Elicit — B1 Vocabulary

🌳 B1 · INTERMEDIATE
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elicit
/ih-LIS-it/

To draw out a reaction, answer or emotion from someone. A verb — it does things.

Quick Answer

Elicit means to draw out a response — an answer, a laugh, a memory. It is a verb: teachers elicit answers; jokes elicit laughter. Think: Elicit Extracts.

Example: Her joke elicited a big laugh from the audience.

Elicit in 3 Sentences

Read these three sentences. Notice how elicit is used:

  • Her joke elicited a big laugh from the audience. (drew out laughter)
  • The teacher asked questions to elicit answers from the class. (draw out responses)
  • The photos elicited childhood memories. (brought them out)

A Quick Tip About ELICIT

Elicit sounds exactly like illicit, but they are unrelated. Elicit is a verb meaning to draw out. Illicit is an adjective meaning forbidden.

Using the adjective “illicit” when you mean “draw out”

The survey tried to illicit honest feedback.
The survey tried to elicit honest feedback.

Easy way to remember: Elicit Extracts — both start with E.

Practice all Illicit vs Elicit

Now practise elicit together with the other words in this topic. Use Study, Practice, Flashcards, and Review.

CEFR B1 – Illicit vs Elicit

Illicit vs Elicit

Master illicit and elicit — they sound identical, but one describes something forbidden and the other means to draw out a response.

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Study Cards

Read the word, look at the picture, and say the example sentence.

Test Yourself: Elicit

Choose the correct answer for each sentence. Click Check to see if you are right.

Question 1 of 5

1. Good teachers know how to ______ answers from quiet students.

2. What does elicit mean?

3. What type of word is elicit?

4. The sad film ______ tears from the whole cinema.

5. Which memory trick works for elicit?

Other Illicit vs Elicit to Learn

Pick another word from this lesson — small steps add up fast.

Keep Going — One Word, Many Wins

You just learned elicit — the drawing-out verb. You can now use a word that many native speakers misspell.

Its identical-sounding twin is completely different: an adjective that describes smuggled goods and forbidden deals. Two letters change everything — have you met it yet?

Next lesson: Illicit — B1 Vocabulary

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