➤Choose your difficulty level - harder levels have more subtle context clues
➤Click START SESSION to begin
➤Read each sentence carefully - one word is missing
➤Click the word that best completes the sentence
➤Use context clues to predict the most logical word
➤Click NEXT after seeing feedback to continue
➤Note: This tests comprehension and prediction, not speed - take your time
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📊 Recent Results
📘 Detailed Instructions
What is context prediction?
Context prediction tests your ability to use surrounding words and meaning to predict what word logically completes a sentence. This measures semantic comprehension, vocabulary knowledge, and your ability to integrate contextual information.
How to use this test:
Select your preferred difficulty level
Choose how many trials you want to complete
Click START SESSION to begin
For each trial, you'll see a sentence with one missing word (shown as a blank line)
Read the sentence carefully and think about what word would make the most sense
Click on one of the word options to select your answer
You'll see immediate feedback on whether you chose correctly
Click NEXT to proceed to the next sentence
About difficulty levels:
Easy: Common everyday vocabulary with obvious context clues that strongly suggest the correct word
Medium: Standard vocabulary requiring attention to sentence meaning and logical connections between words
Hard: More subtle context clues, abstract concepts, or situations where multiple words might seem plausible but only one truly fits
Super Hard: Highly sophisticated academic vocabulary with extremely subtle contextual nuances requiring deep comprehension
What it measures:
Semantic prediction: Your ability to anticipate what comes next based on meaning
Contextual comprehension: How well you understand the overall meaning of a sentence
Vocabulary integration: Your ability to match words to appropriate contexts
Logical reasoning: Determining which word makes the most sense given the situation described
Tips for best results:
Read the entire sentence first before looking at the options
Try to predict the word in your mind before seeing the choices
Pay attention to grammatical clues (verb tense, singular/plural, etc.)
Consider the overall meaning and logic of the sentence
Eliminate obviously incorrect options first
Take your time - this is not a speed test, accuracy matters most