Standardized-test vocabulary is a known unknown. You're going to see roughly 50-100 unfamiliar high-tier words on the SAT, GMAT, or LSAT verbal section, and the words pulled from the same well-studied pool every year. Most students try to memorize 500 flashcards and remember 80 of them. The problem isn't effort — it's the format. Plain text flashcards don't survive contact with a six-week exam timeline.
WordHype attacks the problem with images. Every word in the 975+ deck is paired with an original AI-generated cartoon that visually encodes the meaning — obsequious with a fawning aide, quixotic with a windmill-tilting cavalier, obfuscate with fog rolling over a chess board. Cartoon-plus-word gets the meaning into long-term memory in a way pure text doesn't. You're not memorizing definitions; you're remembering pictures.
Each word also gets a fun example sentence that puts it in a relatable context. Browse by theme (legal, scientific, persuasive, etc.), by difficulty, or alphabetically. Take multiple-choice quizzes to test recall. Sign in (optional) to track your scores over time. The whole thing is completely free.
The vocabulary most commonly tested on the SAT, GMAT, and LSAT — covered, illustrated, and quiz-ready.
Each word comes with an original visual that anchors the meaning to an image — the part that actually survives to exam day.
Words live in context, not isolation. Each entry shows the word in a memorable, relatable sentence so the definition has somewhere to land.
Sort by theme (legal, scientific, persuasive), by difficulty, or alphabetically. Study the way that works for you.
Test recall and track your scores over time. Optional sign-in to save quiz history across devices.
Browse the entire word list, cartoons, and example sentences without an account. Sign in only when you want to save quiz progress.
You've taken a practice test and the verbal section punished you on words you'd never seen. WordHype is built to close that gap fast — the AI cartoons get vocab into memory in a way Quizlet flashcards don't.
The Verbal Reasoning sections lean on dense academic vocabulary. WordHype's 975+ deck is curated around the words these tests actually pull from.
You're not actively prepping for a test — you just want a better vocabulary for writing, reading, or conversation. WordHype is free, browseable, and bite-sized.
No account needed. Browse the full word list, cartoons, and example sentences immediately.
Theme, difficulty, or alphabetical — whichever fits how you're studying today.
Each word has its own AI-generated visual. The image plus the example sentence makes the definition stick.
Multiple-choice testing on the words you've studied. Sign in (optional + free) to save scores and watch your progress.
WordHype is a free vocabulary study tool that uses AI-generated cartoons, fun example sentences, and interactive quizzes to help you learn and remember new words.
WordHype covers 975+ words commonly tested on the SAT, GMAT, and LSAT. Words are organized by theme, difficulty, and alphabetically so you can study the way that works best for you.
Yes — WordHype is completely free to use. Browse all words, view cartoons and example sentences, and take quizzes at no cost.
Quizzes are multiple-choice and test your knowledge of word definitions. Your scores are tracked over time so you can see your improvement. Sign in to save your quiz history.
No account is required to browse words and view content. However, creating a free account lets you save your progress, take quizzes, and track your scores across sessions.