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CEFR Vocabulary Levels Explained: From A1 to C2 Mastery

Vaishnavi
By Vaishnavi
CEFR Vocabulary Levels Explained: From A1 to C2 Mastery

Do you know the difference between being fluent and being proficient?

Most people assume they’re advanced — until they meet a C2-level word and realize they’ve never seen it. The gap between “I can get by” and “I can write an academic paper” is enormous, and most learners don’t know where they actually stand.

The Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) fixes that. It’s the international standard for measuring language ability, running from A1 (basic survival English) to C2 (effortless academic fluency). Every major test — IELTS, TOEFL, Cambridge, TOEIC — maps to it.

This guide does three things:

  1. Shows you exactly what vocabulary lives at each level — with example sentences and common mistakes
  2. Gives you a self-assessment — so you know which level you’re actually at
  3. Provides practice exercises — so you can test yourself as you go

Grab a notebook. Let’s find your level.

  • A1 (500–800 words): Basic survival — numbers, family, food, simple verbs
  • A2 (1000–1500 words): Travel, routines, descriptions, past and future tense
  • B1 (2000–3000 words): Work, opinions, collocations, handling situations independently
  • B2 (4000–5000 words): Business vocabulary, nuance, professional language
  • C1 (6000–8000 words): Academic terms, precise synonyms, formal register
  • C2 (10,000+ words): Rare and literary words — the ceiling of the language
  • Where most people plateau: The jump from B2 to C1. Vocabulary stops being “more words” and becomes “the right word.”
  • Best shortcut: Read at your target level + 1. If you’re B1, read B2 material.

What Is the CEFR Scale?

Six levels, three bands. Here’s what each actually looks like in practice:

BandCEFRLabelWhat You Can Actually Do
Basic UserA1BeginnerIntroduce yourself, order food, understand slow speech
Basic UserA2ElementaryTalk about routines, describe your past, handle simple travel
Independent UserB1IntermediateHave conversations, handle work situations, express opinions
Independent UserB2Upper IntermediateGive presentations, understand news, write detailed emails
Proficient UserC1AdvancedRead academic texts, debate complex topics, use nuanced language
Proficient UserC2MasteryUnderstand everything, write professionally, catch wordplay and subtext

The Council of Europe designed this scale to describe what you can do with the language, not just what you know. A B1 learner might know 3000 words but still struggle with fast conversation. A C1 learner might know 6000 words and handle the same conversation easily because they’ve internalized patterns, not just vocabulary.


Self-Assessment: Find Your Starting Level

Before we dive into every level, let’s get a baseline. Read each statement. The highest number where you say “yes” is your approximate level.

#Can you do this?Likely Level
1”I can say my name, count to 20, and order a coffee.”A1
2”I can talk about what I did yesterday and describe my hometown.”A2
3”I can have a conversation about my job and make a hotel reservation confidently.”B1
4”I can give a presentation at work and understand most news articles.”B2
5”I can read academic papers and express subtle opinions without searching for words.”C1
6”I can understand everything I read or hear, including humor, sarcasm, and wordplay.”C2

Don’t worry if you’re between levels — most people are. The point is knowing where your gaps are. Now let’s walk through every level in detail. For each one, I’ll give you the vocabulary with examples, common mistakes, and a practice exercise. Treat this as a self-study workbook. Read it, then do the exercises.


A1 — Beginner: Building Blocks

A1 is survival English. You’re not having deep conversations, but you can handle immediate needs. Vocabulary here is concrete and high-frequency — words you see and use every day.

A1 Vocabulary With Examples

Basic Verbs

WordExample SentenceNotes
beI am a student.Most common verb in English
haveI have two brothers.Also for possession and experiences
goI go to work by bus.Often followed by “to”
eatWe eat lunch at 1 PM.Irregular past: ate
drinkI drink water every morning.Irregular past: drank
sleepThe baby sleeps at night.Irregular past: slept
buyI buy food at the market.Irregular past: bought
liveI live in Mumbai.Regular verb
workShe works in a hospital.Add -s for he/she/it
likeI like this song.Use “don’t like” for negative

Family & People

WordExampleNotes
mother / fatherMy mother is a teacher.Informal: mom/mum, dad
brother / sisterI have one brother.Add “older/younger” for age
aunt / uncleMy aunt lives in Delhi.Your parent’s sibling
cousinMy cousin is my age.Same word for male and female
friendShe is my best friend.Collocation: “best friend”
neighborOur neighbor has a dog.Someone who lives near you

Everyday Nouns

WordExampleNotes
house / homeI live in a small house.”Home” is more emotional
waterI need a glass of water.Uncountable — no “a water”
foodThe food here is good.Also uncountable
bookI am reading a book.Regular noun
phoneMy phone battery is dead.Short for telephone
moneyDo you have money?Uncountable
store / shopThe store opens at 9 AM.Both words work
schoolThe children go to school.Also used for university

Basic Adjectives

WordOppositeExample
bigsmallThis room is big.
hotcoldThe coffee is hot.
expensivecheapThis phone is expensive.
newoldI have a new job.
goodbadThe movie was good.
happysadShe looks happy today.
hungryfullI am hungry. Let’s eat.
thirstyI am thirsty. I need water.

Key Question Words

WordUseExample
WhatAsking about thingsWhat is your name?
WhereAsking about placesWhere do you live?
WhenAsking about timeWhen is the meeting?
WhoAsking about peopleWho is she?
HowAsking about mannerHow are you?
How muchAsking about price/quantityHow much is this?

Numbers & Time

WordExample
1–20I have ten rupees.
30, 40… 100There are fifty students.
Days (Monday–Sunday)I work from Monday to Friday.
MonthsMy birthday is in January.
Today / Tomorrow / YesterdayToday is hot. Yesterday was cold.
Morning / Afternoon / EveningI exercise in the morning.

Clothes & Body

WordExampleNotes
shirtI wear a white shirt to work.
shoesThese shoes are comfortable.Always plural
glovesWear gloves in winter.Always plural
hatShe wears a red hat.Also called “cap”
handsWash your hands before eating.Always plural
feetMy feet hurt.Plural of “foot”

Common A1 Mistakes

  1. “I have 25 years” ❌ → “I am 25 years old”

    • In English, you don’t “have” an age. You “are” an age.
  2. “I go to home” ❌ → “I go home”

    • “Home” doesn’t need “to” after movement verbs.
  3. “She go to school” ❌ → “She goes to school”

    • He/she/it takes an -s on the verb in present simple.
  4. “I am agree” ❌ → “I agree”

    • “Agree” is a verb, not an adjective. No “am” needed.
  5. “I no have money” ❌ → “I don’t have money”

    • Negatives need “don’t/doesn’t,” not “no.”

A1 Practice Exercise

Choose the correct word for each sentence:

  1. The opposite of expensive is ________ (heavy / cheap / rich)
  2. My mother’s sister is my ________ (aunt / uncle / cousin)
  3. I need a glass of water. I am ________ (hungry / angry / thirsty)
  4. You buy books at a ________ (library / bookstore / shelf)
  5. In winter, you wear ________ on your hands (socks / gloves / boots)
  6. I ________ my phone every night (fill / load / charge)

Answers: cheap, aunt, thirsty, bookstore, gloves, charge


A2 — Elementary: Expanding Your Range

A2 adds about 500–1000 more words. You can handle travel, describe your life, and talk about the past and future. Your sentences get longer and more specific.

A2 Vocabulary With Examples

Travel & Places

WordExample SentenceNotes
airportWe arrived at the airport at 6 AM.Also: train station, bus station
luggage / baggagePlease put your luggage here.Both are uncountable
ticketI bought a ticket online.Also: one-way ticket, round-trip
platformThe train leaves from platform 3.Used at train stations
hotelWe stayed at a cheap hotel.Also: hostel, guesthouse
reservationI have a reservation for two people.Also: booking
passportYou need a passport to travel abroad.Always carry it
mapCan you read a map?Also: GPS, navigation

Describing People & Things

WordExampleNotes
baldMy uncle is bald.No hair on his head
slim / thinShe is tall and slim.”Thin” can be negative
curly hairShe has long curly hair.Also: straight, wavy
friendlyThe staff was very friendly.Opposite: unfriendly
shyHe is shy with new people.Not the same as “quiet”
funnyMy brother is very funny.Makes people laugh
lazyDon’t be lazy. Do your work.Opposite: hardworking
hardworkingShe is a hardworking student.One word, no hyphen

Useful Everyday Verbs

WordExampleNotes
fixCan you fix my phone?Also: fix a date, fix a problem
packI need to pack my suitcase.Also: unpack
borrowCan I borrow your pen?You give it back
lendI can lend you some money.Opposite of borrow
remindPlease remind me to call her.Make someone remember
forgetDon’t forget your keys.Irregular: forget → forgot
inviteShe invited me to her party.Also: invitation (noun)
decideI decided to study English.Also: decision (noun)

Descriptive Adjectives

WordExampleNotes
slipperyThe floor is wet and slippery.You might fall
smoothThis table is smooth.Opposite: rough
softThe bed is soft and comfortable.Opposite: hard
noisyThe city is very noisy.Opposite: quiet
crowdedThe train was crowded.Too many people
emptyThe room was empty.No people inside
deliciousThe food was delicious.Tastes very good
terribleThe weather was terrible.Very bad

Restaurant & Food Vocabulary

WordExampleNotes
menuLet’s look at the menu.Lists the food available
billCan I have the bill, please?What you pay at the end
tipLeave a 10% tip for good service.Extra money for staff
waiter / waitressThe waiter brought our food.Server at a restaurant
dishThis dish is very spicy.A prepared food item
ingredientWhat ingredients do we need?Parts of a recipe
orderI’d like to order coffee.Also: take an order
main courseThe main course is chicken.The main part of the meal

Sizes & Comparisons

WordExample
big / bigger / biggestThis box is bigger than that one.
small / smaller / smallestI need a smaller size.
good / better / bestThis is the best restaurant in town.
bad / worse / worstThe weather today is worse than yesterday.
cheap / cheaper / cheapestLet’s find a cheaper hotel.
much / many / a lot ofHow much time do we have? (uncountable)

Common A2 Mistakes

  1. “I very like it” ❌ → “I like it very much”

    • “Very” doesn’t go before “like.” Use “very much” at the end.
  2. “I am agree with you” ❌ → “I agree with you”

    • A1 mistake that persists into A2. Don’t use “am” with “agree.”
  3. “I have 3 years that I study English” ❌ → “I have been studying English for 3 years”

    • “For” + duration, not “that.”
  4. “She told me ‘come here’” — But: “She said she was tired” ✅ not “She told she was tired”

    • “Tell” needs an object (tell someone). “Say” doesn’t.
  5. “I went to home” ❌ → “I went home”

    • Still a problem at A2 for many learners.

A2 Practice Exercise

Which word doesn’t belong?

  1. Customer / Client / Colleague / Guest Answer: Colleague (the others pay for a service)

  2. Gaze / Stare / Glance / Watch Answer: Glance (it’s a quick look, the others are longer)

  3. Menu / Bill / Tariff / Recipe Answer: Recipe (instructions for cooking, not a restaurant item)

  4. Luggage / Baggage / Package / Suitcase Answer: Package (a parcel to send, not travel luggage)

  5. Blonde / Bald / Curly / Straight Answer: Bald (no hair — the others describe hair types)


B1 — Intermediate: Independence Arrives

B1 is where things get interesting. You can handle most travel and work situations independently. You start expressing opinions, handling unexpected situations, and understanding the difference between similar words. Collocations enter your vocabulary.

B1 Vocabulary With Examples

Opinions & Feelings

WordExample SentenceNotes
disappointedI was disappointed with the result.Sad because expectations weren’t met
thrilledShe was thrilled to get the job.Very happy, excited
annoyedHe’s annoyed about the delay.Slightly angry
embarrassedI felt embarrassed when I fell.Awkward, uncomfortable
exhaustedAfter work, I’m completely exhausted.Very tired
impressedI was impressed by her presentation.You admire something
confusedI’m confused about the instructions.Don’t understand
nervousI always feel nervous before exams.Worried about what’s coming

Personal Traits

WordExampleNotes
obstinateHe’s too obstinate to change his mind.Stubborn, refuses to change
reliableShe’s a reliable colleague.You can depend on her
generousHe’s very generous with his time.Gives freely
ambitiousShe’s an ambitious entrepreneur.Wants to succeed
sensibleThat’s a sensible decision.Practical, reasonable
selfishDon’t be selfish. Share.Only thinks of yourself
patientYou need to be patient with beginners.Can wait calmly
honestTo be honest, I didn’t like the movie.Tells the truth

Work & Situations

WordExampleNotes
resignHe resigned from his position.Quit a job (not retire)
retireMy father retired at age 60.Stop working permanently
hireThe company hired 20 new people.Give someone a job
fireShe was fired for being late.Lose your job (termination)
applyI applied for three jobs.Submit an application
interviewI have a job interview tomorrow.The meeting for a job
promoteHe got promoted to manager.Move to a higher position
salaryThe salary is 50,000 per month.Regular payment for work

Abstract & Problem-Solving

WordExampleNotes
lead (noun)The police found a lead in the case.A clue or piece of information
solutionWe need to find a solution to this problem.Answer to a problem
causeWhat was the cause of the accident?The reason something happened
effectThe effect of the medicine was immediate.The result
opportunityThis is a great opportunity for you.A chance to do something
experienceI have 5 years of experience in teaching.Knowledge from doing something
resultThe test results will be out tomorrow.What happens at the end
challengeLearning English is a challenge but worth it.Something difficult but rewarding

Food Descriptors (more specific than A2)

WordExampleNotes
rawSushi is made with raw fish.Uncooked
rareI like my steak rare.Lightly cooked (for meat)
rottenThis fruit smells rotten.Bad, decayed
bitterDark coffee tastes bitter.Opposite of sweet
sourLemons are sour.Like a lemon
spicyIndian food is very spicy.Has chili or pepper
saltyThe soup is too salty.Has too much salt
freshBuy fresh vegetables from the market.Not old or preserved

Collocations — The B1 Game-Changer

Collocations are word pairs that native speakers use naturally. Learning them is the fastest way to go from “technically correct” to “sounds right.”

Common English Collocations:

CollocationMeaningWrong Version
make a decisionDecide❌ “do a decision”
take a breakRest❌ “make a break”
make a mistakeDo something wrong❌ “do a mistake”
take a testDo an exam❌ “make a test”
make an appointmentSchedule a meeting❌ “do an appointment”
heavy rainA lot of rain❌ “strong rain”
strong coffeeCoffee with intense flavor❌ “powerful coffee”
highly recommendedVery recommended❌ “strongly recommended”
save timeDo something efficiently❌ “keep time”
catch a busGet on public transport❌ “take a bus” (actually also correct)

The difference between B1 and B2 is often just collocations. A B1 learner says “I made a mistake.” A B2 learner says “I made a costly mistake.” The word “costly” adds precision. That’s the next level.

Common B1 Mistakes

  1. “I recommend you to read this book” ❌ → “I recommend reading this book” or “I recommend that you read this book”

    • “Recommend” doesn’t take “to” + person directly.
  2. “It depends of the situation” ❌ → “It depends on the situation”

    • “Depend” + “on,” not “of.”
  3. “I am used to wake up early” ❌ → “I am used to waking up early”

    • “Used to” is followed by a gerund (-ing), not an infinitive.
  4. “I have visited there before 5 years” ❌ → “I visited there 5 years ago”

    • Use “ago” with past simple for completed times.
  5. “I look forward to hear from you” ❌ → “I look forward to hearing from you”

    • “Look forward to” + gerund.

B1 Practice Exercise

Choose the correct word: resign, retire, raw, rotten, lead, obstinate, disappointed, thrilled

  1. He refused to change his mind. He’s so ________.
  2. She was ________ when she didn’t get the promotion.
  3. The police found a ________ that helped solve the case.
  4. Sushi uses ________ fish — it’s not cooked.
  5. My grandfather ________ after 40 years of teaching.
  6. We were ________ to hear that we won the competition!
  7. The fruit has gone ________ — don’t eat it.
  8. He decided to ________ from his job because of the stress.

Answers: obstinate, disappointed, lead, raw, retired, thrilled, rotten, resign


B2 — Upper Intermediate: Professional Territory

B2 is the level most employers look for. You can handle business meetings, technical discussions, and nuanced professional language. Your vocabulary shifts from general to specific.

B2 Vocabulary With Examples

Business & Professional

WordExample SentenceNotes
affluentShe comes from an affluent family.Formal word for rich
destituteThe war left many people destitute.Extremely poor — opposite of affluent
nitpickyStop being so nitpicky about details.Focuses on small unimportant things
ambiguousThe contract language was ambiguous.Unclear, open to interpretation
rationalWe need a rational explanation.Based on evidence and logic
speculativeThat’s purely speculative at this point.Based on guess, not evidence
biasedThe article had a biased viewpoint.Not neutral, takes a side
neutralSwitzerland remained neutral during the war.Doesn’t take sides

Nuance & Precision

WordExampleNotes
gazeShe gazed out the window for hours.Long, steady look
stareIt’s rude to stare at people.Long look, often with intensity
glanceHe glanced at his watch.Quick, brief look
glimpseI caught a glimpse of the celebrity.A very quick sight (noun)
peerShe peered into the dark room.Look closely, trying to see
peekCan I peek at the gift?Quick, secretive look
witness (n)There were three witnesses to the accident.Someone who saw something happen
juryThe jury found him not guilty.Group that decides in court

Advanced Adjectives

WordExampleNotes
meticulousShe is meticulous about her work.Great attention to detail
recklessHis reckless driving caused the accident.Careless, dangerous
apatheticYoung voters seem apathetic about politics.Doesn’t care, no interest
complacentDon’t get complacent after one success.Too satisfied, not trying harder
coherentHis argument wasn’t coherent.Logical and clear
profoundThat was a profound observation.Deep, meaningful
trivialDon’t waste time on trivial matters.Unimportant, minor
feasibleIs this plan feasible within our budget?Possible, achievable

Common Confusing Pairs at B2

Word 1Word 2Difference
Affluent (rich)Effluent (wastewater)Completely different — spelling trap
Compliment (praise)Complement (goes well with)“I” vs “E” changes meaning
Principal (main / school head)Principle (rule / belief)“Pal” = person, “ple” = rule
Stationary (not moving)Stationery (paper, pens)“A” for standing, “E” for envelope
Practice (noun)Practise (verb — UK only)UK maintains the distinction

Common B2 Mistakes

  1. “I am used to work hard” ❌ → “I am used to working hard”

    • “Used to” + gerund. Confusingly, “used to” + infinitive means something different (past habit).
  2. “Despite of the rain” ❌ → “Despite the rain” or “In spite of the rain”

    • “Despite” doesn’t take “of.” “In spite of” does.
  3. “I look forward to meet you” ❌ → “I look forward to meeting you”

    • “To” here is a preposition, not part of an infinitive.
  4. “She suggested me to apply” ❌ → “She suggested that I apply”

    • “Suggest” + that clause (subjunctive), not “suggest + object + to.”
  5. “It’s more better” ❌ → “It’s better” or “It’s much better”

    • Double comparatives are incorrect. Use “much” for emphasis.

B2 Practice Exercise

  1. She is very ________. She notices every small error. (apathetic / meticulous / reckless)
  2. The meaning of this sentence is ________. I can’t tell what it means. (rational / ambiguous / feasible)
  3. He ________ at the document quickly and put it away. (gazed / stared / glanced)
  4. A person who doesn’t care about anything is ________. (complacent / apathetic / ambitious)
  5. The billionaire lives an ________ lifestyle. (ambiguous / affluent / destitute)

Answers: meticulous, ambiguous, glanced, apathetic, affluent


C1 — Advanced: Academic and Precise

C1 is where vocabulary gets sophisticated. You’re not just communicating — you’re choosing words for their exact meaning. This level requires about 6000–8000 words.

C1 Vocabulary With Examples

Academic Verbs

WordExample SentenceNotes
exacerbateThe delay only exacerbated the problem.Make a bad situation worse
alleviateThis medicine will alleviate the pain.Make it better (opposite of exacerbate)
mitigateThe lawyer tried to mitigate the sentence.Make less severe
facilitateThe new system will facilitate communication.Make easier
instigateHe instigated the argument.Provoke, start something
litigateThey decided to litigate rather than settle.Take to court
elaborateCould you elaborate on that point?Explain in more detail
corroborateThe evidence corroborates his story.Support with evidence
hypothesizeScientists hypothesize that the data is wrong.Suggest as a theory
quantifyCan you quantify the damage?Measure in numbers

Abstract Nouns

WordExampleNotes
dilemmaI’m in a dilemma about which job to take.Difficult choice between options
consensusThe group reached a consensus.General agreement
implicationWhat are the implications of this decision?Possible consequences
paradigmThis is a new paradigm for education.A model or way of thinking
phenomenonThe phenomenon is not well understood.An observable fact or event
hypothesisLet’s test this hypothesis.A proposed explanation
ambiguityThere’s too much ambiguity in the contract.Unclear meaning
discrepancyThere’s a discrepancy between the two reports.Difference that shouldn’t exist

Precision Adjectives

WordExampleNotes
conciseKeep your report concise.Brief and to the point
inevitableChange is inevitable.Will definitely happen
comprehensiveThis is a comprehensive guide.Covers everything
superficialHis analysis was too superficial.Only surface-level
profoundThat was a profound insight.Deep, meaningful
explicitThe instructions were explicit.Very clear, no confusion
implicitThere was an implicit agreement.Understood but not stated
prevalentThis view is prevalent among experts.Common, widespread

Formal vs Informal Pairs

InformalFormalExample (Formal)
begincommenceThe ceremony will commence at noon.
buypurchaseWe purchased the equipment last year.
helpassistanceThank you for your assistance.
tellinformPlease inform the team about the change.
enoughsufficientThe evidence is not sufficient.
getobtainWe need to obtain permission first.
useutilizeWe should utilize all available resources.
tryattemptHe attempted to fix the problem twice.

Common C1 Mistakes

  1. “Moreover” overuse — C1 learners discover transition words and use them in every sentence. Restraint is the real skill.

  2. False formality — Using “utilize” when “use” is better. At C1, you know both and choose the right one.

  3. “I am agreeing with you” ❌ for opinions → “I agree with you”

    • Stative verbs (agree, believe, know) rarely take continuous forms.
  4. “According to me” ❌ → “In my opinion” or “From my perspective”

    • “According to” is for external sources, not yourself.
  5. “The reason is because” ❌ → “The reason is that” or “This is because”

    • “The reason is because” is redundant.

C1 Practice Exercise

Choose the correct word: exacerbate, alleviate, mitigate, concise, inevitable, dilemma, consensus, ambiguous

  1. We couldn’t reach a ________. Everyone disagreed.
  2. The instructions were ________. Nobody knew what to do.
  3. He faced a ________: accept the offer or keep looking.
  4. The new policy will ________ the housing crisis, not fix it completely.
  5. Keep your speech ________. You only have five minutes.
  6. Talking about it will only ________ the tension.
  7. Death and taxes are ________.

Answers: consensus, ambiguous, dilemma, alleviate, concise, exacerbate, inevitable


C2 — Mastery: Native-Level Precision

C2 is the ceiling. This is vocabulary that most native speakers don’t fully control. We’re talking about low-frequency, specialized, and literary words. At this level, you don’t just know words — you know their connotations, etymology, and appropriate register.

C2 Vocabulary With Examples

Rare but Powerful Words

WordExample SentenceSimilar To
ephemeralThe beauty of cherry blossoms is ephemeral.Fleeting, short-lived
obsequiousThe obsequious assistant agreed with everything.Sycophantic, bootlicking
cacophonyThe cacophony of the market was overwhelming.Dissonance, noise
mollifyNothing could mollify her anger.Placate, appease
esotericThe lecture was too esoteric for a general audience.Arcane, obscure
indolentHe was an indolent employee who never finished tasks.Lazy, idle
pragmaticWe need a pragmatic solution, not a perfect one.Practical, realistic
dogmaticHis dogmatic approach leaves no room for debate.Rigid, uncompromising
eloquentShe gave an eloquent speech at the ceremony.Articulate, fluent
enigmaticThe painting has an enigmatic quality.Mysterious, puzzling

Precision Verbs at C2

WordExampleMeaning
extrapolateWe can extrapolate from the current data.Infer beyond the known
surmiseI can only surmise what happened.Guess based on evidence
circumventThey circumvented the regulations.Find a way around
amalgamateThe two companies amalgamated.Combine, merge
perpetuateThis myth perpetuates harmful stereotypes.Make continue, keep alive
obfuscateThe lawyer tried to obfuscate the facts.Make unclear, confuse
reiterateLet me reiterate my main point.Say again (emphatic)
precludeThis precludes any further negotiation.Make impossible
concedeI concede that you were right.Admit reluctantly
alludeHe alluded to some past disagreement.Refer indirectly

Easily Confused C2 Pairs

WordMeaningLooks LikeBut Means
InsolentRude, disrespectfulIndolent (lazy)Don’t mix these up
IndigentPoor, needyIndolent (lazy)Different meaning entirely
IngeniousClever, brilliantIngenuous (naive, innocent)Opposite tones
ComplacentSmug, self-satisfiedComplaisant (willing to please)Easy to confuse
DisinterestedImpartial, objectiveUninterested (bored)Classic mix-up
FlauntShow offFlout (disobey)Flaunt rules ≠ flout rules
FortuitousHappening by chanceFortunate (lucky)Not the same thing

Classic Mix-Up: If you say someone is disinterested to mean “bored,” you’re using it wrong. Disinterested = impartial (like a judge). Uninterested = not interested. High-level speakers notice this mistake instantly.

C2 Practice Exercise

Match each word to its meaning:

  1. Ephemeral ________ A. Overly obedient
  2. Obsequious ________ B. Lasting a short time
  3. Cacophony ________ C. Hard mixture of sounds
  4. Esoteric ________ D. Understood by few
  5. Indolent ________ E. Lazy
  6. Mollify ________ F. Lessen anger
  7. Eloquent ________ G. Well-spoken
  8. Pragmatic ________ H. Practical

Answers: 1-B, 2-A, 3-C, 4-D, 5-E, 6-F, 7-G, 8-H


Complete Vocabulary Reference Table

Here’s every word from this guide organized by CEFR level — use it as a quick reference or self-assessment checklist.

A1 — Beginner

CategoryWords
Verbsbe, have, go, eat, drink, sleep, buy, live, work, like
Familymother, father, brother, sister, aunt, uncle, cousin, friend, neighbor
Adjectivesbig, small, hot, cold, expensive, cheap, new, old, good, bad, happy, sad, hungry, thirsty
Nounshouse, home, water, food, book, phone, money, store, shop, school
Questionswhat, where, when, who, how, how much
Clothesshirt, shoes, gloves, hat
Bodyhands, feet

A2 — Elementary

CategoryWords
Travelairport, luggage, baggage, ticket, platform, hotel, reservation, passport, map
Peoplebald, slim, thin, curly, friendly, shy, funny, lazy, hardworking
Verbsfix, pack, borrow, lend, remind, forget, invite, decide
Adjectivesslippery, smooth, soft, noisy, crowded, empty, delicious, terrible
Restaurantmenu, bill, tip, waiter, waitress, dish, ingredient, order, main course
Comparisonsbigger, smaller, better, worse, cheaper

B1 — Intermediate

CategoryWords
Feelingsdisappointed, thrilled, annoyed, embarrassed, exhausted, impressed, confused, nervous
Traitsobstinate, reliable, generous, ambitious, sensible, selfish, patient, honest
Workresign, retire, hire, fire, apply, interview, promote, salary
Abstractlead, solution, cause, effect, opportunity, experience, result, challenge
Food (adv)raw, rare, rotten, bitter, sour, spicy, salty, fresh

B2 — Upper Intermediate

CategoryWords
Businessaffluent, destitute, nitpicky, ambiguous, rational, speculative, biased, neutral
Looksgaze, stare, glance, glimpse, peer, peek
Advancedmeticulous, reckless, apathetic, complacent, coherent, profound, trivial, feasible
Confusablesaffluent/effluent, compliment/complement, principal/principle, stationary/stationery

C1 — Advanced

CategoryWords
Verbsexacerbate, alleviate, mitigate, facilitate, instigate, litigate, elaborate, corroborate, hypothesize, quantify
Nounsdilemma, consensus, implication, paradigm, phenomenon, hypothesis, ambiguity, discrepancy
Adjectivesconcise, inevitable, comprehensive, superficial, profound, explicit, implicit, prevalent
Formalcommence, purchase, assistance, inform, sufficient, obtain, utilize, attempt

C2 — Mastery

CategoryWords
Rareephemeral, obsequious, cacophony, mollify, esoteric, indolent, pragmatic, dogmatic, eloquent, enigmatic
Verbsextrapolate, surmise, circumvent, amalgamate, perpetuate, obfuscate, reiterate, preclude, concede, allude
Confusablesinsolent/indolent/indigent, ingenious/ingenuous, disinterested/uninterested, flaunt/flout, fortuitous/fortunate

How to Move Up the CEFR Scale

Moving between levels takes deliberate effort. Here’s what works at each stage:

A1 to A2: Focus on high-frequency words. The most common 2000 words cover about 80% of everyday English. Learn them in context — phrases, not isolated lists. Apps like Duolingo or Memrise work well here.

A2 to B1: Start with phrasal verbs and collocations. Learning “make a decision” is more useful than learning “decision” alone. Start a vocabulary notebook — physical or digital — and write example sentences, not just definitions.

B1 to B2: Read news articles daily. The BBC, The Guardian, and The Economist use B2 vocabulary naturally. Listen to podcasts at 1x speed. When you hear an unfamiliar word, write it down immediately.

B2 to C1: Read academic and professional content. Switch from news to long-form journalism (The Atlantic, The New Yorker). Watch debates and interviews where speakers use nuanced language. Keep a vocabulary journal organized by theme, not alphabet.

C1 to C2: This is the hardest gap. You need exposure to literary and specialized content. Read fiction with rich vocabulary, academic papers in your field, and editorial columns. At this level, learning a word means learning its connotations, register, and common contexts — not just its definition. Pay attention to collocations and how words are used in different genres.

General Strategies That Work at Every Level

  1. Read at target level + 1. If you’re B1, read B2 material. Stop reading things that are too easy — you don’t grow from comfort.

  2. Use spaced repetition. Anki, Quizlet, or a physical Leitner box. Review words at increasing intervals: 1 day, 3 days, 7 days, 14 days, 30 days.

  3. Write five sentences per new word. Don’t stop at one. Five different contexts lock the word into your active vocabulary.

  4. Speak out loud. Passive vocabulary (words you recognize) is always larger than active vocabulary (words you use). The only way to activate words is to use them in speech or writing.

  5. Don’t learn words in isolation. Learn them in phrases. Instead of “mitigate,” learn “mitigate the risk.” Instead of “ephemeral,” learn “ephemeral beauty.”


Frequently Asked Questions

What CEFR level is required for university study?

Most universities require B2 as a minimum and C1 for competitive programs. IELTS 6.5–7.0 maps to C1. Cambridge Advanced (CAE) is C1. TOEFL 90–100 is roughly B2–C1.

How long does it take to reach each level?

Estimates vary by learner and language background, but here’s a realistic guide for classroom study:

JumpHoursRealistic Timeline
A1 to A2150–200 hours3–4 months
A2 to B1300–400 hours6–8 months
B1 to B2400–600 hours8–12 months
B2 to C1600–800 hours12–18 months
C1 to C2800+ hours18+ months

Self-study with consistent daily practice can be faster. One hour per day beats four hours twice per week.

Can I reach C2 without living in an English-speaking country?

Yes. Many C2 speakers learn English entirely through reading, media, and deliberate practice. Living abroad helps, but it’s not required. The key is exposure volume — you need to read and listen to English for at least 1–2 hours daily at advanced levels.

Is vocabulary the only difference between levels?

No. Grammar complexity, reading comprehension speed, listening accuracy, and speaking fluency all increase with each level. But vocabulary is the most visible marker — it’s the easiest to test and the fastest to improve with focused effort.

How many words do I need for each level?

Estimates vary, but here’s a practical breakdown:

  • A1: 500–800 words (basic survival)
  • A2: 1000–1500 words (functional in familiar situations)
  • B1: 2000–3000 words (conversational independence)
  • B2: 4000–5000 words (professional competence)
  • C1: 6000–8000 words (academic readiness)
  • C2: 10,000+ words (near-native range)

These are active vocabulary estimates — words you can use, not just recognize. Passive vocabulary (words you understand when reading or listening) is typically 2–3x larger at every level.

How do I know which CEFR level I am?

Take a standardized test for an official assessment, or use the self-assessment in this guide for a rough estimate. The Council of Europe also publishes “can-do” statements for every level — search for “CEFR self-assessment grid” and check each skill (reading, writing, listening, speaking) separately.