SURESHKUMAR

Monday, September 25, 2017

Daily vocabulary 26 September 2017

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📣🎊🎉Daily_ vocabulary🎉🎊📣
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🔰1. Forlorn (adjective): (Pitifully sad and abandoned or lonely.) (निराश/परित्यक्त)

Synonyms: Unhappy, Sad, Miserable, Sorrowful, Dejected, Despondent, Disconsolate, Abject, Morose.
Antonyms: Bright, Cheerful, Joyful, Lively.
Example: Since Jake works so much, he does not realize his wife is forlorn because she rarely gets to spend time with him.
Origin: from forlēosan ‘lose’, of Germanic origin
🔰2. Murky (adjective): (Obscure or morally questionable.) (संदेहास्पद)
Synonyms: Questionable, Suspicious, Suspect, Dubious, Mysterious, Shady.
Antonyms: Distinct, Clear.
Example: Most people are naturally murky of door to door salesmen.
🔰3. Sedate (verb): (Calm (someone) or make them sleep by administering a sedative drug.) (शांत करना / शामक औषधि देना)

Synonyms: Tranquillize, Give A Sedative To, Quieten, Pacify, Dope, Drug.
Antonyms: Invigorate, Energize.
Example: The only way to sedate the hostile dog was by putting him to sleep with a tranquilizer.
Verb forms: Sedate, Sedated, Sedated.
Related words
Sedation (noun) - The action of administering a sedative drug to produce a state of calm or sleep.
Origin: from Latin sedare ‘settle’
🔰4. Throng (verb): (Flock or be present in great numbers.) (इकठ्ठा होना/भीड़ करना)

Synonyms: Flock, Crowd, Swarm, Flood, Spill, Teem.
Antonyms: Be Singled.
Example: When the game ended, a throng of fans carried some of the winning players off the field.
Verb forms: Throng, Thronged, Thronged.
Related words:
Throng (noun) - A large cluster of individuals
🔰5. Eerie (adjective): (Strange and frightening.) (अजीब/डरावना)
Synonyms: Strange, Bizarre, Weird, Frightening
Antonyms: Common, Familiar, Natural, Normal.
Example: There was an eerie silence on our early morning walk through the cemetery.
🔰6. Nexus (noun): (A connected group or series.) (गुट)
Synonyms: Connection, Network, Chain, Net, Circuitry.
Antonyms: Disconnection, Dissolution.
Example: The school cafeteria is the nexus of student activity.
Origin: from Latin nectere , ‘a binding together’.
🔰7. Clandestinely (adverb): (In a secretive and illicit way.) (गुप्त रूप से)@Englishpitara

Synonyms: Confidentially, Covertly, Stealthily, Surreptitiously, Sub Rosa.
Antonyms: Openly, Publicly, Overtly.
Example: Frank’s wife filed for divorce after learning about his clandestine affair with their neighbor.
Related words:
Clandestine (adjective) - Done in an unobtrusive manner to avoid detection
Origin: from Latin clam ‘secretly’.
🔰8. Collate (verb): (Collect and combine (texts, information, or data) (क्रमवार करना)

Synonyms: Arrange, Organize, Order, Put In Order, Sort, Categorize, Systematize
Antonyms: Disperse, Scatter, Mix Up
Example: The museum curator will collate the artifacts by their countries of origin before placing them in their respective wings.
Verb forms: Collate, Collated, Collated.
Origin: from Latin collat- ‘brought together’
🔰9. Rankle (verb): ((Of a comment or fact) cause continuing annoyance or resentment.) (खिझाना/परेशान करना)

Synonyms: Annoy, Upset, Anger, Irritate, Offend, Affront, Displease, Exasperate.
Antonyms: Delight, Placate, Please, Soothe, Mollify.
Example: The fact the plane is leaving two hours late is certainly going to rankle the passengers.
Verb forms: Rankle, Rankled, Rankled.
🔰10. Rampant (adjective): (Flourishing or spreading unchecked.) (अनियंत्रित/बड़े पैमाने पर)

Synonyms: Uncontrolled, Unrestrained, Unchecked, Unbridled, Widespread.
Antonyms: Checked, Controlled, Mild, Restrained.
Example: Sadly, the Internet has made it easier for the rampant spread of false information.
Related words:
Rampantly (adverb) - अनियंत्रित रूप से
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Thursday, July 13, 2017

JULY 13, 2017 - THE HINDU VOCABULARY

JULY 13, 2017 - THE HINDU VOCABULARY

◆Sorrowful - feeling or showing grief.
◆Rushed - done or completed too hurriedly; hasty.
◆Stirring - causing excitement or strong emotion; rousing.
◆Renditions - a performance or interpretation, especially of a dramatic role or piece of music.
◆Grit - courage and resolve; strength of character.
◆Deluge - a severe flood.
◆Dispersing - go or cause to go in different directions.
◆Abatement - ending or subsiding.
◆Tendency - an inclination towards a particular characteristic or type of behaviour.
◆Aberrant - diverging from the normal type.
◆Precipitation - rain, snow, sleet, or hail that falls to or condenses on the ground.
◆Extensively - to a large or detailed degree.
◆Phenomenon - a fact or situation that is observed to exist or happen, especially one whose cause or explanation is in question.
◆Confined - (of a space) restricted in area or volume; cramped.
◆Rehabilitation - the action of restoring someone to health or normal life through training and therapy after imprisonment, addiction, or illness.
◆Embankment - a wall or bank of earth or stone built to prevent a river flooding an area.

◆Credentials - a qualification, achievement, quality, or aspect of a person's background, especially when used to indicate their suitability for something.
◆Forgone - past
◆Emerge - become apparent or prominent.
◆Transition - the process or a period of changing from one state or condition to another.
◆Bitterness - anger and disappointment at being treated unfairly; resentment.
◆Prevailed - prove more powerful or superior.
◆Reckoning - the action or process of calculating or estimating something
◆Subsequently - after a particular thing has happened; afterwards.
◆Speculation - the forming of a theory or conjecture without firm evidence.
◆Stints - supply a very ungenerous or inadequate amount of (something).
◆Overshadow - appear more prominent or important than.
◆Astute - having or showing an ability to accurately assess situations or people and turn this to one's advantage.
◆Embarks - begin (a course of action)
Immense - extremely large or great, especially in scale or degree.
◆Unleash - release

Vocabulary