Top 100 Vocabulary List for Grade 10 (Advanced) — V1.1 + V1.3 (Fencing Method™)


Top 100 Vocabulary List for Grade 10 (Advanced)

V1.1 + V1.3 | Fencing Method™

Summary

  • Output target: 6–7 paragraphs, thesis + counter-argument synthesis. 
  • Pace: 25 words/week with a weekly timed essay. 
  • Rule: intellectual discipline > dramatic tone. 

Introduction

Grade 10 (Advanced) moves into higher-level academic control: defensible theses, disciplined tone, and sustained structure. The Output Fence is a 6–7 paragraph structured essay, trained at around 40 minutes, and paced at 25 words/week
Vocabulary must serve argument clarity: strong claims, strong evidence, and clear synthesis.

What Changes at Grade 10?

Advanced Grade 10 students must:

  • Craft precise, arguable thesis statements
  • Integrate evidence smoothly (not list examples)
  • Control tone (formal, restrained, analytical)
  • Use vocabulary purposefully — not decoratively
  • Write 6–7 structured paragraphs with cohesion

Writing now reflects intellectual maturity.


The Fencing Method™ (Grade 10 Upgrade)

  1. Meaning Fence — define with precision + disciplinary awareness
  2. Sentence Fence — 2 sophisticated academic sentences
  3. Paragraph Fence — 1 analytical paragraph synthesising ideas + evidence
  4. Essay Fence — 6–7 paragraph argumentative essay with refined thesis

If vocabulary inflates but ideas weaken → fence unstable.


LLM Tutor Mode (Copy / Paste)

Act as a Grade 10 advanced English tutor using the Fencing Method™.
Select 12 words from the list below. For each:

  • Provide a precise academic definition
  • Give 2 strong academic collocations
  • Write 2 sophisticated thesis-level sentences
  • Create 1 analytical paragraph synthesising two perspectives

Then generate a 40-minute argumentative essay prompt requiring evaluation and synthesis.
After I write, evaluate thesis precision, rhetorical sophistication, evidence integration, tone discipline, and structural coherence. Rewrite my weakest paragraph and suggest 3 high-level drills.


Top 100 Vocabulary Words for Grade 10 (Advanced)


A. Advanced Analytical & Rhetorical Verbs (20)

  1. interrogate
  2. scrutinise
  3. synthesise
  4. evaluate
  5. critique
  6. deconstruct
  7. contextualise
  8. reconcile
  9. articulate
  10. substantiate
  11. validate
  12. refute
  13. interrogate
  14. delineate
  15. consolidate
  16. extrapolate
  17. hypothesise
  18. interrogate
  19. formulate
  20. justify

B. Abstract Intellectual Concepts (20)

  1. paradigm
  2. ideology
  3. hegemony
  4. autonomy
  5. agency
  6. legitimacy
  7. accountability
  8. integrity
  9. sustainability
  10. equity
  11. justice
  12. innovation
  13. tradition
  14. implication
  15. consequence
  16. framework
  17. discourse
  18. narrative
  19. construct
  20. institution

C. Evaluation & Critical Judgment (20)

  1. compelling
  2. tenuous
  3. credible
  4. plausible
  5. contentious
  6. reductive
  7. nuanced
  8. comprehensive
  9. coherent
  10. flawed
  11. robust
  12. superficial
  13. pragmatic
  14. ethical
  15. sustainable
  16. detrimental
  17. beneficial
  18. ambiguous
  19. valid
  20. problematic

D. Structural & Logical Language (20)

  1. although
  2. however
  3. therefore
  4. consequently
  5. furthermore
  6. nevertheless
  7. in addition
  8. conversely
  9. in contrast
  10. for instance
  11. as a result
  12. despite
  13. rather than
  14. instead
  15. because
  16. even though
  17. in conclusion
  18. for this reason
  19. notably
  20. fundamentally

E. Intellectual Tone & Perspective (20)

  1. sceptical
  2. analytical
  3. objective
  4. impartial
  5. discerning
  6. reflective
  7. deliberate
  8. strategic
  9. resilient
  10. critical
  11. assertive
  12. cautious
  13. decisive
  14. conflicted
  15. enlightened
  16. pragmatic
  17. principled
  18. restrained
  19. judicious
  20. perceptive

Let’s Learn! Core Reasons for this Top 100 Grade 10 Vocabulary List

Grade 10 is the turning point where vocabulary stops being “sounding smart” and becomes thinking power under exam load. At this level, vocabulary is no longer about knowing definitions — it is about using words with precision, control, and discipline in argumentative essays, literature responses, summaries, and structured explanations. This list is designed to move your child from:

“I know this word” → “I can deploy it correctly under time pressure, in the exact sentence that earns marks.”

The aim is simple: stable vocabulary that survives real writing, not vocabulary that only appears in a memorised phrase bank.


1) Grade 10 vocabulary is about precision, not impressing people

Many students hit a ceiling because they keep writing in vague, soft language:

  • good / bad / nice / sad / interesting / a lot / very
  • this shows / this means / people think / the author is trying

That language is not “wrong,” but it is low-resolution — it cannot carry analysis. Grade 10 writing requires sharper control:

  • analyse vs describe
  • argue vs state
  • imply vs say
  • contradiction, tension, assumption, consequence, limitation
  • justify, evaluate, synthesise, refute, qualify

This list is built to upgrade students from “general English” into academic and exam English — where every word must do work.


2) This list unlocks three powers at once: argument, analysis, and clarity

Grade 10 is where writing splits into two types:

  1. students who can think clearly and write clearly
  2. students who “know content” but cannot express it cleanly under load

This list is designed to unlock three things at the same time:

  • Stronger reasoning verbs (assert, infer, contrast, critique, substantiate)
  • Cleaner stance control (concedes, challenges, qualifies, counters, reinforces)
  • Sharper description/analysis (nuanced, ambiguous, deliberate, ironic, symbolic)

When vocabulary is correct, your child’s writing becomes more mature, more credible, and more mark-secure.


3) The second aim is structure control: linking ideas like an adult thinker

Grade 10 is where many essays fail — not because students lack ideas, but because their paragraphs are loose:

  • repetition
  • jumping between points
  • unclear logic
  • “sounds good” but doesn’t prove anything

This list trains students to control reasoning flow using connector families:

  • contrast: however, nevertheless, despite, whereas
  • cause: therefore, consequently, as a result
  • qualification: arguably, to an extent, partially, in some cases
  • evidence logic: this suggests, this implies, this reinforces, this undermines

These are not “extra words.” They are the difference between weak writing and high-grade reasoning.


4) Third: we train naturalness and correctness, not “performance vocabulary”

At Grade 10, many students try to sound advanced by forcing big words into sentences. That creates:

  • wrong meaning
  • awkward tone
  • grammar breaks
  • loss of clarity
  • lower marks (because the marker cannot trust the writer)

eduKate Learning Systems treats vocabulary like a skill under stress:

If a word cannot be used naturally and correctly in the exact exam style, it does not count as learned.

The goal is not to impress. The goal is reliable language control under fatigue, speed, and pressure.


5) Fourth: this is a closed-loop training system, not a random routine

Parents and students often do vocabulary like this:

  • memorise → test → forget → panic → cram

That is not a system. That is gambling.

This list runs a closed loop, and every word must survive the loop:

meaning → sentence → paragraph → full response → feedback → repair

If the student fails any step, we do not “push forward.” We repair and stabilise. This is how real capability is built:

Not by more content — but by better loops.


6) Fifth: it’s built so parents can support without being English experts

You don’t need to teach like a teacher. Your job is to run the loop and watch for two failure signals:

  1. Wrong meaning (student uses the word inaccurately)
  2. Forced usage (sentence sounds unnatural or “fake-smart”)

If meaning is wrong: stop and fix it.
If usage is forced: simplify, rebuild with a smaller sentence, then expand.

That’s how you prevent the common Grade 10 trap:

students memorise definitions but cannot deploy vocabulary in real timed writing.


7) Sixth: we use AI/LLMs as a safe feedback amplifier — not a replacement writer

AI can accelerate improvement if used correctly. The safety rule is strict:

The child writes first. AI checks second.

We do not let AI “write for them.” We use AI to:

  • generate multiple example sentences in the right exam tone
  • detect wrong meaning / awkward usage
  • propose cleaner rewrites
  • drill the student on “closest correct usage” vs “almost correct but wrong”

Used properly, AI becomes a home tutor amplifier — faster feedback, more practice, better repair — while the student’s thinking remains intact.


8) Seventh: the hidden aim is confidence under timed conditions

Grade 10 is stressful because students start to feel:

  • “I know what I want to say but I can’t say it fast enough.”
  • “My writing sounds childish.”
  • “I panic in exams.”

When the loop is run properly, improvement becomes visible quickly:

  • clearer topic sentences
  • smoother paragraph flow
  • stronger evidence language
  • more controlled tone
  • fewer “blank moments” under time pressure

That progress becomes motivating. Motivation reduces avoidance. Avoidance reduction improves practice. The whole system becomes easier.


9) Finally: this list gives families back control and predictability

Most families feel insecure because progress seems to depend on:

  • luck
  • last-minute cramming
  • tuition intensity
  • exam mood

eduKate Learning Systems makes progress predictable:

run the loop → detect failure → repair → stabilise → improve

That predictability creates calm. You’re not gambling on your child’s English performance — you’re building it, step by step, with a system that works under load.


Phrase Boost Layer (Grade 10 Sophistication)

  • interrogate the underlying discourse
  • synthesise competing perspectives
  • articulate a defensible thesis
  • substantiate the claim with evidence
  • contextualise the argument historically
  • reconcile conflicting viewpoints
  • challenge dominant paradigms
  • construct a coherent framework
  • evaluate long-term sustainability
  • adopt a restrained analytical tone

Phrasal Verbs (Selective, Mostly for Semi-Formal Use)

  1. carry out
  2. break down
  3. build up
  4. rule out
  5. lay out
  6. sum up
  7. step back
  8. phase out
  9. bring about
  10. take on
  11. work through
  12. follow up
  13. draw on
  14. point out
  15. flesh out

Use sparingly in formal writing.


Sentence Bank (Grade 10 Examples)

  1. It is necessary to interrogate the ideological assumptions underpinning this argument.
  2. Although innovation promotes progress, it may simultaneously destabilise traditional institutions.
  3. This claim appears compelling; however, its evidential foundation remains tenuous.
  4. By synthesising multiple perspectives, a more nuanced conclusion can be formulated.
  5. Consequently, policymakers must adopt a pragmatic and sustainable approach.
  6. Despite its limitations, the framework provides a coherent structure for analysis.
  7. The argument is problematic because it reduces a complex issue to a simplistic narrative.
  8. Fundamentally, integrity should guide institutional decision-making.
  9. In contrast, the opposing viewpoint lacks credibility.
  10. In conclusion, a balanced and judicious evaluation is required.

Paragraph Bank (Grade 10 Synthesis Model)

Example — Innovation vs Tradition

Innovation is often celebrated as the driving force of progress. However, uncritical acceptance of new developments may undermine established institutions and traditions. For instance, rapid technological adoption can disrupt labour markets and social structures. Consequently, while innovation offers significant benefits, its long-term implications must be carefully evaluated. Therefore, a balanced and sustainable approach is essential to ensure responsible advancement.


Essay Practice (Grade 10 Output Fence)

Argumentative Prompt

Is technological progress always beneficial to society?
Use 6–8 of these words:
paradigm, implication, sustainability, hegemony, contentious, nuanced, consequently, pragmatic

(6–7 structured paragraphs)

Critical Analysis Prompt

Discuss whether tradition limits or strengthens modern society.
Use 6–8 of these words:
ideology, institution, discourse, framework, autonomy, reconcile, therefore, fundamentally


Weekly Plan (Grade 10)

25 words per week.

Day 1 – Precise academic definitions
Day 2 – Thesis-level sentence crafting
Day 3 – Analytical paragraph integrating evidence
Day 4 – Counter-argument synthesis
Day 5 – 40-minute structured essay
Day 6 – Rewrite weakest section
Day 7 – Oral thesis defence + critique


V1.3 — Failure Mode Warning (Grade 10)

Common breakdowns:

  • Vocabulary inflation without clarity
  • Overly dramatic tone
  • Counter-argument mentioned but not addressed
  • Evidence listed, not analysed
  • Weak thesis refinement

Rule: Intellectual discipline over linguistic display.


Fence Check Prompt (Copy/Paste)

Check my Grade 10 essay using the Fencing Method™:

  1. Thesis precision
  2. Rhetorical control
  3. Evidence synthesis
  4. Tone discipline
  5. Structural coherence

Rewrite my weakest paragraph in stronger Grade 10 advanced style.
Give me 3 high-level drills.

FAQs

1) What changes most at Grade 10?
You need thesis + evidence + synthesis across a longer essay. 

2) How many words/week?
25 words/week

3) What’s the top weakness?
Counter-argument is mentioned but not properly addressed. 

4) Should the essay sound “formal”?
Yes—restrained, analytical tone is expected. 

5) How do we train quickly?
Timed essay → rewrite weakest section → repeat weekly. 

6) How should an LLM mark?
Thesis precision, rhetorical control, evidence synthesis, tone discipline. 

Start Here: 

Start here if you want the full sequence:

Vocabulary OS Series Index:
https://edukatesg.com/vocabulary-os-series-index/

Fence English Learning System: 

eduKateSG Learning Systems: 

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