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  1. 8th Grade ELA
  2. Consult Reference Materials for Word Meanings

8TH GRADE WRITING • LANGUAGE

Consult Reference Materials for Word Meanings

Learn to use dictionaries, glossaries, and thesauruses to unlock the exact meaning of any word you encounter.

SECTION 1

Why Do We Need Reference Materials?

Have you ever been reading a book and run into a word you didn't know? Maybe you tried to guess what it meant from the sentence around it. That's a great first step! But sometimes guessing isn't enough. That's where reference materials come in. These are tools — like dictionaries, glossaries, and thesauruses — that people have been building for thousands of years to help us understand words.

2300 BCE
Ancient Word Lists
People in ancient Mesopotamia carved word lists onto clay tablets. These were some of the first glossaries (lists of words with short definitions), helping scribes learn new languages.
1604
First English Dictionary
Robert Cawdrey published the first English-language dictionary, called A Table Alphabeticall. It contained about 2,500 "hard usual English words."
1852
Roget's Thesaurus
Peter Mark Roget published his famous thesaurus (a book of synonyms and antonyms). Writers could now find the perfect word for every situation.
1996
Digital Reference Goes Online
Websites like Merriam-Webster.com launched, making dictionaries free and instant. You could hear pronunciation, see examples, and explore related words with one click.
Today
Specialized Digital Tools
Students now have access to specialized glossaries in science, history, and math textbooks, plus digital tools that combine dictionary, thesaurus, and pronunciation features all in one place.

Throughout history, people have worked hard to organize and explain words. Today, you have more tools at your fingertips than any student in history. The big question is: how do you use these tools effectively to find the exact meaning, pronunciation, or part of speech of a word? That's what this lesson is all about.

SECTION 2

Core Principles: Types of Reference Materials

Before you can use reference materials well, you need to know which tool is right for the job. Think of it this way: you wouldn't use a hammer to tighten a screw. Each reference material is designed to answer a different kind of question about words.

1

Dictionary

A dictionary gives the definition, pronunciation, part of speech, and origin of a word. It's your go-to tool for understanding what a word means and how to say it.
2

Glossary

A glossary is a mini-dictionary found at the back of a textbook. It defines key terms used in that specific subject, like science or social studies.
3

Thesaurus

A thesaurus lists synonyms (words with similar meanings) and antonyms (words with opposite meanings). Use it when you want a better or more precise word.
4

Specialized Reference

A specialized reference is a resource built for one field, like a medical dictionary or a legal glossary. It gives expert-level definitions for technical terms.
5

Digital vs. Print

Both digital (online) and print (book) formats work. Digital tools often add audio pronunciation and clickable links. Print versions don't need internet.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of reference materials like apps on your phone. A dictionary is your main search engine for word meanings. A glossary is like a cheat sheet for one subject. A thesaurus is like a word-swap tool that helps you find the perfect word. You pick the app based on what you need!
SECTION 3

Anatomy of a Dictionary Entry

A dictionary entry might look confusing at first, but every part has a purpose. The diagram below breaks down a typical entry so you can see exactly where to find the pronunciation, definition, and part of speech.

ANATOMY OF A DICTIONARY ENTRYcon·spic·u·ous/kən-ˈspik-yü-əs/adjective: standing out so as to be clearly visible; attracting notice or attentionENTRY WORDDots show syllable breaksPRONUNCIATIONShows how to say the wordPART OF SPEECHnoun, verb, adjective, etc.DEFINITIONThe meaning of the wordEXAMPLE SENTENCEShows the word used in context
This diagram shows the five key parts of a dictionary entry: the entry word (with syllable breaks), the pronunciation guide, the part of speech, the definition, and an example sentence.

When you open a dictionary — whether it's a book on a shelf or a website on your phone — you'll see these same parts. The entry word is printed in bold with dots or hyphens to show where the syllables break. Right after it comes the pronunciation in special symbols inside slashes or parentheses. The stressed syllable is usually marked with an accent mark. Then you'll see the part of speech (often abbreviated: n. for noun, v. for verb, adj. for adjective). Finally, you get the definition and sometimes a sample sentence showing the word in action.

SECTION 4

How to Choose the Right Reference Tool

Knowing which tool to use is just as important as knowing how to use it. Here's a simple decision process you can follow every time you encounter an unfamiliar word.

The Reference Tool Decision Process

Start by asking yourself: What do I need to know about this word? If you need the meaning or pronunciation, reach for a dictionary. If the word appears in a textbook, check the glossary at the back first — it will give you a definition tailored to that subject. If you already know what the word means but want a synonym or opposite, a thesaurus is your best bet.

WHICH REFERENCE TOOL SHOULD I USE?I found an unknown word!What do I need to know?Meaning, pronunciation,or part of speechA better or moreprecise wordA subject-specifictechnical termDICTIONARYTHESAURUSGLOSSARY✓ Full definition(s)✓ Pronunciation guide✓ Part of speech✓ Word origin✓ Synonyms✓ Antonyms✓ Shades of meaning✓ Better word choices✓ Subject-specific meaning✓ Quick lookup✓ Textbook terms✓ Focused definitions
This flowchart helps you decide which reference tool to use. Follow the arrows from your question to the right tool and see what each one provides.

Here's another tip: sometimes you need to use more than one tool. For example, you might look up a word in a glossary to get the subject-specific meaning, then check a thesaurus to find a simpler synonym to use in your own writing. Combining tools is a skill that strong readers and writers use all the time.

💡 Print vs. Digital
Digital tools (like Merriam-Webster.com or Google's "define" feature) are fast and often include audio pronunciation. Print tools (physical books) don't need Wi-Fi and can help you practice alphabetical searching. Both are valuable, and you should be comfortable using either!
SECTION 5

Reading Pronunciation Guides and Multiple Meanings

One of the trickiest parts of using a dictionary is reading the pronunciation guide. Dictionaries use special symbols to show exactly how a word sounds. The stressed syllable (the one you say louder) is usually marked with an accent mark (ˈ) or capital letters. Let's look at some common pronunciation symbols.

Common pronunciation symbols found in dictionaries
SymbolSoundExample Word
ālong a (as in "cake")nā-tion
ăshort a (as in "cat")ăp-ple
ə"schwa" — weak uh soundə-bout
ˈstress mark (say this syllable louder)ˈhap-py
ˌsecondary stress (a little louder)ˌun-der-ˈstand

Words with Multiple Meanings

Many words in English have multiple meanings. In a dictionary, these meanings are numbered. The word cell, for example, might list: (1) a small room in a prison, (2) the basic unit of living things, (3) a device that produces electricity, and (4) a small group within an organization. When a word has different meanings, you need to pick the one that fits the context — the sentence or passage where you found it.

Some words can even be different parts of speech depending on context. The word record is a noun ("a vinyl record") when stressed on the first syllable, but a verb ("to record a song") when stressed on the second. A dictionary will show both entries, and the pronunciation guide helps you tell them apart.

📖 Pro Tip: Guide Words
In a print dictionary, guide words appear at the top of each page. They show the first and last entry word on that page. Use them to quickly narrow down where your word is, just like using section headers in a textbook!
SECTION 6

Worked Example: Looking Up a Word

Let's walk through a real example. Imagine you're reading this sentence in your history textbook: "The diplomat's rhetoric helped persuade the opposing leaders to sign the treaty." You're not sure what rhetoric means. Here's how to figure it out.

Looking Up "Rhetoric"

Step 1 — Decide What You Need

Ask yourself: what do I need? You want the meaning and the pronunciation. Since this is a general English word (not just a history term), a dictionary is the best starting point.

Step 2 — Find the Entry

Open a dictionary (print or digital). If using print, go to the R section and use guide words at the top of each page to find the right spot. If using a website, type "rhetoric" into the search bar.

Step 3 — Read the Pronunciation

The entry shows: rhet·o·ric /ˈre-tə-rik/. The stress mark (ˈ) is before "re," so you say the first syllable louder: RET-uh-rik.
Pronunciation: RET-uh-rik

Step 4 — Identify the Part of Speech

The dictionary says noun. This tells you "rhetoric" is a thing or concept, not an action (verb) or a description (adjective).
Part of speech: noun

Step 5 — Choose the Right Definition

The dictionary lists two definitions: (1) the art of speaking or writing effectively, (2) language that is showy but not sincere. Go back to the original sentence: "The diplomat's rhetoric helped persuade the opposing leaders." Persuading leaders sounds like effective speaking, so definition #1 fits best.
Definition: the art of speaking or writing effectively

Step 6 — Confirm with Context

Plug the definition back into the sentence: "The diplomat's art of effective speaking helped persuade the opposing leaders to sign the treaty." That makes sense! You've successfully used a dictionary to clarify the precise meaning of the word.
✓ Meaning confirmed in context.
SECTION 7

Comparing Reference Materials: Strengths and Limitations

Each reference tool has strengths and weaknesses. Understanding these will help you pick the right one — or the right combination — every time.

Strengths and limitations of common reference tools
Reference ToolStrengthsLimitations
Print DictionaryComplete definitions, pronunciation, part of speech, word origins. No internet needed.Can be slow to look up. No audio pronunciation. May not include the newest slang or tech words.
Digital DictionaryFast search. Audio pronunciation. Updated regularly. Often free.Requires internet or an app. Pop-up ads can be distracting on some sites.
GlossaryDefinitions match the specific subject. Quick and focused.Only covers terms from that one textbook. No pronunciation or word origins.
ThesaurusGives synonyms and antonyms. Helps improve writing variety.Doesn't give definitions. Synonyms may not fit every context. Can lead to awkward word choices if misused.
Specialized DictionaryExpert-level definitions for technical fields (law, medicine, science).Definitions may use jargon. Not helpful for everyday words.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of your reference tools like players on a team. A dictionary is your all-around player — great at almost everything. A glossary is your specialist — perfect for one subject. A thesaurus is your creative coach — it helps you find the perfect word to level up your writing. The best students learn to use all three together.
SECTION 8

Connecting to Advanced Skills

Using reference materials is a skill you'll use throughout high school, college, and your career. As texts get harder, the words get more specialized. Here's how the skills you're learning now connect to what comes next.

How 8th-grade reference skills build toward advanced literacy
What You Do Now (8th Grade)What Comes Next (High School & Beyond)
Look up a word in a general dictionaryUse specialized databases and academic dictionaries (like the Oxford English Dictionary) to trace how word meanings change over time
Check a glossary in a textbookConsult discipline-specific reference works for research papers in biology, law, or engineering
Use a thesaurus to find synonymsAnalyze how an author's word choice (diction) creates tone and meaning in literature
Read a pronunciation guideStudy the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) used in linguistics and foreign language learning
Choose the correct definition from multiple meaningsAnalyze how context and connotation shape meaning in complex texts like legal contracts or philosophical essays

The habits you build now — stopping to check a word, using the right tool, and confirming meaning in context — are the same habits that successful college students and professionals use every day. The only difference is that the words and the tools get more specialized.

SECTION 9

Practice Problems

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
You are writing an essay for English class and you want to replace the word "big" with a more descriptive synonym. Which reference tool should you use — a dictionary, a glossary, or a thesaurus? Explain why.
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC
A dictionary entry shows the following: per·me·ate /ˈpər-mē-ˌāt/ v. — to spread or flow throughout. What is the part of speech of "permeate," and which syllable do you say the loudest?
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Read this sentence from a science article: "The compound's volatile nature made it dangerous to store at room temperature." A general dictionary lists two definitions for "volatile": (1) likely to change rapidly and unpredictably, (2) (of a substance) easily evaporating at normal temperatures. Which definition fits this context? How did you decide?
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
You are writing a research paper on ecosystems for science class. You find the word "symbiosis" in your textbook but want a deeper understanding. Describe the steps you would take, including which reference tools you would consult and in what order, to fully understand this word's meaning, pronunciation, and possible synonyms.
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
A classmate says, "I never use a dictionary because I can always figure out what a word means from context clues." Do you agree or disagree? Give at least two specific situations where context clues alone would NOT be enough and a reference material would be necessary.
SUMMARY

Lesson Summary

When you encounter an unfamiliar word, reference materials are the tools that help you unlock its meaning. A dictionary provides the full package — pronunciation, part of speech, definitions, and word origins. A glossary gives you quick, subject-specific definitions right in your textbook. A thesaurus helps you find synonyms and antonyms to strengthen your writing. Specialized references give expert-level definitions for technical fields.

The key to using these tools well is knowing which tool fits your question, reading all parts of the entry carefully (especially the pronunciation guide and multiple definitions), and always checking that the meaning you choose makes sense in context. Both print and digital formats are valuable. Practice using these tools regularly, and you'll become a stronger reader and writer.

Varsity Tutors • 8th Grade Writing • Consult Reference Materials for Word Meanings