-school The old way of doing something
A loop A piece of music
Synthesised Computerized
Embraced To use something eagerly

Hide possible answer.

PART TWO

  1. Break down the word into parts if it is possible e.g. look at its prefix, root and suffix. This will help you to understand the part of speech and possibly its meaning.
  2. Look for a definition, explanation, synonym or restatement of the word nearby.

But traditional studio recording and mixing equipment is far from being on the scrapheap , say industry experts. "There's a classic microphone called a Neumann U47 that was made in the 50s, people still ask for it because they want the sound they got back then," said mastering* and remastering expert Peter Mew, who has worked at Abbey Road since 1965."They like that vocal sound, it's almost distorted, there's a gritty punchy sound to it that's caused by the microphone. They're very expensive as they aren't made any more - but we bought a lot of them back in the day.”

*to master = to control the sound quality


Unknown word Part of speech Clues Possible Meaning
Scrapheap
Abbey Road

Gritty  

Punchy

Click here :

Unknown word Possible Meaning
Scrapheap A place to throw away old useless things especially metal objects.
Abbey Road A recording studio called Abbey Road.
Gritty Punchy The type of sound caused by distortion. Rough hard-hitting

Hide possible answer.

PART THREE

  1. Decide if the word is positive, negative or neither.

Tim Vine-Lott, technical director at Air Studios, founded by The Beatles' original producer Sir George Martin, confessed that engineers still have a very big soft spot for old fashioned audio tape. “We have an Ampex ATR 102, a two-track tape machine that people still prefer to mix to. Most engineers will stay completely digital until they want to mix and then throw out to tape," he said. The ATR 102 was discontinued in 1982 but is still treasured by sound engineers around the world. Air Studios, whose clients include George Michael, Radiohead and the Black Eyed Peas, has four of the vintage machines, which would not look out of place on the set of an Austin Powers movie. 


The Ampex ATR 102, beloved of engineers at Air Studios

Unknown word Part of speech Clues Possible Meaning
Soft spot
Treasured

Click here :

Unknown word Possible Meaning
Soft spot A liking, a positive feeling about the Ampex
Treasured Valued

Hide possible answer.

PART FOUR

  1. Look at the previous sentences or the ones after. They often give useful information/clues to help you work out the meaning.

"We spend a lot of time scouring the world for spares," admitted Mr Vine-Lott. “Getting tape is awkward. You can buy a hard drive for £100 - you could record 96 tracks on that. Or you can spend £250 on a 10.5in (26.7cm) diameter tape - you get about 15 minutes." It's not just the preferred option of the studio engineers.


Knob appeal
"Clients like the sound of tape on some things," said Mr Vine-Lott. "Sometimes we bounce off it just to get the tape sound."
Musician John Maxwell-Hobbs, musician and former producer/director at The Kitchen studios in New York, believes the appeal of older equipment is that it is so much more tactile than a touch screen or a computer keyboard. "To be able to grab hold of handles or knobs on a mixing desk you don't even have to look at them, you know where they are," he said. "Rewinding a tape, you can physically see how much tape there is left... we are tactiley orientated. "Electronic drum kits still sell because of their physical appeal, he added. "Every music shop has them, it's because it feels good to be bashing at something," he said.
The mixing desk used to make Tubular Bells was discovered in disrepair in a barn


Unknown word Part of speech Clues Possible Meaning
Scouring
Tactile

Bashing


Click here :

Unknown word Possible Meaning
Scouring To search thoroughly
Tactile Being able to touch
Bashing To hit with a lot of force

Hide possible answer.

Reprinted with permission from the BBC (bbc.co.uk)
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