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TOEIC Link Part 5: commonly confused word pairs master index

A single hub that organizes the most-tested TOEIC Link Part 5 confusable word pairs into four groups — homophones, one-letter differences, shared-root pairs, and count-noun quantifiers — so you can study them by the pattern that trips you up rather than one word at a time. Each group links to a focused lesson that shows the rule, a worked blank, and the meaning clue Part 5 tests.

EnglishBlitz Team·

TOEIC Link Part 5: commonly confused word pairs master index

Part 5 rewards readers who resolve a blank by meaning, not by matching letters or sound. A large share of its vocabulary questions are built on confusable pairs — two words that look or sound so alike that a hurried reader picks the familiar one instead of the one the sentence actually needs. Studying these one word at a time is slow. It is far more efficient to study them by the pattern that makes them confusable, because the same trap repeats across dozens of pairs.

This page is a hub. It sorts the most-tested pairs into four groups, explains what each group has in common, and links you to a focused lesson for every pair. Work through the group that matches the mistakes you actually make on mock tests.

Group 1: homophones — same sound, different meaning

These pairs sound identical (or nearly so) when spoken, so listening habits do not help you and you must read the surrounding words. Part 5 loves homophones because the wrong answer "sounds right."

Study move: for every homophone, ask which part of speech the blank needs. Half of these pairs split by grammar (verb versus noun), and grammar resolves them before meaning even matters.

Group 2: one-letter differences — read every character

These pairs differ by a single letter, so the eye slides over the difference. The meanings are usually unrelated, which means the sentence context points sharply to one answer once you slow down.

Study move: cover the ending of the word and predict which letter belongs from the meaning of the sentence. If you cannot, the pair is one to drill.

Group 3: shared-root pairs — one meaning, two forms

These words come from the same root but have drifted into different grammatical roles or shades of meaning. The trap is subtle because both forms often fit the topic; only one fits the exact slot.

Study move: learn the test that separates each pair — an object versus no object, a person versus a result, a form versus a function — not just the definitions.

Group 4: quantifiers and comparison words

A smaller but reliable cluster tests whether you match a quantifier or comparison word to the kind of noun or logic in the sentence.

Study move: decide first whether the noun in the sentence is countable, then whether the sentence is about distance, time, or logic. The grammar of the noun usually settles the answer.

How to use this hub efficiently

  1. Take a mock Part 5 and mark every vocabulary miss.
  2. Sort your misses into the four groups above. Most learners cluster in one or two groups — homophones and one-letter differences are the usual culprits.
  3. Drill that group first using the linked lessons, then re-test after a week.
  4. Rotate. Once a group drops below one miss per section, move to the next.

Confusable pairs are one of the highest-return areas in Part 5 because the same handful of traps — sound-alike, one letter off, shared root, wrong quantifier — repeat endlessly with new vocabulary. Learn the pattern and you resolve pairs you have never seen before. For an overview of how the Part 5 word-choice section fits into the wider test, start with what is TOEIC Link.