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Pearson Edexcel · International A Level · WEN01–WEN04

English Language — Keywords & Key Terms — Definitions Glossary (2026)

Pearson Edexcel International A Level English Language

Topic-by-topic keywords, key terms and definitions for precise exam language—separate from our revision checklists (topic coverage) and formula sheets (equations).

Keywords & Key Terms — definitions

Examiner-style keywords and definitions organised by syllabus topic. Terms are tagged Essential (start here), Core (typical exam standard), and Advanced for harder distinctions — tick each row when you can recall it. Your progress is saved in this browser for this list.

Pearson Edexcel International A Level English Language (WEN01–WEN04)

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Pearson Edexcel International A Level English Language (WEN01–WEN04)

Pearson Edexcel International A Level English Language

Pearson International A Level English Language develops analysis of spoken and written texts, language variation and change, and original writing — assessment objectives cover reading, writing, and contextual understanding for 2026.

Mark schemes: AO weightings reward terminology used accurately and linked to effects. Child language / acquisition: stage models used critically. Language change: internal vs external causes. Original writing: audience, purpose, and genre conventions explicit. Examiner reports criticise feature-spotting without coherent argument.

Active recall: 0 / 10 terms ticked

RecalledTopicLevelKeywordDefinition
Systematic analysisCoreClause complexingSubordination vs coordination — information structure.
Systematic analysisCoreModeSpoken vs written — spontaneity, fillers, prosody.
Systematic analysisCoreIdiolectIndividual language fingerprint.
Systematic analysisCoreAttitudes to languagePrescriptivist complaints — authority and identity.
Systematic analysisAdvancedCritical discourse analysisPower, ideology, representation.
Acquisition & changeCoreStages of acquisitionHolophrastic, two-word, telegraphic — caution on rigidity.
Acquisition & changeCoreNativist vs interactionistInnate LAD vs caregiver input.
Acquisition & changeCoreInternal changePhonological, grammatical, lexical drift.
Acquisition & changeCoreExternal changeContact, technology, standardisation.
Acquisition & changeAdvancedGlobal EnglishELF — ownership and norms.

Pair this with our revision checklists, formula sheets hub and past paper finder.

English Language (WEN01–WEN04) — Keywords & Key Terms FAQ

What is on this Pearson Edexcel International A Level English Language keywords and key terms list?
It is a topic-organised glossary of important english language terms with short, exam-style definitions aligned to Pearson Edexcel International A Level English Language (WEN01–WEN04). It is designed for “define”, “state”, “outline” and “explain” questions where precise vocabulary earns marks.
How should I use this English Language glossary alongside past papers?
Tick terms when you can recall them without reading the answer, then check your wording against mark schemes. Pair vocabulary practice with past papers for International A Level English Language (WEN01–WEN04) so you apply terms in context.
Is this the same as a revision checklist or a formula sheet?
No. Revision checklists help you track which syllabus topics you have covered and your confidence—separate pages on Tutopiya. Formula sheets summarise equations and quantitative relationships. This page is only a definitions and key-terms glossary for English Language.
Can I download this English Language keywords and key terms list for free?
Yes. After a quick free sign-up you can download a UTF-8 CSV (opens in Excel or Google Sheets) or open a print-friendly page and save as PDF. Browsing the list on the page is free.
Is this English Language list aligned to the WEN01–WEN04 specification?
Topic groupings and wording follow Pearson Edexcel International A Level English Language for Pearson Edexcel International A Level. Always confirm final learning objectives and any regional options in your official specification and recent examiner reports for your exam session.
Why focus on definitions instead of full notes?
Mark schemes reward correct technical terms and clear links between ideas. A compact glossary lets you drill the exact language examiners expect for English Language at International A Level, separate from longer notes or topic trackers.