Y10W34VC Theme Words — Globalisation & culture

This module focuses on vocabulary connected to the theme of Globalisation & culture. The words in this set are used when discussing how the global movement of people, ideas, and goods shapes cultural identity, diversity, and belonging. Developing fluency with this vocabulary supports students in analysing texts about cultural exchange, hybridity, and the politics of globalisation.

Word in Context (Theme: Globalisation & culture)

These words help you discuss Globalisation & culture with more precision. As you read them, notice how each word adds a different layer to the issue.

homogenise

/hɒˈmɒdʒ.ɪ.naɪz/

ho‑mo‑gen‑ise

verb | [homogenise – homogenised – homogenised]

To homogenise means to make things uniform or similar, removing differences between them.

Word Breakdown: homo- (prefix meaning ‘same’)

Example: Critics argue that global media platforms tend to homogenise cultural tastes, eroding regional and local traditions over time.

Synonyms: standardise, uniform, blend

Collocations: homogenise culture, homogenise taste, resist homogenisation

hybrid

/ˈhaɪ.brɪd/

hy‑brid

noun (also adjective)

A hybrid is something that is made up of a combination of two or more different elements, cultures, or styles, creating a new and distinct entity.

Word family: hybridity (n.), hybridise (v.)

Example: Post-colonial theorists argue that cultural identity is never pure but always hybrid, shaped by contact, exchange, and transformation.

Synonyms: blend, combination, mix

Collocations: cultural hybrid, hybrid form, hybrid identity

resist

/rɪˈzɪst/

re‑sist

verb | [resist – resisted – resisted]

To resist means to withstand or oppose the force, pressure, or influence of something, refusing to yield to it.

Word Breakdown: re- (prefix meaning ‘back’ or ‘against’)

Word family: resistance (n.), resistant (adj.)

Example: Indigenous communities have found creative ways to resist the erosion of their languages and cultural practices by dominant globalised media.

Synonyms: oppose, withstand, counter

Collocations: resist pressure, resist homogenisation, resist change

Academic Vocab

pivotal

/ˈpɪv.ə.təl/

piv‑o‑tal

adjective

Pivotal describes something that is of crucial importance, particularly a turning point on which everything else depends or changes.

Word family: pivotally (adv.)

Example: The emergence of the internet was a pivotal moment in the history of globalisation, fundamentally altering how information, culture, and commerce move across borders.

Synonyms: crucial, decisive, key

Collocations: pivotal moment, pivotal role, pivotal event

decisive

/dɪˈsaɪ.sɪv/

de‑ci‑sive

adjective

Decisive describes something that determines or significantly influences an outcome, or a person who makes decisions quickly and confidently.

Word Breakdown: de- (prefix meaning ‘from’ or ‘away’)

Word family: decisively (adv.), decision (n.)

Example: The decisive factor in the success of the movement was not the size of its following but the clarity and urgency of its message.

Synonyms: determining, critical, conclusive

Collocations: decisive factor, decisive action, decisive moment

fundamental

/ˌ fʌn.dəˈmen.təl/

fun‑da‑men‑tal

adjective

Fundamental describes something that forms an essential foundation, so basic that everything else depends on it.

Word family: fundamentally (adv.), fundamentals (n. pl.)

Example: Globalisation has produced fundamental changes to patterns of employment, cultural identity, and political sovereignty.

Synonyms: foundational, essential, basic

Collocations: fundamental change, fundamental principle, fundamentally different

central

/ˈsen.trəl/

cen‑tral

adjective

Central describes something that is the most important element, or that is placed at the core or heart of something.

Word family: centrally (adv.), centrality (n.)

Example: The tension between cultural homogenisation and the preservation of local identity is central to debates about globalisation.

Synonyms: core, primary, dominant

Collocations: central concern, central argument, central to

critical

/ˈkrɪt.ɪ.kəl/

crit‑i‑cal

adjective

Critical means extremely important or essential, or involving careful analysis and judgement.

Word family: critically (adv.), criticism (n.)

Example: Maintaining linguistic diversity is critical to the preservation of cultural heritage, as language carries forms of knowledge that cannot be fully translated.

Synonyms: essential, crucial, analytical

Collocations: critical role, critically important, critical thinking

this is pivotal

/ðɪs ɪz ˈpɪvətl/

this is piv‑ot‑al

academic writing phrase

The phrase ‘this is pivotal’ is used in academic writing to signal that the argument, event, or detail just described is a turning point on which the analysis or historical narrative fundamentally depends.

Example: The decision to extend voting rights to women in 1902 was not simply a legal reform; this is pivotal because it fundamentally changed the nature of democratic participation in Australia.

Synonyms: this is crucial, this is the turning point, this is decisive

Collocations: this is pivotal because, this is pivotal in, this proved pivotal

Confusing Words

challenges vs subverts / deconstructs

These three verbs all describe ways in which a text, argument, or practice can engage critically with an established idea or power structure, but they differ in the nature and degree of their critical engagement.

  • challenges — Challenges means to question or contest something directly, asserting that it requires scrutiny or a more rigorous defence. It implies a confrontational engagement but does not necessarily dismantle or transform the idea.
  • subverts — Subverts means to undermine or overturn something from within, often subtly and without open confrontation. To subvert is to work against a dominant structure or expectation in a way that gradually undermines its authority without necessarily stating opposition directly.
  • deconstructs — Deconstructs means to analytically break something apart to reveal the hidden assumptions, contradictions, and power structures within it. Deconstruction is a more systematic and theoretical process than simply challenging or subverting.
  • destabilises — destabilises' makes something seem less certain, secure or accepted; use it when that exact meaning is needed, rather than choosing a nearby word that only sounds similar.

Memory rule: A practical guide: use challenges when something is openly contested; use subverts when it is undermined from within, often subtly; use deconstructs when it is systematically broken apart to expose what lies beneath the surface. A student challenges an idea; a satirist subverts a convention; a theorist deconstructs a concept.