Y05W40VC Theme Words — Time & history

This module focuses on vocabulary connected to the theme of time and history. The words in this set are used when discussing historical events, chronology, cause and effect, and how the past shapes the present. Many of these terms appear in humanities, social studies, and analytical writing. Building fluency with this vocabulary helps students discuss historical and temporal ideas more precisely.

Word in Context (Theme: Time & history)

These three words connect to the theme of Time & history. Read each one carefully and think about how it helps you explain the topic more clearly.

era

/ˈɪərə/

e‑ra

noun

An era is a long and distinct period of history with particular characteristics.

Example: The colonial era shaped the landscape, culture, and communities of modern Australia.

Synonyms: period, age, epoch

Collocations: a historical era, the colonial era, mark the end of an era

ancient

/ˈeɪnʃənt/

an‑cient

adjective

Something that is ancient belongs to a very early period in history, long before modern times.

Example: Ancient Aboriginal rock art found in the Kimberley region is among the oldest in the world.

Synonyms: old, historic, prehistoric

Collocations: ancient history, ancient civilisation, an ancient tradition

chronicle

/ˈkrɒnɪkəl/

chron‑i‑cle

noun

A chronicle is a written record of historical events arranged in the order they happened.

Word family: chronicler (n.)

Example: The school produced a chronicle of its first hundred years, documenting key events decade by decade.

Synonyms: record, account, history

Collocations: a detailed chronicle, write a chronicle, a chronicle of events

Academic Vocab

narrative

/ˈnærətɪv/

nar‑ra‑tive

noun

A narrative is a story or account of events told in a structured way.

Word Breakdown: -ive (suffix meaning ‘having the quality of’)

Word family: narrator (n.), narrate (v.)

Example: The historical narrative revealed how the town had grown from a tiny settlement to a thriving city.

Synonyms: story, account, tale

Collocations: a personal narrative, the historical narrative, build a narrative

imagination

/ɪˈmædʒɪˈneɪʃən/

i‑mag‑i‑na‑tion

noun

Imagination is the ability to form mental pictures or ideas that are not present or real.

Word family: imaginative (adj.), imagine (v.)

Example: Studying history requires imagination — the ability to picture lives lived in very different times.

Synonyms: creativity, vision, inventiveness

Collocations: use your imagination, a vivid imagination, imagination and creativity

story

/ˈstɔːri/

sto‑ry

noun

A story is an account of events, real or imagined, told in an entertaining or informative way.

Example: Every object in the museum has a story that connects it to a particular moment in history.

Synonyms: narrative, account, tale

Collocations: tell a story, a true story, the story behind

transform

/trænzˈfɔːm/

trans‑form

verb | [transform – transformed – transformed]

To transform means to change something completely.

Word family: transformation (n.)

Example: The discovery of gold transformed the small colonial settlement into a booming town almost overnight.

Synonyms: change, reshape, convert

Collocations: transform into, completely transform, transform society

create

/kriˈeɪt/

cre‑ate

verb | [create – created – created]

To create means to make something new that did not exist before.

Word family: creation (n.), creative (adj.)

Example: Ancient civilisations created remarkable monuments that still stand thousands of years later.

Synonyms: make, produce, build

Collocations: create a record, create a timeline, create change

to conclude

/tə kənˈkluːd/

to con‑clude

phrase

‘To conclude’ introduces the final summary or closing argument of a piece of writing.

Example: To conclude, the evidence shows that the ancient settlement was far larger than historians first believed.

Synonyms: in conclusion, in summary, finally

Collocations: to conclude, the evidence; to conclude, this suggests

Confusing Words

no vs know

These two words sound exactly the same but are completely different parts of speech.

  • no — No' is a determiner or adverb used to express refusal, absence, or the opposite of yes — for example, There is no written record of the event, or No, she did not agree with the historian's conclusion.
  • know — Know' is a verb meaning to have information or understanding about something in your mind — for example, She was determined to know as much as possible about the ancient site before her visit.

Memory rule: A helpful trick: 'know' contains the letters 'k-n-o-w' — think of it as 'knowledge now'. If you mean having information in your mind, use 'know'. If you mean the opposite of yes, use 'no'.