GCSE English
Command Words Guide
The words in GCSE English questions are instructions. Most students treat them as decoration. This guide teaches you exactly what each command word demands — with real examples of correct versus incorrect responses for every question type.
The examiner isn’t marking what you know.
They’re marking what you do.
Command words are not vocabulary. They are instructions.
A student who knows their text perfectly but doesn’t understand the difference between ‘analyse’ and ‘explore’ will keep writing the wrong type of answer — clearly, confidently, and consistently losing marks they should be earning. The examiner can see that the student knows the material. But the question asked for something specific, and the student didn’t do that specific thing. Command words determine what type of response is required. This guide teaches students to follow them precisely.
Students getting lower marks than expected
If your child understands the material but grades don’t reflect it, misreading command words is the most common cause. This guide identifies the problem and fixes it directly — with before-and-after examples that make the difference immediately visible.
Year 10 students starting exam prep
Learning command words at the start of Year 10 changes how a student approaches every piece of work for two years. Every essay, every response, every practice question benefits from knowing exactly what the command word is asking for before writing a word.
Home educators
The one resource that transforms how a student reads any exam question — Language or Literature, either board. Once command words are understood, every other piece of exam preparation becomes more efficient.
Students preparing for mocks
The single fastest win before a mock exam. One afternoon with this guide produces an immediate, measurable improvement in how students approach exam questions — because they know what the question is actually asking.
12 command words. Each one explained
with examples at multiple grade levels.
Six paired sections, two command words each. Every section includes weak versus strong examples, the specific demand of the word, and the most common mistake students make when they misread it.
What the examiner is looking for — and why writing more doesn’t earn more marks
Identify and List are the most straightforward command words — and the most consistently mishandled. Students write paragraphs of analysis when the question asked for a list of four things. This section explains exactly what each word requires, how long the answer should be, and why expansion is not only unnecessary but penalised by running out of time for higher-mark questions.
The difference between the two — and why ‘because’ is the most important word in any explanation
Explain and Summarise are often confused: students summarise when asked to explain, and explain when asked to summarise. This section distinguishes them precisely, shows what each looks like in practice, and demonstrates the ‘because’ discipline — the habit of linking every claim to a reason — that turns description into explanation.
What ‘analyse’ actually demands — the zoom-in method with worked examples at Grade 5, 7, and 9
Analyse is the command word that separates Grade 5 responses from Grade 8 responses. Students who explain what something means when asked to analyse it are working at the wrong level. This section defines analysis precisely — the zoom-in method, word-level precision, and the connection to writer’s purpose — with full worked examples at three grade levels on the same passage.
Why sequential comparison always caps your marks — and what integrated comparison looks like in practice
The most common comparison mistake: writing about Text A for several paragraphs, then Text B for several paragraphs. This approach consistently limits marks because it demonstrates two separate analyses, not a comparison. This section explains the integrated comparison method — bringing both texts together within each paragraph — with a before-and-after demonstration that makes the structural difference immediately clear.
The four-move structure that answers evaluation questions consistently: position, evidence, complication, conclusion
Evaluation questions require a judgement — a verdict, not just analysis. Students who write excellent analysis in response to ‘evaluate’ questions consistently underperform because they never reach the evaluative move the command word requires. This section introduces the four-move evaluation structure (position, evidence, complication, conclusion) with a worked example and a practice exercise.
Why ‘explore’ demands multiple angles — and how to avoid the single-argument trap in Literature essays
Explore and Discuss are the command words that most reward range and sophistication. A student who makes one argument extremely well in response to ‘explore’ has answered half the question. This section explains what multiple angles means in practice — for Literature essays specifically — and demonstrates how to structure an exploratory response without losing the sense of a coherent argument.
Every command word shown, not just described.
Weak vs strong — side by side.
Every section in the guide includes a weak response and a strong response to the same question. The commentary explains precisely what the weak response does wrong and what the strong response does differently — not in general terms, but with reference to the specific words on the page.
Command word: ANALYSE
Question: Analyse how the writer creates a sense of tension in this extract.“The writer uses lots of short sentences in this extract. This creates tension because the pace is faster. The writer also uses dramatic words which makes it more tense. The repetition of ‘he ran’ shows the character is scared and running away from something dangerous.”
This response explains what the techniques do in a general way. It does not analyse them — it does not zoom into specific words, name connotations, or connect language to the writer’s precise purpose. The command word ‘analyse’ requires more than ‘this creates tension because.’
“The verb ‘lurched’ is the passage’s most precise word: not stumbled, not fell, but lurched — a movement that implies both momentum and loss of control simultaneously. The writer places it at the start of a short, punctuation-free sentence, so the word carries the full weight of the line alone. The reader experiences the physical sensation before the character does, which is the passage’s central tension technique: awareness arriving before understanding.”
This response zooms into a single verb, explains what it connotates versus alternatives, analyses its placement structurally, and connects the technique to a precise effect on the reader. This is what ‘analyse’ requires.
The four-move evaluation structure — included in full
Quick-reference cheat sheet — all 12 command words.
A one-page printable summary of every command word, designed to sit above a desk during revision. Preview below — the full version in the guide includes the key demand, the most common mistake, and the one thing to do differently for each word.
GCSE English Command Words — Quick Reference (preview)
Everything in the GCSE English Command Words Guide
- ✔All 12 command words covered — Language and Literature, AQA and Edexcel IGCSE
- ✔Weak vs strong examples for every command word — shown, not described
- ✔The zoom-in analysis method demonstrated at Grade 5, 7, and 9 on the same passage
- ✔The four-move evaluation structure — position, evidence, complication, conclusion
- ✔Integrated comparison explained and demonstrated with a before-and-after example
- ✔Quick-reference one-page cheat sheet — all 12 words, designed to sit above a desk
- ✔Practice questions: identify the command word, plan the correct type of response
- ✔The 30-second question decoder system — works before any GCSE English question
GCSE English Command Words Guide
Command Words Guide
- ✔All 12 command words — Language and Literature
- ✔Weak vs strong examples for every word
- ✔Grade 5, 7 and 9 analysis demonstrated on the same passage
- ✔The four-move evaluation structure with worked example
- ✔Integrated comparison — before and after demonstration
- ✔Quick-reference cheat sheet — all 12 words, print-ready
- ✔The 30-second question decoder system
- ✔Covers AQA and Edexcel IGCSE
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