Unless you are a child prodigy, The Economist will have you breaking out the dictionary for easily about 2-4 words/expressions per paragraph. This publication is also well-backed for improving your ability in RC. I realize this doesn't answer your question exactly, but in any case I hope it's an insight that helps. I'm not quite sure how you would go about finding a valid "most used vocab words on the LSAT list." If there is one out there, I'd be all ears, but the prevailing wisdom I've gained up to this point is to apply yourself to some dense/challenging/academic reading material every day, and your vocab strength will improve naturally as a result.
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Try downloading an sat vocab app! That's what I have done and swipe through the lists each day.
Has that helped for the LSAT?
Unless you are a child prodigy, The Economist will have you breaking out the dictionary for easily about 2-4 words/expressions per paragraph. This publication is also well-backed for improving your ability in RC. I realize this doesn't answer your question exactly, but in any case I hope it's an insight that helps. I'm not quite sure how you would go about finding a valid "most used vocab words on the LSAT list." If there is one out there, I'd be all ears, but the prevailing wisdom I've gained up to this point is to apply yourself to some dense/challenging/academic reading material every day, and your vocab strength will improve naturally as a result.
I used GRE vocabulary resources when I first started studying and I feel that they really helped, I see a lot of the words in RC .. and LR.
I scanned the pages, digitized them, and turned that into audio files to listen to