Vocabulary Made Easy series: Your guide to scoring well for competitive exams
Students preparing for various competitive exams often miss out on preparing for the vocabulary section in these exams.
Students preparing for various competitive exams often miss out on preparing for the vocabulary section in these exams. For some exams, obtaining a minimum score for these sections is mandatory. In such cases, aspirants cannot afford to take a risk by not preparing for such sections if they aim to score better.
Here's a way to improve your vocabulary and communication skills. Check out the words for the day and a small quiz to push yourself to improve your word power and language skills.
Ignominy (Noun)
Meaning: public shame or disgrace
Example: Imagine the shame, the ignominy, the dire social consequences
Also Read: Vocabulary Made Easy series: Work on your language skills to become a pro
Incongruity (Noun)
Meaning: The state of being incongruous, incompatibility
Example: The sheer oddness of the way the place functioned, the incongruity between functioning and pretension
Inquisition (Noun)
Meaning: a period of prolonged and intensive questioning
Example: I was subjected to a lengthy inquisition into the state of my bank account
Also Read: Vocabulary Made Easy series: Challenge yourself to improve your word power
Immutable (Noun)
Meaning: Unchanging over time or unable to be changed
Example: Their arguments involved press freedom - an immutable concept especially when it comes to protecting sources
Put your thinking cap on and try to answer the following questions to understand how much you have grasped.
- In Nature, nothing is ___________________________ and change is the rule not the exception. Which of the following words fits best in the sentence? (immutable, inquisition)
- Can you think of some antonyms for the word Incongruity?
- Can you think of some synonyms for the word Ignominy?
Also Read: Vocabulary Made Easy series: Consistency is the key to improving your skills
Watch out for this space for your weekly update on improving word power.
(Definitions and examples are from Oxford Languages)