Vocab - 0001 to 1600

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ulterior

*hidden*

Anarchy

(n.) a lack of government and law; confusion

cupid

Symbolic of Love

Eschew

/M - Ass + Chew - I normally (*avoid*) eating ass of Chicken while eating any delicacy / Verb - दूर रहना , परहेज़ करना 1.to abstain or keep away from; shun; avoid: /But a growing number of automakers are going all-in with battery electric vehicles that eschew petroleum entirely. /

Furrow(Frow)

Noun - *deep line or wrinkle on the face *. Sometimes a furrow simply means the impression left by a cart wheel or tire track in the mud.

Opine

/M - Opinion - The verb opine is used when someone *speaks up and expresses an opinion. * You might opine that dogs are highly preferable to cats./ Whenever you have something to say about a subject, you have the option to opine about it or keep your mouth shut. Movie critics opine about the best films of the year, and kindergarten kids opine that they'd rather not take a nap. *Opine can also describe what you suppose will happen, like when you opine that school lunches will improve because of the new cook.* The Latin opinari, or have an opinion, is the root of opine.

oratory

/M - Oral +Story - One who can speak stories in front of many children (*Formal Public Speaking*) / Noun - Formal public speaking /Ex - In the end, despite the oratory and anthems in Sydney's immense town hall, this was a sad occasion./

Panacea

/M - Paan + Asia - An Asian Paan promises eternal life , people in West call it *Panacea ( A remedy that falsely claims to solve every problem , रामबाण दवा )*/ If someone offers you a pill that promises eternal life, don't take the pill. It's a panacea, a remedy that falsely claims to solve every problem ever. The Greek word pan means "all" (think of a panorama, a view where you can see everywhere). The Greek word for "cure" is akēs (which looks like the word "aches"). Those are the roots of panacea, a cure for all aches. *But a panacea doesn't really cure everything; it just acts like it can. Use the word to describe an unbelievable solution, like a new law that will make everyone rich, or a robot that does your homework for you.*

pedantic

/M - Padhantu - Padhantu Bachha ..jo apni knowledge ka dikhawa(*Ostentatious in Learning*) zyada karta ho / Adj - 1. Ostentatious in one's learning 2. overly concerned with minute details or formalism, especially in teaching. /Forgive me for being pedantic, but obviously there is no such thing as a male menopause/ Hindi - पंडिताऊ

panegyric(pane+jee+rick)

/M - Pain + Gayak : Singers who sing sad songs get more *panegyric ( सराहना , गुणगाथा )* like Jagjit Singh/ A formal, high-minded speech can be described with a formal, high-minded word — *the word panegyric, which is a very elaborate tribute to someone. You could consider most eulogies as panegyrics.* *the word today stands for high praise given in a speech or tribute as highfalutin as the word itself sounds.*

Substantiate

/M - Substantial - Substantial means Solid and Substantiate means * Solid Support or Proof सिद्ध करना , सही साबित करना*/ To substantiate is *to give support* to a claim. We'd really like to believe in the Tooth Fairy; however, more evidence is needed to substantiate her existence (besides that quarter in your pocket). Substantiate is related to the word *substantial, which means "solid." So, to substantiate a claim is to make it solid or believable. If the evidence given in support of an argument is weak and unconvincing, that evidence can be described as insubstantial. Of course, in special cases like the Tooth Fairy, having substantial evidence doesn't seem to matter; fans just keep on believing.

Scintillating

/M - Scientist+Illuminating - Scientist ne ek robot banaya jo boht Scintillating (*Brilliant , Clever*) hai and it will grab your attention *) / चमकता हुआ ,बहुत शानदार Adjective *Something scintillating is flashing briefly and sharply with light. Scintillating conversations are smart and captivating.* To be scintillating is to be sharp. Things that are scintillating are exciting: they grab your attention with sparkles, flashes of light, or sheer brilliance. Most often, we talk about scintillating conversations and speakers. If you say someone is scintillating, then they are clever — people want to listen to them. This is a word often used sarcastically. If someone is boring, you might say "Well, that was scintillating," while rolling your eyes. / a scintillating personality./ / Ex - a scintillating conversationalist; a play full of scintillating dialogue. / / Ex - England beat New Zealand as Joe Root produces scintillating innings/

Sedulous

/M - Seduction + Love - Persistently Seducing(*Diligent In Application*) may give chance to make Love / Adj -परिश्रमी ,तत्पर 1. diligent in application or attention; persevering; assiduous. 2.persistently or carefully maintained: /sedulous flattery./

Seers

/M - See - If you can see the future then you can be called as Seer (*A seer is someone who can see the future*)/ Nostradamus is considered a seer because he predicted everything from the Great Fire of London to the French Revolution. Oh, and the end of the world. /With Washington's anointed seers strikingly obtuse on the subject of geopolitical power, perhaps it's time to get back to basics./

Perturbed

/M - Pair +turn +bed - Baar baar bed pe pair maarna and turn karna , Isse bagal waale ko lage ki Earthquake aa gaya hia and he will be *perturbed (flustered , Confused , Jhinjhod dena)* / Imagine a couple of snakes getting loose in a pet shop, and the manager running around trying to round up the snakes and calm down the customers, and you'll picture a perturbed person. *Perturbed means flustered and confused.* When you're perturbed, you're upset by something, and rattled enough by it to be thrown off your usual calmness into a state of confusion. In astronomy, perturbation is defined as "the effects on a large body when it is subjected to gravitational effects from more than one other large body." *When a planet is perturbed in astronomy, it is pulled in different directions by strong forces, which is a great metaphor for what happens to a person who is perturbed.* /The prospect of machines stealing our jobs has perturbed and enraged humans for at least 200 years./ /It perturbed the spiral structure, but you can see it's still an intact spiral and going out a hundred kilo parsecs is this huge tail./

Peccable

/M - Pakka + Able - One who always say that pakka i will complete this work is *Peccable (Liable to Sin or Error , पापमय)*/ adjective; liable to sin or error /He was deposed from the Presbyterian ministry for teaching that our Lord's nature was peccable, or capable of sin./

Pellucid

/M - Pale + LUC(Light) - It was yellow Sun light which was coming through the Glass(*Translucent*) and making things look extra clear (*Clear*)/ Adj 1. Allowing the Maximum passage of Light , as glass ; Translucent 2.Clear or Limpid / There was a smattering of hair across his scalp, but his eyes were a pellucid blue / 3.Clear in meaning or Style / Pellucid Writing /

panoply

/M - Pan + Ply - Collection of Pans on Ply Wood in pan shop . (*Collection Or An assortment of things *)/ A panoply is a *collection or an assortment of things*. You might be eager to show off your panoply of bobble-head dolls when friends come to your house. *An array or display of things* is a panoply, so you can show off your panoply of spooky clown paintings, but you can also display a panoply of dance moves or talk about the panoply of flags at the parade — as long as it's a *complete or impressive display*, it's a true panoply. In ancient Greece, the word was used exclusively to talk about military costumes which were always suits of armor.

purloin

/M - Par + Lion - A thief was very active in Jungle , he *Purloin (filched , Stealing )* Bananas from Monkey and Fishes from Bear . Par Lion ne usey pakad liya / *You can use the verb purloin to mean "steal" or "take," especially if it's done in a sneaky way. If you sneak a dollar out of your mom's purse, you purloin it.* Kids might purloin apples from a neighbor's tree, and a crooked cashier might purloin cash from her boss's convenience store. Originally, purloin meant "put at a distance" in Middle English. The word comes from the Anglo-French purloigner, "put away." /The smell of roasting pork on the farm would alert guards, leading to beatings and weeks of half rations, so they ate purloined pork raw./

scanty

/M - Sufficient + Cant - Things that are not sufficient or enough are called * Scanty अपर्याप्त*/ *We refer to an amount or thing that is not quite enough as scanty, or lacking.* It's an adjective used to describe something that doesn't offer enough, as in "farmers having a scanty crop in a drought year." The adjective scanty comes from the Old Norse scamt, which means "short or brief," and so suggests a small amount. *The word usually suggests a meager amount, and can refer to anything that is barely sufficient.* Someone trying to stretch a meal might offer scanty servings. On a humorous note, a Roaring Twenties flapper referred to her underwear as scanties.

parable

/M - Para + Fable - *A small paragraph story to teach moral lesson* / A parable is a short and simple story that teaches a religious or moral lesson. The parable of the Good Samaritan and the parable of the Prodigal Son are just two examples of the many parables attributed to Jesus, as recorded in the four gospels. Parable descends from the Greek parabolē "a comparison, analogy," from paraballein "to compare," from the prefix para- "beside" plus ballein "to throw." The sense of comparing, or throwing an idea beside another, is at the heart of the word. When you hear a parable, you're meant to use the comparison to learn how to act--the fox's "sour grapes" are compared to your own downgrading of the thing you cannot have. /The story of how it closed is a parable of how relatively low-skilled manufacturing jobs have melted away./

superfluous

/M - Super + Full - Zarrorat se zyada khana kha lene (*ज़रूरत से ज़्यादा*)/ Adj - अनावश्यक , ज़रूरत से ज़्यादा 1. Being more than is Sufficient or Required , Excessive 2. Unnecessary or Needless

Charade

/M - Parade - A parade is a *charade (A charade is something done just for show, Deekhawa*) to show their military power to world / . Your devotion to vegetarianism would be a charade if you actually ate cheeseburgers when no one was looking. When you want things to appear different than they really are, you might be tempted to put on a charade, like a charade of happiness when you are really feeling down. *Charade is also the name for a silently-acted clue in the game called charades — which originally wasn't silent. It used indirect descriptions of the words; the non-speaking version was called dumb charades.* /There are practical reasons for avoiding this inevitable charade - at least for now./ /Everyone knows that there is no way Greece can pay its debts, yet the charade of negotiations goes on./

prose

/M - Paragraph + Rose :*Paragraph* writing on Rose , which is boring and Dull... should have written as Poem / 1. the ordinary form of spoken or written language, without metrical structure, as distinguished from poetry or verse. 2 . Dull 3. to write or talk in a dull, matter-of-fact manner.

pastoral

/M - Pastor - The pastor is a leader within a church who has been ordained and therefore given the authority to conduct religious services. Pastoral can also mean something done by Pastors . Pastors are often referred to as shepherds of their flock (i.e., the members of their church congregation). / * 1. of or relating to a pastor 2. bucolic , rural life , shepherds*

patsy

/M - Pastry - In train an unknown person offered pastry to another *patsy( भोला-भाला व्यक्ति)* person / a person who is gullible and easy to take advantage of /And it's a story that lots of farmers find really irritating, because it makes them out to be dupes or patsies./

pine

/M - Peena - Because of parents , two lovers were seperated ..they know that they will not unite again in future .. Es gam main bande ne boht peena chaloo kar diya an8d dheere dheere uski tabyat kharaab hone lagi(*Suffer with Longing*) / Noun - विलाप करना 1.to yearn deeply; suffer with longing; long painfully (often followed by for): / to pine for one's home and family. / /to pine for a lost love./ / to pine for one's native land;/ 2.to fail gradually in health or vitality from grief, regret, or longing (often followed by away): /Separated by their families, the lovers pined away /

Despondent

/M - Pepsodent - Pepsodent helps you fight germs and bad elements , but if you dont do pepsodent you will be in *despondent(feeling of loosing hope or courage ,आशाहीन , hattash , niraash )*/ If you are discouraged, very sad, and without hope you are depressed, you might describe your mood as despondent.This adjective is often followed by over or about: He was despondent over the loss of his job. *If you want a noun, use the words despondency or despondence.*

Cede

/M - Seed - Seeds which * gives up its life Or Surrender * to become food for humankind / त्याग करना , आत्मसमर्पण करना *To cede is to give up or surrender land, position, or authority.* "She reluctantly ceded the coveted position as the baby of the family to her brother when he was born. She would not, however, cede her bedroom to him." Cede is a word often used in discussing diplomatic issues. *It is more commonly used in reference to actual physical things, like geographic areas or objects, but can also be used in reference to attitudes or opinions. "The rebels ceded territory after the siege failed." "Dad tried but finally ceded control and let me have my own Facebook account.*

permeate

/M - Permit +IN - Permit dena liquid ya smell ko chotey chotey pores se andar aane ka *घुसना , आरपार निकलना , छेदों में होकर जाना*/ *When you live in a big city like New York, you know all too well how the smells of spices and cooking meats can permeate a hallway*, easily passing through those thin apartment doors to make your mouth water. *The verb permeate literally means to "pass through." It's often used to describe smells or liquids that not only pass through, but also spread to fill an entire area.* When you bake cookies, you'll notice that the rich, sweet smell of those cookies isn't confined just to your oven — it permeates the entire kitchen and even the whole house. In science class, you might have learned about a permeable membrane — a thin material that is porous enough to let liquids or gases to pass through.

Preternatural(Preter+Natural)

/M - Peter + Natural - Peter ka nature boht hi Abnormal tha and he used to wear ajeeb gareeeb dresses ..jaise party main Shorts pehan ke aana and School main Suits pehan ke aana ..He was always Out of Sync with other guys ..*oddly abnormal and out of sync with everything else ग़ैरमामूली */ Preternatural describes something that seems *oddly abnormal and out of sync with everything else अलौकिक.* If you hear a preternatural dog's barking, maybe it sounds like a police siren instead of a howl. Note that preternatural contains the word natural. Preter comes from the Latin wowrd praeter which means "beyond"; so something preternatural is beyond nature. It is less commonly used than unnatural or supernatural but means the same thing. If you lift a truck off the ground and hold it above your head, people will marvel at you and say you have preternatural strength. /Dekker walked away from the shot with a preternatural calm while the Wisconsin fan section erupted./

ham

/M - Pig : (*A Pig*) was working as a (*rookie operator*) in 98.1 FM (*who overacts*)/ अस्वाभाविक अभिनय करना Noun - 1. an actor or performer who overacts. /Ex - ... a tin-horn politician with the manner of a rural corn doctor and the mien of a ham actor./ 2. an operator of an amateur radio station.

Seminal

/M - Semen - Like Semen(*Semen Related*) which can give birth to new life (*Highly Original and influencing development of future events फलवान*) / Adj फलवान ,वीर्य संबंधी , Future development 1. pertaining to, containing, or consisting of semen. 2 .Botany. of or relating to seed. 3. highly original and influencing the development of future events: /The university is planning to chase that prize-and the prestige, recruitment power, and seminal research that could come with it. / 5.rudimentary or unformed /Four decades after their seminal paper, there are still no widely validated laboratory tests for any common mental illness. / /Faraday went on to make conduct a series of seminal experiments in electromagnetism, among other contributions. /

Picayune(Pica+youne)

/M - Piku - In Piku movie , Amitabh Bachan has played a role of Old Man with urinal problems ..*it was trivial and was not at all worth worrying about it * as people of that age normally has it / The adjective picayune refers to those things that are so small, trivial, and unimportant that they're not worth getting into. Why focus on the picayune details, when it's the larger ideas that are the real problem? There are several newspapers in America called the Picayune, because they see it as their job to comb through even the minor details of the story to get to the truth. Hear the word "picky" in picayune (though they're not related)? That's one way to remember it.* A picky person is picayune. Airline disaster investigators spend their lives rummaging through the debris, knowing that it might be the most picayune detail that leads them to understand the cause of a crash *. /To see just how picayune the debate got, take a look at the opinions. /

Shroud

/M - Shade - Women in Africa wear *shroud (Hide or Cover )* themselves to get some shade in summer / Are the rules of calculus shrouded in mystery to you? *The verb shroud means to hide or cover something or someone.* The fog might shroud the valley, or that long-sleeved, ankle-length dress might shroud the tan you worked so hard on in Mexico over Christmas break. It used to be that corpses were dressed for burial not in person's best outfit but in a shroud — a garment, often white, made to cover the body. When ghosts, zombies or mummies are depicted in rags, they are wearing the remains of their burial shrouds. If you should hide from them by covering yourself with an abandoned tarp, you will be shrouding yourself from sight.

schlemiel(sh + meal)

/M - She + Male : who is *(really unlucky)* to get Boy or girl / Slang .. Noun - * an awkward and unlucky person for whom things never turn out right.*

Shenanigan(Sha + Nanigun)

/M - Shenai - Bachoo ne ghar ke aangan mian snake dekha toh masti ke liye wo Shenai bajane lage *(masti , Shararat)* . Bagal se ek Aunty jaa rahi thi toh unsey paise bhi mangne lage ki aayi hum aapko Saap ka dance dikhatey hian (*Use of Tricks to Deceive someone)*/ 1. mischief; boisterous 2. the use of tricks to deceive someone (usually to extract money from them) /The whole incident was a PR nightmare for McCain, rivaled only by the shenanigans of his own running mate. /

Shrivel

/M - Shiver - Due to harsh winter Crops shiver and then *Shrivel (मुरझाना , सूखना , wrinkle up )*/ *When things shrivel, they wrinkle up and get smaller, the way leaves begin to shrivel and turn brown in the fall.* A lack of moisture can cause something to shrivel, and in humans it tends to be the natural process of aging that makes people shrivel a bit. Flowers will shrivel if you forget to water them, and grapes will eventually shrivel into raisins if you dry them out long enough.

Shirk

/M - Shred - *To Shred your responsibilities(Avoid Dealings)* / *To shirk your responsibilities is to avoid dealing with them *— like when you watch four consecutive hours of infomercials instead of facing your homework. A verb is an action word, so it's ironic that the verb shirk suggests inaction in the avoidance of work. *To shirk carries with it a negative connotation of laziness*. When Eleanor Roosevelt was asked how she conquered her shyness to become a powerful public figure, she responded, "I faced each problem as it came along. . . . I never tried to shirk. I tried never to evade an issue. When I found I had something to do — I just did it." Ah, Eleanor, why can't we all be a bit more like you?

Shrewd

/M - Shred - Ek Don ne apni Black Diary Shred kar dee .. Jismain sab Dons , Politicans ,Sports and Actors ka number tha ..Wo (*चालाक*) tha coz he knew ki police kabhi bhi aa sakti hia / Adj - सयाना, चालाक , बुद्धिमान 1. astute and penetrating, often with regard to business /an astute tenant always reads the small print in a lease / 2. Artful and crafty: /a shrewd politician / / Shrewd moves to enhance winning chances /

sly

/M - Shy - A shy person can hide his sly*( शातिर When you're sly, you're crafty, cunning, tricky, and wily. Being sly is being deceitful, though not in the worst way.)* motives beneath his shyness ./ If you're good at lying, you're quite sly: people who are sly are good at pulling one over on other people. Being sly helps you get away with things. If you made a mess in your house but got your parents to blame the dog, that was sly. Being sly means you're not being honest, but this word has kind of a harmless flavor to it. Someone who killed someone and lied about it would not be described as sly. Slyness has to do with smaller, sneakier, more harmless kinds of lying

Seismograph

/M - Si Si + Graph - Cooker ne Si Si Si kar sity maari then jab main dekhne gaya toh cooker vibrate kar raha tha .. mujhey laga ye toh Earthquake hai and cooker mera instrument usey measure karne ke liye / *any of various instruments for measuring and recording the vibrations of earthquakes*

pillory

/M - Pillar - Pillar pe baandh kar logo se beizzat karana is *pilloried (criticize harshly and to expose to public ridicule सार्वजनिक रूप से दंडित करना , निंदा करना)* / A pillory is a wooden frame with cutouts for someone's head and hands. Long ago, people found guilty of a crime could be sentenced to be locked in a pillory for a certain amount of time for punishment but also for public humiliation. The verb pillory means to be punished by being locked in a pillory, but references to this form of punishment are historic and it is no longer used — you might see references today to someone in a pillory in a cartoon.* As a modern verb, pillory means both to criticize harshly and to expose to public ridicule.* Someone who is caught doing something immoral may be pilloried and people who believe they have been unfairly criticized say they have been pilloried, but often only after they've been exposed! /Mr. Rosen has been pilloried for insisting on change, but in many ways the world outside the restaurant changed a while ago./

Cringe

/M - Pinch - When you pinch hard someone he will react in cringe( React to pain दर्द की शिकन पीछे हटना) / *When you cringe, your body language shows you don't like what you see and hear. You close your eyes and grimace. You may even jerk your body away from the offensive sight or sound,* like the old picture of you in an "awkward stage" that makes you cringe whenever you see it. Whether it's a song you hate or someone mentioning an embarrassing moment from the past, you cringe at things that are unpleasant. If you think about the way your body involuntarily flinches or bends in those situations, you won't be surprised to learn that the word cringe can be traced back to the Old English word cringan, meaning "give way, fall (in battle), become bent." That's exactly what your body does when you cringe!

piety(Pai+ty)

/M - Pitai - Ek parents ne apne bachho ko boht maara kyunki wo log Devoted nahi they bhagwan ke liye (*Devotion to God , धार्मिकता*)/ *Piety is devotion to God or to religious practices*. Nuns who pray all day long are famous for their piety. If you have filial piety it means you're devoted to your parents. Piety is sometimes used in a disapproving way to mean that the person is only pretending to be devoted or good.

Plaintiff

/M - Plain + Tiffin - A student brought Plain tiffin to school , but some one purloined and finished it . He found who did and it and acted as a * plaintiff ( the person who is accusing someone ) * in front of class / In a courtroom, *the plaintiff is the person or group who is accusing another person or group of some wrongdoing*. If you're the plaintiff, you are claiming that a law was broken, and you're in court to present your case. The plaintiff accuses, the defendant tries to prove that accusation wrong. You've seen this relationship on television shows about lawyers, or maybe you've been to court yourself. The Old French root word translates as "complain" and the Latin root is literally "beating of the breast," or explaining your grief in a dramatic way.

Plaintive

/M - Plaintiff - Plaintiff shares roots with the adjective plaintive, *which describes a sorrowful sound दुख भरा फरियादी दर्दनाक *. The plaintiff made a plaintive cry when the defendant was declared not guilty/ Plaintive is an adjective for describing someone or something with a pleading, sorrowful, desperate tone. If you have ever heard the plaintive howl of a wolf, then you know what we are getting at here. A plaint, as in complaint, is an expression of sorrow or grief. *This word has also been bent a little at the ends to become plaintiff, or complainant—the sufferer—in a lawsuit.* So, whether you are hearing a plaintive tone in a courtroom, at a funeral, or in the wild (as in an animal's plaintive howl), you can be assured that someone or something desires something desperately

sibylline

/M - Sibyl(Sorceress) + Line - Sibyl telling you *Sibylline (having a secret meaning" or "foretelling the future भविष्यसूचक , रहस्यात्मक रूप से) * /. If you can predict the meaning of the word sibylline, you may come from a family of psychics — or you may have a background in Greek mythology. The word has origins in the Greek word Sibulla, meaning "prophetess." *Back in the times of the Greeks and Romans, a sibyl was a female oracle who delivered cryptic prophecies foretelling the future, often inspired by the deities.* The adjective sibylline describes such talents or the messages they reveal.

plaque

/M - Plate - Bronze Plate / A plaque is a sign that *memorializes a person or event*, such as the plaque on a building noting the person it's named after or the year it was built. Plaque comes from the French word for "*plate*" meaning not a dinner plate, but a little brass or tin plate that can be mounted on a wall. If you take a tour of Civil War battlefields, you'll find that historical societies often use plaques to commemorate soldiers or particular events. Plaque is also a hard buildup in the body, like the plaque on your teeth that the dentist likes to scrape off.

polemic(poleymic)

/M - Pole + MIC - Politician Jhanda fehrane ke baad ,Mic pe aatey hi started talking on Disputed Land of Ayodhya ..(*Controversy and Dispute*)/ Adj- विवादास्पद , विवादात्मक 1. of or involving dispute or controversy 2.an argument or controversy, esp over a doctrine, belief, 3.a person engaged in such an argument or controversy

polyglot

/M - Poly + Goat : A Goat who can *talk and write in (Multiple Languages)* / adjective 1. Able to speak or write several languages; multilingual. 2. a book, especially a Bible, containing the same text in several languages. /* And the city is enriched by its polyglot culture in countless ways, including a blossoming of its arts scene. * /

ponder

/M - Pond - Pond ke paas baith ke (*sochna*) / verb - To consider something deeply thoroughly , Meditate , Think / Ex - Charlie Hebdo staff ponder bittersweet new success after jihadi terror attack / Hindi - विचार करना

puny

/M - Pony - Pony tail is *Puny ( Small , weak , कमजोर , नन्हा, छोटा और दुर्बल)*/ Are your muscles looking small, weak, and totally inferior? In other words, puny? Sounds like somebody needs to eat more spinach. *Tiny, shrimpy, wimpy and totally unthreatening. That's puny in a nutshell — a very small, totally lame looking nutshell.* It's most often used to describe someone's inferior physique, but can also apply to anything little that's not about to get in your way. A puny mountain would be no challenge to an Olympic skier, just as a puny plate of hot dogs would be laughable to a world speed-eating champion.

Portend

/M - Port + End - Ship ke crews ne sabko pehle hi(*Indicate in Advance*) se bata diya ki ab Port End ho raha hai and we will be leaving city / verb (used with object) आगे से बताना या जताना 1.to indicate in advance; to foreshadow or presage, as an omen does: /* The street incident may portend a general uprising. */ 2.to signify; mean.

portmanteau

/M - Port + Man + Tea - Ek port pe , ek aadmi tea pee raha tha , usne Saf and Kareena ko dekha ek bade Breifcase(*Suitcase*) ke saath..Usne bola arey ye toh Safeena hai (Modifier ..embodying Several use or qualities, *मिश्रशब्द *)/ noun- मिश्रशब्द ,सूटकेस 1.(formerly) a large travelling case made of stiff leather, esp one hinged at the back so as to open out into two compartments 2.(modifier) embodying several uses or qualities /Ex - the heroine is a portmanteau figure of all the virtues/ / Biodiversity is a portmanteau word, from biology and diversity. / /Hangry is a portmanteau of "hungry" and "angry"/

Plausible

/M - Possible - Quite Possible / If something is plausible, *it's reasonable or believable.* Things that are plausible could easily happen. A woman becoming President is very plausible. A giraffe becoming President is not

posit

/M - Post It - To post your True suggestion or Idea is called *posit (To posit something is to Assume or suggest that it is true )* . You can posit an idea or opinion. When you posit, you submit an idea or give an opinion. Scientists posit many ideas — called hypotheses — that they then try to prove or disprove through experimentation and research. In science, you hear about positing a lot, and the same is true in math and logic. When you say "If X, then Y" you're positing a proposition. Positing can also mean to put something somewhere firmly — this means to deposit, fix, or situate

Posterior

/M - Post(After) + Rear - Things that is on back or that comes after the things in front / *Use the adjective posterior to describe something that's in the back.* It's often used in anatomy — a posterior cerebral artery supplies blood to the back of the brain, and the tail is on the posterior of a fish. The prefix post means "after," and things that are posterior come after the things in the front. *The opposite of posterior is anterior, which refers to the front, usually of body parts.* You can also use the word posterior to jokingly refer to the part of your body that you sit on — your backside. Posterior is also a formal way to say later in time.

pragmatism

/M - Practical + Ism - *One who make practical decisions* / Noun - तथ्यात्मकमा , based on facts When you practice pragmatism, *you accept conditions as they are and make practical decisions*. Your head is not in the clouds. If you urge your daydreaming friend to accept that life is not a fairy tale and the only way to succeed is through hard work, that's pragmatism. *This is an approach based on how things are, not on how you wish they were.* This also refers to a philosophical doctrine built on the idea that *something can only be true if it works*. If you're known for your pragmatism, then you're *realistic, logical, and know how to get things done.* /The technocrats have a pragmatism that makes their agenda hard to pin down/

Preclude

/M - Pre + Conclude - He is a Scientist and he concluded that Chances of Tsunami is very high after earthquake ..so he asked his family and friends to stay away from Beaches .. and yes he was right .. he saved them all and prevented Bad things from Happening / *नामुमकिन करना , असंभव बनाना , होने न देना* To preclude something is to *prevent it from happening*. A muzzle precludes a dog from biting. This is a very formal word, but it has a simple meaning: *when something is precluded, it can't happen*. See the prefix pre in preclude and in prevent? It is signaling that these words are all about things done before another action would happen —* to make it impossible*. Staying away from water precludes the possibility of drowning, though it also precludes any chance of having fun swimming. /Those Asimov laws have always felt to me like a real problem, because they preclude free will./

Preeminent

/M - Pre + Eminent - An eminent personality / *Calling someone preeminent means they're truly outstanding or better than everyone else — not in general, but in a specific field or specialty. Such as a preeminent geologist.* The adjective preeminent was first recorded in the mid 15th century and has its roots in the Latin praeeminentem, which means "to project forward, rise above." And anything that's been described as preeminent certainly does rise above the rest. Preeminent scholars or universities or craftsmen are the best at what they do and are well known because of it.

Precipitate

/M - Precipitation - Weather report predicted heavy ran around 05 PM , people *precipitated , acted suddenly ,हड़बड़ी करना* to leave office and reach home safely / Precipitate, as a verb, can also mean specifically, "*to fall from clouds,*" such as rain, snow, or other forms of precipitation. When used as an adjective, precipitate means "hasty" or "*acting suddenly.*" If you decide to throw your class project in a trash masher just because someone in your class had a similar idea, then your actions might be described as precipitate. Or if you do that sort of thing regularly, you may be a precipitate person.

predicament

/M - Predict + ment - A tough situation in which you cant predict the outcome or way out is called *Predicament (difficult, confusing, and unpleasant situation.कठिन परिस्थिति )*/ If you're engaged to get married, but suddenly fall in love with someone else, you have got yourself in quite a predicament. /He said the Conservative Party "would not have hesitated for a moment" to ditch their leader if they had been in the same "predicament"./ /Only an idiot would put themselves in such a predicament./

Poignant

/M - Pregnant - Watching homeless girl giving birth on road without any help or hospital will be a *poignant (मर्मस्पर्शी, touches deeply )* moment for us/ Something that is poignant touches you deeply*. Watching a poignant YouTube video about baby penguins chasing their mothers, for example, might give you a lump in your throat.* Poignant comes from the Latin pungere "to prick," the same root as pungent. *But something that's pungent pricks your sense of smell, whereas poignant refers to something that pricks your emotions, especially in a melancholy way. *Movie critics might describe a touching portrayal as poignant if there isn't a dry eye in the house.

paramnesia(Para + mesia)

/M - Prem + Asia - Prem ko aisi bimari ho jaaana jissey wo Aisa ko Africa and Africa to America bolta ho ..Also he thinks Batman , Superman, and Spiderman are real (*Distortion of Memory in which Facts and Fantasy are confused *)/ Noun 1.Psychiatry. a distortion of memory in which fact and fantasy are confused. 2.the inability to recall the correct meaning of a word.

pretense

/M - Pretend - Girl said , if you take me to shopping i will pretend to be your Girlfriend , Aise log sirf apne baarey mian sochtey hian and pretentious (*अभिमानी*) hotey hian / Or Pretentious 1. pretending or feigning; make-believe: /My sleepiness was all pretense./ 2 .a false show of something: 3.a false allegation or justification:

Primordial(Pry+mordial)

/M - Primus(First) + Ordiri (To Begin) - *First to Begin , Original आरम्भ */ Primordial, an adjective, describes something that has been around forever, like cockroaches.*When something is primordial, it has existed since the earliest time,* like the primordial mud some scientists believe was the source of all life on Earth. Remember that is it a scientific term — don't call your teacher "primordial" just because she's been teaching at your school since it opened. /Both claim the same land and have a primordial attachment to that specific land. /

Surmise

/M - Surprise - Wife has decided to give a Surprise gift to her hubby on his birthday . She asked him ..Guess what i got for you ...He said ... I cant guess .(*Guess , Suppose अंदाज़ लगाना *)/ If you see the empty ice cream containers, the sprinkles littering the ground, a kicked can of Reddi-wip in the trash, you can surmise what has happened: Sundaes. *To surmise is to form an opinion or make a guess about something * . If you surmise that something is true, you don't have much evidence or knowledge about it. Near synonyms are guess, conjecture, and suppose. You might say, "I can't even surmise what he would do in such a situation." Surmise came to English from the French surmettre "to accuse," which is formed from the prefix sur- "on, upon" plus mettre "to put" (from Latin mittere "to send").

swath

/M - Swathi - Ghaas kaatne waali ladki jo ghaas (*ek lakeer main kaatti*) ho / Noun काटी घास की लकीर 1.the space covered by the stroke of a scythe or the cut of a mowing machine. 2.the piece or strip so cut. *Nowadays it is used more figuratively to mean any kind of path someone makes.* The figurative use of swath has nonphysical senses as well, as in the term "a significant swath of the population believes..."

piffle

/M - TOEFL - TOEFL ke Speaking exam main bakwaas karna(*बकवास करना*) / Noun - बकवास करना 1. Non Sense , As Trivial or Senseless talk /Ex - Of course, the book market suffers from being saturated by piffle and filth, but has this not always been the case? /

Talon

/M - Tail + On - Leopard turns On his tails and claws * नाखून* before running behind a prey / *A talon is a large, hooked claw*. Although talons are usually associated with eagles, hawks and other birds of prey, you can also use the word to describe the *flesh-tearing claws or fingernails of raptors, werewolves or even enraged preschoolers*. Talons typically belong to predators — the word implies bloody attack. An owl uses talons to stab and kill its prey. A chicken, however, uses claws to pick at its feathers and scratch around in the dirt. You can also pull talons into the conversation to be funny or sarcastic: "Hey! Get your talons off that piece of cake. It's mine."

Protrude

/M - Pro + Trade - A guy was expert in Trading and was conspicuous in his field , lekin uski tond itni bahar nikali hui thi ki log boltey they kyun bhia pet se hian kya ..*Stick Out उभरना , बाहर निकला हुआ होना*/ Protrude means to *stick out. A gravestone protrudes from the ground, a shelf protrudes from a wall, a lollipop stick protrudes from your mouth*. From the Latin *prō- "forward, out" + trūdere "to thrust,"* protrude often describes coastlines where rocks stick out into the water. Prō- gives us protrusion "something that sticks out," and protuberance "something that grows out of something else"--a goiter, for example, or a nose. /The Siberian Times reported that they found post office worker Ms Pasternak after noticing her bloodied hand protruding from underneath a pile of undergrowth./

Temporize

/M - Temp(Time) + Rise - *To delay in order to increase the time in hopes of Avoiding or preventing Something निर्णय करने में देर करना, टालमटोल करना *..India main sarkaari office waale jaan bujh ke aapke papers main koi galti nikaltey hian taaki appko time aur lage use theek karne ke liye and then baad main wo boley ki aaj ka din nikal gaya hia ....ab kal aaoo/ The verb temporize describes *stalling in order to gain time in the hopes of avoiding or preventing something *. Your class might temporize so your teacher won't have time to give the pop quiz you all think she's going to give. /They temporize and procrastinate because they lack confidence./

Protuberance

/M - Pro(Forward) + tuber(Thick Fleshy Part of Root) - *Sticking out , उभार , सूजन* / *A protuberance is something that sticks out, like a swelling or a lump, like a bunion on your foot*. A protuberance doesn't have to be hideous; it could be your nose on your face or a knot on a tree. The late Latin word prōtūberāre meant "to swell," coming from the prefix pro, which means "forward," and the root word tūber, meaning "swelling." And "root word" is appropriate here, since a tuber is a thick, fleshy part of a root, like a potato. And that should help you remember how to spell the word protuberance. Don't you love it when a word's meaning and its spelling work together? /It was then that she noticed the protuberance pushing out the lower part of his gown./

prodigious(Prodi + jus)

/M - Prodigy - A teenaged prodigy can eat 200 burgers in one seating , that's *prodigious ( Something exceptional, substantial, or great is prodigious. ,असाधारण , अति विशाल ,अजीब)* / A blizzard includes prodigious wind and snow. *A prodigious writer is one who can write a lot and do it well*. *Prodigious is a word for things that are impressive*. If you have prodigious strength, you're very strong. If your cat had a prodigious litter of kittens, then you've got a houseful of kittens. This is a strong word that's also kind of formal. *Save it for things that really blow you away because of their quality or quantity*. A little drizzle isn't a prodigious rain, but a storm that floods a whole city certainly is.

propriety

/M - Property - In US a family should atleast have 3 to 4 bedroom Home ...that is socially Acceptable thing ..(*Socially Acceptable in Speech and behavior , शिष्टाचार*)/ Propriety is following what is *socially acceptable in speech and behavior*. If you are someone who cares about always doing the right and proper thing, your friends might accuse you of being obsessed with propriety and beg you to loosen up.

prudent

/M - Proud + Dent - Ek driver ne jo boht proud karta tha apni Driving Skill pe , usne apne maalik ki Mercedes ko de maara , then he called his Malik and explained the situation and apologized for it . He did *Wise thing in that situation चतुर*/ Describe an action as prudent if it is *the wise thing to do under the existing circumstances*. If you're getting in trouble, it is probably prudent to keep your mouth closed and just listen. *If you show good and careful judgment when handling practical matters, you can be described as prudent*. Similarly, a wise and well-thought-through decision or action can be called prudent.

Sycophantic

/M - Psycho + Fan - ek fan jo pshyco hai .. he will do anything to win favor / * चापलूस* The adjective sycophantic is perfect for describing someone who uses *flattery to get what they want*. The sycophantic guy in your biology class might compliment the professor on her fabulous shoes as he hands in his lab report. Someone who's sycophantic goes overboard with compliments, usually to gain some kind of advantage. You see sycophantic behavior in Hollywood all the time, from red carpet interviews pouring flattery on movie stars to fawning autograph seekers. Sycophantic comes from the Greek word sykophantes, "one who shows the fig," a vulgar gesture of the time. The reference is to hypocritical Greeks behind the scenes who pretended to flatter while encouraging others to "show the fig."

puffery

/M - Puff - Puff udate huey *puffery ( to praise someone ) * karna kisi ki/ 1. *exaggerated praise, as of a book, product, * etc, esp through an advertisement 2. a short quick draught, gust, or emission, as of wind, smoke, air, etc, esp a forceful one 3. Verb - *to increase the price of (a lot in an auction) artificially by having an accomplice make false bids*

pugnacity

/M - Pug + City - A quiet pug when came to big hustling bustling city was quite disturbed and turned himself to a pugnacity (*aggressiveness, belligerence)*/ noun 1. a natural disposition to be hostile /It was a mixture of Christie's inherent pugnacity and carefully staged performance art, and it worked./ /For so long, hip-hop has been light on pugnacity — Bobby Shmurda's got oodles of it./

pun

/M - Pune - Pune ke judva bhaii ramesh and suresh ka naam lete waqt hamesh log masti kartey hain ..kabhi ramesh ko suresh boltey hain and suresh ko rames / Noun - *A humorous substitution of words that are alike in sound but different in meaning* Verb - to make pun

Pious

/M - Pure - पवित्र , धर्मपरायण / If someone is deeply religious and visibly follows all the moral and ethical codes of his religion, he is pious. Don't become a priest if you're not prepared to live a pious life. Pious comes from the Latin pius, which means dutiful. It doesn't always have to be used to talk about organized religion. If someone believes deeply in something, and lets everyone see it through their behavior, then they are pious, whether they're pious Christians or pious environmentalists. It differs from its synonym devout, which implies deep religious sentiment, whereas pious emphasizes the public display of feeling.

Qualm(Khualm)

/M - Q(Why) + Calm - When he stole candy from superstore , he was acting *uneasy* . Store manager saw him and thought why is he not Calm and guessed probably he has *done something wrong पछतावा* / *A qualm is a feeling of uneasiness, or a sense that something you're doing is wrong, and it sounds almost like how it makes your stomach feel*. If you had qualms about taking candy from the bulk bins at the store, your conscience probably told you to go back to the cashier and pay. Qualm entered English in the 16th century, with meanings like "doubt" and "uneasiness." Usually a qualm comes from doubt about an action and a feeling that you are doing, or are about to do, something wrong. *It isn't a bad feeling about another person's behavior but about your own.* If you have qualms about lying to get into the over-18 dance club, you might decide to follow your gut-check and meet your friends for coffee instead.

Slick

/M - Silk - Silk ki tarah smooth , jo aadmi smoothly boley / मिठबोला , चतुराईपूर्ण ,चिकना Slick describes a *smooth, effortless style.* How did that Girl Scout talk you into buying so many boxes of cookies? It must have been her slick sales pitch. A great salesman is often described as slick — he or she seems more like a friend than someone trying to sell you something. Things that are *smooth and glossy can also be called slick, like the surface of a glass table or an icy patch on the sidewalk*. Slick is also a verb, meaning "to smooth," like when you slick back your hair. The oldest meaning of slick is shiny, and in the 1620s, it was even the name of a kind of cosmetic. /And, contrary to popular belief, the fog machines and light shows at those slick evangelical conferences didn't make things better for me./

simile

/M - Similar/ *Use the noun simile when describing a comparison between two fundamentally different things, such as: "His voice was smooth, like butter in a warm pan."* A simile (pronounced SIM-uh-lee) is a comparison that usually uses the words "like" or "as": "Me without a mic is like a beat without a snare," rapped Lauryn Hill in the song "How Many Mics." The word comes from similus, a Latin word meaning "the same." A simile is different from a metaphor, in which the comparison is less explicit, as in Shakespeare's line "All the world's a stage."

Quixotic

/M - Q(Why) + Exotic - A boy asked his father after seeing an exotic Ferrari .. Why cant every one is this world owns a Ferrari .. His father said Beta thats not possible *quixotic( अवास्तविक , unrealistic )* / Use *quixotic for someone or something that is romantic and unrealistic, or possessed by almost impossible hopes*. Your quixotic task is easy to understand, if difficult to achieve: establish world peace. What a wonderful word quixotic is! While it is most often used to mean equally impractical and idealistic, it also has the sense of romantic nobility. Its source is from the great Spanish novel "Don Quixote," whose title character is given to unrealistic schemes and great chivalry. In the middle of a recession and high unemployment, it would be quixotic to imagine that you could quit your job and find another easily /This, as much as anything, encourages Quixotic presidential campaigns, because candidates realize that failure is often little more than a precursor to years of success./

scathing

/M - Skating - In Skating competition i performed so bad that my coach gave me such *scathing( means witheringly harsh that it feels like you have been burned तीखा ) * remarks that i feel like quitting this sport / If you enter a singing contest and the judge says that your singing is like that of a toad with laryngitis, that is scathing criticism. Scathing comes from an old Norse verb, to scathe, which means to injure by fire or lighting. *Now we use it when someone's critique is so harsh that it feels like you've been burned. *If your best friend turns against you and advertises your faults to the world, and you feel like everyone is staring and talking about you, you are having a scathing experience.

Slander

/M - Slam + Door - Ek aadmi apne colleague ko gaali de raha tha boss ke saamne ..uske kaam ki buraiyan kar raha tha(*Defame*).. He got pissed ,slammed the door and walked out of the room / Noun लांछन लगाना , कलंक लगाना 1.defamation; calumny: /rumors full of slander./ 2.defamation by oral utterance rather than by writing, pictures, etc. /a slander against his good name./

Quack

/M - Quack - Ek duck jo pretend kar raha ho ki wo Doctor hai (*Pretending Doctor */ There are good quacks and bad quacks. *A good quack is the sound a duck makes. A bad quack is someone pretending to be a doctor. (You'd be better off visiting the duck with your ailment.)* If you ever get a chance to interview a celebrity duck, prepare to write the word quack in your notebook many, many times, because that's all that ducks can say. The way you spell animal sounds changes depending what language you speak. In English a duck quacks, but in Danish a duck "raps," while Indonesian ducks "wek," and Romanian ducks say "mac." And that "MD" who isn't really a doctor, but is good at pretending to be one? He's a quack. If you ever meet a quack that "quacks," please run.

slur

/M - Slut - they said Slut to a girl ..It was * Slur ( Insulting remark बदनामी ,कीचड़ उछालना) * which made her furious / A slur is an insulting remark. In a political campaign, it's not unheard of for a candidate to launch a slur at her opponent, though doing so is usually frowned upon. Slur can also be used as a verb meaning "to insult," and it has a number of additional meanings as well. To slur one's speech is to pronounce words in a clumsy, lazy way. In the context of music, to slur is to slide smoothly from one note to another. The word history of slur is hazy, but some scholars have suggested a relationship with a Dutch word meaning "to drag."

Quarry

/M - Query - Granite Mill workers ne Granite ki khadaan main ( *खदान*) main chuhe ka shikaar(*any object of search, pursuit, or attack.*) karne ka competition rakha ..coz wahan boht saare chuhey they (*an abundant source or supply*)/ Noun Both meanings of quarry have to do with *going after something *. *An animal being hunted is called quarry, and when you dig a hole in the earth looking for rocks, both the digging and the hole are called quarry as well*. Gross fact: Quarry derives from the Latin cor "heart," because hunters used to drape the entrails of their chosen quarry on their dogs' backs. The origin in a word for "heart" can help you remember both quarries: *a rock quarry is searching down toward the heart of the earth; a stag's heart is considered a hunter's greatest prize.*

Quisling

/M - Quizlet - Quizlet ka employee jo Quizlet ki khabre uske opponent ko pahuchata ho ..and probably chahta ho ki Wo company usko achha Job Offer karey (*Betrays his country*)/ noun - ग़द्दार 1.a person who betrays his or her own country by aiding an invading enemy, often serving later in a puppet government; fifth columnist. /* The quisling of Belgrade */

quotidian

/M - Quote+A+Day - We should read a Quote *(daily)* ..It will give us new perspective of the *(ordinary, Usual )* life / Adj रोजमर्रा का , दैनिक , आम , साधारण 1. Daily , Usual , Ordinary or Commonplace /Their cabinets are quotidian, their surroundings absolutely ordinary. / /The book opens with a profound essay sparked by the quotidian exercise of cleaning the refrigerator./ /These small mysteries celebrate the non- quotidian in their subjects and settings. / 2. A Malarial fever characterized by attacks that recur daily

Supplicant

/M - Smart + Applicant - A guy was smart and was preparing for GRE .. he practiced hard and at the same time he prayed daily for good result *निवेदक , प्रार्थी* / If you pray every night to be accepted to your dream college, you can call yourself a supplicant, or a person who asks humbly for something. A supplicant can be a fervently religious person who prays to God for help with a problem, and it can also be someone who begs earnestly for something he or she wants. A younger brother entreating his sister to be allowed in her tree house could be described as a supplicant. The Latin root word is supplicantem, "plead humbly."

Sovereignty

/M - REIGN ( शासन ) - *Freedom of a Nation to Control Itself* / Sovereignty can describe the power of one state or thing over another or the freedom a state or thing has to* control itself *. Look closely at the word sovereignty, and you will see it is all about who *reigns*, or rules. Although sovereignty is usually used in a political sense — particularly the power of nations, it can be used to describe personal control as well: If your mother insists upon your wearing wool hats in summertime, you might declare complete sovereignty over your wardrobe. The word is also occasionally used for the power of royalty, like a queen. /Beijing claims sovereignty over most of the South China Sea, through which $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year./

Rakish

/M - Rakesh Roshan - Rakesh roshan was a *Ladies' man* who owns a sexy yacht (*Streamlined Ship*) / Ladies, the rakish fellow you met last night with the suave dance moves, smoothly rehearsed lines, and your number listed as "Goddess #14" in his phone is fine for a flirt, but probably isn't meet-the-parents material. Used as an adjective to describe a dashing ladies' man or a streamlined ship, rakish comes from the fusing of rake + -ish. Don Juan, the famous Spanish nobleman immortalized in 17th century Spanish tales, is the epitome of rakish: stylishly handsome and prone to saucy, fast behavior. Synonyms include charming, flashy, and immoral. /Others don't relish the idea of celebrating the mine's former owner, a rakish former oil geologist named Charles A. Steen./

Ramble

/M - Ram + able - After Sita was kidnapped by Ravana , Ram started * rambled (Aimless) * search to find her . Finally after getting help from other people he was able to find who took her / Verb 1. *move about aimlessly or without any destination*, often in search of food or employment 2. *continue talking or writing in a desultory(Unorganized) manner* /Did you ramble, or were your answers entirely "on point" to the questions posed?/

Ramify

/M - Ram - Ram ka naam japne se manokamna poori hoti hia , this theory was ramified (*spread through out country*) / *The verb ramify describes something that branches off or spreads*, like the new subway lines that ramify across your city and reach even the neighborhoods farthest from the center. Ramify came into English through French, but it traces all the way back to the Latin word ramus, meaning "branch." *It can describe things that literally branch out in segments, or it can be used figuratively to describe things that spread, like the effects of a new policy that ramify through your school. Ramify might seem like a strange word, but you probably know the related word ramification, a consequence that stems — or branches — from some other action.* /t's not a "very rare" virus; it's a common virus known only rarely to infect humans, and with no ramifying chains of human contagion/ /This is the kind of environment where godlessness remains a real struggle and raises questions that could ramify across the rest of the country./

repercussion

/M - Rape+Conclusion - Rape karne ke baad ka conclusion --- * प्रभाव and प्रतिक्रिया , response */ अप्रत्यक्ष परिणाम , प्रतिध्वनि , प्रभाव , प्रतिक्रिया *A repercussion is something that happens because of another action.* You could quit paying your rent, but getting evicted from your apartment might be the repercussion. Repercussion may remind you slightly of concussion or percussion — what they all have in common is the idea of something (a head, a drum) getting hit. With repercussion, the hitting is the action, and the result (i.e., the repercussion) is like hearing an echo of that original strike over and over as it reverberates through the air. / Ex - his own government was responsible for the recent chemical attacks inside Syria alleged by the White House, but suggested there could be chilling "repercussions" elsewhere in the region if the US intervened. /

Rapacious

/M - Rape+Serious - Rape karne waale ensaan jo bhediye ki tarah *खूँखार and लालची* hontey hain / Adj - खूँखार ,लालची 1. the satisfaction of greed. 2. predatory; extortionate / Ex - the sea; the sea is a collector, quick to return a rapacious look. /

Prattle

/M - Rattle - A rattle snake to another snake ...SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS ..Another Snake stop dude its really Annoying *बकबक)*/ If your little sister won't stop talking about her latest crush and you don't want to hear it, you might say, "Stop prattling on about that loser!" *To prattle is go on and on about something unimportant.* Prattle can also be a noun. If your sister tattles about your comment regarding her prattling, you could defend yourself to your mother with: "I didn't mean to call Sophie's crush a loser, but she had driven me mad with her constant prattle." There are a lot of funny-sounding words with a meaning similar to prattle - *chatter, blether, blather, jabber, gabble, blabber, and babble*, to name a few.

Reprehensible

/M - Re + Apprehensive - दंडयोग्य Deserving of , Capable of / *Reprehensible means deserving of blame or strong criticism.* It is a strong word--your mother might forgive you for doing something bad, but something reprehensible? That's worse. /Then again, some of them doubtless think it reprehensible that he speak at a memorial service for an old "communist". / /Why is it mainly women who have to tell us this behavior is reprehensible ? /

diddle

Verb *ठगना , बहकाना * *1. Manipulate 2. deprive of by deceit * /The only reason to have a separate vote is to diddle the White House around. /

rebuff

/M - Re + Bluff - One should reject or *rebuff (reject , Ignore , Snub , इनकार)* invitation from person who always bluff others / *If you rebuff someone, you reject or snub him. *You might decide to rebuff a classmate's invitation to the dance after hearing him gossip meanly about a friend. Although the verb rebuff is a somewhat old fashioned one to use for social relationships, it's still common in the world of diplomacy. *One country's rebuff of another might start a war, or end peace talks, or otherwise reverberate through the world of international relations*. You can also use rebuff as a noun — deliberately ignoring your sister's text message is one example of a rebuff. The Italian root word, ribuffo, combines ri, expressing opposition, and buffo, "a puff."

Resuscitation

/M - Re + Citation - मृतप्राय को जीवित करना , पुनः होश में लाना/ *Resuscitation is the action of bringing someone back to consciousness *. Ambulance workers are skilled at resuscitation. *To resuscitate is to revive someone who has passed out: this act is called resuscitation *. If someone needs resuscitation, something serious has happened — the person has lost consciousness and may be on the verge of death. You've probably heard of "mouth-to-mouth resuscitation," which is one method of reviving. Medical professionals have many other techniques and gadgets that aid resuscitation. The Latin root word is resuscitare, "rouse again, or revive," from re and suscitare, "to raise." /*The researchers found that only 22 percent of babies born at 22 weeks were given "active treatment," like breathing machines, feeding tubes or heart resuscitation.*/

relinquish

/M - Re + Link + ish - When you relink two object , you don't *relinquish ( Let it got , छोड़ देना , त्यागना) * them / *If you relinquish something, you let it go*. You relinquish control of the army when you resign as general. Your relinquish your plan to sneak into town when your parents find out what's going on. *Relinquish is also commonly used to mean physically letting go of something: The monkey wouldn't relinquish its grasp on the banana. *Relinquish descends from Latin relinquere, from the prefix re- "again" plus linquere "to leave."

Requite

/M - Re + Quit - One who doesnt want to Quit on doing Welfare for Society ...*He will repay your Kindness and Love* and also share it among who needs it / Verb लौटाना You can requite a friend's kindness by doing your friend a favor or by being kind in return. Requite means "*to repay or return.*" To requite something is to return it. However, saying that you want to requite a gift means that *you want to give something in return for it* — not that you want to return the gift to the store for some quick cash. Requite is often used in the context of love; *if you requite someone's love, you love that person back*. Requite can also be used in a negative sense. Someone who wants to requite an injury wants payback for it.

reverberation

/M - Re + Vibration - Sometimes you feel that your phone is vibrating again , but its probably the *reverberation (echo , गूंज )* of your heart beating for someone / *A reverberation is an echoing sound.* When you bang on a big piece of metal, you can hear the reverberation even after you stop banging. The repeating, often low, booming sound that follows the strum of an electric guitar or the thump of a drumstick on a cymbal is called reverberation. It's frequently described as sound that lingers beyond the original noise. You can also use the word to describe something else that lingers, like a feeling or an effect: "*The reverberations of the war lasted for decades.*" Originally, reverberation was "reflection of light or heat," from the Old French reverberacion, "great flash of light."

ribald

/M - Re+Bald - Ek aadmi phir se takla ho gaya ..uske dosto ne uska itna mazzak uddaya(*Vulgar and Indecent in Speech *) ..he felt bad / Adj अश्लील Ribald is an adjective you would use to describe someone who makes *dirty sexual jokes. Vulgar, perverted, but still kind of funny — that's a ribald person*. Remember the time Uncle Marvin told hilarious stories about his sex life? Everyone was rolling with laughter, except your grandmother, who thought Marvin's ribald tales were disgusting. People are conflicted about whether being ribald is good or bad, and the fact that its root means "indulge in licentious pleasure" and "prostitute" doesn't clear up the matter much. Should you feel like behaving in a ribald way, remember that your saucy sense of humor might be offensive to others.

recuperate

/M - Recover+ Operate :* Recuperate (Financial Problems) - पुनः प्राप्त करना , सुधार होना* )Recovering after operation / *To recuperate is to get something back that you have lost — could be good health, or money lost in a bad investment. When you recuperate, you heal and recover.* Recuperate comes from the Latin word recuperare "to take back," so when you recuperate you gain something back that was yours before — health or money. Recuperate is usually something people do after an illness. If you break your knee playing rugby in college, you might go home to recuperate. If you don't want to sound fancy, just say you're recovering. It also means to get money back, so you can also try to recuperate your losses by staying in the poker game.

rhetoric

/M - Red + tonic - Doctor was giving *rhetoric( अलंकार विद्या , वक्तृता देने की कला , Speaking or writing that's intended to persuade )* to his patients about Red tonic and its harmful effects / . If your goal is to write editorial columns for "The New York Times," you should work on your rhetoric. Rhetoric comes from the Greek meaning "speaker" and is used for the art of persuasive speaking or writing. *When people listened eagerly to long speeches and studied them in school, rhetoric was generally used positively; now it is often a negative term, implying artfulness over real content. If someone gives a clever speech but doesn't really address the problem, you might say, "That's just a lot of rhetoric."*

Refute

/M - Refuse - Refusing someones Opinion *(Prove to Be False)* or *(Denying)* Something / Verb - झूठा या असत्य ठहराना, खण्डन करना 1. To Prove to be false or erroneous , as an opinion or charge / It's good when someone else adds their two cents to refute an untruth. / 2. To Deny /Additionally, these same scientists would not discuss or refute the science and facts presented. /

Replete

/M - Replenishment - भरा हुआ , भरना / *Replete means full, often in a satisfying way. *"The library was replete with bound first volumes, and Lucy, a bookworm, was happier there than any place else." Replete shares a root with the word plenty. When you have plenty of cookies and cake, you can say your table is replete with goodies. Another cousin of replete is replenish. *When your cabinets are bare, you go to the store to replenish them. When you unpack your groceries, your pantry is replete with essentials.*

tread

/M - Thread - To *walk with force on चलना* thread , you can also drive your car on thread but your * Tires Groove टायर के ऊपर का हिस्सा* should be good enough to balance the Car/ When you *tread on the earth, you walk on it.* The next time your pal thinks you have it too easy, you might ask him, "Why don't you tread in my shoes for a day?" Tread usually implies *stepping with force, but it can also simply mean placing your feet, one after the other, on the ground.* You might try to tread lightly on the moss in the backyard so you don't damage it. *Tread is also a noun that means the mark that a tire leaves on the ground, or the actual grooves on the tire.* You might be relieved that the tread marks at the crime scene didn't match your brother's truck after all

Resolute

/M - Resolution - Everyone makes resolution on 1st Jan but only few follow it diligently ..but a purposeful and determined person will follow it until he achieves it(*दृढ़प्रतिज्ञ*) / Use the adjective resolute to describe a purposeful and determined person, someone who wants to do something very much, and won't let anything get in the way. "Milo thought for just a moment and then, with a resolute 'I shall,' volunteered to go," Norton Juster writes in the classic children's novel The Phantom Tollbooth. From the way Milo said "I shall," we can infer that he was quite confident in his split-second decision, or at least made himself appear to be so. Some near-synonyms for this word include *resolved, adamant, unswerving, and unwavering*. If you make a "resolute refusal" of something, you're declaring you don't like it and never will. /We go into the negotiations aiming to be constructive and engaged, but also resolute and firm/

retroactive

/M - Retro + Active - *Puraani baato ko Active karna* / Adj- बीती हुई बातों पर काम करने वाला The adjective retroactive refers to *something happening now that affects the past*. For example, a retroactive tax is one that is passed at one time, but payable back to a time before the tax was passed. The Latin word *retroagere, an ancestor of the adjective retroactive, means "drive or turn back," and goes along with the meaning of the word*. Sometimes governments pass rulings that are set as if they were in effect before the ruling was even made, and that means they are retroactive. On the bright side, you might be awarded a salary raise that is retroactive, meaning you'll get paid more for work you did in the past. And, retroactive fads in clothing keep vintage clothing stores in business.

ravage

/M - Revenge - Germany was raged by WW I defeat and wanted to *ravage ( destruction or to destroy नाश ,विध्वंस)* the world in WW II/ *The word ravage can be used as a noun or a verb meaning destruction or to destroy*. In a war, bombs and the attacking army will ravage the country under siege. When ravage is used as a noun, you usually see it in the plural. Beware of the ravages of drugs on your body and your life. The city has almost been destroyed by the ravages of poverty and disaster. Often you see it paired with the word, time, to describe how things fall apart as they age. *The ravages of time may be apparent in the lined faces and hunched postures of your grandparents*

Revue

/M - Revenue - Theater pe naach gaa kar paise kamana (* theatrical entertainment in which recent events, popular fads, etc., are parodied.*)/ noun 1.a form of theatrical entertainment in which recent events, popular fads, etc., are parodied. 2.any entertainment featuring skits, dances, and songs.

Rivet

/M - River - Ganges is so beautiful that it holds your attention and mesmerize you *दिलचस्प*/ A rivet is a fastener that holds something closed or down, and something riveting keeps you glued to your seat and grabs your attention. *Sometimes a movie is so riveting that not even free popcorn refills can lure you away.* Riveting is an adjective for things that really draw you in, like a book you read in one sitting or a song you turn up so you can hear every lyric. Beautiful scenes are riveting, but terrible and ugly things are also riveting, like the site of an accident you can't stop looking at. Words from a teacher or actor have a riveting effect when they're full of impact and interest, and when you exaggerate a story for your best friend, that's riveting too. /On the heels of the critically acclaimed neo-noir The Square comes the riveting crime-drama Animal Kingdom. /

Arbiter

* An arbiter is someone selected to judge and settle a dispute * . When Doc and Grumpy disagreed over whose turn it was to stay late at the mine, they chose Snow White as an arbiter. Arbiter, from the Latin, means "one who goes somewhere as witness or judge." The arbiter of a baseball game is called an umpire. In football and basketball, the arbiter is a referee. Arbitration is a type of conflict resolution in which a neutral person — the arbiter — hears the details of a dispute and makes a legally-binding decision about its resolution.

obnoxious(Ab + noxious)

* Annoying , Unpleasant * /M - Ab + No + More - Ek employer apne employee ko boht hi *Offensive and Objectional* baato pe chilla raha tha .. finally employee said .. Ab Aur Nahi / *आपत्तिजनक , बुरा* If something is obnoxious, *it's annoying and unpleasant*. Generally, people like to avoid obnoxious folks. *If something is driving you absolutely crazy, it's probably obnoxious*. Yelling and stomping your feet is obnoxious. Poking someone repeatedly is obnoxious. Driving like a maniac is obnoxious. If the teacher comes in and finds students jumping up and down and throwing books, she might say, "Stop being so obnoxious!" Anytime someone is obnoxious, someone else probably wants them to stop it. /an obnoxious little brat./ /I mean reveal and condemn this obnoxious system of moral extortion. /

malarkey

* Bunkum , Speech or writing to Impress* /M - Mala + Key - Mala itni bewkoof ladki thi ki usne apni Chaabi ke liye ek Speech likh daali ..Uski chaabi thi Lohe ki lekin Speech main usne like ki wo sone ki thi and Hire Jade huey they .. Everyone knew ki the *speech is misleading and was only to impress* her Boy Freind / Noun- 1 .speech or writing designed to obscure, mislead, or impress; bunkum: /The claims were just a lot of malarkey./

Chary

* Chary = Wary = Conscious * /M- Brahma + Chari : Brahmchari refrain from marriage because they do not like to take chances of their pious life style , you can also call them *chary (Someone who is very cautious ,एहतियाती, संयमी)*/ The definition of chary is a person who does not take chances or is not very giving and is being wary or cautious. An example of chary is someone who always drives just below the speed limit ; someone who rarely hugs others. *A synonym of chary is wary, and both include caution, but some definitions suggest that it's obvious when someone is wary — it shows — while being chary is more of an inside, or hidden, distrust.*

destitute

* Desperate of Help, Very Poor , Implore * /M - Desperate - *One who is desperate of help who is lacking all the necessities of life and need help to sustain , can be termed as Destitute* / *When you think of the word destitute, which means poor or lacking other necessities of life, think of someone who is in desperate straits.* A very, very tight budget is poor. Living on the streets is destitute. *Destitute essentially means not having something.* When you're destitute in the sense of being poor, you're technically "destitute of money." You can be destitute of other things as well. If all your friends have abandoned you, you're "destitute of friends." If you are applying for a job as a waitress but have never worked in a restaurant in any capacity, you're "destitute of experience." /Lisa, the young daughter, strikes up a friendship with a destitute man who acts like a dog./ /He died destitute in 1929 at age 32 at an Illinois veterans hospital./

allege

* If you accuse someone of committing a crime but the proof of the wrongdoing isn't yet found, use the verb allege *. You might allege that your sister broke a vase, just because no one else was home when you heard the crash.

Ordain

* Invested with Special Power* / M - Order + dein - (*Destine, Command*)/ *An ordained minister is one who's been appointed to the job by a special church authority*. If you've ever had to sit through a lecture about the evils of too much TV, you know that a person doesn't need to be ordained in order to preach. When you say that *people have been ordained, you usually mean that they've been invested with special powers*. After a priest has been ordained in the Catholic church, he can perform sacraments. Such priests are higher up in the church hierarchy than others, and those below them can be called their "subordinates," a word also related to ordain.

Transitory

* Last very short Time * Adj 1. lasting a very short time *If something is fleeting or lasts a short time, it is transitory. * Your boss declared the company's restructuring to be transitory, and promised that the company would emerge stronger and better than ever.

contemporary

* Modern or Lived at Same Time* Things that are contemporary are either happening *at the same time or happening now.* Contemporary art is recent art. In history class, if you hear that one famous *person was a contemporary of another, that means they lived at the same time. * Contemporaries are people and things from the same time period. Contemporary can also describe things happening now or recently. It's common to speak of *contemporary music or contemporary furniture, for example. Those things are new, not old*. Anything characteristic of the present day can be called contemporary.

proselyte

* One who changed his belief and wants you to convert as well * /M - Pro + Sell - *A Pro in selling his Religion to common people ..he can give you facts and figures to covert from your religion to his* / Noun - a person who has changed from one opinion, religious belief, sect, or the like, to another; convert. Verb - *Proselytize - to convert (someone) from one religious faith to another* /Ex - The Times no longer sees itself in a position to proselytize for its brand and its left -liberal authority/

vilify

* Spread Nasty Story * /M - Villain - *A villain who spread nasty stories about you which are not true बदनाम करना* / *To vilify someone is to spread nasty stories about them, whether true or not.* The verb vilify comes from the same root as the word vile and is a negative word if ever there was one! One way to remember the word is to think about how it sounds — like the word villain (which is unrelated and comes from villa). This suggests that when you vilify someone, you make them sound villainous. So avoid spreading vile words that vilify another and make him or her seem like a villain.

plinth

* Square Platform * /M -Pee +Lean - Pee kartey waqt ek khambe pe lean hona .. baad main pata chala ki wo khamba ek Square kabr ke upar hai .. sabki haalat kharaab ho gayi *स्तम्भ की नीचे की चौंकी* -/ *If a building has columns, you can call the platform or base on which a column rests a plinth. The plinth typically lies between the column and the ground.* In architecture, a plinth is one of the basic building elements. While it's most common for a plinth to support a pillar or column, it can also be used as a base or slab underneath a statue, a bust, or a decorative vase, and in engineering a plinth is the support for a dam. The word comes from the Greek root plinthos, "brick" or "squared stone.

invigorates

* Strength , Force , Energy* /M - IN + Viagra - After Having Viagra you will feel *Life and Energy* / Verb - to give vigor to; fill with life and energy; energize. / Ex - . It took this trial of a tie to invigorate Arsenal / Hindi - स्फूर्ति से भर देना

Conten*D*

* To defend or support a Belief * *To defend a belief or keep affirming that it's true is to contend. A lot of supporters would contend that the earth was flat, but eventually, when no one dropped off the edge no matter how far they traveled, the "round" theory won.* One of the meanings of contend is from the French "to strive with," and it is a literal fighting, as in "to contend with fists." * Most contemporary uses of the verb contend illustrate competitions of proof or defense, where a person will contend that something is true, or better, or wrong. * It is still a striving but more of a verbal kind, where what you contend is what you hope to convince others is correct. /Morales contends that her water was poisoned by coal ash./ /Morales contends that her water was poisoned by coal ash./ /The Harvard lawsuit also contends the Ivy League university specifically limits the number of Asian Americans it admits each year./

Utilitarian

* Utilitarian means relating to practical purposes , or relating to the idea that usefulness is more important than beauty*. An example of a utilitarian decision is to purchase a car that gets good fuel mileage instead of a bigger, more comfortable car.

Knotty

* Whether it's pine or problems, sometimes the word knotty can apply to both. Knotty can describe something that has a lot of knots, either literally or figuratively*. /Knotty political problem involving two warring nations like India and Pakistan over line of control issue/ /knotty legal issue involving complicated constitutional issues./

Perseverance(Per+ Servearance)

* the effort required to do something and keep doing it till the end* /M - Preserve + ance - To preserve your scruples until last moment of your life and *not giving it दृढ़ता* for money or other vices / *Perseverance is not giving up. It is persistence and tenacity, the effort required to do something and keep doing it till the end, even if it's hard.* Perseverance originally comes from the Latin perseverantia and means to abide by something strictly. This makes sense, because if you're doing something in spite of all the difficulty, you're being strict on yourself. Sailing around the world and climbing Mt. Everest are acts requiring perseverance. Even things like learning a new language require perseverance and daily practice.

ember

* अंगार An ember is a little piece of wood or coal in a fire that's dying.* Embers are hot and glowing. When the fire is out and the embers are glowing, it's time to call it a night. Embers (usually plural) are smoldering pieces of wood or coal — usually very small — that burn brightly as a fire starts to fade. When you see embers, the fire isn't finished yet, but it's almost done. If you're camping and you put out a fire, don't leave it alone until the embers go out, too. *People also use embers as a metaphor for other things that are starting to fade, like the last embers of a dying friendship.* /The last embers of the Nazi regime were being extinguished./ /They began almost as soon as the embers cooled and the smoke cleared./

Undercut

* कम दाम में देना , कमज़ोर बनाना* 1.* sell cheaper than one's competition* 2.* to weaken or destroy the impact or effectiveness of; undermine. * /Unfortunately for the president, the drive was undercut by skeptical comments from leading Democrats, including Bill Clinton. /

audacity

* कलेजा If you have audacity then you're one daring — and perhaps reckless — character.* Running a red light with three previous tickets under your belt certainly shows audacity. And stupidity. The noun audacity developed from the Latin word audacitas, which means "boldness." So someone who shows audacity makes bold moves — and isn't afraid of the consequences. Audacity can be admired or frowned upon, depending how far it's taken and how it rears its head. But as former British Prime Minister and novelist Benjamin Disraeli once said, "Success is the child of audacity."

Blatant

* खुल्लम-खुल्ला Something blatant is very obvious and offensive. Don't get caught in a blatant lie, because you won't be able to weasel your way out of it.* Blatant acts are done without trying to hide them. *This adjective is probably from Latin blaterare "to chatter, croak" or Latin blatīre "to chatter, gossip." A near synonym is flagrant*.

trump

* तुरुप का पत्ता , पछाड़ देनाTo trump is to outrank or defeat someone or something, often in a highly public way*. Safety might trump appearance when you're buying a car, or your desires may trump your brother's when it comes to making weekend plans.

amiable

* प्रेमपात्र A friendly, pleasant person could be described as amiable. Airline flight attendants tend to be amiable.* The people monitoring the school's cafeteria? Maybe not An amiable person is good-natured and easy to get along with. Add one letter and you get amicable, a word with a common ancestor (Latin amicabilis) and a similar meaning. *But while amiable refers to friendly people, amicable refers to friendly relations between them; * two amiable people who no longer want to be married to one another might have an amicable divorce.

concord

* समझौता A concord is an agreement.* If you want to watch a romantic comedy and your date wants to watch a horror film, you might compromise and come to a concord by agreeing to watch an action comedy. Concord can be used as a verb meaning "to arrange by agreement," but this usage is rare. Much more common is concord used as a noun. *The United Nations could work tirelessly to establish a concord between warring nations*, or you might even work to establish a concord among the warring factions on your cheerleading team. *A concord brings peace and harmony — just like a peace treaty.*

egalitarian

* समाधिकारी* /M - Egg + iterian - People who eat Eggs doesn't believe that Egg should be part of Non - Vegetarian Meal , They are not Egalitarian *( An egalitarian is a person who believes in the equality of all people, and an egalitarian society gives everyone equal rights.)* belief of Hen and Eggs equal / This is a word that means something close to equality and has to do with fairness. If you believe that everyone deserves a chance to vote, go to school, get good jobs, and participate in society, then you are an egalitarian. When laws make life fairer, the law is getting more egalitarian. The opposite of an egalitarian system could be a fascist society or dictatorship. Monarchies are not egalitarian. When you see this word, think about equality and freedom

Grim

*/M - Grim Reaper - ख़राब , डरावना , भयानक , No Compromise /* *To vanquish Grim reaper you should have Stern Determination or Grim Determination * Adj - कठोर , ख़राब , डरावना , भयानक 1. stern and admitting of no appeasement or compromise: /Grim Determination / 2. of a sinister or ghastly character; repellent: / A Grim Joke / 3. fierce, savage, or cruel: /war Is a Grim Business /

Obeisance(Obey+Sense)

*1. Act of Respect * /M - *obedience - Act showing dutiful obedience दण्डवत प्रणाम*/ An obeisance is an act, usually physical, *showing dutiful obedience*. A supplicant might perform obeisance, touching his face to the ground, before humbly asking for help. *Obeisance is often used in historical or religious contexts and often refers to bowing or kneeling. Figuratively, it means an act of respect though sometimes with the negative connotation of slavishly doing as expected.* Your boyfriend might bring you and your mother flowers in obeisance to the idea that the parents should be courted as much as the child. Consumers who want this software must show obeisance to the Internet — it can't be bought in a store or anywhere else.

r*O*il

*1. Agitate* /M - Rock + Oil - To get oil from rocks you have to Stir them up *हिलाना* / To roil means to stir up or churn. A stormy ocean might roil, or even a restless crowd. The word roil is often confused with rile, which has a slightly different meaning. *If you roil someone you're stirring them up but not necessarily annoying them. To rile someone is to deliberately provoke or antagonize them. * Usually there's no roiling without riling. /Muhammad Ali roiled much of America when he refused to be drafted for the Vietnam War./

formidable

*1. Awesome Strength Size or Difficulty , causing Fear or Apprehension * What do the national debt, your old gym teacher, and your mother-in-law have in common? They're all formidable — that is, * they inspire fear and respect thanks to their size, or special ability, or unusual qualities.साहस तोड़ने वाला , भयंकर , डरावना* (Or possibly all three in the case of your mother-in-law.) *What's interesting about formidable is that we often tend to use it about things that, while they may scare us, we can't help being pretty impressed by all the same. *A formidable opponent is almost by definition a worthy one; a formidable challenge almost by definition one worth rising to. Not surprisingly, this word is derived from the Latin formidare, "to fear." /Formidable describes a foe you're slightly afraid of, but formative describes what formed you. Perhaps a formidable gymteacher scared the pants off you during your formative years in grade school, and now you're a world-class athlete. (Or a bookworm, depending on how you react to formidable foes.)/

Thrall

*1. Captivated , Fascinated by idea/things/people* /M - Thrill - In a thriller movie , villain *thrall (ग़ुलाम , दास बनाना When you're in thrall to someone, you are under their control in some way. If you're being held as a hostage, you're in thrall to your captor.*) people for making world's best monument . The monument was quite Enthralling / *You can be in thrall to anything that holds you captive or controls your thoughts or actions, like an addiction, a disease, or a cult leader*. The Old English word that thrall comes from literally means "slave" or "servant." Another word with the same root as thrall is *enthrall मंत्रमुग्ध करना which is sort of a friendlier version of the same idea. If you're enthralled by someone, you're captivated or fascinated, rather than "held in bondage."*

Locus

*1. Center of Something* /M - Focus - Center of something / *The center or source of something *is known as the locus. A shopping mall is usually a locus for teenagers. In addition to being a hub or hotspot, locus has specific meanings when used in math or science. *In math, a locus is when a set of points all meet at a designated location: a circle is the locus of points equal in length from one given point. In genetics, the locus is the location of a certain gene on a chromosome. A locus is where things are happening.* Washington, DC is the locus for politics in the U.S. /While Europe and the United States constructed their share of third-rate apartment blocks and dull glass office towers, Latin America was a locus of ferment./

rail

*1. Complaint, Criticize, Negative Publicity * /M - Rail - Restroom in Indian railways are so bad that people *complained* about it to higher authorities ..even though nothing changed ..then they protested in front of Rail Bhawan and speak openly about bad condition of restroom (* To Criticize*) ..Even after that nothing happened .. then Media took issue in their hands and spread *negative publicity* about Rail minister *निंदा करना , बुरा कहना , गाली देना*/ The verb rail means to *criticize severely*. When you rail against increased taxes at a town meeting, you speak openly and loudly about how wrong the increase is and point out the problems it will cause. Rail can also mean "*to complain.*" When your mom asks you to vacuum the house, you might rail against this chore by saying that you ALWAYS do the vacuuming, that vacuuming is SO hard, and that you hate the stupid vacuum! Rail can also mean to spread negative information *about someone in an abusive way*. If your "friends" rail against you to everyone in school, they're spreading nasty rumors about you, and you should find new friends!

felon

*1. Convict* *Technically, a felon is anyone who's been convicted of a serious crime, but you can use felon to describe anyone you think has done something terrible*. For a felon, it's being paraded in handcuffs in front of the public that can be the worst part of being convicted. In some countries, you're considered a felon simply because the king says that you are. Here in the U.S., though, you're innocent until proven guilty, at which point people can call you a felon. *My boyfriend took the dog, the TV, and my expensive French sauté pan after we broke up. If you ever run into the felon, please kick him in the shins, and tell him he's a criminal.* /Harold faces charges of stealing firearms from a licensed dealer, felon in possession of a firearm and receiving stolen firearms./ /"They really, really want to have that talking point of deporting 'felons not families,'" Newman said./

Hinterland

*1. Country Side , Backward Place* /M - Hinter(Behind) + Land - *Hinter means Behind or Backward in German , hence hinterlands means backward place or country* / The hinterlands are affectionately called "*the sticks,*" or the "*boonies," short for "boondocks.*" Use it to specify an area that is far away from a city or town, or even civilization as we know it. Cell-phone reception and cable television aren't guaranteed. The noun hinterland comes to the English language via Germany: hinter is "behind" + land is, well, "land." It actually refers to the land lying inland — or behind — an ocean coast or river shore, which is why backwaters and hinterlands are used interchangeably. Use hinterlands when you want to make fun of an area's backwardness, or to celebrate its natural beauty: "*Coming from the unspoiled hinterlands of Louisiana, she found it hard to adjust to the sights and sounds of the big city*."

solemn

*1. Dignified and Serious Ceremony* /M - Sole + Man - A sole man was standing quite at the corner of full packed room gathered together for a *Dignified and serious गंभीर महत्त्वपूर्ण * Oath Taking ceremony / If you've ever attended a funeral, you were probably struck by how quiet, earnest, and solemn the mood was. You can use the word solemn to describe * anything that's really serious and dignified*. The adjective solemn comes from the Latin sollemnis, which means formal or ceremonial. *You can still use it to describe a ceremony or event, but it's also a good word for talking about someone who's serious and sincere and maybe lacks a sense of humor about certain things * . Here's a trick for remembering it: Think of a "sole man," a serious guy standing alone at a party talking to no one.

Farrago

*1. Disorganized mix of things * /M - Fargo - in Fargo movie , villain made plan to kill his wife but his plan was *disorganized mix of thoughts and didn't fit together at all */ *A farrago is a pile of odds and ends or a random assortment of stuff. *If your teacher said your paper was a farrago of thoughts, that's not good: * a farrago is a disorganized mix of things that don't fit together.* Farrago sounds more formal than hodgepodge or mishmash, but it means about the same thing.A flea market usually features a farrago of antiques and old junk. And kids get a farrago of treats — chocolates, lollipops, the occasional box of raisins — on Halloween. /What lessons should be drawn from this farrago?/

Prosaic

*1. Dull and Not Interesting , Prose * /M - Prose + Ic - *Dull and not interesting* or very Ordinary Paragraph / Prosaic means ordinary or dull. Most of us lead a prosaic everyday life, sometimes interrupted by some drama or crisis. This adjective is from Latin prosa "prose," which is ordinary writing intended to communicate ideas and information. Prose is often contrasted with poetry, which usually has a more imaginative and original style. /And only in viewing those earlier, prosaic scenes through this retrospective lens does the ordinary become sublime./

Gloss

*1. Explanation or Definition 2. Negative Meaning - Leaving Important Information or explanation 3. Shiny Finish * झूठा दिखावा , व्याख्या , चमक-दमक 1. to give*a false or deceptively good appearance to*: 2.A gloss is a shiny finish on an object. It's also an *explanation about a word or phrase*. Right now, you're reading a gloss on the word gloss. Gloss has a number of meanings, so it's a good idea to read our gloss on this word. Gloss can refer to the shine or polish on a smooth surface. A gloss can also be a definition or explanation. A book may have glosses that explain what unusual or technical terms mean. *Sometimes gloss has a negative sense: if you leave out important information when discussing something, you could be accused of glossing over those details. * /Plenty of other readers, though, cautioned that triumphal stories about surviving, thriving preemies can gloss over certain grim realities./

foist

*1. Forced * /M - Moist - The weather was so moist(Wet) that it *forced थोपना* him to wear Raincoat/ Did your parents foist your baby sister on you when they went out? It means they forced her on you. *Anything — a person or object or idea — can be foisted if it's done by force upon an unwilling party. * Foist used to imply a degree of deception rather than just brute force, but that's a meaning that's pretty much lost now: if something's foisted upon you, you know about it. The earlier meaning comes from an old Dutch term for palming a loaded die into a game. Today we call that cheating. /Germany has foisted similar rules on other EU countries through the 2012 fiscal-compact treaty, partly to limit its own liability to them/

Vain

*1. Fruitless Attempt 2. Concieted * *If you spend all day admiring yourself in reflective surfaces — mirrors, pools of water, the backs of spoons — people may think you are conceited or vain बेकार , व्यर्थ*. बेकार , व्यर्थ If, to your horror, you have searched everywhere for a reflective surface but can't find one, you have made a *fruitless* or vain search for a mirror. Vain is from Latin vanus "empty," and in English it originally meant "*lacking value or effect, futile*"; we still say "a vain attempt" using that sense, and the phrase "in vain" means "without success." Normally, though, vain means "*conceited, too proud of oneself.*" Carly Simon's line " *You're so vain, you probably think this song is about you" is an excellent illustration of this use.* /The fact is that in those days, it was seen as unseemly, vain, uncouth for a presidential candidate to speak to voters about his qualities./ /The ECB is to issue a response to the batsman's claims after he was told his bid to earn a recall had been in vain./

Notwithstanding

*1. In spite of * 1.*nevertheless; anyway; yet, in spite of * 2.Notwithstanding means "*in spite of something*." Your boasts about having memorized the entire textbook and bribing the teacher with apples notwithstanding, you still managed to fail the final exam with flying colors. You don't have to look too closely at the word to be able to break it into three parts: *not- + withstand (to successfully oppose or resist) + the participial ending -ing. In the most literal sense, notwithstanding actually means to successfully oppose or resist. * Top-of-the-line wet-traction tires notwithstanding, the car still got stuck in the mud. Notwithstanding works just as well in a more figurative context. *His reputation for charm and tact notwithstanding, he offended everyone in the room.*

conceited(kan+seated)

*1. Inflated Self Image , गर्वीला ,अभिमानी* /M - Kaun + Seat - In my wife's office , seat for his boss is reserved in all places even in the gym ..Her boss thinks that he is the most entertaining and wonderful person in this world, * गर्वीला ,अभिमानी* / A conceited person has an *inflated self-image and perceives himself as incredibly entertaining and wonderful. * Talk incessantly about your accomplishments on the clarinet or amazing ability to wiggle your ears, and people are going to think you're conceited. An offshoot of conceit, conceited was first recorded in 1600 as meaning "*having an overwhelming opinion of oneself*." It's a shortened form of "self-conceited" and the total opposite of "modest." In a remark about such vain people, the English Victorian novelist George Eliot once said, "I've never any pity for conceited people, because I think they carry their comfort about with them." /"I didn't want to come off arrogant or conceited, basically how I've been acting the past year, year and a half," he said./

Sequester

*1. Isolated , Hidden away from Others* /M- Seek(Looking for) + Quest(The Act of Searching Something and it often involve journey) - Siddhartha started journey in quest of Self Discovery , he was seeking wisdom and in the process he was *sequestered(Isolated , hidden away from others )* in his lone world / *The word sequester describes being kept away from others.* If your sister tells you to stay out of the way so she can cook dinner for her new boyfriend, you might sequester yourself in your room. Legal types may be familiar with the word sequester since it's often used in relation to a jury for an important trial. In that case, members of the jury are sequestered, meaning they aren't allowed to watch the news or read articles that could influence their judgment. However, *sequester can describe anyone who is isolated or hidden away from others, like a pop star sequestered in a hotel room, protected from fans' mania below*

omniscient(Omni+Shent)

*1. Knowledge of All* /M - *Omnis(All) + Scientia (Knowledge) :One who knows about everything is *omniscient (अन्तर्यामी , सर्वज्ञ )/ *To be omniscient is to know everything. This often refers to a special power of God.* If you combine the Latin roots omnis (meaning "all") and scientia (meaning "knowledge"), you'll get omniscient, meaning "knowledge of all." It would be nice to be omniscient: then you would know absolutely everything in the world. Many religions have a god who is all-powerful and omniscient. This is how a god is supposed to know when you sinned, or what's going to happen in the future.

Indifference

*1. Lacking Interest* *Indifference is the trait of lacking interest or enthusiasm in things. When you feel indifference for something, you neither like it nor dislike it.* If you are a person who feels a lot of indifference, you probably say "eh," a lot. You just don't care much.* Indifference can be compared to apathy, which means "lack of concern," though apathy is a little stronger: Apathy means you don't care whether your friends call you; indifference means you don't care what movie you end up seeing — you don't have a strong preference for any of the choices*

Fastidious(fest+idious)

*1. Meen Maikh Neekalna , Difficult to Please* /M- fast + tedious : Fasting is tedious especially when you do it for 9 days , after that you don't do *fastidious(कठिनता से तृप्त होनेवाला, difficult to please, Meen main nikalna)* things in your food , you just eat it / If you want to describe a person who insists on perfection or pays much attention to food, clothing and cleanliness, the right word is fastidious.

Interlocutor(Inter+Law+cutor)

*1. Middleman* *An interlocutor is someone who participates in a discussion or conversation, sometimes as a go-between. If you and your friend are in an argument and aren't speaking, a third friend could act as an interlocutor, delivering messages back and forth.* Interlocutor traces back to the Latin word interloqui, meaning "*to speak between.*" We use interlocutor either for "*a conversation partner,*" or for "a third party in a conversation," like a *middleman* who speaks on behalf of an organization. It's also an old term for the guy in a minstrel show who questions all the other performers as a way of moving the act forward. "What's that you say? A funky dance? Go on and show us then." /True enough, my Democratic interlocutors say, but there's a lot of real enthusiasm out there for Hillary./

Rescind(Re+sind)

*1. Official reversal* /M - Re + Send - When company has responded to your email saying that you need to resend your application form then that means *रद्द करना, रोक लेना* / If get a call saying a company has decided to rescind your job offer, it's back to the classifieds for you. *Rescind is an official reversal.* Things that are rescinded: policies, court decisions, regulations, and official statements. What all these examples have in common is that they are on the record. *Also, rescind usually refers to promises instead of tangible objects. You can't rescind a shirt a friend has borrowed from you, but you can rescind your offer to loan them your jeans.* /Sen. John Murante of Gretna said the bill could create problems if the next president rescinds the program that protects the young people from deportation./

Legerity(Leg+erity)

*1. Physical or Mental Quickness * /M - Leg + Agility - One who is very *agile , Physical or Mental Quickness * and can do stunts like jumping etc / 1. *physical or mental quickness; nimbleness; agility. तेज़ी* /Hence, it would be an unpardonable legerity to close our eyes to the dangers lurking beneath an apparent passivity./

repudiate(re+pui +diate)

*1. Reject* /M - Repo + date - Politician's son approached a girl and ask her out for date, he was showing to his friends that his reputation will get everything for him . But Girl *repudiated (To repudiate something is to reject it, or to refuse to accept or support it. इनकार करना ,नामंजूर करना , त्याग करना) * the offer . If you grow up religious, but repudiate all organized religion as an adult, you might start spending holidays at the movies, or just going to work. *This verb usually refers to rejecting something that has authority, such as a legal contract, doctrine, or claim. *In connection with debts or other obligations, repudiate is used in the specialized sense "to refuse to recognize or pay." *If referring to a child or a lover, repudiate is used in the sense "to disown, cast off.*" This verb is derived from Latin repudiare "to put away, divorce."

Somatic

*1. Related with body * /M - So + Automatic - One instrument was created to make you sleep automatically at 09:00 PM , this will give much rest needed to your body *Word Dealing with body */ *Somatic is a fancy word that just means dealing with the body*. You may be tired of hearing your great-grandfather's somatic complaints, but give him a break - his body has been working for 80 years! /They have all kinds of somatic pains, body pains that come and go. /

Equitable

*1. Share that they Deserve* If you work on a group project in class, you want an equitable share of the credit, you want as much credit as you deserve for your work. *Equitable distribution means each party gets the share of something that they deserve.* When you look at equitable, you might think you see the word, equal, but it doesn't mean fair in the sense of exactly the same. If you worked ten hours at a lemonade stand and your friend worked five, you'd want an equitable share of the profits rather than an equal share. Equitable would take into account the amount of work you did, equal would not.

Coterminous(Ko + Terminus)

*1. Similar or Equal in Scope* /M - Counter + Minus - My wife brought so many things from Supermarket , at the register she found that she bought 2 Similar things ..*Similar , Equal * then she returned one of them . / Use the word *coterminous to describe things that are equal in scope. If an earthquake in Australia was coterminous with the earthquake in China, that means it caused the same amount of destruction.* The adjective coterminous derives from the Latin word conterminus, meaning "bordering upon, having a common boundary." When something is coterminous, it has the same boundaries, or is of equal extent or length of time as something else. The expansion of the American Old West was coterminous with the expansion of the Great American Frontier. Your mayor's term in office might be conterminous with increased access to social services

Candid

*1. Straight Forward and Truthful* /M - Candid Interview - Straightforward and Truthful/ * सच्चा , साफ दिल का Straightforward and truthful talk might be described with the adjective candid*. If you're too candid in your personal blog, a future employer might discover your penchant for nude skydiving. A serious-minded politician might suggest engaging in a "candid discussion" about a complicated topic like health care or the environment, because candid means "open" or "frank." Remember that TV show Candid Camera? It was called that because its hidden cameras supposedly showed a candid view of reality. *In photography, candid has become a noun meaning "an unposed photo.*" The word comes from Latin candidus, meaning "white," which was later extended to mean "pure." Candid talk provides the pure, unvarnished truth.

Bolster

*1. Support * /M - Bolt - To *bolster( सहारा देना support or strengthen)* by adding more bolts/. When you cheer up a friend who's feeling down, you bolster them. To bolster is to offer support or strengthen.* A bolster is also the name of a long pillow you might use to make your back feel better. And the two uses are not dissimilar. When you bolster your friends, you support them and prop them up, just like the pillow does for your back. *When you're trying to bolster your credibility, you find people and/or documents that support you or your view*. Bolster efforts to learn this word!

formative

*1. Things which Shaped you * *Formative is a word that describes something that made you who you are.* You might call your adolescence your formative years because that time period had such a strong influence on the rest of your life. The word form means "to shape." Something that is formative is capable of shaping or molding something or someone. *A formative experience is one that strongly influenced you, like the first time you went to the beach and decided, from that day, that you wanted to become a world-class surfer. *Formative can also describe an organism that is able to form new cells. In linguistics, the noun formative is a small language unit that can help shape or form a word.

Unwonted

*1. Unusual, Out of Ordinary* /M - Unwanted - When *something is unusual or out of the ordinary असामान्य , ग़ैरमामूली* is unwonted / Unwonted is a pretty old-fashioned word now, meaning something unusual or out of the ordinary. Nowadays, unwonted is a pretty unwonted word itself. Unwonted was once a particularly beloved literary term, favored by authors like Henry James and Charles Dickens, whose books were filled with "unwonted circumstances," and the like. Not to be confused — as it often is — with unwanted, meaning not wanted or desired. The confusion arises not just because the words sound identical, but because their meanings overlap: it's a safe bet that anything unwonted is generally unwanted, too /The heaviness of the atmosphere and an unwonted stillness benumbed my senses. /

paragon

*1. Very Best * *Paragon applies to someone who is a model of perfection in some quality or trait. We link paragon with other words that follow it, such as "paragon of virtue" or "paragon of patience."* *A paragon means someone or something that is the very best*. The English noun paragon comes from the Italian word paragone, which is a touchstone, a black stone that is used to tell the quality of gold. You rub the gold on the touchstone and you can find out how good the gold is. You are hoping that it is the paragon of "goldnes

Antediluvian(Ante+Di+luvian)

*1. Very Very Very OLD* /M- Aunty+ de +luv - Usually, Loving and Caring Aunties are OLD... very Old.. and hence you can call her *Antediluvian ( प्रलयपूर्व,अत्यंत प्राचीन , बहुत पुराना ,Antediluvian in the Bible, is defined as someone or Something from the time before the Great Flood like *Adam and Eve* dinosaur.or your great great grand mother..)* In popular language, antediluvian is almost always used to exaggerate how comically, *Something ridiculously old and out-of-date *. You may laugh at your parents' antediluvian ideas of what's proper for going out on a date. And how about those antediluvian computers they still insist are fine!

fallible

*1. Wanting in Moral Strength , Courage . 2. Likely to Fail * *As humans we are all fallible, because fallible means likely to make errors or fail*. Nobody's perfect, after all. Fall down on the job and you're fallible. It's a forgiving way to say you screwed up. If a scientific experiment's data is fallible, that means you can't trust the numbers. More than just locking your keys in the car, fallible can allude to a lack of moral strength. If in addition to locking your keys in the car, you kissed your best friend's husband, you might try using "I'm fallible" as your defense. Adj - 1. wanting in moral strength, courage, or will; /"I'm only a fallible human"/ 2. likely to fail or make errors /everyone is fallible to some degree/

Attenuate(Aten+uate)

*1. Weaken* /M - At + ten + ate - If you dont eat properly until age 10 , you growth hormones will become * weaken कम करना , बल या मूल्य में घटाना* / *Attenuate is a verb that means to make or become weaker. The effects of aging may be attenuated by exercise.* (Or by drinking from the fountain of youth.) The versatile word attenuate denotes a weakening in amount, intensity, or value. As a verb, attenuate is usually transitive, meaning it needs an object to be complete, such as in the sentence: "*This tanning process tends to attenuate the deer hide, making it softer*." The word can be intransitive in past tense, as in "The rain attenuated, ending the storm." And it can even be used as an adjective to describe something weakened: "Even an attenuated solution will remove the stain."

venerate

*1. Worship * /M - Van + rate - One of the websites rate Vans in different categories and it was really helpful for its customer to buy best Van according of their choice ..these customers worship this site *WORSHIP सम्मान करना , पूजना* / *To venerate is to worship, adore, be in awe of. You probably don't venerate your teacher or boss; however, you may act like you do!* The word hasn't come far from its Latin roots in *venerari, "to worship.*" Although you can certainly venerate a deity, a person can deserve it, too. *Find part of the word Venus in there, meaning "love, desire" and dang, if someone venerates you, you're doing okay*. We don't usually venerate our sweethearts; we often save it for those higher powers, or for remarkable people we're in awe of. *Mother Teresa was venerated for her work with the poor, and Gandhi was venerated for his efforts for peace, but most people aren't venerated for normal stuff*, like being someone's sweetie.

Deprecate

*1. belittle * /M -Deression + Katory -Ek Katory jo peetal ki thi wo sirf special guests ke liye hi use hoti thi , baaki normal katorion ke liye wo boht badi baat thi , en sab katorion ne Peetal ki katori se pooch ki how i feel ..toh usne bade hi normal dhang se bola ki kuch nahi just kuch normal logo ko khana serve kiya hia ..not a big deal ..this is called Deprecatory , to be little achievements / *To deprecate is to show disapproval or to make someone feel unimportant by speaking to them disrespectfully* , like seniors who deprecate younger students just for fun. To deprecate is to diminish, or to oppose, like when someone deprecates your dream of climbing Mt. Everest by calling it "a little walk up a hill." Some people deprecate themselves, which is called being self-deprecating. *People who do are self-deprecating play down their abilities because they are humble — or want to appear that way.* So if you do climb Everest and you are self-deprecating, you'll say it wasn't such a big deal, even if it was the proudest moment of your life

bucolic(Bui+colic)

*1. ग्रामीण , देहाती , ग्वालों का* /M - Buclol - Gaaon main bewkoofon ko buclol kaha jaata hai . (* ग्रामीण , देहाती , ग्वालों का *) ..buclol gaaye and bhens bhi paaltey hian / As an adjective, *bucolic refers to an ideal country life that many yearn for*. If your parents wanted to raise you in a bucolic environment, you may find yourself living 45 minutes away from the nearest movie theater or person your age. Not ideal. You wouldn't know it to look at it, *but bucolic is a distant relation of cow, and all bucolic's meanings can be connected to the bovine creature*. Bucolic ultimately comes from the Greek boukolos, cowherd or herdsman. *A bucolic could be a short poem about pastoral (cow) life or a country person, who is stereotyped as a cowherd*. Used as an adjective, bucolic can refer to an idealized rural life (think life with cows) or to herdsmen (more cows). And that's no bull. /Beth Olem's bucolic setting soon gained industrial neighbors as the auto industry ascended at the turn of the 20th century./

subterfuge(sub+te+fuge)

*1. चाल* /M - Sab + taraf + fuse - When you see that ki sab ke ghar light aa rahi hia but tumhare ghar ki hi nahi hai and Fuse bhi theek hai then you think that this may be a *subterfuge (चाल)* to celebrate your birth day . / n. 1. *Subterfuge is the use of tricky actions to hide, or get something.* 2. something intended to misrepresent the true nature of an activity /The chain that links the Columbian Chemicals hoax to the Internet Research Agency begins with an act of digital subterfuge perpetrated by its online enemies./

pulverize

*1. चूर-चूर होना* /M - Powederize - To *pulverize चूर-चूर होना* dream or heart / *When you pulverize something, you break it up until it becomes dust or powder*. You might pulverize coffee beans in grinder, running it until the coffee turns to powder. Pulvis is the Latin word for "dust." *When something is turned into dust, often it becomes useless. That's why pulverize can also mean "to destroy or demolish." *Construction crews pulverize a building using wrecking balls and sometimes even explosives. The materials left behind are broken into such small parts that they can't be salvaged for other uses.

Jockeying

*1. धोखेबाज , ठगना* /M - Jockey - One of the guy in Indian got 10 Jockey undergarment without paying any penny for that ..He *tricked धोखेबाज , ठगना* person at register and security officer at the gate / 1.* to trick or cheat: * /The salesman jockeyed them into buying an expensive car./ 2. *to manipulate cleverly or trickily: * /He jockeyed himself into office./ /Red states are jockeying for greater influence on the GOP race this year by moving up their primary dates. /

Rue

*1. पछतावा , Shokmanana ki wo kaam nahi hota* /M - Rona - Rona on past mistakes ...* Pachtava karna पछतावा , शोक * / Verb 1. to feel sorrow over; repent of; regret bitterly: /to rue the loss of opportunities./ 2. to wish that (something) had never been done, taken place, etc.: /I rue the day he was born./

chastise(Chast + Ice)

*1. फटकारना* /M - Chest + Ice - Kid was *chastised (फटकारना Chastise is a fancy word for telling someone that something they did was really bad.) * by his mother for playing with Ice on Chest game / If you pick your nose, your mom's gonna yell at you. If you do it in front of the Queen of England, your mom will chastise you. Back in the Middle Ages, chastise used to also come with a beating--that sense of the word has passed, and in fact, people tend to use chastise when they are trying to accuse someone else of overreacting. "*You're chastising me for forgetting to feed the cat, but it's not like the cat died! *"

frugal

*1. बचाने वाला , Economical , Thrift , Spartan and Prudent * /M - Free + Gal - A girl was saving money for Graduation and was saving on food , clothes and anything in which she can save it. This type of person can be called Frugal who lives *simply and economically* / *Thrifty, spartan, and prudent are synonyms for frugal * , a word that often has positive connotations when used to describe a person who lives a simple life. "*The question for retailers is whether shoppers will remain frugal or slowly resume their old spending habits whenever they get more money in their pockets,*" wrote The Wall Street Journal. You might also speak of "*a frugal meal*" — a very plain, cheap one. The word is from Latin frux, meaning "fruit" (in the sense of "profit").

placate(play+kate)

*1. मनाना , Appease * /M - Plate + Cake - On your wife's Bday you bring her a big plate with different varieties of cakes in it ..She will be *pleased मनाना */ *When a husband shows up with flowers after he's fought with his wife, he's trying to placate her. If you placate someone, you stop them from being angry by giving them something or doing something that pleases them.* If your little sister is mad that the dog ate her favorite teddy bear, you could placate her by buying her an ice cream cone. *A near synonym for placate is appease*. The origin of placate is Latin placare "to calm or soothe." The related Latin verb placere is the source of English please. /Eastern Europeans with little experience of housing and integrating refugees will hardly be placated by the small sums of money on offer./

Crestfallen

*1. हतोत्साहित निराश* /M - Chest Fallen - When you loose a match , your shoulders will be down , chest will be fallen and you will feel *crestfallen( हतोत्साहित )*/ *If you are crestfallen, you are dark, depressed, and down in the dumps हतोत्साहित निराश*. You are in need of a pep talk, or at least a hug. /He sees Jutta's crestfallen face, bent over the pieces of their broken radio./ /In 2011, the team was crestfallen when they lost in the semifinals to Japan./

trepidation

*1.Fear* /M - Trip + Expedition - When a group of scientist went on an expedition for searching Alien world in Antarctica they all had *fear घबराहट* for Polar Bears and cold .. / When plain old "*fear*" isn't enough to get across a deep feeling of dread about something on the horizon, use the more formal word trepidation. "*It was with a certain trepidation that I attended an advance screening of Rob Zombie's Halloween in Hollywood last night*," wrote a film reviewer. Some dictionaries note that trepidation carries connotations of apprehension about an upcoming threat. In most cases, though, you can get by with the simpler word fear — why use three syllables when you could make do with one? The word comes from the Latin verb trepidare, "to tremble." /Right now Nepal is jittery again, and everyone is waiting with trepidation for the next aftershock./

Caulk

*1.Sealant* /M - Chalk - A lout thought that he can stop water cracks by putting white chalk in it .. as he heard from some one that Chalk is a *sealant* .. It was Caulk though / Caulk is the sealant. It comes in a tube and is used commonly by plumbers and carpenters trying to seal up cracks where air or water might push through. When a plumber caulks a tub, he's applying caulk to its seams to make it watertight. Caulk can be used to describe both the process of applying caulk and the sealant itself. The word caulk comes from the Old Northern French cauquer, meaning "to press down." After you lay the caulk down over the seam you press it down by either running your finger over it or using a specific tool to force the caulk to settle into the hole you're trying to cover.

Vein

*A blood vessel that carries blood back to the heart*.

Churn

*A churn is a container that you fill with cream and then agitate(उत्तेजित करना, हिलाना , भड़काना) until the cream becomes butter.* You may have only bought butter at the store, but your ancestors probably used a traditional plunger-type churn to make their own. The verb churn means to mix cream until it turns into butter, separating out the buttermilk. You can make your own butter by churning it in a jar if you don't have a churn, shaking heavy cream until it becomes solid. *To churn can also simply mean to agitate, like a boat might churn in a turbulent ocean, or your stomach might churn with anxiety about your big test the next day.*

conglomerate

*A conglomerate is a group of things, especially companies, put together to form one*. If you are rich enough to buy a TV network, a record company, several newspapers, and a radio station, you too can own a media conglomerate. The root of conglomerate is glomus, a Latin word for "ball." So think of a conglomerate as a bunch of different things balled together. Before it came to describe giant corporations, a conglomerate was a rock formed from different kinds of minerals. Conglomerate can also be used as a verb — like when your media companies conglomerated successfully.

umbrage

*A feeling of anger caused by being offended ,offense, resentment*/ /*M - Ambuj + rage - Feeling of Anger towards Ambuj */ Noun- रोष -A feeling of anger caused by being offended ,offense, resentment *When someone takes umbrage at something, they find it offensive, and it probably makes them angry.* Umbrage comes from the same source as umbrella, the Latin umbra,* "shade, shadow." The umbrella was invented to keep you in shade, and when you take umbrage at something, you're casting a shadow over the person or thing responsible for the offense. * I take umbrage at the suggestion that I'm not a nice person: it's offensive and infuriating. After having devoted my life to helping animals, I might take umbrage at the notion that I've been doing it for publicity purposes: I resent the idea that it was for any other reason than my love of animals.

hypocrite

*A hypocrite preaches one thing, and does another. You're a hypocrite if you criticize other people for wearing fur, but pull out your big mink jacket as soon as it gets cold.* The word hypocrite is rooted in the Greek word hypokrites, which means "stage actor, pretender, dissembler." So think of a hypocrite as a person who pretends to be a certain way, but really acts and believes the total opposite. Hypocrites usually talk a big talk but fail to follow their own rules — like an outspoken vegetarian who secretly eats bacon.

Chivalrous(Shee+wa+ras)

*A man who is courteous and attentive to women can be described as chivalrous*: "The chivalrous stranger picked up the packages Veronica dropped and held the door open while she entered the apartment building."

Plight

*A plight is a situation that's hard to get out of.दुर्दशा अवस्था * Learning about the plight of very poor people trying rebuild their homes after a devastating earthquake might inspire you to send money to a charity. Plight means predicament. It comes from the word for pleat, which means fold. *A plight is a tough bind. You'll usually hear the word plight for groups of people or animals struggling to survive, or struggling for better lives*. We talk about the plight of refugees, or the plight of sea birds after an oil spill. *An old-fashioned use of plight is for pledge. वचन If you get engaged, you give a plight of your love.*

prodigy

*A prodigy is someone who is so naturally talented at something that they become a master of that particular skill as a child--you can be a musical prodigy or a math prodigy.* Mozart was one, writing symphonies and playing for kings when he was only five years old. Prodigy is one of those wonderful words whose different meanings tell a story about how the meanings of words bloom over time. The word derives from the Latin prodigium, meaning an omen or a sign of something to come. Prodigies are kids who often seem so talented that their success must presage even greater mastery, though, of course, the irony is that most prodigies peak in their youth.

Renegade

*A renegade is a person who has deserted their cause or defied convention; they're rebels and sometimes outlaws, or even traitors.* A long, long time ago, a renegade was a Christian person who decided to become Muslim. That definition is pretty outdated, as these days a renegade is anyone who breaks laws or expectations to do their own thing or join the other side. It might sound kind of cool to be a renegade, like some rogue action hero. But in general, renegade actions are frowned, not smiled, upon.

iris

*A ring of muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye around the pupil and controls the size of the pupil opening*. Classical Mythology. *a messenger of the gods, regarded as the goddess of the rainbow.*

Seminary

*A school or college where persons are trained to become priests, ministers, or rabbis, a place where something develops, grows, or is bred, Old-fashioned a school, esp. a private school for young women*

Anecdote

*A short, amusing true story is an anecdote. किस्सा, लघुकथा* You might come back from a crazy spring break with a lot of anecdotes to tell. *An anecdote is a funny little story; an antidote counteracts poison* *It can still have connotations of unreliability, as in the phrase "anecdotal information.*" But the most common sense today is that of "a funny story about something that happened."

Sophomoric

*A sophomore is in their second year, either in high school or college.* Once you became a sophomore, thinking you now knew everything, you pitied the freshmen for their confusion over how to write college papers. The sophomoric is *considered immature and showing a lack of judgment * They're not bright-eyed newcomers anymore, and think they know a lot, but really they've much to learn. *We also use the word for other seconds: a band's second album is usually called their sophomore album.*

swivel(swee+well)

*A swivel is a device that allows something to turn freely. Desk chairs are often designed so the seat can swivel atop the base.* In the hospital, the TV is usually mounted on a swivel so that the nurses can adjust its facing. Swivel comes from a middle English word, swive, meaning to sweep. It's often used to describe gun mountings, like on a tank or a boat where a gun is fastened down but can still be swung around in any direction. But people can also swivel. *If you were in the middle of robbing a bank and you heard a noise behind you, you'd probably swivel around quickly to see what it was.*

Tangent

*A tangent is an entirely different topic or direction.* When you want a break from geometry class, you might ask your teacher about his hobby of woodworking, a topic that's always good for a ten-minute tangent. Tangent is mainly a mathematical term, meaning a line or plane that touches a curved surface but doesn't intersect it.* The non-mathematical meaning of tangent comes from this sense of barely touching something: when a conversation heads off on a tangent, it's hard to see how or why it came up.* When talking about history, someone suddenly brings last night's basketball game? Definitely a tangent. /In coming days and weeks, this story will produce many tangents that may distract us from the central point./ /Griffin's live shows are largely improvised with the comic gossiping, going off on tangents and telling stories from her outrageous experiences in Hollywood./

Tyro

*A tyro is a beginner, a new recruit, or someone who is just learning something.* If you are the new guy at the job and you're wearing a big dorky badge that says Trainee on it, you are a tyro. Tyro can also be used as an adjective to describe *someone new to a particular scene — such as "the tyro congressman" or "the tyro quarterback.*"

Amass

*Accumulate* Amass means bring together or assemble. It can be a real shock to enter a room and see your amassed friends shouting "Surprise!" *Although the word amass should not be confused with "a mass," as in the thing you never want to hear has been found on your lung, they both derive from the Latin massa "lump." When you think about it, this makes sense.* Whether soldiers or cancer cells, things that come together to form a whole are amassed. — in this case, a tumor or an army —

Passive Voice

*Action is Performed on Subject* / 1. The exam was failed by One Third of the students . 2. Brake were slammed by her as Car sped Downhill /

ostentatious

*Adj - Showy; Trying to attract attention , pretentious* /The rich are richer - and more ostentatiously so - than ever / Hindi - भड़कीला Reach for the adjective ostentatious when you want a flashy way to say — well, "flashy" or "showy." No one wants to be described as *ostentatious, a word whose cousins include pretentious, flamboyant, and gaudy*. It originates from the Latin word ostentare, "to display," but in English it's often used for displays of the crass or vulgar sort. A rapper's diamond-encrusted teeth might be an ostentatious display of "bling," and someone wailing especially loudly at a funeral of a distant acquaintance might be making an ostentatious show of sorrow.

Incessant

*Adj - लगातार , निरंतर* /M - In+Session+Ant :- ek ant Wall pe chadhne ki koshish kar rahi thi ... Chadi , Giri .. Chadi, Giri .. Din bhar she tried again and again (*Unending , uninterrupted ,लगातार *) / Adj - लगातार , निरंतर 1. continuing without interruption; ceaseless; unending: / Ex - How to silence incessant burglar alarms/

Covenant

*Agreement between God and Human* /M - Cave + Tenant - Cave main jo Tenant rehtey hain ..unse bhagwaan ka agreement tha ki main tumhey safe rakhoonga raat ko agar tum es cave se bahar nahi jaaogey but uske badle tumhey samay pe kiraya dena hoga (*Agreement between God and Human*)/ Noun -(Bible) an agreement between God and his people in which God makes certain promises and requires certain behavior from them in return Hindi - ईश्वर और मानव के बीच का समझौता

Slake

*Allay , Appease , to Make less Active * /M - Slate - Indian Government ne gareeb bachho ko Slates baati taaki wo badmaashi kam karey(*To make less Active, Intense*) and padhai pe zyada dhyan de ../ Verb 1. To Allay by Satisfying 2. to make less active, vigorous, intense, etc.: 3 to cool or refresh: /He slaked his lips with ice./

Vitriol(Vit+ real)

*Also called Suplhuric Acid and when Criticism is so harsh that it can eat mental that's Vitriol * /M - Vitriol - also called Sulfuric Acid , *So vitriol is a language so mean-spirited and bitter that it could eat through metal अपशब्द* / *Vitriol is harsh, nasty criticism*. You may have deserved some blame when the cake didn't rise, but the head chef's stream of vitriol was unnecessary. Back in the day, vitriol was the name for sulfuric acid, which burns through just about anything. So think of vitriol as language so mean-spirited and bitter that it could eat through metal: /These lengthy speeches, or harangues, would always cast me as unmotivated lout and include lots of spit and vitriol /

Amble

*An amble is a leisurely, pleasurable walk*. Care to take an amble down a pleasant country road instead of reading the rest of this word description? That would certainly be understandable. You can use amble as either a noun meaning "a stroll" or as a verb meaning "to walk in a slow, leisurely way." You might decide to amble, or take an amble, on over to the snack table and grab a brownie. This word comes from the Latin ambulare, which means "to walk about," as in ambulatory. Weirdly enough, for a long time it was only used for horses or for those on horseback. We use it for people now, but it still retains some of its horse-like country feel.

ambulatory

*An ambulatory surgery is the kind of procedure where the patient walks in and walks out. Ambulatory means able to walk, or related to walking.* To remember ambulatory, think of ambulance, which essentially means a walking hospital. (Its meaning derives from the time when it was pulled by horses, which would be walking.) You can also think of the old fashioned word for baby carriage, perambulator (it's been shorted to "pram") which means a carriage you push by walkin

Analgesic

*An analgesic is a medicine that takes away physical pain*. If you ask for pain relief, and the nurse says "Here's an analgesic," she's not trying to worsen your headache with a difficult word; she's just giving you a painkiller. As a noun, *Analgesic is the actual medicine, and as an adjective, it describes the effect of the medicine* — a pill will have an analgesic effect, relieving the pain — unless it's really bad pain, in which case you'll need two

Potboiler

*An average work of literature or art produced merely for financial gain* /*M- Pot + boiler - itna likhta ya art banata hai ki pot me khana boil karne ke hi paise mil sake*/

autonomy

*Anatomy - Body parts or Deep Analysis Autonomy - Political or Personal Independence Anonymous - No - Name* *Political or personal Independence * Hindi - स्वराज्य , स्वतन्त्र / Ex - Assisted suicide is never an autonomous choice / *When a group wants to govern itself or a person wants to make independent decisions, they are looking for autonomy*. Autonomy comes from the Greek roots auto meaning "self" and nomos meaning "custom" or "law." This reflects the political sense of the word — a group's right to self-government or self-rule. When a person seeks autonomy, he or she would like to be able to make decisions independently from an authority figure *Anonymous - गुमनाम*

brogue

*Any regional ascent of English a fraud; trick; prank. heavy Shoe* /M- Bro + Rog - bro ko Aisa English Rog laga hai ki uska ascent(*Regional English Ascent*) Bilkul hi Englishman ki tarah ho gaya hai ..also now he is big fond of heavy shoes (*Heavy Shoes*)..Dhongi Saala(*Fraud*)/ /Ex -Brogues for women were fashionable last year/

expeditious

*Anything expeditious is speedy and efficient. *People like shortcuts because they are expeditious.*If you can do things quickly and well, then you're good at being expeditious.* In math, there are often many ways to get an answer: the quickest method is the most expeditious. There might be many ways to get home from school, but the fastest is the most expeditious. But there's more to being expeditious than just speed — you have to get a good result too. If you solve a problem quickly but get it wrong, that's not very expeditious. /"But the way to bring the process to an expeditious conclusion is for Iran to cooperate fully," she said./ /Certainly that is a better explanation for his expeditious dispatch, especially by an anti-aircraft gun./ /We are committed to administering a program that is survivor-centric and helps policyholders recover from flooding in a fair, transparent, and expeditious way."/

Sensuous

*Anything that is pleasing to the senses can be called sensuous.* The feel of a soft cashmere sweater on your skin, the taste of dark chocolate, even the smell of your favorite person — all of these can be sensuous experiences. Sensuous *describes anything that feels, tastes, smells, looks, or sounds good*. Eating delicious food or relaxing in a warm bath are Sensuous activities. Use sensuous to describe stuff that makes your five senses happy.

apropos(Ae+ pro+po)

*Appropriate * /M - Appropriate : One which is appropriate to a scenario or circumstances * उचित, अनुरूप*/ Apropos means regarding or appropriate to, as in: *Apropos of your interest in fishing, your grandfather gave you his set of championship lures, rods, reels and lucky tackle box.* Apropos is a useful word to learn. But first you have to know how to pronounce it: AP-rə-pō. Then you can conveniently change the subject of a conversation by using the expression "Apropos of nothing," which is a glib way of saying, "Oh, and by the way..." If someone's remarks are suitable and appropriate to the occasion, you can get on their good side by saying: How apropos!

apposite

*Apt or Pertinent or Relevant * /M - A + opposite :They are opposite of each other but even though they fit perfectly ..One is big Cricket fan and other doesn't like it ..but even though they Gel perfectly * उपयुक्त*/ 1. *Apt or Pertinent* Something apposite is fitting or relevant. It is apposite that radio stations play Christmas carols on Christmas Eve, and that your tax accountant takes vacation after April 15th. It all makes sense.

Posture

*Attitude* The alignment and function of all components of the kinetic chain at any given moment. /* Ex- Despite his posturing, though, he was more dutiful than devout */

Stupor

*Barely Conscious* A person in a stupor is considered *barely conscious or stunned*; or, if you consult Led Zeppelin lyrics: *dazed and confused.* Stupors can be brought on by drugs, alcohol, illness, or shocking news. You might doze off with a lampshade on your head if you're in a drunken stupor. *Medically speaking, a person in this state responds only to pain*. You can also be in a stupor if you're in shock, like if your boss says he's replacing you with a robot, or if Mister Ed the talking horse kicks you in the gut. Like stupid, it comes from the Latin word stupere that means basically "to be stunned." Hindi - मूर्छा

impede

*Block , Hold , hindrance * /M - Impedance - a material's opposition to the flow of electric current; measured in ohms , So Impede is Opposition , Hindrance , Hold , blocking etc / Verb - *To impede something is to delay or block its progress or movement *. Carrying six heavy bags will impede your progress if you're trying to walk across town. *An impediment is something that impedes, such as a physical defect that affects speech--a speech impediment.*

inhibit

*Block , Hold* /M - In + habit -He was avid smoker and it was his habit that made him asthmatic ..but then he Stopped it * Blocked it or Hold it back रोकना * / When you inhibit something, *you block it or hold it back*. If you put plants in a dark room, you inhibit their growth. A teacher who mocks their students for giving wrong answers inhibits their willingness to speak up in class. When you look at the word inhibit, think hinder. Though it sounds like it might be a bad thing to inhibit something else, there is no judgment built into the word.* A drug that inhibits the growth of cancer cells would generally be considered a very good thing. * While you may wish cancer cells to be inhibited, you probably don't wish it upon your friend's sense of humor or your country's economic growth.

Incendiary

*Bomb , Explosive either be explosive statement * /M - Insane + Diary - A boy wrote his diary daily ..he used to say bad things about his friends like ..He is Ugly or Fat or Boor ..One day his friend caught his writing diary and when he glanced he saw few bad words about him ..he was so mad ../ An incendiary device is a bomb. An incendiary statement is, "You're ugly, fat, and stupid." Both are* likely to produce an explosion of one kind or another*. Incendiary means more than flammable. *It means explosive.* *If you are a radical who changes the world by exciting people and makes as many enemies as followers, you might be called an incendiary figure. The speeches you give that rile people up are incendiary. * People who set fires are sometimes known as incendiaries but more often are called arsonists.

barge

*Bumping through Crowd* /M - Bar - Ek Bar jo boht bade boat (*Flat bottom Boat*)pe bani hai jismain Disk hai uska bottom flat hone ki wajah se .. Log Jab pee ke nikaltey hain toh bas Ek duser se (*Collide*) Hotey rehtey hain / a large, strongly built vehicle or flat-bottomed boat for carrying freight (noun) Verb - bump into thing , Collide / Ex - to barge through a crowd./ * Barge In/Into - To Intrude *

interpolate

*Calculate , Alter Original text by adding words , often falsifying it * /M - In + Pollution : Atlanta main pollution both kam hai , so the government thought that we can accommodate(*Add , Insert , Introduce*) More factories for more jobs..The statement was Altered by press (*to falsify or Alter by addition of*) that Government wants to Increase Pollution / Verb 1. Insert Words into Texts , often falsifying it thereby 2. Calculate , Reckon /Ex- Its loose-jointed structure allows small ensembles to interpolate all manner of dialogue and ritual. / /Ex -Traditional camera chips record one color per pixel and interpolate colors for adjacent pixels. /

cartilage

*Cartilage is the strong but bendable tissue found in various parts of your body, such as the joints. Your outer ear is made of cartilage, which is why you can pull on and bend it.* Whenever you run or jump, thank your cartilage. It's the strong but stretchy tissue that supports your joints so you don't just fall to the ground in a heap. Cartilage also gives your nose its shape. And when you have a cold, you can blow that nose forcefully without hurting it because your cartilage also supports your honker.

Cardinal

*Central or Essential* /M - Cardigan - Cardigan wore by *High Ranking Bishop* who created *Cardinals (Essential rules)* for Christians which should be followed religiously / बुनियादी , मुख्य, मूल In Catholicism, a cardinal is a high-ranking bishop. In math, you use cardinal numbers to count. * A cardinal rule is one that is central and should not be broken.* Okay, that's a lot of definitions. How exactly are they related? * In all cases, cardinal means central or essential *. It's a cardinal principle that you use it to describe words of behavior like rule or sin. In the Church, cardinals form the central governing body, and in math the cardinal numbers (one, two, three) are the numbers you learn and use first.

puerile

*Childish , Related to Child * /M - Pure + Aisle - An aisle in Target which has Child products(*Of or relating to Child*) ..Buying evrything different for a Child is foolish(*Immature*) .. like Toothbrush .you buy it from child section because it is suppose to be soft and made for children .. / Adj बचकाना 1. Of or relating to Child or Childhood 2.Childishly Foolish, Immature /This eight-minute piece of puerile propaganda features the warm and winning voice of Ed Asner. / /So I simply focused on another British movie star who has depended on his juvenile appeal and not his puerile one. / *As adjectives the difference between juvenile and puerile is that juvenile is young; not fully developed while puerile is characteristic of, or pertaining to, a boy or boys; confer*

Reconnaissance

*Circumspect , Checking Situation before taking Action* /M - Recognition - Before recognizing some one you have to check the situation (*Checking Situation before taking action प्राथमिक परीक्षा*)/ Reconnaissance is checking out a situation before taking action. Often it's used as a military term, but you could also do reconnaissance on a new employee before you hire her, or a resort before you take a vacation.

clad

*Clad means dressed or covered*. You might be clad in green velvet and leather. A jewelry box might be clad in ebony with silver carvings. As it applies to what a person is wearing, *clad is the past participle of clothe*. If you wanted to talk about the day your friend commanded you to clothe yourself in green and you obeyed, you'd say, "*I clad myself in green." Of course, it sounds archaic. Like talking about your shoes by saying shod*.

bunkum

*Claptrap* / Bum banana aur use kam daam main Terrorist ko bech dena ..Pakistani politician boltey hain essey humey Kashmir waapas milega ...Log jaantey hain ki ye sirf baatey hian *(Insincere Talk , to please )* vote jeetne kye liye / Noun - 1. insincere speechmaking by a politician intended merely to please local constituents. 2. insincere talk; claptrap; humbug.

Anthology

*Collection of Writings , Compendium * /M- (Anth) N number of writers compiling and publishing there written stories to Oxford: a collection of poems, stories, etc. that have been written by different people and published together in a book is Anthology/कथा/ कविता /नाट्य * संकलन * *A collection of writings is an anthology *. The heavy textbooks that span the literature of an entire culture and that school children transport in over-sized backpacks with wheels? Those are anthologies.

corpus

*Collection of Writings* /M - Corpse - Collection of Bodies and their documents (* Collection of Writings*) in morgue . / *Collection* A corpus is a collection of writings. If you tend to never throw anything away, you might have your entire school corpus, from your first scribbled words to your high school English class essays. *The written works of an author, or from one specific time period, can be called a corpus if they're gathered together into a collection or talked about as a group*. You could discuss the corpus of Dr. Seuss, for example. Corpus sounds a little like corpse, and that's no coincidence; corpus means "body" in Latin, and though it's come to mean specifically "body of work," the two words are closely related.

Burlesque

*Composition for Sake of Laughter* /M - Bar main Less kapdo ke saath naachna logo ki khushi ke liye (*Sake of Laughter *)/ an artistic composition, especially literary or dramatic, that, for the sake of laughter, vulgarizes lofty material or treats ordinary material with mock dignity.

Compendium

*Comprehensive Collection* /M - Company + Dim -An employee used to stay late in office and once everyone leave when lights are dim , he used to take out Encyclopedia and read it , He always says Encyclopedia is compendium *( Comprehensive Collection of Something )* of Wisdom./ When you search an online encyclopedia, you are searching a compendium of information on just about everything. A compendium is a comprehensive collection of something. *You can also use the word compendium to describe a collection of written works. If you gather all of the anecdotes your parents and grandparents have told you into a book, you'll have created a compendium of family stories. * The plural of compendium is either compendiums or compendia.

Become a Damascus Road

*Conversation which is life changing * The phrase "Damascus Road experience" is used to describe a conversion which is dramatic and startling. Many people receive Christ in a life-changing, instantaneous experience, although many others describe their conversion as more of a gradual understanding of the truth of the gospel of Jesus Christ. But both types of experiences have several things in common /* Ex- I have very little interest in church vestments but the CRE North catwalk may become a Damascus Road. I have always wanted to be a model cleric but perhaps I will have to settle for being a clerical model.*/

resplendent

*Dazzling , Glorious* /M-Repair + Pendent - A diamond pendant which was dazzling and lovely *दमकता हुआ , चमकीला* came to repair . / Someone or something that is resplendent has great beauty and is a pleasure to behold.* "She was there, at the base of the stairs, resplendent in her flowing gown and jewels."* When people or things are resplendent, they are dazzling, splendiferous, glorious, or lovely. The adjective resplendent comes from a Latin word that means "to shine brightly." The gilded entranceway was resplendent in the golden glow of the afternoon light. When he flashed his resplendent smile, she was helpless against his charms

Delineation

*Delineation is the act of representing something or describing it *.The portrait you paint of your best friend is a delineation of that person. *A delineation can refer to any kind of pictorial representation of something else, like a geometric sketch or a map of a city. * A delineation more generally means any kind of accurate or vivid portrayal of something else. So, a lively summary of a book that makes the listener feel she read it herself can be a delineation. Telling someone else what you dreamed about last night is a delineation of that dream. /The company views that delineation between software and hardware as a false dichotomy, in fact./ /This signal and delineation would be especially consequential in the university setting./ /But while Palestinian leaders have accepted the concept of swaps, neither they nor the United States have ever agreed on a delineation of such blocks./

Implore

*Desperate Request* /M - I + am + Poor - Poor guy was asking for money to buy ration for his family and kids , he was *imploring (प्रार्थना करना , मांगना)* to people for help / You might ask your friend for a loan if you're short a few bucks, but if the bank is about to foreclose on your house you'll implore your friend for the money, *desperately begging* for the cash so you can keep your house. The word implore is often used to describe an urgent request made out of desperation.* A man on death row might implore the governor to grant him a last-minute pardon*. In the old days, you might have heard the word spoken by someone with lousy aim at a duel — "I implore you not to shoot me, my good man!" Today, this first-person use of the word sounds old-fashioned, although you might still hear it in a period drama.

Dilettante(Dile+ Tanteee)

*Dilettante - Dabbler - When you are little bit involved in an Activity* /M- Dil(Dilli) +ettante ( Atlanta ): The flight crew of Lufthansa were *Not dilettante (नौसिखुआ, अधकचरा)* so we reached Atlanta from Delhi safely / The definition of a *dilettante is a dabbler or a person who cultivates an interest without really committing or learning anything in depth*. A dilettante is an amateur often one who pretends to be very knowledgeable like your friend who thinks he can play the guitar after several short lessons. Today, the word *dilettante implies you're pretending to be more of an artist than you're interested in or capable of being*.

contempt

*Dis Respect* /M - Its Contempt of Court - Showing No respect / Noun - *अवहेलना , अपमान ,उपेक्षा* *the feeling with which a person regards anything considered mean, vile, or worthless*; disdain; scorn. Law - willful disobedience to or open disrespect for the rules or orders of a court (contempt of court) or legislative body. an act showing such disrespect. /One of the strengths I derive from my class background is that I am accustomed to contempt. /

Disinterested

*Disinterested - Unbiased , No Profit from Something Uninterested - Who Doesn't care or pay attention* Adj - *Unbiased , Impartial , No profit from Something* If you want a disinterested, or unbiased opinion, don't ask your ex-boyfriend if you can ask his brother out. He will not be disinterested. Disinterested means impartial, having no bias or profit from something:

dispense

*Dispense - Give Out Dispense It - Get Rid of It * *To dispense means to give out or distribute something*. A school nurse can dispense students' medication and we all can dispense advice. The word dispense comes from the Old French word dispenser, meaning "give out." You can dispense anything from hand sanitizer to dating advice. *When dispense is paired with with it means "get rid of it" or "skip." If you dispense with traditional Thanksgiving dishes, you might instead celebrate with pizza, pancakes, tacos — anything but turkey and all the fixings.*

Scorn

*Disrespect* *घृणा , मज़ाक , चुटकी पर उड़ाना* Scorn is *open disrespect for someone or something*. It can also be *disrespect coupled with feelings of intense dislike*. The noun scorn describes your feelings of *disdain when you encounter something you view as worthless or inferior* — like, for instance, a talk show that gets all its facts wrong. Use the verb form for those times when you're actively expressing scorn. You might scorn a politician who spends $100,000 on travel while claiming to work hard promoting middle-class values. / They scorned the old beggar./

Diurnal(Die+ur+nal)

*Diurnal - Active during Day Light and Sleep in Night Nocturnal - Active at Night , Sleep in the Daytime* /M - Daily Nal - Mumbai main paani daily 2 baar aata tha 10 se 11 and 04 se 05 baje, jo cheeze din main hoti hian usey Diurnal boltey hian /

sap

*Drain or Deplete Over Time , Sticky Liquid* *To sap something is to drain or deplete something over time*. If you sap a maple tree, you drain the liquid inside it to make maple syrup. But if you sap a person of strength, you've rendered him defenseless. Whether used as a noun or verb, sap is rarely a good thing. If your energy or will is sapped, it's not meant lightly; it means you have been exhausted of all your reserve energy, you're reduced to a shell. If someone calls you "a sap," it suggests you lack strength and character. And if you get sap — the sticky liquid inside a tree — on your hands, good luck getting it off in the middle of a forest without a bar of soap and running water. Yuck.

Decimate

*Drastically reduced or killed * /M - Desi Murga - Nowadays its tough to find Desi Murga and its costly too as there numbers are greatly reduced/ If something is *drastically reduced or killed, *especially in number, you can say it was decimated. "The oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico decimated the wildlife along the coast." The verb decimate originally referred to a form of capital punishment for Roman troops. If there was a rebellion, one out of every ten men (thus the dec in decimate) was put to death. So the word's first expanded usage was to mean a ten percent reduction or a ten percent tax. Modern usage gives the word decimate its "drastically reduced" meaning, but the verb can also be used to mean "to wipe out" or "to eliminate." /"I am a little surprised they did not think the networks were decimated in 2012," he said/

Imperative

*Essential , Unavoidable * / M - Important + Native - Gaaon se ek boht hi important rishteydaar aaya , aake bola mujhey AIIMS jaana hai and boht zaroori kaam hia (*Unavoidable , Absolutely Necessary*) . Hum log mana bhi nahi kar saktey they so le gaye / अनिवार्यता adjective 1.absolutely necessary or required; unavoidable 1. Essential Noun - 1 . An Obligatory Statement, /Letters: Cooling the Arctic is imperative/

emulsion

*Ever notice the separate layers of oil and vinegar in salad dressing? Give the bottle a shake and those layers combine in a process called emulsion or the combination of liquids that don't dissolve into each other.*

Perpetual

*Everlasting* Continuing forever; everlasting seemingly ceaseless because often repeated: /*Ex - Nasa's animations: from the perpetual oceans to the surface of the sun and moon*/

inevitable

*Evitable - Can be Avoided* *inevitable - Can't be avoided* /M - Un + Avoidable / *If something is inevitable, it will definitely happen, like death or tax season.* Inevitable comes from the Latin word inevitabilis, which means *unavoidable*. If you say something is inevitable, you give the sense that no matter what scheme you come with to get around it, it's going to happen sooner or later. You can use all the skin products you want, but wrinkles are inevitable.

Excoriate

*Extreme निंदा करना , Bitter Rant (निंदा करना)* /M - Ex + Koreans - South Koreans hate North Koreans .. the ex officers from South Korean Army *Criticize* and show anger towards N Korean for all the mishaps in their country / When it comes to "telling someone off," excoriate is reserved for the most severe cases. So, before you excoriate your little sister for borrowing your favorite jacket without permission, consider whether she truly deserves such harsh treatment. *If you excoriate someone, you let that person know that you really, really disagree with them. This verb goes beyond mere criticism; it implies anger, a harsh and insulting tone, and even a scathing attack.* Synonyms of excoriate include denounce, decry, and condemn. In a medical sense, excoriate means "to tear skin off by chafing." A bad rug burn can excoriate your skin. If someone excoriates you verbally, it might make you feel like you've been physically excoriated. /Last week, his interpretation was bolstered by a three-judge panel that excoriated the NSA program as illegal on its face./

Inveigh

*Extreme निंदा करना* /M - In + Weight - Ek aadmi apni beti ki waat laga raha tha coz wo both Sugar and fast foods khati hai and she is putting more and more weight *घोर निन्दा करना*/ Picture an old man banging his fist on the dinner table, inveighing against the evils of teenagers being allowed to listen to music and dance. Inveigh means to rail against something with hostility and passion. Related to vehicle, inveigh comes from Latin in- + vehere "to carry." During the Vietnam War, war protesters held rallies where young men burned their draft cards and inveighed against the imperialist motives by which our country was being driven and the war's escalation without its ever being properly authorized in Congress.

Vituperate(Why + 2 +perate)

*Extreme निंदा करना* /M - Why+2+pe+Rate - Couple asked their neighbors why you guys *vituperate(निंदा करना To vituperate is to speak or write in an extremely negative way about someone.*) about us every time . to rate two people in negative sense / Just as vituperation consists of negative, explosive, malicious outbursts, to vituperate is to communicate in this way. Negative political ads vituperate against opponents. When you insult someone and swear at them, you vituperate.

Sheer

*Extreme* If people can see through your shirt, it's sheer. This can also mean something steep, like a cliff, or anything extreme, like sheer nerve. This word has several meanings, but *they're all extreme. * A sheer (see-through) shirt is an extreme way to dress — climbing a sheer cliff is almost impossible. If your car sheers, it swerves sharply, and you might crash. Maybe you've met all these meanings in a single nightmare: *When the sheer cloth blew over your face as you drove, you lost control and the car began to sheer, filling you with sheer terror as you went over the sheer cliff. *

debilitate

*Feeble* /M - Deb+Lita - Deb ko lita kar pitna ..ussey wo kamzor (*Weak* ) ho jaayengey and itna nahi pakayengey / Verb - To make Weak or Feeble . Used with diseases Hindi - दुर्बल या कमजोर करना /Ex - Hawking has also, of course, defied all the predictions about how his illness would debilitate him and shorten his life. /

fraught

*Filled with Something Bad* /M - Freight - Think of a cargo ship loaded up with freight for a journey — it's full of supplies, just like Thanksgiving was *filled* with — or fraught with — awkward moments./ *Fraught means filled with something — often something bad* . Your Thanksgiving was fraught with awkward moments when your family saw your blue hair, and it only got worse when you told them you'd quit law school to join the circus. Fraught is related to the word freight, and comes from the Middle English fraughten, meaning "to load with cargo." * Fraught can also describe a situation filled with distress*. If relations between two countries are fraught, they are not getting along with each other.

conscript

*Force to Join * /M - kaun + Script - Manager asked everyone that who will create this script , everyone was looking sideways then he *Conscripted (forced)* me to create it/ *अनिवार्य भरती करना , जबरन भरती किया गया सैनिक* *If you're ever drafted into the Turkish army, then you could be called a conscript, someone who is forced to join the military.* At the root of conscript is the Latin word conscriptus, meaning "enroll." Conscript does involve enrollment — but it's a forced enrollment, used to describe someone who has been forced to join the military, such as someone who has been drafted. As a verb, conscript means "force to join," like a military that conscripts new soldiers. In contrast, those who choose to join are recruited; when they enter the service, they enlist.

Fortuitous(For+tuit+ous)

*Fortunate - Good Fortune Fortuitous - By Chance or By Accident either good or bad ,serendipity * Adj - Fortuitous means by chance, like a lucky accident. If you and your best friend's families happen to go on vacation to the same place at the same time, that's a fortuitous coincidence!

garbled

*Gadbad karna* /M - Gargle - Gargle kartey huey kisi se kuch bolna .. He will get (*Confuse*) and (*can mess the Order of Facts , Statement*) Etc / Verb *अस्पष्ट * 1.to confuse unintentionally or ignorantly; jumble: /Ex - to garble instructions. / 2.to make unfair or misleading selections from or arrangement of (fact, statements, writings, etc.); distort: /Ex - to garble a quotation. /

Pith

*Gadhha , Ya kisi cheez ka Central Idea * /M - Pit - Ek boht bada Pit jo Desert ke Center main ho ..and uske Center main Diamond Extraction Machine ho ..(*Center/Essence of Something*)/ Pith is the *central idea or essence of something सार*. If you're in danger, you could exclaim, "I would greatly appreciate it if someone would provide assistance." Or, you could get right to the pith of your point by shouting, "Help!" In botanical terminology, *pith refers to a spongy, central cylinder of tissue found inside the stems of most flowering plants*. If you know a lot about plants, that fact should help you remember the primary definition of pith. If not, just take our word for it. *You can think about the pith of an argument like the pith of a plant: both lie at the heart or core of something*

grisly

*Grisly means disgusting and bloody, absolutely repulsive and horrible.* There's a wonderfully creepy movie about a man who suffers a grisly death at the hands of the grizzly bears he was studying.

gristly

*Gristly means rubbery or full of cartilage*. The hardest part of your trip to rural China might be graciously accepting and attempting to chew the gristly meat your hosts offer you.

ensemble

*Group of things put together or group o people who come together for performance * /M - Assemble - Together / 1.* a person's complete costume; outfit * 2. An ensemble is a group of musicians, dancers, or actors who perform together, like an ensemble which has been playing music together for several years . Ensemble comes from the Middle French word ensemblée, which means "together, at the same time." * Groups of people who perform at the same time are ensembles, so are things that are put together* . A collection of short stories or artwork can be an ensemble, but you don't have to be a writer or artist to be complimented on your ensemble — the outfit you are wearing.

bohemian(bohee+meean)

*Gypsy , Dont care about Conventional Rules/Practices* /M - Baho + Main - Baho main chale aaa ..Ye jo gaana hai ismain Actor and Address ne Hippy(*Gypsy*) jaise kapde pehne hia...JInnehe dekh kar lagta hai ki they (*dont care about Conventional Rules and Practices*) . / noun - 1. a native or inhabitant of Bohemia. 2.(usually lowercase) a person, as an artist or writer, who lives and acts free of regard for conventional rules and practices. 3.the Czech language, especially as spoken in Bohemia. 4.a Gypsy Hindi - रूढ़िमुक्त /Ex - The clothes married rock'n'roll image (vinyl skinny trousers) with a loose bohemian spirit (dressing-gown coats hanging artfully off one shoulder). /

hack

*Hack - भाड़े का लेखक , टैक्सी चलाना , To cope with a situation* *Hack around - to pass the time ideally * Verb 1. to cut, notch, slice, chop, or sever (something) with or as with heavy, irregular blows (often followed by up or down): Hindi - *काट* /Ex - to hack meat; to hack down trees. / Slang - *to deal or cope with; handle*: /Ex - He can't hack all this commuting./ 2 . Tennis. to take a poor, ineffective, or awkward swing at the ball. *to play tennis at a mediocre level*. Noun - 1.a writer who works on the staff of a publisher at a dull or routine task; someone who works as a literary drudge: *भाड़े का लेखक * 3.a taxi , or a *cab driver* (hackie) Hindi - टैक्सी चलाना

Revere

/M - River -Ganges and Brahmputra itni bhayanak river hai ki you have to show respect to them * सम्मान करना* / *Revere means that to respect someone so deeply that you almost worship them*. Despite the size of the American military, the American people revere peacemakers like Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi. Rock stars are revered by throngs of devoted fans. Revere is related to the words reverence ("to hold something in worshipful awe") and its opposite — irreverent. Reverence for the irreverent is actually possible. Howard Stern humor is often vulgar and absurdly irreverent yet his legions of fans and even some media analysts revere him and his ability to maintain a loyal audience. Revere is the perfect word when respect is not strong enough but worship seems a little too religious-sounding. /Rossellini believes equality has a better chance in Europe, especially in France, "where artists are so revered"/

condemn

*Hindi - निंदा करना, दोष लगाना , जब्त कर लेना , दण्ड देना* You can condemn, *or openly criticize, someone who is behaving inappropriately*. If you are an animal rights activist, you would probably condemn someone for wearing fur. Condemn originally comes, through Old French, from the Latin word condemnāre, "*to sentence, condemn.*" You may see politicians condemn each other in political ads during a campaign in hopes of improving their chances of winning an election. You also might hear of a convict being "condemned to death." In this sense of the word, to condemn still carries on its Latin meaning of "to sentence." 1. *express strong disapproval of* /"We condemn the racism in South Africa"/ 2. *demonstrate the guilt of (someone)* /"Her strange behavior condemned her"/ 3.*pronounce a sentence on (somebody) in a court of law* /"He was condemned to ten years in prison"/ 4.*compel or force into a particular state or activity* /"His devotion to his sick wife condemned him to a lonely existence"/ 5. *declare or judge unfit for use or habitation* /"The building was condemned by the inspector"/ 6.*appropriate (property) for public use* /"the county condemned the land to build a highway"/

Hostility

*Hostility - State of ill will or bad feeling or Aggresive Relations * *Hostility is the state of ill will and bad feeling. *If a teacher embarrasses you in front of the whole class, you will probably regard him or her with hostility for the remainder of the school year. *Hostility can be used to describe aggressive relations between two countries as well as between people.* The issue of territorial borders can often cause hostility between neighboring countries. If actual fighting breaks out, use the word hostilities to refer to the violent actions between them. The ordinary citizens of the countries involved will look forward to the end of hostilities when the two governments are able to work together for peace.

Antagonism

*Hostility, Opposing force , principle or Tendency * /M - Ant + Agony - When one group of Ants confronts other then they show (*Hostility*) . Sometimes if they have equal force then they step back , else they put an (*Opposing Force*). / Noun - 1. an active hostility or opposition, as between unfriendly or conflicting groups: / Ex - the antagonism between the liberal and the conservative parties. / 2. an opposing force, principle, or tendency: Hindi - प्रतिरोध , मनमुटाव /Ex - Her plan to become an actress met with the antagonism of her family. /

Fervid

*Hot , Or Heated Emotions * /M - Fur + Video - A video was showing how animals was killed and their Furs used to create Fur Clothes ..isko dekh kar PETA waale boht hi gusse ho gaye and उत्तेजित ho gaye ..(* Physically Hot or Heated Emotions *) to sustain/ बहुत गरम ,उत्तेजित Fervid can be used to describe something that is physically hot such as "a fervid day in August," but it is more often used to describe heated emotions like anger, love, or desire. *When passions and emotions run wild, you should expect to hear some fervid language thrown about.* The adjective fervid comes from the Latin fervidus which means "glowing, burning, or boiling." It is often used like the word fiery. You might hear a politician deliver a "fervid speech" if he or she is particularly worked up over an issue.

Toil

/M - Roil - His work was to roil rocks to get petroleum , the *Toil (कठिन कार्य Work was laborious)* was too hard / *Toil is another word for work*. You toil as a customer service rep all day, but you'd prefer to work as a rock goddess. Unfortunately, there weren't many ads in the employment section for goddesses — rock or otherwise. *Although toil means "work" (in both its noun and verb forms), it usually has the added meaning of hard work, especially physical labor. *If you'd lived during the Great Depression, you might have toiled on roadwork and conservation projects. Your toils would have created roads in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, for example. Thanks for all your hard work! Now, relax and enjoy the scenery.

Rudiments

/M - Rude + ments - He just started(*Elementary Stage*) showing Rude behavior and i think i can fix it as its partially developed(*Partially Development*)/ Noun - आरंभ , मूलतत्त्व 1. The first Principle or elementary stages of Subject 2.a partially developed version of something /Similar to cows, the pronghorn has a rudiment stomach, or a four-part stomach./

moot

*Ideas and Arguments that doesn't matter* /M - Mut - Logo ke beech main (*Discussion/Debate*) challoo hua ki agar aap Electric wire pe Su Su karogey toh kya appko Current Lagega .. Evey one knows that its (*Hypothetical , theoretical* ) subject . Sabne apne apne points present kiye (*To Present or Introduce* ) ..It looked like a (*Mock Court*) / adjective - विवादास्पद,बहस करना , कल्पित विषय पर तर्क वितर्क करना 1.open to discussion or debate; debatable; doubtful:/ Ex -a moot point. / 2.not actual; theoretical; hypothetical. verb (used with object) 4.to present or introduce (any point, subject, project, etc.) for discussion. 5.to reduce or remove the practical significance of; make purely theoretical or academic. 6.Archaic. to argue (a case), especially in a mock court. noun 7.an assembly of the people in early England exercising political, administrative, and judicial powers. 8.an argument or discussion, especially of a hypothetical legal case. 9.Obsolete. a debate, argument, or discussion.

embryonic

*If something is described as embryonic, it's just starting to develop or come together. *An "embryo" is a person or animal that is still growing in the womb or egg, and embryonic means "like an embryo."

frown

*If you frown at someone, you look at them with disapproval, and if you frown on something they do, you don't approve of that either*. Because you frown on smoking, you probably frown at smokers too! /Furthermore the college should agree to tell prospective students which groups are frowned upon at dear old Harvard./

ruminate

/M - Rum + Urinate - Rum peene ke baad jab SU SU lagti hia toh boht Saare log Washroom main jaakar ghanto bitatey hain (*meditate*) or relax your mind and (*think about something*) / Meditating or Thinking in a slow quite way to chew the cud / And research shows that it is normal and healthy to ruminate extensively on the birth experience/ Hindi - विचार करना

Resonant

*If you have a loud, deep voice, then your voice has resonance, and if your words are powerful and meaningful, then your words have resonance, too*. Something with resonance has a deep tone or a powerful lasting effect. *Resonance is the quality of being "resonant," which can mean "strong and deep in tone" or "having a lasting effect."* If your voice has resonance, you might consider a profession that involves public speaking. Perhaps you'll become a politician and deliver speeches that have a lasting effect, or resonance, with your audience. Rooms that intensify sound, like many gymnasiums, can also be said to have resonance. /Roof's photographs appear to show his interest in the racially resonant landscapes of his state./ /This last argument has special resonance in current congressional debates about US trade policies./ /In contrast, Barack Obama, America's first black president, has struggled to speak about the country's racial conflicts in a way that resonates on the ground./

existentialism

*If you study philosophy, you learn about existentialism, a school of thought that claims people are responsible for creating meaning out of life — since the world is meaningless.* In a nutshell, existentialism, pronounced "eg-sih-STEN-shul-ism," asks what it means to be human when individuals have the power to shape their lives without being absolutely sure of what is good and what is evil.

exigent

*Imperative , Essential , Unavoidable * /M - Excess + Gents - Haryana main Gents ki sankhya boht zyada ho gayi hai agar jaldi kuch nahi kiya (*Urgent , Immediate*) toh situation kharaaab ho jayegi / अत्यावश्यक,जल्द Adj - urgent; requiring immediate action /Likewise, they will mix-match legal principles arguing "exigent circumstances" when none really exist/

inextricably

*Impossible to Separate* /M - India + Extreme - In India cricket and politics are inextricably tied to common people (* Impossible to separate *) / *Inextricably is an adverb that means in a manner that is impossible to unravel or separate from something else. It is usually modifies words like "linked" and "tied." * To most Americans, pilgrims and Thanksgiving are inextricably linked. Inextricably is the adverb form of the adjective inextricable, which comes from the Latin word inextricabilis, meaning cannot be disentangled. In your mind, summer and the beach are inextricably tied together because you've spent your vacation at the shore for as long as you can remember. * Circumstances might inextricably link you and your neighbor when you're trapped in an elevator together for the longest nine hours of your life.*

varnish

*Improved Appearance , Deceive Truth * /M - War + Nash : War me Germany Nash ho gaya , war ke baad unhone kaafi theek kiya by repainting (*Coating* ) . Building achhi toh dikhni lagi (* Improved Appearance*) but everyone knows that it hides the truth(*Deceive Truth *)/ दोष छिपाना ,दिखावा Noun 1.a coating or surface of varnish. 2.Nail Polish 3.superficial polish or external show, especially to conceal some defect or inadequacy Verb - 1. to give an improved appearance to 2. to give a superficially pleasing appearance to, especially in order to deceive: /Ex - To Varnish The Truth /

Assay

*In Depth Analysis* /M - Essay - An essay should consist of*detail analysis* with facts and figures . You need to examining Individual parts to determine root cause and solution / *An assay is a breakdown of a material, examining the individual parts that make up the whole*. When you assay a situation, you look at all the elements that created the problem in order to come up with a solution. The word assay comes from the French word essai, which means "trial," an appropriate sense for a word that means to examine for analysis. *As a noun, assay means a test or appraisal to determine the components of a substance or object. As a verb, it refers to the act of analyzing, or of conducting that test. *It is usually used in chemistry-related fields like metallurgy and pharmaceuticals, but you can also assay a poem.

Fatuous

*Inane , Stupid , Pointless , foolish* /M- Fat + U + Ass - Jab kisi moti ko tumhey stupid bolna ho toh u can say Fatuous (बुद्धिहीन, मूर्खतापूर्ण)*/ Fatuous derives from * the Latin fatuus meaning "foolish.*" It sounds like it should have something to do with being fat, but it actually has no relation to size. You want to debate someone who's fatuous, because they are unintelligent, silly and even a bit conceited so they probably won't be very persuasive debaters. just donot call them fatuous to their face. Even if they don't know what it means, it's just not nice!

comprehend

*Include , To Understand* Verb *सम्मिलित करना , समझना* 1. to understand the nature or meaning of; grasp with the mind; perceive: / Ex - He did not comprehend the significance of the ambassador's remark./ 2.to take in or embrace; include; comprise: / The course will comprehend all facets of Japanese culture./

Forsooth

*Indeed* /*M - For + so + truth */ 1. in truth (Indeed) 2.*an archaic word originally meaning 'in truth' but now usually used to express disbelief (Really?)* Hindi - निस्सन्देह / The outrageous liberties taken with history in this film about who really wrote Shakespeare's plays would be easier to swallow if it were witty and intelligent - forsooth it is not /

circumlocution

*Indirect Way of Speaking* /M - circum + location :- Hum log Mandir gaye and wahan pe mandir ke 7 chakkkar lagaye ..I dont get the idea ..if we can go directly to bhagwaan then why to circle around(*to use more words then necessary to express an Idea *)/ Noun - a roundabout or indirect way of speaking; the use of more words than necessary to express an idea. /Ex - Diplomacy is often the art of deft circumlocution and constructive ambiguity /

boor

*Lacking Politeness * /M -Bore - Maha Bore aadmi jiske harqatey Jaahil Jaisi ho(*Unmannerly Person*)/ Noun - a churlish, rude, or unmannerly person. Hindi - जाहिल /Ex - Frustrated? Yes, with you being a boor/

Churlish

*Lacking Politeness* / /M - Childish - Baccho ki tarah bewkufion waali harkat karna(*Lacking Politeness*) / (adj.) lacking politeness or good manners; lacking sensitivity; difficult to work with or deal with; rude Hindi - अभद्र , कंजूस /Ex - . It feels churlish to criticize /

Aorta

*Largest artery in the body* The main artery, which receives blood from the left ventricle and delivers it to all the other arteries that carry blood to the tissues of the body.

Deride

*Laugh to Scorn (Mazzak bana dena kisi ki baat ka ) , Contempt* /M - De + Ride - The jerk would *deride the other kids on the bus by calling them names or pulling their hair* until the driver decided to de-ride him *मजाक बनाना* / Verb - to laugh at in scorn or contempt The verb deride means to show a low opinion of someone or something. To "ride" people is to get on their case or give them a hard time, and to deride is to do the same with insulting language or poor treatment. Deride comes from the Latin root dērīdēre, meaning "to ridicule, to scorn," and it's often used to express dislike or even hatred. Criticizing something with words is a common way to deride, and politicians often deride each other in their speeches during election campaigns. / Ex - Experts deride report on crime and moral decline/

Imminent

*Likely to Occur at any moment * Adj -अभी होने वाला 1. Likely to Occur at any moment , Impending 2. Overhanging /What happens when Israeli intelligence learns of an imminent attack forming in Sinai? /

trumped up

*Meaning something that's been falsely made up *. A politician may face trumped up charges that could ruin his career.

Mercenary

*Missionary - Someone Sent on Mission Mercenary - Someone who only works fr money* /M- Mercy + No - Someone created for showing no Mercy , they only works for Money . They can be foe or friend depending on who throws more money / The *definition of mercenary is someone whose only motivation to do a job is the money they would be paid*. A synonym for mercenary is "*soldier of fortune*" and this phrase sometimes glorifies the mercenary, turning the meaning of "fortune" from "cash" to "luck in battle."

Scruples(Scru+ pels)

*Moral which tells you whats wrong and right* /M - Screw + Principles - Elders always say to NOT Screw your principles , *the conscience which tells you what right or Wrong नैतिकता*/ Having scruples is *kind of like having a conscience*: your morals or scruples cause you to act in ways you think are right. The idea of scruples has to do with ethics and morality: what is right and wrong. If you had no scruples at all, you'd just kill, steal, cheat, and do God knows what else. *Scruples are a kind of moral compass that lets you know what's right*. Often people use this word in an outraged way when someone does something bad: "Don't you have any scruples?" Liars, thieves, criminals, and politicians have fewer scruples than the rest of us

Rake

*Morally Degrade , Gather or Collect Abundantly , To Search Something , A Long Handled tool , Slanted * /M - Rakhi - Rakhi Sawant is (*morally Degraded*) and who doesn't clean her back yard which is covered by leaves .. She do have the rake (*A long handled tool *) but she is too much involved in finding Pencil on her messy desk (* To Search Something*) ..she doesn't need to it as she has too many pencils (* Gather or Collect Abundantly *) ..The Pencil was all (*Slanted*) and was shining like Diamonds .. / *तलाश करना , एकत्र करना , जमा करना ,बटोरना* If it's fall and the yard is covered with leaves, you'll want to get out *the rake, a long-handled tool with a row of tines*. Either that, or get out the excuses and leave the leaves where they lie. Rake has several senses, including to use a rake to gather leaves or smooth soil. Rake can also mean *to search something* — the way police may rake through a crime scene for clues or the way you may rake through a messy desk to find a pencil. A rake is also a *slanted plane* — it's often used to refer to a *slanted stage* in a theater. In high society, a rake is an *immoral man*. *to gather or collect abundantly* /"The more money you rake in," he said, "the more reckless you become."/ /The prison phone service industry now rakes in around $1.2 billion every year./ /Before modern equipment removed items from the wastewater stream, workers raked through sewage and made interesting finds/

Enigmatic

*Mysterious, inexplicable, puzzling* /Ex-Mona Lisa enigmatic smile / hindi - रहस्य

Abstract

*Not Practical , Summary , To Draw Attention to * Adj - 1. *theoretical* , Not Practical ,Difficult to understand , Abstruse 2. *of or relating to the formal aspect of art*, emphasizing lines, colors, generalized or geometrical forms, etc., especially with reference to their relationship to one another. / The ideas of the revolution centered in certain abstract conceptions./ Noun - 1. *A summary of text*, Scientific Article , Document , Speech Etc. - epitome / The publishers ask for an abstract of only 150 words. / Verb - 1. *Remove , Steal Away* 2. *To draw attention to* / The more they abstract the less I know the truth. / 3. To consider as a *general quality* / Ex - to abstract the notions of time, space, and matter / Abstract is from a Latin word meaning "*pulled away, detached,* " and the basic idea is of something *detached from physical, or concrete, reality*. It is frequently used of ideas, meaning that *they don't have a clear applicability to real life, and of art *, meaning that it doesn't pictorially represent reality. It is also used as a noun, especially in the phrase "in the abstract" (a joke has a person laying down a new sidewalk saying "I like little boys in the abstract, but not in the concrete"), and as a verb (accented on the second syllable), meaning "to remove."

Serendipity

*Noun - Good Luck* /M- Serena Williams + Pity - Venus Williams vs Serena williams main Wimbledon ka final match hua , Venus badhi behan hokar and ye scoch kar ki usne boht saare matches jeetey hain and ye Serena ka first Grand Slam hai , usne sympathy(pity) dikhatey huey match Serena ko de diya . Serena ke liye ye *Serendipity (Good Fortune )* waali baat ho gayi ki final uski behan ke saath hi tha / Noun 1. *An Aptitude for making desirable Discoveries by Accident.* /Get to know these three terms: Timeline, the Open Graph, and serendipity —the process of stumbling toward discovery. / 2. *Good Fortune , Luck * /the serendipity of getting the first job she applied for./ /Then came one of those weird bits of serendipity that make the writing life—and the book tour—worth all the trouble. /

Espionage(S+peeonaaj)

/M - S + P + Naaz - Indian logo ko apne SP , Superintendent of Police pe naaz hai ..coz usne police waalo ko Spies bana kar gundo ke area main bheja and wahan se Secrets nikal kar ..unki band baja dee .. waise ye *spying ko Espionage bhi boltey hian* / *the systematic use of spies to get military or political secrets* *It's no secret: espionage is the act of organized spying, usually with the goal of uncovering sensitive military or political information.* If the government has relocated you to a foreign country, made you change your name, given you a fake mustache to wear, and instructed you to hide in a closet at the presidential palace and report back weekly on what you overhear, then you are engaging in espionage. This noun is similar to snooping, but generally applies to much more serious situations, like when countries or businesses spy on each other to try to obtain top secret information.

Symbiosis

/M - SIM+BIO - SIM and BIO ka aapas main depend hona(*Inter Dependent*) ..jissey dono ka progress ho..SIM hoga toh you will have girl freinds ..jisse you can create BIO structure / सहजीवन Noun - any interdependent or mutually beneficial relationship between two persons, groups, etc. /But this symbiosis, long recognised as efficient by ecologists, doesn't fit with modern development strategies/

Hull

*Outer Cover* /M - Skull - *Outer cover or Outer Body * of brain / *A sailor who is far out at sea has to hope that the hull of her boat is watertight. The hull of a boat or a ship is its outer body.* A boat's hull can be made of wood, metal, or fiberglass — it gives a boat or ship its shape and keeps water out. Another kind of hull is the outer covering of a seed. Corn, for example, has a hull that is removed when you husk it and reveal the kernels. This kind of hull is thought to be the root of the nautical hull, probably based on the similarity between a ship's hull and an open pea pod.

sapid

/M - Saanp + Eid - Saanp Eid mana raha tha ,usne itne saarey flavorful jaanwar jaise Colorful Lizard , Frog and ek golden fox , pakad ke laaya ki uski puri family khushi se naachne lagi. Khanan itna achha and *Sapid (flavorful)* tha ki poocho nahi / *Something that's sapid is very flavorful or savory*. A sapid beef stew tastes rich and delicious. The adjective sapid is a fairly uncommon way to describe something with a rich, deep flavor. You can declare your grandmother's Thanksgiving feast sapid, though you may have to reassure her that it's a compliment — sapid is more often used in scientific or industry writing about food than in cooking magazines. It comes from the Latin sapidus, "savory, or having a taste," from the root sapere, which means both "to taste" and "to be wise."

Sanctity

/M - Sacred + City - City which is taken as *Sanctity(Sanctity describes something that is holy, like the sanctity of religious objects to believers.)* like Jerusalem / Sanctity goes back to the Latin root sanctus, meaning "holy" or "sacred." A synonym for sanctity is godliness and most religions describe God as completely holy. Sanctity also can describe sacred obligation or rights — you may have heard of the sanctity of marriage, meaning the value and respect society shows to married people.

Gouge

*Overcharging , Indentation on All pumps * /M - Go + Urge - Group of protestor opposed Oil Refineries for increasing Gas charges ..they said its costly and you are *stealing from common people by overcharging* ...Few of them attacked a local gas station and made *indentation on all pumps with flat head chisel खून चूसना , छेद करना का यंत्र*/ Gouge means stealing by overcharging. If your local gas station puts the price of gas way up because a storm is coming, you may say that the station owner gouges prices — and that's illegal. The verb gouge means to cut or carve. You can use special chisels to gouge linoleum for interesting design in printing. As a noun, a gouge is the tool you would use — instead of a flat-head chisel, a gouge has a trough — to make the gouge marks of the design. *Another meaning of the verb gouge is an indentation in the surface of something.* If you're not careful with the screwdriver, you'll accidentally gouge a hole in the wall.

Ardent

*Passionate , Glowing or Shining Like fire * /M - A R Dent - A R rehman ke gaano pe log inte Aredent( * paagal and Passionate *) hia ki wo log boltey hian A R Rehman sets stage on *Fire , Glowing or Shining like fire */ Adj - If you are ardent, you are passionate about something . A pop star's ardent admirers might go so crazy at his concert that they faint from excitement. Ardent is most often used to modify words like supporter, fan, advocate, admirer, and defender — but also opponent . Although you can either ardently support or oppose something, support is by far the more common use. 2. glowing or shining like fire . /from rank to rank she darts her ardent eyes"- Alexander Pope/ /frightened by his ardent burning eyes/

pertain

*Pertain - Relevant Pertinent - Relevant and On Point * To pertain is to be *relevant or somehow associated with something*. If you're a lawyer, *you try to find evidence that will pertain to the case and eliminate anything that is not connected.* Behind the verb pertain lies the Latin verb pertinēre, which means "to be applicable" or "to hold through." If you think the rules of the road don't pertain to you, try explaining that to the state trooper when you get pulled over. *Pertinent* - Something pertinent is *relevant and on-point*. If you give your best friend pertinent advice, that means the advice is *appropriate for the situation.* Something pertinent is related to the current topic or situation — and probably helpful too. If you're in math class and you make a comment about World War I, that's likely not pertinent. If you're in music class and you talk about a cello, that probably is pertinent. *Pertinent things are appropriate and logical*. In most situations, people like to get comments and questions that are pertinent — anything else can just seem like a distraction.

cogent

*Pertinent , Convincing , Telling* /M - Gentleman - Convincing a gentleman , by presenting Clear Facts (*Convincing by telling*) and to the point(*To the Point*) Solution is Easy / Adj 1.convincing or believable by virtue of forcible, clear, or incisive presentation; telling. 2.to the point , relevant , pertinent /Ex - - a serious and cogent argument against the EU /

impertinent

*Pertinent - relevant Impertinent - Irrelevant * / M - imperfect tenant who is .. *Rude , Uncivil and talks Irrelevant* / उद्दंड , गुस्ताख , मुंहज़ोर Adj 1. intrusive or presumptuous, as persons or their actions; insolently rude; uncivil: 2. Irrelevant 3 . Inappropriate

pomp

*Pomp is a ceremonial display, such as you'd find at the Independence Day parade in your town, where brass bands and men and women in full military dress march to patriotic songs, while citizens wave flags and cheer.* 1. ceremonial elegance and splendor /In its pomp, Margate's famous Dreamland amusement park was one of the UK's leading visitor attractions with hundreds of thousands of visitors every year./ /All the pomp and circumstance will be eclipsed by the unfinished business of World War II./

Sinew

*Power, Tendon* /*M- Sanyu : Sanyu means Muscle(Tendon) in Marathi ...Marthi manus ko Muscle se hi taakat(Strength, Power) milti hia..aur kahin toh hoti nahi hia / Noun - 1. a tendon. 2. Strength; power; resilience:

Foreshadow

*Predict* /M - Fore + Shadow - Mom has *predicted* that its going to be hot and sunny outside ..and for that you need an umbrella पूर्वाभासना./ To foreshadow is *to predict something or to give a hint of what is to come*. If you could take a stereo apart and put it back together at age five, it can foreshadow a successful career in electronics. The verb foreshadow is often defined as "warning" or has a suggestion of something bad to come, though sometimes it's more neutral or shows examples of both good and bad predictions. Dark gray clouds foreshadow a thunderstorm, just as spring showers foreshadow May flowers.

Proscribe

*Prescribe - Recommend Proscribe - Forbid or prohibit it * To proscribe something is to forbid or prohibit it. A school principal might proscribe the use of cell phones in class. When the legislature passes a law banning the use of marijuana, this is an example of a time when it proscribes the use of marijuana.

salubrious

/M - Sallu + Bros - Salman Khan ( Salu) and his brothers eat *salubrious (स्वस्थ , Good for health) * food / *Salubrious is a fancy way to describe something that's good for you or is generally favorable to mind or body*

Sermon

/M - Sar + Mon - Office main kuch log zyada hi gyaan dete hain(*गम्भीर सलाह ,उपदेश*) , Khas kar Monday ko jab sab ka sar Fresh hota hai / Noun -गम्भीर सलाह ,उपदेश 1. a long, tedious speech. 2. any serious speech, discourse, or exhortation, especially on a moral issue. / Once upon a time, the good vicar was the one who preached the best sermon. /

Protege

*Prodigy - an unusually gifted or intelligent (young) person , a sign of something about to happen Protege - a person who receives support and protection from an influential patron who furthers the protege's career* /M - Prodigy - A poor child who was prodigy in cricket , but he needed someone to take him as protege , so that he can get good favor , opportunities and he can turn his talent into a successful career . Prodigies without being protege normally fades out / A *protege is a person who receives special protection and promotion from someone more established in a field* . If your boss introduces you as his newest protege, you're off to a good start in your career. Essentially, a protege is a teacher's pet, someone who is given special status or favors . Often, the word is used for someone who has special standout talent and is taken up as an upcoming star or powerhouse.

Profuse

*Profuse is a word for a lot of something or even way too much* — a profuse rainfall is a serious amount of rain. This word has to do with extravagance or abundance. If you're bleeding profusely, you're bleeding a lot. If you lavish profuse gifts on your pet, you might have too much money on your hands. When you give someone profuse praise, you're probably laying it on a little thick. If you're a farmer and your crops are profuse, that's great because you have a lot of crops. Anything profuse is happening in great amounts.

testament

*Proof , Evidence , Will* /M - test+Aana - Test aaa raha hai and log Entertainment pe lage hue hain ..Tab parents ne bola ki ye hum logo ke over pyaar ka nateeja hai ..tumse contract pe sign kara kar padhana chahiye (*Contract of Love between God and Human*) / 1. Proof, evidence of /"his easy victory was a testament to his skill"/ 2.a legal document declaring a person's wishes regarding the disposal of their property when they die , Will *Old Testament* the collection of books comprising the sacred scripture of the Hebrews and recording their history as the chosen people; the first half of the Christian Bible *New Testament* the collection of books of the Gospels, Acts of the Apostles, the Pauline and other epistles, and Revelation; composed soon after Christ's death; the second half of the Christian Bible

Prostration

*Prostate - Prostate gland is part of a man's reproductive system; Prostrate - Means to lie or bow down दण्डवत्, Make Helpless or defenseless औंधे मुँह गिरा हुआ , निस्सहाय कर देना* /M- Frustration -When People are too disappointed and in despair situation seek help in God's house , they * prostrate (Lie Down ) * there and ask forgiveness and help / *The verb prostrate means "to make helpless or defenseless."Illness, injury, food poisoning, grief — any of these things can prostrate people, or lying down in a helpless position. It can also be described lying on the ground in a helpless position.* /I was mostly bedbound then, seven months after a sudden fever had knocked me prostrate./ /Johnp wrote: "Everyone prostrates themselves before money. If only there was as much motivation for taking care of the environment."/

Protagonist

*Protagonist is defined as the main character of a story*.A novel, movie, or play might have many main characters, but it can really only have one protagonist — or maybe two in the case of, say, Romeo and Juliet. It can also mean a leading figure in a real-life situation: "Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis were the protagonists of the U.S. Civil War.

Oblique

*Purposefully Misleading*If something is oblique, it has a slanting position or direction. *In figurative use, oblique means indirect or purposely misleading. "What is two plus two?" "Fish!" as an answer is completely oblique.*

quench

*Quell, Suppress , Put an end to * Verb - *दबाना ,बुझाना , ठंडा करना* Quench *means to put out, put an end to, or satisfy*. If you're stranded in the middle of the desert with nothing drink, you're probably dreaming of a nice big glass of ice water to *quench your thirst.* Quench originally meant "extinguish fires." That meaning still works today, but we've expanded it to also apply to quenching the fiery thirst of a summer marathon runner or quenching the hot flames of passion. If you want to get deep about the word quench, consider what Voltaire said: "*Superstition sets the whole world in flames; philosophy quenches them.*"

Forbear

*Refrain , Hold Back* /M - 4 Bear - Please abstain *forbear ( refrain , Endure )* from feeding the bears / *सहन करना , धीरज रखना , अपने आप को रोक पाना* 1. To Tolerate or endure 2. To refrain from or abstain from /Some readers therefore concluded that the forbearing Dr. Spielvogel must be the hero of the novel. /

sardonic

/M - Sar + Tonic - aap agar stand up comedy club main jaaogey toh 90% comedian aise hongey jo Disrespectful ho and kisi na kis ka audience main se mazzak udatey ho (*Scornful and Mocking in humorous way उपहासपूर्ण*) ..but eventually aapke sar ko achha lagega if wo aapka mazzak nahi udaye / If someone is being *scornful and mocking in a humorous way, call her sardonic*. If you want to write comic sketches for late-night talk shows, work on being sardonic. Sardonic comes from the Greek adjective Sardonios, which actually describes a plant from a place called Sardinia that supposedly made your face contort into a horrible grin...right before you died from its poison. The Greeks used sardonic for laughter, but we only use it when someone's humor is also mocking or ironic.

Lambaste(Lam + Baste)

*Reprimand , Berate , Scold * /M -lamba + namastey - few kids disrespected their Grandparents by saying namastey in Funny way ..their parents were so furious by this they* scolded* them in front of every one / *To lambaste is to reprimand or berate someone severely. People lambaste those who have angered or disappointed them. * Have you ever watched a basketball game and noticed a coach yelling like a maniac at a referee? That coach is lambasting the referee. *Lambasting is also called chewing out, taking to task, scolding, reprimanding, berating, bawling out, and chiding. * Parents lambaste disobedient kids. A boss might lambaste a worker who is late all the time. Lambasting is severe and goes way beyond criticizing. When you are lambasting, you are furious at someone and letting them know it. /McGinty declined to comment on the pending case, but in court documents his office has lambasted the officers and the police union./

Retraction

*Retraction is defined as formally taking back something which was said or done.* When a newspaper prints something incorrect and later takes back what they said and publishes an article saying they were wrong, this is an example of a retraction.

rile(Ral)

*Roil - Agitate Rile - Agitate + Annoy * /M - * चिढ़ाना , क्रोधित करना , ग़ुस्सा दिलाना * / *To rile is to stir up, like water that becomes muddy when you rile, or to bother or disturb, especially with little annoyances*. For example, *if you bring up an unpleasant subject, this might rile your friend's mood, or a noisy neighbor might rile your nerves.* The verb rile is derived from roil, and they basically mean the same thing. * However, rile is more commonly used to mean "annoy" and roil mostly describes stirred liquid *. If you rile up your sister, what you say makes gets her worked up, ready to argue with you. *When a kid splashes around in the tub, the water is roiled — but if it gets all over the floor, his parents will be riled.* /Her comments in the piece, published in January 2012, riled many who strongly believe that individuals don't choose their sexual orientation/

boisterous

*Rough and Noisy , Unrestrained * /M - Boys + Stress - Boys jab stress main ..tab they want to have beer and more beer .. uske baad boht Chillatey hain , boht zyada masti kartey hain and boht Logo ko pareshaan kartey hain (*Rough And Noisy , Unrestrained , Rough and Stormy*) Adj उपद्रवी , उधमी, तेज़ 1.rough and noisy; noisily jolly or rowdy; clamorous; unrestrained: /the sound of boisterous laughter./ 2. rough and stormy. /She grew up in upstate New York, the youngest and by far the most boisterous of three children. / /Although the crowd was filled with boisterous young people, there were also families who came down to take in the moment. /

Elegy(Allajee)

*Sad Poem , to praise some one who is no more* /M - Eulogy - Eulogy is a speech at Funeral , Elegy is a Poem you wrote who is lost to the grave.* शोकगीत*/ *An elegy is a sad poem, usually written to praise and express sorrow for someone who is dead. Although a speech at a funeral is a eulogy, you might later compose an elegy to someone you have loved and lost to the grave.* The purpose of this kind of poem is to express feelings rather than tell a story. Thomas Gray's "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard" is a poem that reflects on the lives of common people buried in a church cemetery, and on the nature of human mortality. The noun elegy was borrowed in the 16th century from Middle French élégie, from Latin elegīa, from Greek elegeia, from elegos "mournful poem or song."

pedagogy(Peda+gaujee)

*Science of Teaching* / *प्रशिक्षण, अध्यापन-कला Pedagogy is another word for education, the profession and science of teaching.*/ 1.the profession of a teacher 2.*the principles and methods of instruction* 3.the activities of educating or instructing; activities that impart knowledge or skill This might be one reason that the word, pedagogue, is often used for a teacher who is overly interested in rules and details, hence the *science of teaching*, rather than actually getting through to his or her students.

Clandestine

*Secret , usually Illegal Activity , Covert * /M - Clan + Destine - No one knows destiny of clan , not even the sibyl who tells she can see future . Its * Clandestine ( Secret ,Usually Illegal Activity )* and you will uncover only when you are there / Pick the adjective, clandestine, to describe something that is done in secret, like your clandestine attempts to steal your brother's Halloween candy. *Clandestine, an adjective imported from Latin, describes a secret, usually illegal activity* . Often these things have to do with political and spy organizations. The CIA might run a clandestine operation to infiltrate terrorist organizations. Words with similar meanings include *secret; covert, used especially for military matters; undercover, common in espionage;* and surreptitious which emphasizes a person's efforts to keep something secret

ephemeron

*Short Lived * /M - Emeron - Emeron lagogi toh gori ho jaaogi .. but uski cream chalti boht kam din hai ( *Short Lived* ) / Noun - 1. anything short-lived or ephemeral. 2. ephemera, items designed to be useful or important for only a short time, especially pamphlets, notices, tickets, etc.

Idyll

*Short Period in which everything is amazing , or a short poem describing this * /M - Idle - Imaging you are sitting on Miami Beach with beer and watching beautiful people enjoying Atlantic Ocean , thats Idyllic , period when everything is Perfect and wonderful / * An idyll is a short period in which everything is wonderful *. You could say a cruise you took with your family was an idyll in an otherwise difficult year. In its more formal sense, idyll describes a pastoral(rural) interlude or a poem set in nature--an idealized, or idyllic, version of nature where you are drinking champagne under the apple trees, and no one has stepped in cow manure or walked through poison ivy.

fable

*Short Tale to teach a lesson * Noun झूठ , दंत कथा , किस्सा 1. *a short tale to teach a moral lesson*, often with animals or inanimate objects as characters; apologue: /the fable of the tortoise and the hare; Aesop's fables./ 2.a story not founded on fact: /This biography is largely a self-laudatory fable./ 3.an untruth; falsehood: 4.verb (used with object), fabled, fabling. *to describe as if actually so*; talk about as if true: /She is fabled to be the natural daughter of a king./ /It is a fable about an elderly woman, "Grandy," who has suffered an unnamed loss. /

idiom(Ediom)

*Slang, Speech Peculiar to person* *An idiom is a form of expression that is particular to a certain person or group of people*. If your friend always says, "squirrelly nuteriffic!" when she means something is great, she's using her own idiom. Idiom comes from the Greek idios, which means personal. Idiom originally meant "* speech peculiar or proper to a people or country.*" These days we use idiom for a specialized vocabulary or an expression that isn't obvious, like kick the bucket which means "die." If you're studying a foreign language, idioms are the hardest phrases to translate.

facetious(fa+see+tious)

*Someone who is facetious is only joking*: "I was being facetious when I told my mother I want Brussels sprouts with every meal, but she took me seriously!" *Facetious is a useful word to describe something that's humorous, or meant to be humorous. If a joke falls flat, then you can back off from it by saying you're only being facetious.* There are limits to this use of the word: if you stage an elaborate prank on your friend, making him run out into the street in his underwear because he thinks his house is on fire, calling the joke facetious will probably earn you a punch in the face.

sleazy

*Something that is sleazy is low and nasty*. It's a perfect word to describe characters like the sleazy door-to-door con men who cheat old ladies into selling them their jewelry at a deep discount. Sleazy originally meant flimsy, but nowadays it's only used to describe morally degraded people or places. *Usually it refers to sexual behavior, but it is often associated with people trying to swindle others as well. * It's not as bad as perverse or criminal, which suggest that a line has been crossed. But sleazy people make you feel uncomfortable, for sure.

unprecedented

*Something that is unprecedented is not known, experienced, or done before.* If you've never gone on a family beach vacation but you're planning one now, you could refer to it as an unprecedented decision.

salient

*Something that stands out * /M - Silent - Dyson Launched blade less , extreme silent Fan . The fan was totally different than other in that * category and totally stands out प्रमुख * / आगे की ओर कूदने को तैयार , प्रमुख *If something stands out in a very obvious way, it can be called salient * . It's time to find new friends if the differences between you and your current friends are becoming more and more salient. Salient, from the Latin verb salire "*to leap*," was originally used in English to refer to leaping animals such as a frog or deer and may still be used this way. Often, however, it is used in math or geography to mean protruding. A salient angle juts outward rather than inward. Figuratively, *it means noticeable or prominent.* When giving an argument, make your most salient points at the beginning or the end.

argot

*Special Vocabulary and Slang * / A R rehman ke gaane main goat ki aawaaz .. sab goats boley kya baat hai AR tune to humari boli(*Special Vocabulary and slangs*) use kee / *चोर-भाषा* Noun - 1. the special vocabulary and idiom of a particular profession or social group 2. slang or jargon peculiar to a particular group, esp (formerly) a group of thieves

surreptitious(Surre+ petitious)

/M - Sarah + Pet + se - Jab Sarah ke parents ko pata chala ki Sarah pet se hai uske school ke Boy friend ke saath toh un logo ne *surreptitious ( Secretive)* way main Sarah ka abortion kara diya / When someone behaves in a surreptitious way, they're being secretive. They're doing something that they don't want to be seen doing.While surreptitious means secret, it has the added sense of "sneaky" or "hidden."

pilfer

*Stealing* /M - Pil + fir : Poor girl needed diabetes medicine every month . first month she bought it somehow but in second month she *Pilfer (Stole)* it from chemist / *To pilfer is to steal something, typically of small value. *Minor thefts, like taking a roll of toilet paper out of a public bathroom or napkins from the Early Bird Buffet are what your grandfather, for example, might pilfer. The verb pilfer comes from the Old French noun pelfre, meaning "booty," or "spoils." Now pilfer is used when talking about the act of stealing loot: *you may find that you have to really restrain yourself from the desire to pilfer your friend's new fur-lined gloves, even though you're pretty sure she pilfered your headphones* . Robin Hood was able to pilfer from the rich to give to the poor. How romantic!

Innervate

*Strength , Force , Energy* /M - Inn+Nerve+Ate - Days INN main aaraam se baith kar ..apni biwi ka nerve:dimaag ate:khana , you will feel *confident ,energized and motivated* / प्रेरित करना ,अंदर आना Verb (Transitive ) to supply with energy; to stimulate; energized /Ex - The nerves that innervate the ear actively stimulate the limbic system, which is the pleasure circuit of the brain /

Stern

*Strict , Harsh , unforgiving * You know when you've done something really wrong, and the person who gets you in trouble has that unforgiving look on his face? The best word for that look is stern, meaning "strict" or "severe." Stern, strict, severe, harsh, unforgiving — they all more or less mean the same thing, which is very tough and exacting, with a little helping of seriousness thrown in for good measure. What does this have to do with the stern of a boat, also known as the rear area? Um, nothing? But it's good to know about that meaning too, since it could come in handy some day when you're giving directions on a ship.

Resent

*Strong Negative Feeling* Verb - क्रोध करना , नाराज होना To resent something is to *feel anger or bitterness toward it*. You might resent someone who has treated you poorly. To resent is a *strong, negative feeling*. You may resent the accusation that you were stealing cookies, or when a teacher yelled at you for whispering, even though everyone else was too. You might resent a friend who has more money or friends than you. Lots of people resent celebrities because they're famous and wealthy. If your friend borrowed a sweater and didn't return it, you would probably resent it. Resenting is the opposite of being grateful. *Resentment - * *Resentment, or the strong and painful bitterness you feel when someone does something wrong to you, doesn't have actual physical weight, but it feels very heavy and can last a long time. Forgiveness is one way to get rid of resentment.* Sometimes resentment lasts for years. It can be strong and hard to pull out, like an old, gnarled tree root. While resentment over being wronged can come from just one act against you, it also can get stronger over time, as in "your growing resentment might just come from the fact that the team captain always picks you last." It also comes from misunderstandings, like feeling resentment over a dirty look you thought was directed at you but really wasn't. It's usually best to root out resentment early.

Decent

*Sufficient or Acceptable* Lastly, decent can also mean "appropriately clothed" (or just "not naked"). If a stranger is knocking on your door, you're probably not going to answer it until you're decent.

insinuate

*Suggest , Imply , Introduce * /M - Insaan +Sin + ate = Insaan ka agar Pet bhara ho toh wo SIN nahi karta hai ..that (*Indicates , introduce*) ki bhook aapse sab kuch kara sakta hai / Verb - संकेत करना , लल्लो पच्चो करके घुस जाना 1.to suggest or hint slyly: 2.to bring or introduce into a position or relation by indirect or artful methods: /Ex - Your questions are disingenuous because they're meant to insinuate there are fundamental and serious issues with climate change. / / Ex - The agency should not insinuate itself into the market between the actors. /

evangelical

*Super Enthusiastic about something* /*M- ev + angel +ical */ *Evangelical is a word to describe anyone who is super enthusiastic about something *. You might meet *an evangelical Christian or an evangelical cheerleader, or even an evangelical Christian cheerleader.* Evangelical is an adjective originally used to describe a relationship to a particular school of Protestantism. More generally, evangelical is used to describe a strict belief in the Christian gospel and an emphasis on personal conversion to Christianity. Outside of church, *the adjective evangelical can describe someone who is an extremely enthusiastic or zealous about a particular cause.* An evangelical supporter of something will speak passionately and try very hard to get you to convert to their cause. /*Ex- it is open about the fact that it is an evangelical Christian organization, with a mission to share the love of Jesus with those who do not believe in him */

snob

*Superior Nobody in that field , घमण्डी , Gurur* /M - Superior + Nobody : A person who thinks that he is *Superior in that field* / Noun , घमण्डी If your best friend tells you that you've become a snob, he means that you've become *condescending and you like to think you're better than everyone else*. Of course maybe he's a snob for looking down on your behavior — how annoying! Snob has a funny history. *It used be slang for "shoemaker," then "common person," and then came to mean "someone who doesn't have a degree from a fancy university," and then it started to mean "people who liked to pretend they have degrees and are generally fancy and look down on common people like shoemakers.*" Nowadays, snob isn't only for people with false pretensions. *Rich people who despise less tasteful folks are snobs*, too. / Ex - She speaks with an aristocratic intonation, but is no snob. /

quell

*Suppress , Put an End to * /M - Yell - If someone is yelling at you then you have to either Ignore it or punch him back to Extinguish yelling (*Suppress , Put an End to *)/ Verb शांत करना ,जीतना 1 . To Suppress , Put an End to , Extinguish 2. to quiet or allay (emotions, anxieties, etc.): /The child's mother quelled his fears of the thunder./ /Yesterday the military named a new civilian prime minister, apparently in a bid to quell the protests. / /It remains to be seen whether the military retains the credibility to quell the protests. /

syntactic

*Syntax - Arrange in Order to Make Logic * वाक्य रचना संबंधी *One of the hardest things about learning a new language is figuring out the syntax, or the basic rules for the way that words and phrases should be arranged in a sentence in order for it to make sense.* Syntax isn't necessarily something you think about when you're speaking, but the order of words in a sentence can make a huge difference to its meaning. If you aren't convinced, try telling a waiter that you'd like "a slice of dessert for cake." And then, as the waiter stands there looking confused, try explaining that you don't think "important is very syntax."

usher(Asher)

*That guy who guided you to your seat? He's called an usher *. You most often see ushers at movie theaters and weddings. An usher is someone with the job of helping people find their seats. At the movies, ushers take your tickets and tell you where to go. At some theaters and sports venues, the ushers might actually take you to your seat — they usher you there. If you're an usher in a wedding party, it's your job to walk guests down the aisle and to their seats. The doorkeeper at a courtroom or legislative chamber is called an usher, too.

Obtuse

*The adjective obtuse literally means "rounded" or "blunt," but when it's used for a person, it means "not quick or alert in perception"* — in other words, not the sharpest tool in the shed. It's not just for dull people, but also dull angles: in geometry, an obtuse angle is one that is not so sharp (between 90 and 180 degrees). /And that's probably me being obtuse to leave it open at the end./ /With Washington's anointed seers strikingly obtuse on the subject of geopolitical power, perhaps it's time to get back to basics./

Upshot

*The upshot of an action is the end result, whatever happens last as a consequence of the original action* The *upshot of reading this sentence is that you will understand what the word upshot means*. In the 16th century, *the last arrow launched in an archery competition was called the upshot*. Like that final arrow, *the upshot is the conclusion, the Outcome*.

Valence

*The valence of an atom is the ability of that atom, expressed in numbers, to combine or interact with another atom*, depending on the number of electrons available for bonding in the atom's outer shell, called the valence shell. The Latin valentia, "strength," is the basis for the word valence. It's a fitting word, as the valence of an element determines its strength — an idea that was first recorded in the later 19th Century. Since the word valence carries the idea of interaction, *it can also be used to describe the amount of attraction or repulsion by people, either toward each other or an event*. /"I do think that when the emotional valence of a story is this high, you really have to verify it."/

Bode

*The verb bode ( भविष्य सूचित करना) suggests prescience or forecasting. Something bodes well when the clues or signs imply a favorable outcome. But if something bode ill, you'd better watch out!* Something might bode good fortune, or it could bode disaster. The word, which can be traced back to the Old English bodian "to announce, foretell," is also found in the adjective foreboding, which means "ominous, boding ill." /Their recent capture of the dam at Ramadi a year after they took the Fallujah dam bodes ill for downstream parts of Iraq./ /It is an unusual match-up to have the same two judges on the same case and one that does not bode well for the administration./

hone

*The verb hone means to sharpen skills*. When you practice shooting baskets every day after school, you are honing your skills as a basketball player.

disgorge(Dis + Gaurge)

*To Empty or throw out* /M - Dis + Gorgeous - Ek Gorgeous ladki ne *Vomit* kar daala ..Puri ki puri bottle jo pee thi wo ulat dee(*Empty*) .. she is not looking Gorgeous any more / 1. *to throw out* (swallowed food, etc) from the throat or stomach; vomit 2.*to discharge or empty* of (contents), to yield /*Ex - An Australian-owned gold mine in western Romania has disgorged 378500 litres (100000 gallons) of cyanide-contaminated water */ /*Ex - Charter flights have disgorged thousands of English holidaymakers on to the Tarmac at Faro as the annual invasion of Portugal begins */ 3.(transitive) ( angling) to remove (a hook) from the mouth or throat of (a fish) Hind - उगलना , निकाल देना

spur

*To Encourage* /M - Is Par - Is paar se us paar jaane ke liye Motivate karnea .*To Encourage , or to stimulate प्रोत्साहन , उकसाव , प्रेरणा * / *To spur something on is to get it going, to encourage it, to hasten it or stimulate.* Cowboys wear spiky metal tools called spurs on their boots to kick their horse, and spur them to greater speed. *Economists talk of lowering interest rates to spur spending. A new source of funding for research will hopefully spur new proposals for research from scientists.* An earthquake in China might spur cities in California to a higher standard of earthquake preparedness. You might spur your team on to victory by cheering from the sidelines.

protract

*To Extend , Lengthy * /M - Protractor - To create a line using Scale and Protractor .. *To extend* / Verb खींचना , बढ़ाना 1. Extend the duration of , Prolong /Child custody battles among super-wealthy celebrities can be particularly bruising and protracted. /

Imbue

*To Inoculate , Introduce , inspire * /M- I + Am + Budh : To inspire yourself with teachings and opinion of Budha (*Introduce , Add* ) / Verb - *दिल पर असर डालना* 1. to impregnate or inspire, as with feelings, opinions, etc.: /The new political leader was imbued with the teachings of Mahatma Gandhi. / 2. to saturate or impregnate with moisture, color, etc.

inoculate

*To Introduce* /M - Inoculation - Process of *Introducing Antigen* to Study Disease / Verb - *टीका लगाना* 1. to implant (a disease agent or antigen) in a person, animal, or plant to produce a disease for study or to stimulate disease resistance. 2.to affect or treat (a person, animal, or plant) in this manner. 3.to introduce (microorganisms) into surroundings suited to their growth, as a culture medium. 4.to imbue (a person), as with ideas. 5.Metallurgy. to treat (molten metal) chemically to strengthen the microstructure.

prevaricate

*To Mislead or Lie* /M - Pre +Vacate - Tenant ne NRI Makaan malik se bola ki hum log toh ghar 1 mahine pahle hi chod chuke hain (*To Mislead , lie*) ..Jab makanmalik ne kisi ko bheja check karne ke liye toh pata chal 1 din pehle hi vacate kiya hai / टालमटोल करना Verb - To deliberately avoid the truth; to mislead,To lie /Ex- it's time for politics to stop prevaricating /

confound

*To Mistake and Confuse* /M - Kaun + Found - A magician was showing card trick and suddenly he disappeared a card , he asked them to find it . At last, when he asked one of the person to check his pocket , every one was *confounded (हक्का-बक्का करना , गलत साबित करना , चकरा देना , Mistake , confuse )* that the card was there./ *The verb confound means both "to mistake" and "to confuse."* If you decide to treat yourself to a delicious dessert, you might find yourself confounded by the overwhelming number of choices. If you end up ordering the chocolate cake but the waiter brings you chocolate mousse, the waiter has somehow confounded those two options. * Another meaning you may come across in literature is "to damn," as in "Confound it! You are the most exasperating person on the planet. *

Flail

*To Wave Around Wildly * /M - Fail - A family was stuck on a deserted island .. they saw a ship in distance , to get attention they tried to shout for help ..but failed to get any notice .. then they wave there hands wildly which Captain noticed for ships deck / To *flail means to wave around wildly*. If you are stranded on a deserted island and you see a ship in the distance, it's a good idea to flail your arms in the air to get the captain's attention. It is also related to the noun flail, a stick with a swinging attachment to it, used to thresh grain. As a verb, it most often refers to arms, but can also involve the whole body, especially if someone is a very wild dancer. Other things can flail as well. * If someone admits that his business is flailing, it's probably lacking direction and not doing very well.*

Braid

*To braid is to lace or weave together. Hair that has been done this way is in braids.* *Have you ever seen someone with their hair bound together in thick, rope-like arrangements? That hairdo is called braids. *Women often braid each other's hair or get it braided by a hairdresser. The longer your hair, the longer your potential braids. To braid hair, you have to weave the strands of hair together: this is also called plaiting, lacing, and interlacing. Other materials can be braided, but the most popular thing to braid is definitely hair.

concur

*To concur is to agree or approve of something. If someone says something you agree with, you can say "I concur!"* /M - Con + Karega - Boss ne poocha team se .. Ye kaam kaun karega .. kisi ne kuch nahi bola , thodi der mian Boss ne ek bande ki taraf ishara kartey huey bola . I think ye kaam tumhey karna chahiye , coz you have skill and knowledge about this .. Ye suntey hee sabney bola ..We Concur (* We Agree, Approve)*/ Verb 1. happen Simultaneously 2. Be In Accord , be in Agreement /Let's be clear on this: We concur completely with the speaker./

Defy

*To defy is to openly refuse to do something.* You can defy the no-costumes-in-class rule if you wear your fairy wings to school, but just don't try to defy the laws of gravity unless you can actually fly.

Dispel

*To dispel is to get rid of something that's bothering or threatening you*, regardless of whether that's warts, worries, or wild dogs. However, that when *dispel is used in reference to physical foes, it often has the added meaning of scattering your opponents in all directions*

Embrace

*To embrace something is to welcome it with open arms, hold, hug, accept completely* You might embrace your sweetheart, or even changes in technology. Embrace is from the French verb embrasser, which started out meaning "to clasp in the arms" (but now includes kissing). *You embrace someone by giving her a giant hug, and when you embrace a new idea, it's like your brain gives it a hug.* The noun and verb form are similar: If you embrace someone who isn't your sweetheart, you might get caught in an embrace. In Henry IV, Shakespeare writes about a really, really tight embrace: "I will embrace him with a soldier's arm/That he shall shrink under my courtesy."

Enlist

*To enlist is to voluntarily join the military*. You may have seen television commercials or posters encouraging people to enlist. There are various ways people end up in the military. *Sometimes there's a draft(Also called Conscript) , which selects people whether they want to go or not. Sometimes people enlist, which means they sign up on their own*. Enlisting also refers to recruiting or hiring people for some purpose or organization. If you are moving, you might try to enlist your friends to help — good luck with that.

Infer

*To guess on Logic given or presented * When you infer something, you read between the lines. *To infer is to make a well informed guess — if you see your mom's bag on the table, you might infer that she's home.* *When you infer, you listen closely to someone and guess at things they mean but haven't actually said.* It's like guessing, but not making wild guesses. You're making deductions — guesses based on logic. Another kind of inferring is more scientific, like when a scientist has part of a dinosaur fossil and can infer what the rest of the dinosaur looked like. When you see the word infer, think "educated guess."

extrapolate

*To infer from facts * /M - Extra + Pollution - Aaj Pollution zyada hai coz aaj thand zyada thi and mausam cloudy tha ...and i think kal subah kohra hoga by extrapolating these facts(*Deducing these facts*) / Verb - to infer (something not known) by using but not strictly deducing from the known facts /Ex - It's harder to extrapolate with little or no data./ / Ex - You cannot extrapolate a generalization based upon a handful of data. /

plumb

*To plumb a body of water, you measure its depth. To plumb a house, you connect all of its pipes. To make carpentry plumb, you get it exactly vertical.* Originally, the verb plumb only meant "to measure the depth of water." These days, if you *"plumb the depths" of something, you go in deep for knowledge and experience:* /But God intended marriage to be about more than "plumbing," Mr. Vines argued: "Marriage ideally should be about permanent, mutual, self-giving, self-sacrificing love."/ /The opera does less well at plumbing the wreck Parker's drug use made of his personal life./

Ratify

*To ratify a treaty or contract is to officially approve it by signing or voting for it.* /M - Rat + fight - 2 Rat ke groups main jhagda ho gaya ...unko shaant karne ke liye ek third group ne Treaty Or Contract karaye ..Ye Contract ko dono group ke leaders ne Sign kiya ki Ab Jhagda band ho jaayega *प्रमाणित करना* / *To ratify a treaty or contract is to officially approve it by signing or voting for it.* You and your brothers and sisters might devise a plan for a family vacation to Disney World, but it would need to be ratified by your parents. You are most likely to hear the word ratify when talking about laws. In the US, Congress writes bills, but they need to be ratified before they become law. An amendment to the U.S. Constitution must be ratified by three-fourths of the states, either passed by the state legislatures or by state conventions /Final approval of a bankruptcy plan, which must be ratified by U.S Federal Bankruptcy Judge Meredith Jury, is likely to take months./

vanquish

*Total Winner * /M - Van + Quish - verb (used with object) - Van ki kushti main ek van dusre van se jeeet jata hai *जीत लेना*/ To vanquish is to be *the complete and total winner, to overpower and overcome, whether in a contest, a race, or a war. It generally suggests a total trouncing, to the point of humiliation — or worse — for the loser*. Sometimes words for the same thing are effective in different ways because they offer different levels of meaning. *For example, in a game, you can simply win, or you can vanquish your opponent. The former is enough, but the latter makes that defeat sound so much worse, like a total rout. *&Philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche once stated, "Against war it may be said that it makes the victor stupid and the vanquished revengeful. /He vanquished all his fears./ /She is credited with helping to end the war and vanquish dictator Charles Taylor in 2003, opening the door for Sirleaf. /

Autocratic

*Tyrant Leader* /*M - Auto + cratic - Autocratic describes a way of ruling, but not in a nice way. An autocratic leader is one who rules with an iron fist; in other words — someone with the behavior of a dictator */. Autocratic rulers don't tend to be popular. They use fear and control to gain total power over their people. Often, their country is left destitute as a result of their actions. The word autocratic is often used to describe the head of a country, but really, anyone who is a despotic leader can qualify — including the boss who threatens to fire you if you refuse to polish his shoes and work every holiday.

Fallow

*Unused* /M -fallow mind- If you're smart but lazy, someone might say you have a fallow mind./ Something that is fallow is left unused. We use the word to talk about any unused resource, it started as a work about land. Fallow comes from the old English word for plowing, and refers to the practice of leaving fields unplowed in rotation--when a field lies fallow, the soil regains nutrients that are sucked up by over-planting * अजोत भूमि*

*W*an(waaan)

*Unwell, Lack of Energy, fading Light* /M - Van - A guy on date brought his Maruti Van to pick his date , After looking at the VAN girl was too scared and remembers all the scene in which Van was used to kidnap people ... her face turned *Yellow and was looking Unwell with lack of Energy ( also Fading Light) * / Someone who is wan is visibly unwell and lacking in energy. If you've had the flu for over a week, and you finally get out of bed looking pale and tired, your mother might say that you look wan. When your aunt comes to dinner and eats three helpings of dessert, she might seem a little wan as she drinks her tea, meaning she looks sickly and weak — and no wonder, after so many slices of pie! *Wan can also describe a fading light — one that is sickly and weak,* just like your aunt. When the light bulb in the living room burns out and leaves only wan twilight filtering in, you'll find it impossible to read.

ruminant

*Use the word ruminant for any cud-chewing animal, like a cow or a camel*. A ruminant is a mammal with hooves and a complicated system of stomach compartments whose digestion works by chewing partly digested food a second time in order to soften it. Cows, moose, giraffes, and goats are all ruminants. The Latin meaning of ruminant is literally "chewing over again" or "chewing the cud." A similar word is ruminate, which comes from the same root and means "think deeply about something."

Venial(We+neal)

*Venal - corrupt or willing to take bribes. Venial - Easily excused or forgiven मामूली गलती* /M- Venal - In Arab , Venal crimes like involving in corruption or caught while taking bribes can put you in sever punishment . but in India its *venial ( मामूली गलती ) and can be forgiven easily* / *Venial crimes and sins are excusable. They're not a big deal * .In school, there are so many things that are against the rules: talking during class, tossing spitballs, pulling the fire alarm, stealing a basketball, etc.they all are Venial crimes and sins.

indwell

*Verb - inhabit , Inner or self Moral Principle or motivating force .* one that remains inside the body for a prolonged time / Ex - Because she taught me to see this indwelling spirit that animates the green woods, it lives now, not only in trees but in her. / / Ex - It is an indwelling catheter that is surgically placed directly into the bladder through the abdomen. / Hindi - *अन्तर्निवास*

Profound

*Very Deep* /M - Pro + found - To become a Pro of anything you need to gain profound( * very deep* ) knowledge and skill / The definition of* profound is being deep, having intellectual depth or being intensely felt*. When you need a word that's deeper than "deep," consider profound.

Fervent

*Very strong feelings or enthusiasm जोश* /M - Fur + Went - to remove fur from Fashion Industry , PETA opposed slaughtering of all the species .* They have very strong feeling and enthusiasm to save these species and will not stop until they are out of danger * .. the protest was so *hot and burning* that people from different places supported them / *Use fervent to describe a person or thing that shows very strong feelings or enthusiasm *. If you have a fervent desire to become an actress, you'll stop at nothing to realize your dream.*The adjective fervent and the noun fervor are often associated with the feelings aroused by patriotism, religion, or a belief that you support or oppose*. A near synonym for the adjective is ardent. Fervent is from Middle English, from Old French, from the Latin verb fervēre "to boil, glow." /The Iraqi government was being run by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a fervent Al Qaeda foe and ostensible American ally./

tempest

*Violent Uproar, Disturbance , तूफ़ान* /M - Temper +est - Hot Temper at its highest level ...which can cause Violent Storm (*Violent Uproar, Disturbance , Wind*/ Noun हलचल, तूफ़ान 1.a violent wind or storm 2.a violent commotion, uproar, or disturbance Verb 1.to agitate or disturb violently /Ex -Love is a torment of the mind,A tempest everlasting;/

belligerent

*War related ,hostile* /M - Bell + Urgent - In world war (WAR) II when enemy planes fly over cities ..Log Church ka Bell baja kar sab ko inform kartey they (*Engaged in War*) . All (*members of military forces*) aise samay main Kaafi aggresive(*Aggresive , Hostile*) hokar Planes ko shoot karne ki koshish kartey they / adjective योद्धा , लड़ाका 1.warlike; given to waging war. 2.of warlike character; aggressively hostile; bellicose: a belligerent tone. 3.waging war; engaged in war: / a peace treaty between belligerent powers./ 4.pertaining to war or to those engaged in war: /belligerent rights./ noun 5.a state or nation at war. 6.a member of the military forces of such a state.

Tangible

*When you can touch something, it's tangible:* "I need tangible proof that aliens exist — I want to shake their little green hands!" Tangible is from Latin tangere "to touch," and it simply means something that can be touched or felt, though it can be used in metaphorical senses: "tangible assets" *have a value that can be precisely measured, and "tangible grief" can be clearly sensed by an onlooker*. So you might not need to physically touch something for it to be tangible, but it has to be grounded in the real world of facts: "Has the teen pop star demonstrated any tangible ability to sing?"

Eavesdrop

*When you eavesdrop, you secretly listen in on someone's conversation*. A little girl might eavesdrop on her parents in an attempt to find out what she's getting for her birthday. /From there, he could eavesdrop on phone conversations, rummage through text messages and contacts, or turn on the microphone to capture audio./

grope

*When you grope for something, you try to get a grip on it.* If you drop your flashlight in a dark cave, you might grope around for it. Beware of snakes! *If you're asked a question and you grope for an answer, you're at a loss for words.* You can also grope another person, although I wouldn't recommend it: grope is usually used to describe touching that is unwanted (i.e. creepy behavior). If you do grope someone, don't bother groping for an explanation when you get slapped or arrested.

home in

*When you home in on something, you focus your attention on it *. Your brother who is always reading probably homes in on bookstores when he visits a new place.

Tardy

*When you're tardy, you're late*. If you've ever been late for school, you know about tardy, and you may have a stash of notes your teacher has sent home to your parents, informing them of your tardiness. *You may be tardy for an appointment because you got stuck in traffic, or maybe you just slept late and you don't have good time management skills*. Whatever the excuse, being tardy almost always annoys whoever's waiting for you. *As a reality TV star once crooned, "Don't be tardy for the party." The word comes from the Latin tardus, meaning "slow."*

hanker

*Yearn - Desire , Attracted towards something Hanker - Incessant Craving to fulfill some urge Longing - Desire which you know cant be fulfilled Pine - to fail in health from grief , regret or Longing * /M - Hanger - A cat was resting on Hanger ..She was stuck there and was getting Restless to come down and drink milk (*Restless to Fulfill Desire*)/ तरसना Verb - *Hanker suggests a restless or incessant craving to fulfill some urge or desire*: to hanker for a promotion; to hanker after fame and fortune

spin-off

*a business that is created by separating part of an operating business into a separate entity*

repertoire

*a collection of works that an artist or company can perform* All of the behaviors a person can do; or a set of behaviors relevant to a particular setting or task.

harangue

*a long, passionate, and vehement speech, especially one delivered before a public gathering. * /M - Hara + rang - An Indian wore Green Color in the stadium where India and pakistan were playing . All Indians gave him stern look and one of the old guy gave him * harangue ( big nasty lecture *) for wearing it / *A harangue is more than a speech, louder than a discussion, and nastier than a lecture*. It is a verbal attack that doesn't let up, delivered as a verb or received as a noun. Either way, it's pretty unpleasant. /He used to harangue any of the young men in Homs not participating in protests, recalled Moutlak. /

Wag

*a witty amusing person who makes jokes मसखरा */Many commentators used the burgeoning scandal as a chance to channel their inner wag./

canard

*base Less Story* / M - Kanade ne Duck khayi ..and baad main sabko bola ki Duck ke andar usey ek Fish mili jiske andar ek diamond tha .. We knew ki that (*was baseless story*) / झूठी अफ़वाह Noun 1. A False or Baseless , report , rumor 2. Duck Intended or used for food /An old canard that just keeps rolling along/

Contradistinction

*by contrast*, having opposite qualities/Ex - We used hamburgers and soda in contradistinction to healthy food. /

Covert

*concealed; disguised. under cover of darkness secret or hidden not openly practiced or engaged in or shown or avowed गुप्त * *Covert is the opposite of overt, which means obvious, something in full view.* "The teachers weren't impressed by the students' overt attempt to derail the discussion. 'You aren't even pretending to try to like Shakespeare,' she complained."

devout(Dee+vout)

*deeply Religious * /M - Dev Out ho kar ghar chala gaya ...baad main pata chala ki usko mandir jaana that and he was *too religious* / (adj.) deeply religious; sincere; earnest; heartfelt /*Ex - Disbelief and anger greet arrest of devout Muslim */

Scruff

*dirty and untidy* /M - Scrub - Scrubbing karna dirty and untidy kapdo ko/

contentious

*disputatious, argumentative. * /M - Content - ious - Brother and sister were arguing (*Argue or heated Discussion झगड़ालू , विवादपूर्ण*) about which Toy to purchase as their parents told them to be content with 1/ A contentious issue is one that people are likely to argue about, and a contentious person is someone who likes to argue or fight. *Some issues — like abortion, the death penalty, and gun control — are very controversial. They're also contentious, because people tend to argue about them, and the arguments will probably go on forever*. Contentious issues get people angry and in a fighting mood. On the other hand, some people always seem to be in a fighting mood, no matter what the issue is. People like that are contentious too.

dynamo

*energetic person* 1.generator; forceful, 1.an electric generator, especially for direct current.

Agog

*excited * /M - AG + OG - Anil Kapoor song in which he is singing: AG OG yeh bhi sunogi,kehta hu mai jo woh tum bhi sunoji..1 2 ka 4 4 2 ka 1, My name is lakhan..He is too *excited* in that song, and is curious to tell his story to everyone... / Adj *उत्सुक* 1. Highly Excited by Eagerness , curiosity , anticipation , highly impatient /Fans around the world could watch agog as the deadline neared and bids rose. / /Nearly everyone is agog these days at the wonders of the electronic computer. /

Splay

*expand, dislocate, awkward.* /M - spread + Play - Gymnast had competition to check who can *spread out* their legs in 180 degrees ..People were afraid that it can *Disjoin or Dislocate* their legs and will definitely *look awkward फैल जाना भद्दा बेडौल* / 1. to spread out, expand, or extend. 2.to disjoin; dislocate. 3.clumsy or awkward.

Apocarpous

*flowers with two or more carpels* and the carpels are not fused (ie. free)

eloquence

*fluency and aptness of Language* /M - E+Logo+Sense - Indian logo ka sense boht hi kharaab hai ..kahin par bhi kachra fek dete hai ..kisi ki bhi izzat nahi kartey ..En sab cheezo se pareshaan ho kar .Ek politician ne ek speech de daali ..In which he used his (*fluency and aptness of Language* ) to convey people ki ye sab na kare(*Persuasive*) .. After that people stopped / Noun - 1. the practice or art of using language with fluency and aptness. Hindi - उत्तम बोली /Ex - Jenny Diski applies angry eloquence to inoperable cancer diagnosis / 2. the quality of being persuasive or moving

cordial(Kor+gel)

*friendly , Anything that Invigorates and exhilarates* /M - Cocktail+ Dial - After drinking Cocktail mixed with Strawberry , you feel good(*मन प्रफुल्लित करने वाला पेयन*) and like to talk to your friend (*Friend*)/ Adj - 1.courteous and gracious; friendly; warm: 2.sincere; heartfelt: Hindi - स्नेहपूर्ण Noun - 1.a strong, sweetened, aromatic alcoholic liquor; liqueur. 2.a stimulating medicine. 3.anything that invigorates or exhilarates. Hindi - मन प्रफुल्लित करने वाला पेयन

sceptic

*having doubts* about something that other people think is true or right -> I'm very ... about the results of the survey.

Desultory

*lacking in consistency, Visible Order , Random* /M - De + Resultory - One of the Maths teacher has to give results of each class he taught in Descending order (from 12th Standard to 1st ) as per School rule ..But he didnt follow the *plan or purpose and jupmed from one class to other without following School's rule.बेमेल*/ * If you lack a definite plan or purpose and flit from one thing to another, your actions are desultory*. Some people call such desultory wanderings spontaneous. Others call it "*being lost.*" The adjective desultory comes from the word *desultor, which was a circus rider who would leap from the back of one galloping horse onto another*. From this literal sense of jumping from one thing to another, we get the modern meaning of desultory as jumping between things without a logical purpose

coarse

*lacking in fineness, unrefined* Adj 1. *lacking in fineness* or delicacy of texture, structure. /The stiff, coarse fabric irritated her skin/ 2. composed of relatively large parts or particles / People dip their potatoes in coarse salt and edible clay. / 3. vulgar; obscene; crude, unrefined /The coarse talk of the banking trade/

Improbity

*probity - Having Strong Moral Principles Improbity - Lack of principles * /M - I + Am + Probable - A big scam was revealed in which 5 politicians were shown taking 1000 Cr ..One of them said I am probably the best politician in world who thinks only about people and have no savings at all ..but the evidence clearly showed him taking few crores ..It clearly shows his Improbity* Lack of Honesty बेईमानी */ 1. Lack of Honesty or Moral scruples /Despite the bitter setbacks faced by journalists across different formats trying to expose injustice and improbity at the heart of the Ara/

stiff upper lip

*self-restraint in the expression of emotion *(especially fear or grief)

Gospel

*the story of Christ's life and teachings*, especially as contained in the first four books of the New Testament, namely Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.

amain

*to a high degree; exceedingly; at full speed* /Ex - was in the act of putting his trumpet to his mouth, it somehow fell from his hand into the sea; and the wind now rising amain /

Simmer Down

*to become calm or quiet, as from a state of anger or turmoil* /We waited for the audience to simmer down./

hive off

*to become transferred from the main body of a commercial or industrial enterprise through the agency of new ownership.*

Go the whole Hog

*to proceed or indulge completely* and unreservedly: / Ex - We went the whole hog and took a cruise around the world./ /to go the whole patriotic hog ahead of such an epochal national event, our cousin put on a garment he only dusts down for extra-special occasions /

quaint

*unusual in an Old fashioned and charming Way* /M - Quant - Quant book of McGraw Hills explain Maths in *Old fashioned way* , but the answers can easily be understood / *अनोखा , पुराने ढंग का* *Quaint means strange and unusual in an old-fashioned and charming way*. It's a word you'd use to describe a little store that sells tea cozies and antique tea services, or your grandmother's habit of calling the radio the "wireless." *There is a commonly used sarcastic sense of quaint--when something is run down or shabby and you're trying to say something positive, you might substitute"How...quaint" for "How...interesting."*In Middle English, this adjective meant clever or cunning. Its origin is Old French queinte, cointe, from Latin cognitus "known," from cognōscere "to learn." /It is one of those quaint pastimes of days gone by --- like checkers or going to a Shriners Convention. / /n a quaint London tea shop, Mackenzie Scott is distractedly fiddling with the handle of her dainty bone china cup./

smug

*आत्मतुष्टि से पूर्ण , अपने हाल में मस्त* /M - Sheila + Mug - Ek aadmi Sheela ki Jawaani gaana dekhta hua apne Mug main Beer Pee raha tha .. he was feeling happy and proud about his life(*आत्मतुष्टि से पूर्ण , अपने हाल में मस्त*) ..itne main uski biwi aati hai and Beer alag alag kar ke Channel Change kar deti hia / Adj - contentedly confident of one's ability, superiority, or correctness; complacent. Slang - Having or showing excessive pride in oneself Hindi - आत्मतुष्टि से पूर्ण , अपने हाल में मस्त /That one would certainly warrant a firm shoulder tap from the overbearing smugness algorithm./ /Feeling smug that your iPhone can't be hacked? /

cadence

*आवाज का उतार-चढ़ाव* /M - Kanade + Dance - Kanade ka dance , jo kabhi Chadhta hai and kabhi girta hai / Noun -*आवाज का उतार-चढ़ाव* rhythmic flow of a sequence of sounds or words

Ferment

*उबाल, क्रोध में होना, agitation, unrest , excitement * 1. Fermentation process (Fermentation is a metabolic process that converts sugar to acids, gases or alcohol. It occurs in yeast and bacteria, but also in oxygen-starved muscle cells, as in the case of lactic acid fermentation.) 2. *agitation; unrest; excitement; commotion; tumult: * /The new painters worked in a creative ferment. The capital lived in a political ferment./ /While Europe and the United States constructed their share of third-rate apartment blocks and dull glass office towers, Latin America was a locus of ferment./

Austere

*कठोर , रूखा , सीधा-सादा* /M - Australia : Australian Team ne Indian cricket Team ko khane pe bulaya and then सीधा-सादा (*Simple*) Khana Khila ke रूखा ( *Serious*) tone main bola Ki bartan saaf karo .. That was a tough (*कठोर*) punishment for coming Late/ Adj - 1. severe in manner or appearance; uncompromising; strict; forbidding Hindi - कठोर /Ex - why he thinks the future is bleak; and the panel comes up with a reading list for a new age of austerity / 2. grave; sober; solemn; serious: Hindi - रूखा 3. severely simple; without ornament: Hindi - सीधा-सादा / Should art be austere in a recession/

Enervate( E + Nervate)

*कमज़ोर , शक्तिहीन करना* /M - End+Nervous - En waqt pe Nervous hone and match main weak perform (*Weaken*)/ कमज़ोर , शक्तिहीन करना Verb - to deprive of force or strength; destroy the vigor of; weaken. Adj - Enervated /Ex - Accordingly the team must look to energies not enervate/ Hindi - कमज़ोर बनाना ,हतोत्साह करना

incumbent

*कर्तव्य* /M - Income + bent : Once you get promoted and be officer(*Officer*) then your salary bent upwards ..tum Ghoos bhi le saktey ho ..lekin wo tumhare (*कर्तव्य*) obligations ke khilaaf hai / adjective अधिकारी, पदधारी ,कर्तव्य ,अवश्य , सहारा लिये हुए 1.holding an indicated position, role, office, etc., currently: /Ex -the incumbent officers of the club. / 2.obligatory (often followed by on or upon): /Ex - a duty incumbent upon me./ 3.Archaic. *resting, lying, leaning*, or pressing on something:/Ex - incumbent upon the cool grass. / noun 4.the holder of an office: /*The incumbent was challenged by a fusion candidate.*/ 5.British. a person who holds an ecclesiastical benefice.

Stigma

*कलंक * /M - Sigma - A sign which gives a distinguish *mark of Social Disgrace ,धब्बा, कलंक * / Noun 1. a distinguishing mark of social disgrace /the stigma of having been in prison/ 2.a small scar or mark such as a birthmark /Now, we talk about reducing the stigma of this disease—yet we've treated a visitor living with it as a threat. /

Manifest

*जाहिर करना , प्रकट* /M - Money + fest -When you pay $20 as an entry fees for College fest and there you didnt get anything to eat or drink , you will be frustrated and will *Manifest (जाहिर करना , प्रकट)* your emotions to every One/ *Choose the verb manifest when someone shows something for everyone to notice जाहिर करना , प्रकट*. You might manifest your dislike of school food by stirring it around into a big pile of slop on your tray. *Noun - a customs document listing the contents put on a ship or plane*

Rubberneck

*जिज्ञासु व्यक्ति* /M - Rubber + Neck - A guy was wearing Rubber rings around neck , so when we passed him we cant help staring at it * जिज्ञासु व्यक्ति* / *The term rubberneck describes what you do when you can't help staring at something.* People tend to rubberneck when they're passing a car accident on the highway. You might rubberneck at a waiter who drops a huge tray full of glasses. Tourists are sometimes accused of stopping to rubberneck at unfamiliar sights as well. *Rubberneck was first used in 1897, from the idea that nosy or curious people turn their heads for a closer look as if their necks are made of rubber.* /Callie hadn't been any help; instead of navigating, she had frankly rubbernecked, bending towards Paul to peer out his window or hanging halfway out of her own to get a good look at someone's cavernous two-car garage or expensively landscaped lawn. /

Swindle

*ठगना , बहकाना * Verb *धोखा , छल से लूट लेना* 1.to cheat (a person, business, etc.) out of money or other assets. 2.to obtain by fraud or deceit. /Another way of looking at it: How many Bernard Madoffs would it take to swindle the US taxpayer out of $1.2 trillion/

Tamp

*ठूंसना* press down tightly /He tamped the tobacco in his pipe/ /Once anti-American protests start in on some supposed grievance, our ability to tamp down tensions is very limited. /

Grin

*दाँत दिखाते हुए मुस्कुराना* Verb 1.to draw back the lips and reveal the teeth, in a smile, grimace, or snarl

Ecstasy(Xtasy)

*परम आनंद* /*M- Ek Tasty chocolate .. extreme happiness */ *Extreme happiness a powerful drug that acts as a stimulant and can produce hallucinations*

Laudatory

*प्रशंसात्मक , सराहने योग्य* /M - Lord's (Ram) + Story - A pundit was telling us the story of Lord Ram in Ramayana .. had full of praise for Ram( *containing or expressing praise*)/ adjective *प्रशंसात्मक , सराहने योग्य* 1.containing or expressing praise: /overwhelmed by the speaker's laudatory remarks./ /The first time round, in 2011, the critics, while not unkind, were not laudatory. /

Atonement

*प्रायश्चित , हरजाना* /* M- a + ton + cement = ek tone cement deke prayaashchit(atonement) kia*/ compensation for a wrong amend reconciliation; agreement. the experience of humankind's unity with God exemplified by Jesus Christ. Hindi - प्रायश्चित , हरजाना

oblivious

*बेपरवाह , भुलक्कड़* /M -Obviously+ Ignorant - *One who Ignores or is Absent Minded बेपरवाह , भुलक्कड़* / If you don't notice or aren't aware, it means that the *adjective oblivious applies to you*! When we think of the adjective oblivious, it is usually in situations that *involve being totally unaware of what's staring us right in the face*. It can also mean being forgetful and absent-minded. The cartoon character Mr. Magoo is a perfect example of someone who is oblivious; his eyesight is so bad that he always gets himself into various scrapes and mishaps. For example, Mr. Magoo mistakes an airplane for a theater and instead of watching a movie, he takes a seat on a departing airplane!

Animosity

*बैर , शत्रुता * /M - Enimy + City - A city where you will get *Strong Dislike* / Noun - A feeling of Strong Dislike Hindi - बैर , शत्रुता / Ex - China and Japan are stirring up an old animosity /

intimidate

*भयभीत करना,धमकाना* (v.) to make timid or frighten by threats; to use fear to get someone to do (or not to do) something /to intimidate a voter into staying away from the polls./

spectre

*भूत A specter means a ghostly apparition, a ghost itself, or simply an idea that people find frightening*. You can give yourself nightmares if you listen to too many stories about ghostly specters appearing in dark windows. Specters as fears are the kind that tend to loom on the edge of our minds, lying dormant for awhile, then raising their ugly heads. *It can be hard to sleep if you think too much about the specter of a terrorist attack, or the specter that your blabbermouth cousin might spill the beans to your parents about the night you two took your dad's car without asking*. The word can also be spelled spectre. Hindi - प्रेत

Gull

*भोला-भाला व्यक्ति* 1. Noun - Sea Gulls 2. Adjective - easily tricked because of being too trusting /If you are gullible, the joke is on you because you are easily fooled./

Benediction

*मंगलकामना* A prayer invoking God's power and care upon some person, place, thing, or undertaking. The prayer of Benediction acknowledges God as the source of all blessing. An expression of good wishes Hindi - मंगलकामना

epoch(epic)

*युगारंभ , new beginning * /M - YE + poch - Maalik ne naukar se bola .. clean kar table ko and naye customer ko bitha ..it will be (*new start/age विशिष्टकाल *) for new tips / 1. the beginning of a distinctive period in the history of anything: /* The splitting of the atom marked an epoch in scientific discovery. */ Hindi - विशिष्टकाल 2.a point of time distinguished by a particular event or state of affairs; a memorable date: /* His coming of age was an epoch in his life. */ /* Bank of Japan bows to pressure with 'epoch-making' financial stimulus */ Hindi - युगारंभ

Imperial

*राजसी* Imperial carries the implication of royalty, usually pertaining to an empire; the emperor or empress is referred to as "your imperial highness." The word imperial has a lofty feel, and though it's often used of royalty, it is sometimes used to refer to anything extremely large or impressive. It was once the name of a large suitcase that was too big to fit inside a coach and so was tied on top. Think of something imperial as being something so upper-class that it's almost to the point of royalty — and sometimes almost to the point of being a joke.

wry

*व्यंग्यपूर्ण* Adjective - 1.produced by a *distortion or lopsidedness of the facial features*: 2. devious in course or purpose; misdirected. Hindi - *ऐंठा , टेढ़ा , व्यंग्यपूर्ण* /Ex - Several other speakers took similar tough-minded approaches, though none were so wry in delivery. / / Ex - With a wry smile, she observed that there was no need for the Russian authorities to worry about what she wrote /

Conten*T*

*संतुष्ट , विषय सूची* *If you feel content, you're satisfied and happy. The content of a book, movie, or song is what it's about: the topic. * This word has two main meanings. The first has to do with being pleased and satisfied (feeling content) or making someone else feel happy and at peace with things (contenting them). The other meaning has to do with subject matter: the content of a history class might be American history. The content of a math class might be geometry. As long as there's a topic or subject, there's content. /Of the things we presented, I particularly liked Jack's discussion on the characteristics that make for great content/ /Unlike Facebook, some of Vine's most active content consumers are people without their own accounts, who have never made videos and likely never will./

Imperialism

*साम्राज्यवाद* *Imperialism is a type of government that seeks to increase its size, either by forcing (through war) or influencing (through politics) other countries to submit to their rule.* The sun never sets on the Roman Empire, or so went the saying when Rome controlled the majority of Europe 2000 years ago. Empire has the same Latin root as imperialism, and the Roman Empire grew to be so vast because they invaded, conquered, and developed everywhere they could. Until Rome fell, that is. Imperialism isn't always violent, but it's usually used in a negative sense, so watch for secret agents if you're talking about your country's policy of imperialism. /Now, like leaders across Eurasia, they are wondering if they can survive the revived imperialism of Russia under Vladimir Putin/

Plagiarism

*साहित्यिक चोरी * /M - Pledge + ism - To pledge ki tum kabhi Cheating nahi karogey .. Kisi aur ki mehnat ko apne naam se nahi bechoge / Noun - *साहित्यिक चोरी * 1. an act or instance of using or closely imitating the language and thoughts of another author without authorization and the representation of that author's work as one's own, as by not crediting the original author: 2. Copied from someone else

Kindle

*सुलगना * When you *start* a fire burning, you can say you kindle the fire. Knowing how to kindle a campfire is an important survival skill. It can help keep you warm at night, and keep you from eating cold beans for dinner. The verb kindle not only means to start a fire, but also to catch fire. Another meaning for kindle is *to arouse interest or passion*. A dynamic music teacher could kindle the students' interest in learning an instrument. Or, romance can also be kindled: "As they danced together, a spark of romance kindled between them."

inundation

*सैलाब , जलप्लावन An overabundance of something is an inundation. * If you got an inundation of requests for your famous chocolate cupcakes, you better get baking! /It swept great part of the town away, and Mr. King lost a great deal of property from the inundation, and nearly his life./ /Mr. Blankenship argues that the deadly explosion, on April 5, 2010, was caused by a natural "inundation" of methane gas./

Elusive

/ M - Exclusive - The Car made by Jaguar was exclusive for Amitabh Bachan ..The car had so many features that its (*Hard to express or Define ,बचना, Elude *) and its damm (*difficult to find or get*) car like that / Adj -चालाक ,पकड़ में न आने वाला 1. Hard to Express or Define , Elude /He was inspired by the idea that movies could be so mysterious, elusive, and unpredictable./ 2. Difficult to find / hoping that elusive donors will finally contribute. / /We have finally caught up to our elusive prey/

impromptu

/ M - I + Am + Prompt - I do all things at last minute without any planing and preparation. Most people are not expert in Speaking in front of Audience without Preparation . But I am not like that .. I am Prompt * बिना तैयारी के*/ Some of the best kinds of parties are impromptu ones, when you decide at the last minute to get together. The adjective impromptu describes *things done or said without previous thought or preparation*. Impromptu is also used as an adverb: Most people are not able to speak impromptu in front of an audience. This word was borrowed from French, from Latin in prōmptū "at hand, in readiness" from in "in" plus prōmptū, a form of prōmptus "readiness," from prōmere "to bring forth." As you can guess from the spelling, the adjective and verb prompt is related to impromptu; they are from the same Latin verb.

Ingenious

/ M - Indian + Genius - One who shows *creativity and Inventiveness* / Something ingenious shows creativity and inventiveness. If someone compares you to Einstein, they're implying that you, too, are ingenious genious comes from the Latin words for inborn talent. It started off meaning someone who was talented or incredibly smart, but has come to *mean inventive, or clever*. If you can solve 146,392 * 27,453 in your head, people might call you a math genius. But if you come up with a way to turn water into fuel, you will be praised as ingenious. Ingenious can also describe thing, like an ingenious device.

Indigent

/ M - Indian + Gents - Indian Gareeb gents jinke paas kuch nahi hia गरीब / *An indigent person is extremely poor, lacking the basic resources of a normal life*. Often the indigent lack not only money but homes. Indigent comes from a Latin word meaning wanting, which we used to use to mean "lacking" and not just to describe desires.

limerick

/ M - Lime + Rick- Rick ne Lime kha ke ek *poem likhi .. 5 line kee ..*/ Noun - a kind of humorous verse of five lines, in which the first, second, and fifth lines rhyme with each other, and the third and fourth lines, which are shorter, form a rhymed couplet.

martinet

/ M - Marathi + Lieutenant - Marathi Lieutenant who is *very stick and stubbornly Adheres to Rules */ कठोर अनुशासक Noun - 1.a strict disciplinarian, especially a military one. 2.someone who stubbornly adheres to methods or rules.

onomatopoeia

/ M - Ono+Main+ Burai - Ona main kahe Dikkat nahi hai bas SU SU SU(*Word formed from sound*) bolta hai */ Noun - 1. The formation of a word, as cuckoo, meow, honk, or boom, by imitation of a sound made by or associated with its referent. /The Clock' Marclay's witty onomatopoeia show are compulsively physical /

pander

/ M - Pan + darr : Mumbai main ek scandal chala hai jismain Paan waale free main paan khila kar logo ko loot rahe hian , Police ne advertise kiya hia ki aise log aapke Paan ke prem se *pander(Profit from Weakness)* utha saktey hian , isliye en logo se back kar rahiye / Verb 1. PIMP 2.a person who caters to or profits from the weaknesses or vices of others. /Ex - As a teacher in Syria I saw the effect of Assad's culture of fear, but his regime is pandering to social sensibilities./

paucity

/ M - Pause + City - The City which is paused because it lacks all the infrastructure , there is lack of employment and lack of Money to support existing operations (*Not Enough Of Something *)/ Noun - कमी The word paucity means *not enough of something*. If you've got a paucity of good cheer, for example, you'd better cheer up! One good way to remember the meaning of paucity is that it's a bit like pauper, as in *The Prince and the Pauper*. The prince had too much money, and the pauper had a paucity. There are a lot of words that mean "little" or "small," but paucity is used when you mean specifically "not enough" or "too little." People in LA don't understand how New Yorkers can live with such a paucity of space. For what New Yorkers pay for a tiny apartment, Angelenos get a house and a yard. /The Internet, with its explosive growth and paucity of regulation, may be the closest thing to it today./

presumptuous

/ M - Pre+ Assumptions - One who Assume or Judge someone / Adj - *ढीठ , मान लेना* 1. full of, characterized by, or showing presumption or readiness to presume in conduct or thought, as by saying or doing something without right or permission. 2. unwarrantedly or impertinently bold; forward.

vestige

/ M - Wastage - They thought that their old jalopy was waste and they gave it to someone for free . After it was gone , it was *vestige (असर , निशान , अवशेष, reminder of something )* of old memories . / *Vestige is an elegant word. It's all about shadows, and gives us a way to talk about traces or reminders of something that has disappeared or is disappearing.* Vestige derives from the Latin vestigium "footprint," and that is a good way to think of it--footprints in the sand. Sometimes vestige is used to emphasize the complete lack of something. * She told me she took the money from my wallet without the least vestige of remorse in her voice or facial expression * /"We may change that fairly quickly.... That is a vestige of a division system that may not make sense anymore/ /Any country that elects Hillary Clinton as president has completely cut itself loose from any vestige of a moral mooring. /

Assuage(Assvage)

/ M - assure + age = kisi ko assurance Dena ki uski badhti age ka insurance hai ..And if something happens then they will take care of it ..wo shaant ho jaayega(*To Calm *) / /M - Massage - Kisi ko massage dekar usko gussa shant karna (*To Calm*)/ (v) to make easier or milder, relieve; to quiet, calm; to put an end to, appease, satisfy, quench Hindi - शांत करना

melancholy

/ M -Milan+Choley - Milan ko jab Choley pasand nahi aaye toh wo( *depress* )ho gaya / उदासी की अवस्था Noun - a gloomy state of mind, especially when habitual or prolonged; depression. Depression

Scabbard

/ M -Scrape(Cut the surface) + Board - A chef always kept his kitchen knifes in *म्यान* to save the sharpness of knife , he uses to cut the surface / A scabbard is a sheath for a sword, dagger, or other type of knife. Some cooks wear their French knives in a scabbard so they'll be ready to chop no matter where they are in the kitchen. You've probably seen a scabbard in an older movie. The hero sheaths his sword in a long wooden, metal or leather scabbard hanging from his belt. The origins of the word, however, are not that manly. Scabbard comes from an old Germanic compound meaning "blade protector.

Variorum

/ M- Various + forum = this book has work of various editors of various forum./ *An edition containing various versions of a text* or notes by various scholars or editors

haka

/ M- haka haka hurr hurr dance of war/ *War dance* /Ex - It's time the haka posture is put out to pasture /

Ghetto

/* M - Ghinna + hato = ye ghinna hai yahan se hato */ During the Middle Ages, a neighborhood in a city set up by law to be inhabited only by Jews; now used to denote a section of a city in which members of any minority live because of social, legal, or economic pressure.

Fanatical

/* M - Over Impulsive Fan */ If you are *excessively enthusiastic about — a sports team, an actor, your religion, saving the whales, a certain brand of chocolate or anything— then you are fanatical about it.* The original English meanings of both fanatic and fanatical implied that *the person being described was insane with enthusiasm, like a religious Zealot* The word fan is likely shortened from fanatic, and thus shares the same roots, but that word doesn't imply the same obsessiveness that fanatical does.

aperient

/* M - perish + food - perish karta hai tummy ke food ko (aaraam dene waala) */ laxative

Bridle

/* M- A + bride + restrains = Bride restrains husband from doing lot of stuff */ to restrain 1. anything that restrains or curbs: His common sense is a bridle to his quick temper. 2.part of the tack or harness of a horse, consisting usually of a headstall, bit, and reins. Hindi - लगाम

Urchin

/* M- Archan = Jo bacche kaam me archan daale vo baut shararti hote hain */ Poor and often mischievous city child /*Ex - Some unfortunate underage urchin will nod off through overwork and undersleep */ Noun - लावारिस शरारती बच्चा Adj - Hindi - नटखट

Desegregate(De + Segregate)

/* M- De+ segregate(Alag Karna) - Alag nahi Karna*/ open (a place) to members of all races and ethnic groups Hindin- वर्णभेद दूर करना

Phillumenist

/* M- Philic + illumination = He is philic to illuminating match box covers*/ One who collects match box covers

Uncouth

/* M- Un + Cultured + youth */ Adj - गँवार Crude; unrefined; awkward or clumsy; ungraceful; archaic; foreign; unfamiliar; clumsy, uncultivated; lacking in delicacy or refinement

Uncanny

/* M- Un + cann(CAN'T).....something which you CAN'T understand and explain, is always mysterious to you. / (adj.) strange, mysterious, weird, beyond explanation, supernatural MYSTERIOUS; STRANGE Hindi - विचित्र, रहस्यमय

mal de mer

/***(Mal) (de)kha ke Sea main legaya and main (mer) raha hun sea sickness se **/ seasickness

Ninny

/**M- Bewkoof Nanhi ***/ Fool

gibber

/**Mnemonics - gibber is like ***** speaking foolishly **/ Nonsense; unintelligible speech, Hindi - बड़बड़ाना

Appease

/*M - Application + of +ease */ /M - Aaap + Ease - Saamne waale ko Calm Karna / (v.) to make calm, soothe; to relieve, satisfy; to yield to

Archipelago

/*M - Archi+pe+lago - God broke land pieces, threw them in sea and said Architecture pe lago(Group of Island)*/ Group of island

grubstake

/*M - Curb+Steak : Curb pe Steak bechne waali dukaan start karne ke liye parents se Inital investment maangna */ Noun - 1. provisions, gear, etc., furnished to a prospector on condition of participating in the profits of any discoveries. 2. money or other assistance furnished at a time of need or of starting an enterprise. /* I grubstaked him to two mules and supplies enough for five months.* /

Ides

/*M - Id+es -Id pe debts es din dena*/ 15th day of March , May , July and October 13th of other months

Satire

/*M - Set + Fire = sarcasm sets opponents on fire */ A work of literature that mocks social conventions, another work of art, or anything its author thinks ridiculous. A work that reveals a critical attitude toward some element of human behavior by portraying it in an extreme way. It doesn't simply abuse (as in invective) or get personal (as in sarcasm). It targets groups or large concepts rather than individuals. sarcasm /*Ex - Kim Jong-un is too easy a target for satire*/

pasture

/*M - pas + charr = jahan pas ke jaanwar aake charte hain = grazing ground*/ Grass or other plants grown for feeding grazing animals, as well as land used for grazing.

Achromatic

/*M- A+Chrome = without colour*/ Without Color , Life less

Archaic

/*M- Archaelogy + ic */ Ancient Characteristic of an earlier period, ancient, primitive Dating back to a much earlier time; ancient

artifacts

/*M- Art +for +fact = made in ancient time ki aage generation dekhe ki art was a fact that time too(artifact)*/ Objects made or altered by people of that era ( eg. weapons, tools).

galenical

/*M- Gale + Nikal - Gale main nikle huey tonsil ko theek karne ke liye ayurvedic medicine(Vegetable Drug) */ Noun 1. an herb or other vegetable drug, distinguished from a mineral or chemical drug.

Sporadic

/*M- Periodic - Sporadic is opposite of periodic, something that happens occasionally or at irregular intervals .*/ An example of sporadic is when you go to the doctor only once every five years or so.A specialized use of sporadic is to describe a disease that appears only occasionally in random cases and is therefore not an epidemic.

synod

/*M- saath + nod = jo pop ke saath discussion me nod karte hain*/ A representative body of bishops assembled periodically by the pope to advise him on important Church concerns. It is not a legislative body. Hindi - कौंसिल, पादरियों की सभा

triskaidekaphobia

/*Mnemonics - 13 ka phobia **/ /*trisk-3 + deca-10- Phobia = 13 Phobia*/ Phobia of number 13

circumvolve

/*Mnemonics - Circumstance main revolve hote rehna*/ To revolve or wind about, cause to turn on an axis or center

Potent

/*Potent means really strong, but not like a body builder. Use potent instead to describe things like intense smells, powerful magic potions, and very influential people.*/ From the Latin potentum, meaning "powerful," potent is just that: having tremendous strength or influence in either a moral or physical sense. A potent question gets to the heart of the matter and sparks serious discussion. Really stiff drinks can be potent, as can your breath after a garlicky meal. And as the composer Igor Stravinsky once asked, "What force is more potent than love?"

Figurehead

/*नाममात्र का शासक*/ *A figurehead is someone who appears to be in charge, but who really holds very little influence*. In many countries today, kings and queens are merely figureheads. A ceremonial president or king — *one installed as a symbolic head of a country, while someone else holds the real power* — is one type of figurehead. If a retiring businesswoman promotes her son to be the new CEO of her company, while putting a different person in charge of running the business, the son is just a figurehead.*The word figurehead comes from its original meaning, the figures carved at the front of old sailing ships.*

Bile

/*पित्त*/ In medicine, *bile is a fluid secreted by the liver and used to help breakdown fats*. Because it used to be associated with anger, *feeling your bile rise is the same as feeling mounting anger.* How did bile get linked to anger? Pre-modern doctors believed there were four basic substances to the human body, called humours, one of which was yellow bile that controlled anger. It doesn't, but when you feel angry, you'll still hear that you have to swallow your bile. /"Words of bile and hatred were hurled in my direction," he wrote on his Facebook page./

Abut

/*से हटा हुआ या लगा हुआ होना*/ When something borders something else, it is said to abut it. The term is often used in real estate to refer to a lot line. Wouldn't it be nice to have your back yard abut a forest preserve or park?

Tamper

/*हस्तक्षेप करना*/ To tamper is *to alter or mess with something, usually for a bad reason. Tamper also refers to being nosy about someone's business. Don't tamper with anything; it's annoying.* *Tamper involves sticking your nose where it doesn't belong*. One kind of tampering involves meddling in other people's affairs. The other kind of tampering has to do with things. If you tamper with financial records, you alter them. Sometimes medicine or food will come with a label that says "tamper proof," like when a bottle of vitamins is sealed so that you can't open it until you buy it. 1. *to engage secretly or improperly in something.* 2.to engage in underhand or corrupt dealings, especially in order to influence improperly (usually followed by with): *Any lawyer who tries to tamper with a jury should be disbarred.*

debunk

/Imp - DEB + Uncle - Deb uncle (*भंडाफोड़ , Expose*) expert hain .. he will expose your Jhut in front of everyone and then aapka mazzak udayengey / Verb भंडाफोड़ करना *When you debunk something you show it to be false *. For over a century people have tried to debunk the notion of natural selection, but no one has succeeded. It's a very hard idea to debunk. *To debunk something is to prove it wrong*. The idea that music education is frivolous and should be the first item cut from the budget was long ago debunked: in schools with strong music programs, students always do better. Columbus debunked the idea that the world was flat: he showed clearly that it was round. / Sequences of maps can also be used to debunk misconceptions. /

Soliloquy(Sa+Lali+qui)

/M - * Solus (Alone) + Loqui(Speak) - Talking to himself */ *Ever see someone talking to himself while on a stage? That's what you call a soliloquy — a character's speech voicing his or her own thoughts as if to himself*. Shakespeare's plays are full of soliloquies. The noun, soliloquy, comes from the Latin roots, solus "alone" plus loqui "speak" meaning "a talking to oneself." A soliloquy is a speech a character gives of his thoughts and reflections. Some of the most famous lines in drama are taken from soliloquies. Take "to be or not to be..." and "Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow, Creeps in this petty pace..." as two examples of lines from soliloquies that have tortured high school students around the globe. Not the Globe Theater, Silly. /In a tearful statement, he launched into a soliloquy about seeing himself free again playing with children, balloons, and dogs. /

Savor

/M - Save + forever / Whether it's a *feeling of joy or a piece of pecan pie — when you savor something, you enjoy it to the fullest*. *When you savor something, you enjoy it so much that you want to make it last forever*. With that in mind, savor carries a connotation of doing something slowly. If you savor that flourless chocolate tart, then you eat it slowly, bit by bit, deliberately picking every last crumb off the plate. The word is often applied to eating, but you can savor any pleasurable experience, whether it's the winning touchdown or your moment in the spotlight.

Seine

/M - Scene - Scenic Pond main Fishing karna aise *Nets use kar ke jo vertically Sink ho jaaye */ Noun 1. a fishing net that hangs vertically in the water, having floats at the upper edge and sinkers at the lower.

voracious(vora+cious)

/M - * unflattering greediness, intensely involved*/ *Voracious is an adjective used to describe a wolflike appetite. It might be a craving for food or for something else, such as power, but the word usually denotes an unflattering greediness.* Voracious comes from the Latin vorāre, "to devour." The word is usually associated with swallowing or devouring food in a ravenous manner,* but it can be used of someone intensely involved in any activity. Pierre Salinger referred to President Kennedy as a "voracious reader," while Robert Bakker once likened the IRS to a "voracious, small-minded predator."* /Ms. Milton grew up in a religious household, and she was a voracious reader./ /The voracious 24-hour news cycle is another factor, especially so when civil unrest and violence are involved./ /The voracious appetites of their larvae can quickly defoliate large tracts of forests./

Accretion

/M - *Accrue - अनुवृद्धि */ *The process of increasing can be called accretion*. Although you may say that stalactites "grow" from the ceilings of caves, they actually form from an accretion of limestone and other minerals. So what's the difference between an addition and an accretion? Addition implies adding to something that already exists, such as an addition to the cast (when a new actor joins an existing show). The noun accretion, on the other hand, implies an accumulation that causes increase, such as "an accretion of frost on the windows" or "an accretion of plaque on your teeth." The latter, of course, is why the dentist always begs you to floss and brush.

jeer

/M - *Anti + Cheer* / उपहास , मज़ाक , ताना *As a noun, jeer is the act of scoffing, taunting, or mocking. Think of it as an anti-cheer. If you offer cheers for the visiting team and jeers for the home team, you might not be too popular in the stands. /She's stripped naked and paraded through a jeering crowd of commoners during a long "walk of atonement."/

cognition

/M - *Attention + Perception + Memory + Reasoning +Problem Solving* = To solve a question you have to 1. give attention to it . 2. Then you have to understand the question 3. You have to scan through your memory for possible similarities . 4. You have to put Reasoning 5. Then you can solve the question / noun 1.the act or process of knowing; perception. 2. knowledge.

Blitzkrieg

/M - *Blitz(Lightning) + Kreig( War) - means Rapid Attack तूफानी हमला*/ A blitzkrieg is an intense and brutal military campaign. If you're studying the history of World War II, you'll eventually come across the word blitzkrieg. /Fueled by atrocity and a blitzkrieg of gains in Iraq and Syria, the Islamic State has enjoyed a meteoric climb to notoriety. /

Cataclysmic

/M - *Catastrophic - Devastation* / Something that's *cataclysmic is violently destructive*. The word often refers to natural disasters, like a *cataclysmic earthquake, but cataclysmic can describe other events as well as long as they're bad enough, like the cataclysmic failure you had making meatloaf*. Earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, floods, tornados, landslide . . . These natural disasters are often described as cataclysmic when they cause great devastation. Cataclysmic isn't just for describing natural disasters — *personal disasters can be called cataclysmic as well if you want to emphasize just how badly something turned out. If your meatloaf is just so-so, it's not so disastrous. But if it's so spectacularly bad that no one can eat it? That's a cataclysmic failure.*

climactic

/M - *Climax* / Something that is the highest or most exciting point is climactic. This adjective is used to describe a scene, event, or action.

contention

/M - *Competition प्रतिस्पर्धा*/ There is nothing "content," or satisfying, about being in contention, and that's probably because *the word contention means being in a competition that ends with one side, usually the winning one, being content.* "And in this corner, the contender" is heard at most boxing matches to describe each of the fighters about to go into contention in the ring. Sometimes, though, *a contention can be a battle of words or a struggle between two parties over a single point. The expression "bone of contention" describes a narrow object of disagreement that reaches the level of strife, or contention. * For two hungry dogs, though, the bone of contention might be a serious matter. /That dropped the Charlotte resident six shots back and he never was in contention again/

Condescension

/M - *Con + descend - One who treats to you like Child and always Patronize you झुकना* / 1 Patronizing 2. Condescension is an insulting way of talking to other people, as if they were stupid or ignorant. *Condescension is rude and patronizing*. Treating someone with condescension is the opposite of treating them with respect. Condescension is full of arrogant and snooty attitude, and people who practice condescension treat others like inferior idiots. Sarcasm goes well with condescension if you're trying to be a jerk. You can almost hear the word descent in condescension, so think of someone acting all high and mighty, looking down at everyone else. /He condescended to their intellectual level in order to be understood./

Foolhardy

/M - *Fool + Hardy (Brave/Bold) - Foolishly Brave */ If you decide you are going to scale Mt. Everest next weekend without any training or experience, that would be a foolhardy decision. Use the adjective foolhardy when someone rushes into action without considering the consequences. Foolhardy is a combination of the noun fool and the adjective hardy, meaning "brave" or "bold." Put them together and you've got "foolishly brave." Someone who is foolhardy throws caution to the wind and takes reckless chances. *A foolhardy mistake is typically the result of this kind of impulsive behavior*. But foolhardy doesn't always imply foolishness or stupidity; *foolhardy can convey courage and romance, as in the case of a foolhardy passion or desire*

folly

/M - *Foolish* / Noun नादानी, मूर्खता 1. Lack of good sense; foolish action or undertaking 2. a foolish action, practice, idea, etc.; absurdity: /Ex - the folly of performing without a rehearsal./ Ex- She had a round face and eyes that sparkled with the certainty that human folly ruled and wasn't that a hoot.

grim

/M - *Grim Reaper मनहूस , भयानक */ Things that are *gloomy, stark, ghastly, and somber are grim*. Sunshine, puppies, and rainbows are not grim; zombies, reapers, and mummies are grim. Less scary things like drizzly, foggy days can also be called grim. Two famous uses of the adjective grim are the Grim Reaper and Grimm's Fairy Tales. Mr. Reaper shows up in movies and books wearing a long, hooded black cape and carrying a scythe, or long-handled blade used, in less grim circumstances, for mowing grass and reaping grain: he represents death. The real-life German brothers wrote some bone-chilling tales under their own name, Grimm, meaning "cruel, fierce," which is related to the English word grim. *Modern grim things include crime-drama images of dead bodies and characters in horror movies.*

Hawser

/M - *Hose - bade hose ya ropes jisey Nautical purpose ke liye use kiya jaaye*/ large heavy rope for nautical use /The two stroke oars cast off the stern hawsers and vaulted over the gunnels to their benches./

impeccable

/M - *Im + peccable(Liable to Sin or Error ) - Represent something which doesn't have any flaws . त्रुटिहीन */ The adjective impeccable describes something or someone without any flaws. A stand-up comedian needs impeccable timing for his jokes to work. The adjective impeccable refers to something or someone without marking or error — but it can also mean to be spotless or clean. The word comes from the Latin impeccabilis and means "to be sinless," which is also one of the senses, now outdated, in English. You can see how "clean" comes from "sinless." Because of the messy nature of picnic food, it is highly unlikely that you would leave with your clothing still as impeccable as when you arrived, especially if you like mustard and ketchup! /Coincidentally, I had begun reading the book in early March, so the timing of Tony's email was impeccable./

Parity

/M - *Par(Equal) + ty - Equality* / Parity refers to *equality* of an amount or value, and it's used most often to refer to finance. Par means "equality" — for example, something "not up to par" is not equal to what it should be. *In a similar way, parity means "equivalence." *Farm parity is a system under which farm-produce prices are supported by the government to give farmers prices equal to a set level, thus supporting the farmers even if the market prices should fall.

Sanguine

/M - *Sang( Blood in french) - sanguine is someone or something the color of blood or a reddish color. If you're sanguine about a situation, that means you're optimistic that everything's going to work out fine.*/ Sanguine is from Latin sanguis "blood" and originally meant "bloody" — in medieval medicine it described someone whose ruddy complexion was a sign of an optimistic outlook. Sanguine has settled down as a fancy way to say *Someone is cheerfully confident* Adj - 1. *confidently optimistic and cheerful 2. inclined to a healthy reddish color often associated with outdoor life* Noun 1. a blood-red color /Some conservative pro-Israel groups and most Republicans opposed Hagel for being too hostile to Israel and too sanguine on Iran. / /That said, I am not as sanguine about the future of the U.S.-Egypt bilateral relationship. /

suffuse

/M - *Super + Diffuse - Spread until they fill a space* / Use suffuse to describe things that spread until they fill a space, like the infectious laughter that becomes a roar on a particularly good night at the comedy club. You might say comedy suffuses the area. Suffuse is a synonym for steep. Like tea whose flavor grows stronger the more it steeps, when you suffuse something it spreads throughout until an area is full, or even overly full. Another synonym, infuse, looks a lot like suffuse. Both words come from the Latin word fundere, which means "to pour."

Theologians

/M - *The Dharm Gyani* / A college student who majors in religion may decide to become a theologian, or an expert in the study of religion. *धर्मशास्त्री* Use the noun theologian to describe a person who has read and studied religious thought and ideas. Professors in a university's religious studies department are usually theologians, and religious leaders are usually considered to be theologians. Theologian comes from theology, the study of God or religion, which has its root in the Greek word theologia, "an account of the gods."

unison

/M - *Uni( One) + Sonous( Sound) */ *The noun unison describes something that is synchronized or simultaneous, like when someone asks a question and you and your friend respond with the exact same answer at the same moment.* When something is said in unison, two or more voices sound like one. Unison comes from the Latin root words uni, meaning "one," and sonous, meaning "sound." So unison literally means one sound, and in music, it still retains that meaning. Unison occurs when two or more people play or sing the same pitch or in octaves. Outside of music, you may have experienced unison speaking when your class recites something together or unison movement when a group performs a dance routine.

Veritable

/M - *Verify + Table - two boys were staring at stars and one of them said .. that 6 stars looks like Dining Table ..the second one see it and says yeah bud .. वास्तविक* / *When something is veritable it is true, or at least feels that way*. "The trees and lights turned the campus into a veritable wonderland" means that the campus seemed to be transformed into a true wonderland (if there is such a thing). Veritable comes from the Latin veritas which means true. But unlike true, it does not describe things like statements. It is often used to enhance the word that follows it. "A veritable cornucopia of food" is a lot of food of different varieties. If someone calls you "*a veritable force of nature," they don't mean that you are actually a hurricane; they just mean that you have the unstoppable quality of a big old storm*.

Indict(In+Diet)

/M - *अपराध लगाना* / *If you accuse someone of committing an offense, you indict them*. A book that indicts the entire education system might lay out all the reasons that schools are failing kids. In a legal sense, *the verb indict means to bring formal charges against someone, especially in a court of law, as in a federal grand jury*. The grand jury indicted, the man on 12 counts of murder. Although it's true the boy had stolen cookies from the cookie jar in the past, that is no reason to indict him out of hand in the present case. There were no witnesses and the crumb evidence would suggest someone else committed the crime.

pervade

/M - *पैठना , प्रवेश करना , घुस आना* / To pervade means to be present throughout, to exist in every part of. If you have too many cats, the horrible smell of cat pee will pervade your house. You can use pervade both for external things like smells and sickness, and for more internal things like feelings. *For instance, you can say that a feeling of doom pervaded the army as they caught sight of the opposition's superior forces.* Despite efforts to prevent bullying, peer pressure and clique mentalities pervade the school environment.

paradox

/M - *विरोधाभासी - */ Here's a mind-bender: "This statement is false." If you think it's true, then it must be false, but if you think it's false, it must be true. Now, that's a paradox! A paradox is a logical puzzler that contradicts itself in a baffling way. "This statement is false" is a classic example, known to logicians as "the liar's paradox." Paradoxical statements may seem completely self-contradictory, but they can be used to reveal deeper truths. When Oscar Wilde said, "I can resist anything except temptation," he used a paradox to point to our fundamental weakness to give in to tempting things (like chocolate or a pretty smile), all the while imagining that we can hold firm and resist them. /But there's a paradox: The lower a school's standard for any one quality, the more likely a student is to rate him or herself highly./

foe

/M - *विरोधी* / *A foe is an enemy*. Foes can range from an adversary of one person to that of a nation, from "he is my foe" to "they are my foe." There is also a "that is my foe" who those who are trying to diet know well, aka chocolate.

abash

/M - A + Bash(hit Something Hard) - Ek aadmi itna drunk tha ki usne apni gaadi de maari dusi gaadi main , After that he felt so embarassed or Sharm , guilty (*Abash ,शर्मिंदा करना , humiliate*) ki unse kabhi sharaab nahi pee/ Although abash sounds like a big party or what firefighters do to get through a locked door, abash is, in fact, a verb that means you have *caused another person to feel awkward, bashful, embarrassed, or ashamed.* To make *your best friend feel abashed, you might tell her new boyfriend about the time she... but why would you want to embarrass her*? Typically abash is used when something has a shaming effect. You might find yourself saying: "I was abashed by the magnitude of the others' generosity so I donated twenty thousand more," but you wouldn't just use abash in place of embarrass. It would sound strange to warn, "Don't do that, you're going to abash yourself!"

Amortize

/M - A + Mortgage - *Gradually paying off your debt*/ किश्तों में ऋण चुकाना Verb : Gradually pay off a debt, or gradually write off an asset

annotate(Anna+tate)

/M - A + Note - Making a note of the complex and critical explanations / *When you annotate, you write critical explanations to add extra insight about something. These explanations can be necessary to understanding writings in which the language might be difficult to make sense of without clarification.* The heart of the word annotate is the word note. The Latin annotātus means "noted down," making the word a breeze to remember.* A writer will annotate parts that need extra explanation in technical works or classic writings in which the language or concepts might be difficult to grasp.* In fact, some works, like James Joyce's "Ulysses," have entire separate volumes of annotations, and readers must shift back and forth from the novel to the annotations. Now that's a dedicated reader!

avuncular

/M - A + One +Uncle + ar - Maternal Uncle who is *avuncular (Everyone likes an avuncular guy, that is someone who is kind and patient and generally indulgent with people younger than he is. )* The Dalai Lama is an avuncular fellow. So is Santa Claus. Unless you haven't been good. The word avuncular originally comes from the Latin avunculus, meaning "maternal uncle," and strictly speaking the term describes the relationship between an uncle and his nephew. Uncles, by their very definition, are supposed to be avuncular to their nephews. For many uncles though, Santa Claus is pretty hard to compete with.

Apathy

/M - A + Pathy(Sympathy) - One who Dislike *Use the noun apathy when someone isn't interested in the important things that are happening*. You might feel apathy for the political process after watching candidates bicker tediously with one another. Although *apathy is a lazy-sounding word indicating a lack of interest, action, or emotion, * it has traveled through many languages to arrive in English. From the Greek apatheia, "freedom from suffering" or "impassibility," apathy has existed in English since the 17th century. *Not just one person, but a whole segment of the population can be accused of inaction or emotional detachment: the expressions voter apathy, student apathy, and consumer apathy show just how unenthusiastic groups of people can be.*

Atonal

/M - A + tonal = *without following a tone*/ *Atonal music doesn't follow the usual rules of melody, and it's not in a particular key*. Sometimes very experimental atonal music sounds a lot like noise. Most music is written in a particular key, and it centers on a tone from which notes rise and fall in a familiar way. In the early 20th century, some adventurous composers wrote pieces that were atonal, such as Arnold Schoenberg, whose atonal compositions are among the most well known, although he objected to the term itself. The word atonal combines a-, "not," and tonal, from the Greek tonos, "pitch, accent, or key."

Aver

/M - A + verify - To declare that something is 100% True *दावे के साथ कहना *) *To aver is to declare something is true or to state* . This verb has a serious tone, so you might aver something on a witness stand or you might aver that you won't back down to a challenge. The verb aver comes to English via the Latin root words ad, meaning "to," and verus, meaning "true." The word can have the sense of formally declaring something is true, but it can also mean to report positively: "*The grandmother averred that her granddaughter would make a fine veterinarian because of her love and caring for animals.*" /America may be ready for Hillary, as her campaign team avers, but is Hillary ready for America/

Abraded

/M - A Bra Dead - Ek Bra jo ghis ghis(*to wear off*) kar kharab ho gayi ho / Verb *घिसना ,रगड़ कर साफ़ करना* 1.to wear off or down by scraping or rubbing. 2.to scrape off. /Ex - he was a natural inswinger, movement that tended to disappear once the harsh South Australian pitch and outfield had abraded the ball. /

Demure

/M - A handsome boy in restaurant was flirting with a girl and wanted a kiss, She demurred Few times because she was *demure( Shy and Polite )* ..then the boy said .. de ya mar / A demure woman or girl can be described as polite and a little shy. A demure outfit is a modest one--think high neckline and low hem. Demure is a word you don't hear a lot these days, but it used to be a huge compliment for a woman or a girl, for them to be considered shy and quiet and modest. Those days are over, thank goodness, because demure people are nice and all, but they're also a little boring.

Jamb

/M - A jamb is one of the upright boards or posts that support a door or window frame. Your front door shuts securely in between two jambs.

Adumbrate

/M - A+ dumb+ rat - Ek dumb rat ne exam main koi bhi answer detail main nahi diya but he just gave the *outline* ..when he came home his mom* predicted , foreshadow* that he will fail the exam . / रूपरेखा प्रस्तुत करना अस्पष्ट रूप से समझाना रेखाचित्र खींचना to adumbrate something is to *outline it*. In an English essay, you could *adumbrate the themes in a novel; or, in a letter to Santa, you could adumbrate all the ways you have been behaving*. Adumbrate is built on the Latin root umbra, "shade," and the image it evokes is of a shadow being cast around something. Your outline is like a shadow of something bigger — like the themes in that novel or the ways you have been behaving. You can also use adumbrate to mean "*foreshadow*": "The scene where the princess dreams of the vampire adumbrates her later discovery that her little brother is, in fact, a vampire." /let's adumbrate just a few of the areas that we should be looking out for in the coming year:./

aplomb

/M - A.P + Bomb - A.P ke log itne cool hai ki even agar Bomb gir jaaye tab bhi wo panic main nahi aayengey , They show great *aplomb (Coolness, calmness) * under stern conditions/ Noun 1. great coolness and composure under strain

Epaulet

/M - A.P + Lieutenant :- A.P se jitne bhi Soldiers Army join kiye unko AP ki government ne extra shoulder medal diya / *An epaulet is a decoration that is attached to the shoulders of a uniform. *If you are a guard at Buckingham Palace, you have pretty nice epaulets on your uniform, but they aren't as amazing as that hat. The noun epaulet comes from the Late Latin meaning of spatula, "shoulder blade." Any fancy extras attached on the exterior shoulders of a garment can be called an epaulet. Epaulets often have gold braided embroidery. Or stars. Some have fringe. The epaulets on the uniforms of airline pilots have four rows of braids, which distinguishes them as a higher rank than co-pilots, who wear three braids.

eponym(Ape+nym)

/M - A.P + Name -*AP main har kisi ke naam pe koi na koi cheeze rakh dete hian , jaise Mirza Galib ke naam se Mirza le liya ho and jo bhi sher shayari main yakin rakhta ho usey Mirza boldetey hain, this is called Eponym*/ An eponym is either a person for whom something is named, or a thing named for a person. Jules Leotard, a trapeze artist, inspired the creation of the eponym "leotard." Thanks, Jules. Words are formed in many ways: often, they are named after people. For example, the boycott was named after Charles C. Boycott. That makes Boycott an eponym, and boycott is also an eponym. Eponyms are the people who provide the names and the words that are formed from the names. St. Audrey is another eponym, because her name inspired the word tawdr

Epitaph

/M - A.P + PITA - AP main muslims apne dad ki kabr pe ye likhwatey hai stone pe ....*Ae Pita*/ /M - *Epi (UPON) + tophus (TOMB)* - For thousands of years various societies have carved poetic, weepy, and witty words onto the monuments marking the final resting places of famous and infamous citizens./ Epitaph is an inscription on a gravestone. Famous for his comedic jabs at the City of Brotherly Love, writer W.C. Fields once said he wanted "I'd rather be living in Philadelphia" as the epitaph on his tombstone.

Epithet

/M - A.P + Theft - Andhra Pradesh main choro ko saja dete waqt unke *nicknames* rakh diye jaatey hai ...Isliye ki samaj unhey baar baar yaad dilaye ki unhone kya kiya hai ..Ek Chor ka naam rakh diya Kalmuha Chor coz he was black .. ek ka rakh diya bartan chor coz wo humesha bartan chori karta tha / *An epithet is a description of someone, often a nickname, like if you're tall and people call you Daddy Long Legs*. It's not necessarily an insult, but these days it's used that way a lot, like a racial or sexist slur. It's the kind of thing people sling at each other, like "red headed stepchild." *An epithet can be negative, but it doesn't have to be*

Amorous

/M - Aam+Rus :Aaam ke ras ka (*Love*) bhari pad sakta hai ...*/ प्रेम संबंधी, Verb 1. showing or expressing love: / an amorous letter./ 2. being in love; enamored: /She smiled and at once he became amorous of her./

iamb

/M - Aayi + Ambar :- Aayi(*Short*) se ambar(*Long*) tak ko baar baar use karna poem hai / a foot of two syllables, a short followed by a long in quantitative meter, or an unstressed followed by a stressed in accentual meter, as in Come live / with me / and be / my love.

Abhor

/M - Ab + or - Ab or nahi - *नफ़रत करना*/ /While male and female players universally tend to abhor synthetic turf, Fifa insist theirs is an issue of perception over fact./

acrid

/M - Acid - To Smell or speak bad, like you just ate some thing acidic . This smell or tone can also be called as *Acrid (Bad Smell or tone )*/ *Acrid is almost always used to describe a smell, and it ain't a pretty one.* Acrid is the nasty sting that you feel in your nose when you walk by a building that just burned down--it's sulfur mixed with smoke. You can also use acrid to describe someone's tone or general demeanor when they are being nasty. Someone about to do something evil might first give an acrid sneer, or speak in a chillingly acrid tone of voice, or even shudder as if they'd just bit into something with an acrid taste.

Adjunct

/M - Ad + to +Junction - *सहायक , जोड़*/ *Adjunct means something added on, but not part of the whole*. An adjunct professor is someone who is hired by a college to teach but isn't a full member of the faculty. This is a word you can figure out by taking it apart. From ad- "to" and -junct "join" (think "junction"), you can see that this is about joining something to another. "During lunch, Tim always sat the girls' lacrosse-team lunch table, and they joked that he was an adjunct member of the team."

Edict(Ee+dict)

/M - Addict - If you are addicted to smoking and then you meet this girl of your dream and she ask you politely to leave smoking , but then as usual you didn't comply . Suddenly one day if she ask you that either its Cigarette or its me then thats an Edict for you * An order which you should comply with * or loose your beautiful Girl friend obviously you dont want that / *If your mom orders you to clean your room, that's an order. If the king asks you to do it, that's an edict — an official order from some higher up.* Edict comes from the Latin editcum, meaning a "proclamation, or ordinance." Although it was originally used to describe a declaration or command from a king or other governing official, in more recent years it has come to be used almost sarcastically to describe any order. When your teacher says the report is due Monday morning, no exceptions, you know you'll be hitting the books this weekend — this is an edict you cannot ignore.

epiphany

/M - Aisi + Fainy = Goa main fainy peene ke baad logo ko boht *Inspirational thoughts प्रभुप्रकाश* aatey han / When inspiration hits you out of the blue, call it an epiphany. In the Christian tradition, Epiphany (ə-PIF-ə-nee) is a festival celebrating Christ's appearance to the Gentiles, observed every year on January 6. From the Christian sense we get an additional religious sense, "the appearance of a god or deity" and the more common modern usage, a noun meaning "*a sudden revelation.*" There's nothing religious about most epiphanies these days — your "Eureka!" moment could come when you realize that you're in the wrong line of work and you need to quit your job to join the circus.

Aesthetics

/M - Aisi+Tectics - Aisi Tectics jissey ensaan ko Sundar or asundar ki parakh ho / Or Esthetics Noun - *the branch of philosophy dealing with such notions as the beautiful, the ugly*, the sublime, the comic, etc., as applicable to the fine arts, with a view to establishing the meaning and validity of critical judgments concerning works of art, and the principles underlying or justifying such judgments. Hindi - *सौंदर्य शास्त्र*

allegory

/M - Alligator +Glory - A story written to show Alligator as a Greatest King lived ever on earth with great empire . *This story is like Metaphor on Steroids */ The figurative style known as allegory has nothing do with alligators — unless you're telling a story where alligators represent evil forces snapping at humanity. *An allegory is like a metaphor on steroids*: a writer tells a fictional story where everything and everyone in it is supposed to represent a deeper meaning. Using a plain old metaphor, you might call death "the grim reaper," but an allegory might build a whole tale of how the grim reaper goes around in a black cloak and informs people of their impending doom. Aesop's Fables are allegories, with animals taking the place of different human character types — though Aesop never wrote an allegory about an alligator /In the view of the government, this book is a veiled allegory championing the ideology of political dissidents./

Emollient

/M - Am + Oil + ient - I am big fan of Johnson's baby cream , it *emollients ( Softening or Soothing शांत करनेवाला)* dry skin / * An emollient is a cream or ointment with a thick, gooey texture. When your hands are dry and cracked in the winter, you probably apply an emollient to make them softer. * Emollient comes from a Latin word with the same spelling, which means "to make soft." The noun form of emollient refers to a substance that makes something soft. However, emollient can also be an adjective used to describe something with a *softening or soothing effect*. For example, the annoying child on the airplane might be soothed by the emollient sound of the pilot's voice over the intercom

anachronism

/M - Ana(Up, Against) + Chronism ( Time) - *An anachronism is something that doesn't fit its time period, like if you say you'll "dial" your smartphone.*/

Ire

/M - Anger / Ire is another word for "*anger*." So if you routinely steal your neighbor's newspaper, don't be surprised to be on the receiving end of his ire. Ire comes almost directly from the Latin word for anger, ira. While it means pretty much the same thing, ire usually stems from a specific grievance, rather than just general irritation with the world. And if you provoke someone's ire, you're probably going to feel their wrath. Shakespeare used both ire and anger in one famous sentence from his play "Pericles": "Yet cease your ire, you angry stars of heaven!" /Hip-hop mogul Russell Simons drew the ire of the Anti-Defamation League with a speech in Israel this week. /

tendon

/M - Ankit Tondon ke patle bones aur muscles ko jodne waala inelastic and tough tissue */ पेशी 1. Anatomy. *a cord or band of dense, tough, inelastic, white, fibrous tissue, serving to connect a muscle with a bone or part; sinew*.

Annus Mirabilis

/M - Annus ( Year) + Miracles - *Year of Miracles* / 1. a year of wonders, catastrophes, or other notable events /Ex- My annus mirabilis/

anthropoid

/M - Anthropos(Human Beings) + oid (Resembling) - Next time you are in need of a subtle insult that will completely go over your oafish brother's head, accuse him of being just barely *anthropoid( somewhat resembling a human.)* /

antiquity

/M - Antiquity - Old Whisky / 1. *Extreme Oldness* 2. the historic period preceding the Middle Ages in Europe /Last week, two members of Egypt's tourism and antiquities police force were shot dead on a road near the pyramids at Giza/ /Most times, particularly in antiquity, a piercing injury to the spine would have killed a person nearly instantaneously./

Anoint

/M - Appoint - If some is appointed by God that is called *anointment (To anoint means to choose by divine intervention. Or at least it seems like the big guy upstairs had something to do with it.)*/ Saints and religious leaders are said to be anointed, but so is that new unstoppable quarterback who saved the team midseason. Anoint comes to us from the ancient Latin word unguere, which means "to smear." Which explains the other sense of this word, which is *to apply with oil or another smearable substance, such as during a religious ceremony*

armistice(Army+ istice)

/M - Army + Ice: For some time army ko ICe kar dena ...(*to temporary stop War*) for sometime / Noun - युद्धविराम , थोड़े दिनों की युद्ध निवृत्ति 1. a temporary suspension of hostilities by agreement of the warring parties; truce: /Ex - World War I ended with the armistice of 1918./

Assail

/M - As + Sail - France ke King ne apne Soldiers ko bola ..we will attack (*Attack Violently*)on Britain tomorrow .. We will sail tomorrow ..But before that we need to (*Master art*) of Sailing ..That will (*impact*)our speed and time to reach Britain / Verb हमला करना , purpose of Mastering , Make an Impact 1. to attack vigorously or violently; assault. / to assail one's opponent with slander./ 2. to undertake with the purpose of mastering: /He assailed his studies with new determination./ 3. to impinge upon; make an impact on; beset: /His mind was assailed by conflicting arguments. The light assailed their eyes./

Asinine

/M - Ass + Nine - A jerk was acting like he got brains of Nine Asses , so everyone called him *Asinine ( बहुत मूर्खतापूर्ण )*/ If you want to call someone a jerk while sounding smart yourself, asinine is your go-to word. Asinine derives from the Latin asinus. Guess what that means? Bonus: Asinine takes stupid up a notch. There's someone so delightful in the double-edged quality of asinine behavior. *Talking trash about your boss is stupid. Talking trash about your boss in an email they're cc'd on...that's asinine.*

Assiduous

/M - Assi (80) + Daud - Ek race main assi 80 laps hain and racers ko constantly achhi Speed se daudna hoga to win it / adjective - *परिश्रमी , तत्पर* *If you call someone assiduous, it's a compliment. It means they're careful, methodical and very persistent. Good detectives are classically assiduous types.* / assiduous reading. / /an assiduous student. /

eviscerate ( Avis + Rate)

/M - Avis + Rate - Avis ki services ko rate kartey waqt if you take out review of cars then tum Eviscerate (*taking out important part)* kar rahe ho pure rating ko ..Car ko hatane ke baad rating ka koi matlab hi nahi reh jaayega / Eviscerate is not a pretty word. *To eviscerate can mean to remove the entrails of a creature. *On the Discovery Channel you can watch a vulture eviscerate or take out the guts of a dead animal. Verb *1. Remove the Entrails of 2. Take Away a Vital or Essential Part of * /the compromise among the parties eviscerated the bill that had been proposed/

Berate

/M - B.E + Rating - The rating he got in BE was very poor and deserved (*Scolding*) from his parents / A strong verb for *harshly cutting someone down with words is berate*. "He didn't just correct the cashier who gave him the wrong change, he started to berate her, calling her names in front of the whole store." When you berate someone *it is more than just raising your voice at them; it implies putting them down by insulting their character*. Berate comes from the 16th-century English and French for "to scold" or "to blame." Often the anger behind the scolding seems over-the-top, as in "When the young man behind the counter dropped the scoop of vanilla, the manager berated him excessively by declaring him worthless and weak."

Beset

/M - BE+Set - Ek dost ne apni Bachelor of Engg , IIT Kanpur se keee...In his 4th year he was (*attacked from all side,surrounded ,घेर लेना*) by HRs ..they were giving his different offers , finally he sat down and accepted Google's Offer / *Beset means to attack from all sides*--an invading army will beset a castle, or you might find yourself beset by a devastating storm. Beset also has a very different meaning: *to decorate or encrust with jewels or other ornamentation*. If you are attending a ball, you may choose a gown that is beset with silver sequins, just be careful that you don't end up looking like a giant disco ball. /Every petty little hiccup that beset its launch was magnified as an index of its chronic malfunction. /

Buffoon

/M - Baboon- Bewkoof baboon(*Fool*) ki tarah har kisi ko hasana(*Amuse*)/ noun मसख़रा 1, *a person who amuses others by tricks, jokes, odd gestures and postures, etc. * 2. a foolish person

balmy

/M - Balm - *the adjective balmy is used to describe weather so pleasant that it's positively therapeutic.*/ Tourists who flock from Minnesota to Florida in the wintertime are hoping for balmy weather — that is, those frosty Midwesterners are trading mountains of snow and freezing winds for warm sun and gentle breezes. /Downtown already has some beautiful new spaces, much used by people from all over the city enjoying themselves in what is often a balmy climate/

badinage( Badi + Naaaj)

/M - Bandage - He was involved in (*playful banter*) with his colleage and got this little cut on his forehead / Noun - हंसी-दिल्लगी करना , छेड़ 1. an exchange of light, playful, teasing remarks; /Ex - Sometimes there's no harm in a little badinage among colleagues. /

Barrage

/M - Bar + Age - Ek aadmi apne chotey se bachhey ko le kar Bar jaata hai ..Wahan ka Manager ye dekh kar aadmi ko bolna chaloo kar deta hai with *Uncontrolled Anger , Overflowing Emotion */ A barrage is something that *comes quickly and heavily गोला-बारी* — as an attack of bullets or artillery, or a fast spray of words. Sometimes in movies or news footage, the audience gets a glimpse from behind a mounted weapon and sees a heavy rain of bombs or bullets — called a barrage — going toward a target, sending as much POW! as possible to hit a wide area. *Words become a barrage when spoken or written in uncontrollable anger or with overflowing emotion*: "Her human-rights speech was a barrage of passion. It was hard to keep up with, but we felt the intensity of her cause." /He sought to do the only thing he could to counter the barrage of criticism about his style - attempt to make a virtue of it./

bourgeois(bor+jua)

/M - Bar + Jua - Bar main jaane ke baad , jua wahi log kheltey hain Jo (*Middle Class*) ke hotey hian / n. Middle Class adj .dominated or characterized by materialistic pursuits or concerns. / a bourgeois mentality / /Ex - Theatres should be proud to be bourgeois. For years, theatres have ignored middle-class customers and strived for a more diverse clientele. It is time they stopped / Hindi - मध्यवर्गीय

Solicitor

/M - Barrister- Mahatma Gandhi / If you get into trouble in England, don't ask for a lawyer. Find a solicitor. *England has two levels of attorneys: for big problems, you'll need a barrister, but for your hypothetical legal troubles, a solicitor should do nicely.* Some highly place attorneys in the U.S. are also called solicitors. The lawyer in charge of government cases that come before the Supreme Court is the Solicitor General, and that was Elena Kagan's job before President Barack Obama appointed her to the Supreme Court. Solicitor isn't always a privileged position. The person who knocks on your door asking you to contribute to some worthy cause is also a solicitor — someone who asks for — or solicits — donations.

Blase

/M - Base - When whole Army sits on Base for months and months, they get Blase *(Bored with life, Unimpressed )* / Adj - *indifferent to or bored with life; unimpressed, as or as if from an excess of worldly pleasures.* If the thrill is gone, you are blasé. If you yawn on a roller coaster, then maybe you've had one too many rides. *The adjective blase (most often spelled blasé), describes someone who is bored with the pleasures of life because of frequent indulgence or exposure.* When asked what she thought of the award ceremony, the actress yawned and replied, "It was blasé. It was just like the last 15 award ceremonies I had attended."

berserk

/M - Be + Sarak + Gaya + Ye + toh - He is gone *berserk ( पागल , निडर Berserk is another way of saying deranged, destructively violent, or unrestrained. )* - Sarak gaya hia ye , pagaal ho gaya hia / Like a wailing toddler ravaging the playroom when he's hopped up on sugar and long overdue for a nap. Famous writer and runner George Sheehan said, *"If you want to win anything - a race, your self, your life - you have to go a little berserk.*" He must have been thinking of the fierce Norse warriors called berserkrs that inspired the adjective we know to mean "crazed." Those warriors were feared to be fighters of superhuman strength who wore bear skins and chewed madly at their iron shields. It's safe to say most of their opponents ran away crying

belabor

/M - Be +labor : Boss ne buri tarah chillaya naukar pe ... tab bhi wo nahi suna kyunki wo abhi biwi ko peet (*to beat someone *)kar aaya tha.. then Boss repeated(*Repeated*) it many times.. Be Labor .. Be Labor/ पीटना Verb - 1.to explain, worry about, or work at (something) repeatedly or more than is necessary: /E - He kept belaboring the point long after we had agreed. / /* Why they can't get some major out to belabour the obvious, I don't know./ 2. to beat someone; to attack someone verbally Sri Lanka belabour Australia ..

Beeline

/M - Bee + Line - the most direct route/ *A beeline is the swiftest, most direct route between two points.* If you are shopping at the mall on a weekend afternoon and you see an empty parking space, you should make a beeline for it or risk circling the lot for hours. The word beeline combines the words bee and line. *The idea behind the word is the belief that a bee, when it is done feeding, will take the shortest path back to its hive without delay or meandering. So beeline not only has the sense of being a direct route, but also that there is some haste behind the action*. If you make a beeline for the chocolate at a party, you went straight to the dessert table without eating dinner first. /"he made a beeline for the bathroom"/

embellish

/M - Bell+Ish - *To decorate with bells and make it more attractive , or to enhance with false additions *./ * अलंकृत करना , सजाना The word "bell" shows up in the middle of embellish, and bells are something that decorate, or embellish something, making it more attractive. If you embellish speech, though, it can get ugly if you add a lot of details that aren't true.* Embellish often has the positive meaning of adding something to make it more handsome or beautifully decorated. But, while adding bells to something looks great at first, after a couple of hours of bells ringing in the ears, what was meant to embellish and beautify can get annoying. That's what can happen when you embellish by adding too many false or exaggerated details to a story. Embellishing with true, colorful details and vivid descriptions is what can really enhance the beauty of a story. /"Did you just make this up yesterday, Mr Evans, to embellish your account?"/ /The artist begins by creating a skeletal framework, or "canvas," as he calls it, embellishing it with curved, crosshatched lengths of wood as he goes./ /The network subsequently ordered an internal investigation into other instances where Williams allegedly embellished his experiences, most often in talk show appearances./

bellicose

/M - Belligerent / Adj - having or showing a ready disposition to fight

bestow

/M - Best two - The prizes will be * bestowed ( When you present an honor or gift to someone, you bestow it दान करना अर्पित करना*) by president to best two teams./ *Bestow comes from the Middle English stowen, "to place." Placing something really valuable or honoring in the hands of another, or conferring a position of responsibility on them, is to bestow it*. For example, "She gave her teacher a ceramic apple she had made, knowing that her whole class would bestow the big honor of Teacher of the Year later that day," or, "The king praised her for working with the poor, and he would later bestow the medal of honor on her in a ceremony."

bipartisan

/M - Bi + Party - If something is* bipartisan, it has the support of two political parties that normally don't agree on much.* / You might read about a bipartisan plan to improve the school system where you live. The word bipartisan is easy to figure out when you break it apart: bi-, meaning "two," plus partisan, meaning "supporter of a party." So something that's bipartisan involves two parties finding enough common ground to support the same thing. A key aspect of something that's bipartisan is that the two parties involved typically hold opposing views about the best way to do things, so *A bipartisan agreement is one that likely involved a lot of effort, compromise, and cooperation* /A bipartisan group of Maryland lawmakers on Monday will begin its work to develop recommendations for improving police training and enhancing police-community relations./ /Credit for the bill's successful passage this year also is being given to bipartisan alliances./

blasphemy

/M - Blast + funny : to blast the idea of god and make fun of it is *Blasphemy ( ईश्वर निन्दा, Offensive Ideas)*/ *Saying offensive things about God or religion is blasphemy. Blasphemy can be used for offensive ideas in other areas too.* If you're saying something bad about a god, or taking the Lord's name in vain, or questioning a religious institution in any way, you could be accused of blasphemy — insulting something sacred. You can use this word in a lot of other ways too. At a meeting of conservatives, a liberal idea could be considered blasphemy (and vice versa). You might even jokingly cry "Blasphemy!" if a friend said your favorite ice cream flavor stinks.

Bleak

/M - Bleach - Which makes you White and Pale ...i,e when you are in Tough Situation , you feel depressed / Adj Something that is bleak is *gloomy and depressing*. If it's raining and dark, you might describe the night as bleak. If you have looked for work and no one will hire you, you could describe your prospects as bleak. If you and the ten people sharing your lifeboat have been adrift for ten days and are down to your last cracker, your situation is bleak. A near synonym is *dismal*. Bleak is from Middle English bleik, from Old Norse *bleikr "white, pale." This word is related to the English word bleach.*

Bluebeard

/M - Blue + Beard - * Blue Beard man jo apni biwion ka katl karta ho* / any man who allegedly murders a series of women he has married (Crime)

boodle

/M - Booo - Ek aadmi Politican ko Ghoos(*large Quantity of Money, Bribe*) dete pakda gaya , toh Governor ne Aadmi ko Ghus dene ke liye saja suna dee ...Ye sun ke Log(*Crowd, Pack*) Bhadak gaye and boo karne lage .. unhone protest karna challoo kar diya and Lootna bhi (* Stolen Goods*) ..Tab jaakar Governor ne saja waapas le leee / Noun 1. *the lot, pack, or crowd:* /Send the whole boodle back to the factory./ 2. *a large quantity of something, especially money:* / He's worth a boodle./ 3. *a bribe or other illicit payment, especially to or from a politician; graft.* 4. *stolen goods; loot; booty; swag.*

Brackish

/M - Brac(Salty) + ish - When the water is too *Salty or unpleasant and harsh * it is called as Brackish / Adj -1. *distasteful and unpleasant; Slightly Salty , Unpalatable* /a brackish lagoon/

Brandish

/M - Brand - Ek pakistani bandey ne Boom Boom ka sabse mehanga waala bat liya . Jab batting karne pahucha toh *aage peeche hilaane laga * and *aggressively dikhaya* bowler ko ki dekh le ye Boom Boom hai ..samhal jaa bohot chakke maroonga main / Verb 1. move or swing back and forth /Web images of Roof that later surfaced showed him brandishing the battle flag/ 2. exhibit aggressively /brandish a sword/ /Brandishing nuclear weapons are the only way it knows to guarantee it will be left alone./

brinksmanship

/M - Brink(Edge) + Man + Ship - Ek aadmi ne ship main chori kartey huey pakda gaya .lekin usne apna Gunaah kabool nahi kiya .. Then logo ne usko ship ke Edge par laa kar khada kar diya and asked him to accept his Mistake ..(*a situation extremely close to a dangerous point*)/ Brinkmanship is pushing a situation to the point of disaster without quite going over the edge. Brinkmanship is mainly a political policy. When you're on the brink of something, you're right on the edge. *In politics, brinkmanship is an approach in which a country pushes a situation extremely close to a dangerous point*. Many considered the Cold War between the U.S. and Russia an example of brinkmanship; the accumulation of so many deadly weapons could have led to disaster. Brinkmanship is a gamble: by coming close to a dangerous outcome, you hope to get an agreement or concession you wouldn't otherwise get. /The simple fact is that, outside of the South and a few other areas, Tea Party extremism and brinksmanship is deeply unpopular. /

Brook

/M - Brook Bond - Brooke Bond Chai peeyo and Sahanshakti(*to Tolerate*) paao ..Coz ye Freshwater (*Natural Stream of fresh Water*) se ye chai bani hai / NOun - छोटी नदी ,बर्दाश्त करना 1.to bear; tolerate 2.a small, natural stream of fresh water. /None of these facts brook disagreement, but here the unity ends. /

brume

/M - Broom - Jhadu lagane ke waqt jo dhul ka Mist ya Fog ban jaata hai/ Noun 1. mist; fog.

mull

/M - Bull - Drink Red Bull (*to study or to meditate*) ..If you drink more than it can make Mess and you wont be able to Study (*गड़बड़ ,Failure*). As you know that Red Bull is made by ( * Sweetening and Heating with Spices *) of Pomegranate Juice with Spices and then Wrapped with (* Thin Cotton Fiber *) / Verb मलमल ,गड़बड़ ,विचार करना , मसाला देना 1. to study or ruminate; ponder. 2. to make a mess or failure of. 3.to heat, sweeten, and flavor with spices for drinking, as ale or wine. 4.a soft, thin Muslin(Cotton Fiber). 5.to mix (clay and sand) under a roller for use in preparing a mold.

Bumptious

/M - Bump (To Knock into them , Barge) - ek dusre ko jaanbujh ke bump kartey huey jaane ke attitude ko *Bumptious (Someone bumptious is cocky, aggressive, and loud अहंकारी , अक्खड़* ) boltey hian / Bumptious people jump ahead of everyone in line at the ice cream truck and steal subway seats from pregnant women. It's good to speak your mind and stand up for yourself, but it's not good to be bumptious. When you're bumptious, you're obnoxious. Someone who dominates a conversation without listening to others is bumptious. Someone who takes more than their fair share of something is bumptious.* To be bumptious is to be selfish and annoying. Bumptious people are often arrogant and usually thoughtless, and bumptious behavior shows no concern for other people.*

cacophonous

/M - Cactus + Phone - Cactus jaisi (*कर्कश*) aawaaz / Adj कर्कश 1. Jarring In Sound , Discordant , Harsh /The halftime show, especially, is a cacophonous display of shock and awe. /

Callow

/M - Call + Low - A *callow(young, in experienced)* receptionist was transferring calls at very low rate/ If you're a rookie or new to something, you could be described as callow — like callow freshmen in high school or the callow receptionist who can't figure out how to transfer a call. The word callow comes from the Old English word calu, which meant "bald or featherless." It was used to describe young, fledgling birds. Over time, the meaning expanded to include *young, inexperienced people*. You'll most often see the adjective paired with the noun youth. Think of the callow youth as people who haven't tested their wings yet.

culpable

/M - Capable of Blame - दंडयोग्य / If a child tells his mother he was not to blame for the cookie jar being broken, she could still find him culpable if he was the only one home. *Culpable means to be at fault.* Culpable is being deserving of blame. If you are culpable of a crime, you are the culprit, or the one who did it. Culpable can be used when looking for the root of the problem rather than a simple who done it. If a teacher leaves the room during a difficult test, and the students decide to cheat, parents might ask whether or not the teacher was also somewhat culpable for the outcome /However, because he is believed to have paid for Elhuzayel's ticket, he too is criminally culpable, federal authorities argued in the filings./

Carrion

/M - Carry + On - A vulture saw another vulture eating * Carrion ( Dead and rotting flesh of an animal )* he said , bud carry On / *The noun carrion refers to the dead and rotting flesh of an animal.*Ever seen a dead opossum or cat in the road? You can call that road kill carrion. The word carrion comes from a Latin word caro, which means "meat," but carrion is usually considered unfit for human consumption. Birds of prey and other opportunistic animals will often have carrion as part of their diet, however. Sometimes the word carrion is used a little more metaphorically: " * The soldiers were unable to retrieve the bodies of their fallen brothers, so they were left on the field of battle like so much carrion. *

castigate

/M - Cast + Gate - Brahmano main dusre cast ke logo ko gate ke andar nahi aane diya jaata hai , ek baar ek muslim ghar ke andar aa gaya toh Dadimaa ne usey boht daata (*Harsh Scolding*)/ फटकारना Use castigate when you mean *reprimand but in an especially harsh way*. If you take a mean teacher's books, even accidentally, you might worry that she's going to castigate you as soon as she finds out. Castigate means *punish, and punish harshly, but the punishment is always a severe scolding*. Sometimes it means criticize severely. Politicians in the Senate are always castigating each other for their alliances and opinions. Castigate and chasten, which also means "to reprimand" but is less severe, share the Latin root castus which means "pure." Ideally, if you castigate someone, you mean to guide someone away from the wrong path and toward a more pure one. But it sure doesn't feel like that when you're being castigated! /My former colleagues recently castigated me on Facebook for my conservative views./

Clement

/M - Cement - Ek budhiya ghar bana rahi thi ..but uske paas Cement nahi tha..Toh usne neighbor ke ghar se 2 bore Cement ke chura liye ..Neighbor ko jab pata chala toh usne gareeb samajh kar jaane diya (*merciful; lenient*)/ तरस , क्षमा , मेहरबानी Adj - merciful; lenient

Censurable

/M - Censure - deserving blame or censure as being wrong or evil or injurious /

certitude

/M - Certainly / 1. *total certainty or greater certainty than circumstances warrant* Certitude is very similar to certainty, and often used interchangeably, but there's a hint of danger about certitude; someone who displays it may well be overconfident .Certainty is more certain.

Chantey

/M - Chant - *Singing Salor Song*/ a rhythmical work song originally sung by sailors

chimera

/M - Chimera - A monster that has Lions head , A Goats Body and A Serpents' Tail ( *an idea that feels real but is impossible, which can only exist in one's mind कल्पना*) / A chimera is something you've imagined that's bits and pieces of others things mashed together into a new horrible fantasy, something impossible in real life that only exists in your mind. In Greek mythology, a chimera is a monster that has a lion's head, a goat's body, and a serpent's tail. And it breathes fire. No creature like that has ever existed, but the idea seemed real and terrifying to Greeks, and that's another meaning: *an idea that feels real but is impossible*, like the idea of a world without evil. Pronouncing the word is very possible though, just try it one of two ways, either kye-MEER-uh or kih-MEER-uh, both work. /Well the IMF today says that £7bn surplus is a chimera./

Chorale

/M - Choir - Song sung in Choir / A chorale is the *melody of a Christian hymn, or religious song. You're most likely to hear a chorale in a church*. You can use the *noun chorale to talk about a church song, or more specifically, the tune which the voices sing*. Most chorales are sung in harmony, blending higher and lower voices, and are fairly simple melodies that are relatively easy to sing along with. The word comes from the German Choralgesang, "choral song," with its Latin root of cantus choralis, "song belonging to a choir."

circuitous

/M - Circuit - *Circuitous means indirect or roundabout घुमावदार*. / If you're in a hurry to get to the hospital where your wife is having a baby, you want to take the straightest, fastest way, not a circuitous one! Circuitous comes from the Latin word circuitus meaning basically "a going around." If you're being circuitous it's like you're going around and around in circles. *It can also refer to someone's manner or speech, if they are not being direct. *For example, if you want someone to get you another piece of cake but just you sit there looking longingly at your empty plate, saying "More cake sure would be nice," then you're being circuitous. And annoying.

Circumvent

/M - Circus + Went - Tum Haathi ke trainer ho circus main , aur har baar bina uski tatti uthaye huey chup chup nikal jaate ho , es cheez ko Circumvent kehtey hian *चालाकी se बच कर निकलना */ Verb 1. *surround so as to force to give up* /to circumvent a body of enemy troops./ 2. *avoid or try to avoid fulfilling, answering, or performing (duties, questions, or issues)* /He circumvented capture by anticipating their movements./

Cloture(Clo+ture)

/M - Closure - *To close a debate and causing immediate vote to be taken* / A method of closing a debate and causing an immediate vote to be taken on the question.

Klutz

/M - Clumsy Person - Stupid Person/ 1.a clumsy, awkward person. 2. a stupid or foolish person; blockhead. /But if you call my kid a dopey young klutz, God help you/ /Have to get over this savior complex, I instruct myself, no one wants to be rescued by a klutz./

cockney

/M - Cock + Ney - Cock ne Hen ke liye Mattar Paneer banaya ..that was unusual (*Non Standard*)/ *the nonstandard dialect* of natives of the east end of London

Colloquial

/M - Col + *Loqu(Speak)* - Colloquial is a colony language and should not be used in formal conversation साधारण बोलचाल संबंध/ *Colloquial language is casual and conversational: it's the difference between "What are you going to do?" and "Whatchagonnado?"* The word colloquial comes from the Latin word colloquium, which means "speaking together." The roots are the prefix com-, which means "together," and the suffix -loqu, which means "speak." Some may think that colloquial language is not good, when in fact it may just not be appropriate for the context. While it is OK to be colloquial and chatty with friends, it is not acceptable to be colloquial in an essay for school or work /In Nigeria—and in some other parts of Africa—Apollo is the colloquial term for conjunctivitis./

cogitate

/M - Colgate +Ate - Colgate kha ke (*Sochna*) uske side effect ke baarey main/ think over something; ponder / Ex - Thinking is an art that we've allowed to settle into a habit. Change the way you cogitate and you could come up with some surprises / Hindi - विचार करना

corroborates

/M - Collaborates - To collaborate with some one so that *he can Support you* when you need him in the Court Room .पुष्टि करना/ *समर्थन करना To corroborate is to back someone else's story*. If you swear to your teacher that you didn't throw the spitball, and your friends corroborate your story by promising that you were concentrating on math homework, she might actually believe you. For example, a witness in court corroborates the testimony of others, and further experimentation can corroborate a scientific theory. Near synonyms are substantiate and confirm. Corroborate, originally meaning "to support or strengthen," was borrowed from Latin corrōborāre, formed from the prefix cor- "completely" plus rōborāre "to strengthen" (from rōbur "strength")

Comely

/M - Combly - उपयुक्त , मनोरम / *Comely means attractive or appropriate. A comely girl is pretty.* A comely hairstyle makes you seem prettier maybe than you are. If your manners are comely, it means you know the right way to act to put people at their

commiserate

/M - Commission - In india you have to give commission for any Government work , an indian was telling this to his chinese friend and he was expressing * commiseration ( Sympathy ,समवेदना, सहानुभूति)* Commiseration refers to feelings of sympathy for other people. If a friend's pet dies, you will probably want to express your commiseration. * If you are feeling commiseration for someone, they are probably going through difficult times. * We feel commiseration when others suffer or feel pain and we understand that pain. We commiserate with them. The Latin root com- means "together with." Just as communication and community are words involving getting people together, commiseration is about feeling other people's pain.

encompass(En+Compass)

/M - Compass - University of California , Berkeley's campus is so big that you need to use Compass to navigate . This campus *encompasses(Contains)* lecture halls, a football field, a medical center, a dining hall and some parking lots./ Encompass means to contain. Encompass can be used when talking about anything that contains something else. A lecture on Edward Hopper might encompass all aspects of his life and art, a work of art could encompass many techniques, and a policeman's jurisdiction may encompass an entire state. The continental U.S. encompasses 48 states. This entry encompasses many examples of the word encompass in use!

concoct

/M - Con + Caught - Kaun Kaun se cheezo ko pakad ke tumne ye sabzi banayi hai ..A husband asks to his wife .. He further said .. it looks like *concot ( mixing different ingredients) * of Kerela and Baigan which i really dislike / When you concoct something, *you mix up different ingredients*. If you want to become a mad scientist or a wizard, you'll have to learn how to concoct strange potions. If the word concoction makes you think of steaming caldrons or liquids bubbling in test tubes, you'll be amused to know that it comes from a Latin word for "digestion." Yum! On summer days, children sometimes concoct imaginative stews from grass, leaves and dirt. * They may also concoct lies to explain why they tried feeding such concoctions to their little sister *

Condign

/M - Con + Dine - A Con man was dining on forge credit card . His card was declined and when manager found that his credit card was forged , he asked him to clean floor which was *condign (worth, deserved, appropriate उपयुक्त)* punishment for him / *Use the adjective condign to describe a fair and fitting punishment,* like the condign clean-up work assigned to a group of students after they made a big mess. There are two ways to correctly pronounce condign: "CON-dine" or "con-DINE." The word comes from Latin: con- means "together, altogether" and dignus means "worthy." So, something that is *condign is deserved or appropriate. It especially applies a punishment that is severe but just, meaning the punishment is appropriate for the crime.*

Conjecture

/M - Con + Lecture - Every one was guessing ki Lecture Kaunsa hoga *Guess* , अनुमान लगाना/ Can you guess what conjecture means? It's a word to use when you are not sure of something and have to "*guess or surmise.*" You can see how the word conjecture means that you create a theory or opinion about something without basing it in fact because the original definition of conjecture, from Old French, is "*interpretation of signs and omens.*" Since signs and omens are pretty subjective, it makes sense that the word would then move to its current meaning. However, even though it only seems like weather reports are conjectures, they are actually based on evidence!

Consecrate

/M - Con + Sacred - *Something consecrated is dedicated to God and thus sacred. And then remember that the meanings of words tend to stretch; over time this one moved from "dedicated to God" to "dedicated to whatever"*/ Consecrate means to make holy or to dedicate to a higher purpose. You need to consecrate a building to turn it into a church, but you can also consecrate a week in New York City to the pursuit of the perfect bagel. /His inevitable setbacks will consecrate any idea that feasts on them. / * commit, dedicate, devote, give*

Contemplate(Kaun+template)

/M - Con(Kaun) + Temple + Late - Pujaario ke head ne sab pujaarion se poocha ..kaun late aaya aaj ..(*to consider thoroughly; think fully or deeply about सोचना *) Before you accept a job offer, or a college's offer of admission, you should take time to contemplate the pros and cons of your decision. If you contemplate something, you think about it carefully. Contemplate is from Latin contemplatus, past participle of contemplari "to gaze attentively, observe," from the prefix com- "together" plus templum "temple." The original meaning of Latin contemplari was "to mark out a space for observing auguries or omens," and the temple was a holy space reserved for this purpose. /"I think it's downright shameful that they're even contemplating turning their backs on American troops," he said./

condescend

/M - Condo + Descend - He was living in one of the biggest Condo's in Atlanta Downtown ..but he left that place and bought a small house in Suburb to stay with her Middle class Girl Friend (*अपने स्तर से नीचे गिरना *)/ Verb अपने स्तर से नीचे गिरना ,एहसान जताते हुए करना ,कृपा दिखाना 1.to behave as if one is conscious of descending from a superior position, rank, or dignity. 2.to put aside one's dignity or superiority voluntarily and assume equality with one regarded as inferior: /He condescended to their intellectual level in order to be understood./ /He would not condescend to misrepresent the facts./ /Try to not even think it, so that you don't come across as arrogant or condescending. /

Consternation

/M - Congress + Stir + Nation - Congress Stirred a new Issue in which they blamed Bhajpa for 20000 Cr Scam .. Whole Nation is in *Shock घबराहट * as it may collapse the Government and put country in bad shape / /* घबराहट*/ Consternation is a noun that can stop you in your tracks because it means "a sudden, alarming amazement or dread that results in utter confusion; dismay." f you have a sense of consternation you have become afraid, disoriented, or completely befuddled. /For Labour supporters, the Scottish Nationalists are both a cause for consternation and hope./

connoisseur

/M - Conno + Sir :- humarey school main har teacher apne subject main expert they (*Expert , Discerning* )/ Noun - जानकार , विशेषज्ञ , माहिर 1. a person who is especially competent to pass critical judgments in an art, particularly one of the fine arts, or in matters of taste / a connoisseur of modern art./ 2.a discerning judge of the best in any field: / Ex -a connoisseur of horses /

Construe

/M - Construction - Ek naye aadmi ne construction line join kiya , usko daily thoda thoda kaam sikhane lage , he was *able to understand and make sense समझाना* of all the important points like , Concrete ko sukhne ke pehle hi dhang se level main laana hota hai nahi toh usmain cracks aa jayengey / *If you interpret something or make sense of it, you construe its meaning*. If the new girl in your class asks to sit with you at lunch, you could construe that she wants to be friends. You can never have too many friends!

conflate

/M - Cornflakes :- Cornflakes and Milk always *conflate ( Mix Together )* together / *Conflate is a more formal way to say "mix together.*" You probably wouldn't say you conflated the ingredients for a cake, but if you blended two different stories together to make a new one, conflate would work. The verb conflate comes to us from the Latin word conflare, which literally means "to blow together." So *think of using this word when you want to talk about two things getting thrown together and combined*. Things that have been conflated often seem mixed up or confused, as when you conflate two different ideas, taking parts of one and parts of another to build your own Frankenstein version of things.

scoff

/M - Cough - Kuch ameer ladkian ek garib ladki ka schoool main mazak uda rahi they , they were scoffing (*disrespecting, making fun of her )* her for cheap phone . Hastey hastey ek bandi ko khansi chalu ho gayi and they she was coughing and blood bhi aaa gaya gale se ..Isliye boltey hain ki kisi ka mazzak nahi udatey / *To laugh at someone with scorn is to scoff at them.* People have scoffed at many great inventors, saying their products would flop because the public wouldn't be interested in things like the light bulb, cars, televisions, or personal computers. The verb scoff is often followed by the word at ("scoff at the idea, scoff at the statement, scoff at the notion"). The verb can also mean to treat with contempt or to mock. Naysayers scoff at all kinds of theories, and grouchy old men tend to scoff for the heck of it.

Countenance

/M - Count + Nuns - Counting *face expression (Behavior, मुख मुद्रा )* of Nuns ..which is always Strict / The noun *countenance means the face or its expression. If you're a great poker player, you probably have a calm countenance.* Countenance comes from a French word for "behavior," but it has become a fancy term for either the expression of a face or the face itself: "*He had a puzzled countenance*," or "*what a charming countenance!*"Countenance can also be a verb meaning to tolerate or approve. If someone does something offensive, tell them, "I'm afraid I can't countenance that."

Drab

/M - Crab - Crab se mujhey allergy hai so usey dekhtey hi i feel *Dull and Depressing */ *Dull, dreary, dingy, depressing*: These adjectives capture the sense of drab, whether the word is used to describe a muted color, a miserable mood, or an oppressively boring existence. *Have you ever heard of the color olive drab? It's the color the military clothes its soldiers in and is the original meaning of the word drab*. A little over 100 years ago, people began using drab in the metaphorical sense to mean "dull" and "lacking brightness." If a website or an advertisement is drab, the page is boring and unattractive. If it is cold and rainy for a week, you'll get awfully tired of those drab days, and a great teacher can make even the drabbest book come to life.

Curmudgeon

/M - Curry + Mud - Curry and Mud main lipta hua budha paagal jo *सठियाया* gaya hai and sab ko gaali de raha ahi / Noun - *सठियाया हुआ व्यक्ति* Old, cranky, and more than a little stubborn, a curmudgeon is the crusty grey haired neighbor who refuses to hand out candy at Halloween and shoos away holiday carolers with a "bah humbug!" He'll be ill-tempered and miserly, eager to shake his fist and spout disagreeable opinions.

Scurrilous

/M - Curry + lious - He was Referring Curry to tattiii ..that was gross (*Gross*) ...and that hurt our maharashtrian friend (*Disrespectful*) / Adj - अपमानजनक , गंदा 1.grossly or obscenely abusive

Curtail

/M - Curtain - When you pull down the curtain you *Curtail( Curtail is an official-sounding word for stopping or slowing things down. )* sunlight / *The police try to curtail crime — they want there to be less crime in the world*. A company may want to curtail their employees' computer time, so they spend more time working and less time goofing around. Teachers try to curtail whispering and note-passing in class. *When something is curtailed, it's either stopped entirely or stopped quite a bit — it's cut short.*

Dabble

/M - Dabble - ऊपरी तौर से दिलचस्पी लेना/ You dabble when you are *a little bit involved in an activity*, such as an art form or a hobby. Maybe you only dabble in mystery novels, but you are very knowledgeable about comic books. *The word dabble can also often relate to water. It can mean "to splash playfully," or "to get just a little wet." * A bird can also dabble in water by dipping its bill into it. Each of these meanings of dabble is often followed by the word in. For example, a duck may dabble in the water (and then dribble a few drops afterward from its bill), and you may dabble in shrubbery art.

twilight

/M - Dawn सांझ / The time just after sunset, when the light is half-faded, but the world is not yet totally dark, is twilight. If you are between two states, like asleep and awake, that can also be called a twilight moment. Twilight comes just before the night falls. The early light, just before sunrise, is also technically called "twilight" but most people call it "dawn." The prefix twi- might be a clue that twilight happens twice a day, or it could mean "half," as in the half-light of this time. * Something that is declining can be described as twilight आखिरी अवस्था *— like the twilight of the trend of wearing plastic clogs favored by nurses and chefs. /Now, in the twilight of his career - and very possibly at its pinnacle - the reverberations are starting to be heard./

demur

/M - De + Mar - A handsome boy in restaurant was flirting with a girl and wanted a kiss, She * demurred ( Politely Disagree , Hesitated )* Few times ..then the boy said .. de ya mar / If your mother asks you to clean your room and you refuse, you demur. And if your friend invites you to the Death Metal Forever concert but you hesitate, you demur. *Whether you object, politely disagree, or hesitate, you demur* If Aunt Tilly offers to knit you a sweater, you might politely demur, being reluctant to accept. When she describes the bunnies she plans for the sweater, you would want to strongly demur, explaining that you are moving to Texas next week and will no longer need sweaters. *And if you find yourself the defendant in a civil suit, you might file a demurrer, objecting to the plaintiff's complaint *. When you file that demurrer, you also demur.

detractors

/M - De + Tractor - A person who always wants to drive tractor on you always (*One who puts you down*) Noun - निन्दक A detractor is someone *who puts you down*. When you're proposing ideas at work, your detractor is the person who finds fault with everything you say. Use the noun detractor for someone who is always critical. You might describe your brother as a detractor of the government if he complains incessantly about taxes, voting, the President, and all the members of Congress. If a person takes a dislike to you in particular, he is your own personal detractor. The origin of detractor goes back to the Latin word detrahere, "take down, pull down, or disparage. /A lone tweet she sent on Monday night was knocked by detractors as insufficient given the gravity of the moment./

deluge

/M - Delhi+Huge : Delhi had huge flood (*Flood*) recently , after which money and support from whole country down poured. (*Overwhelmed*) / मूसलाधार वर्षा , पानी की बाढ़ ,पानी की बाढ़ Noun - 1. flooded or overwhelmed 2. Downpour Verb 1. to Flood 2. To Over run , Overwhelmed / She was deluged with congratulatory letters./

demotic

/M - Demo(Common People) + Tic - demotic saying or expression is casual, colloquial, and used by the masses जनसाधारण and not by Elite./ Some forms of the Greek and Egyptian languages are also called demotic, which will be relevant to you when you get your PhD in Classics. *Demotic comes from the Greek word demotikos, meaning "of or for the common people" or "in common use." Members of the aristocracy don't typically use demotic idioms, but it is often the elite who will point out that something is demotic. Of course, in a classless society, everything ought to be demotic, therefore making it obsolete to designate sayings as demotic. So far, however, demotic is still a relevant term.

Dissident

/M - Desi + Dent - Indian Protestors ne Government vehicles ko todna chaloo kar diya ... issey 90% vehicles main major dent aa gaya ..*Rebelling Against Government */ If you are a dissident, you are a person *who is rebelling against a government. Dissidents can do their work peacefully or with violence* . *Dissident is closely related to the word, dissent, which means objecting*. People who are dissidents show their dissent. Catholic priests who advocate allowing women into the priesthood could be called dissidents, as could the Puritans who left England to live in colonial America. *As an adjective, a dissident member of a group is one who disagrees with the majority of members.* /Police do not believe dissident republicans were behind the attack./

desiccate

/M - Desi +Cat - Desi Billian apne khane ko Sukha(*Dry*) kar chuppa Deti hai / verb - सुखाना (used with object), desiccated, desiccating. 1.to dry thoroughly; dry up. 2.to preserve (food) by removing moisture; dehydrate. verb (used without object), desiccated, desiccating. 3.to become thoroughly dried or dried up. /Trees lose their leaves so that they don't desiccate./

Deign(Dayn)

/M - Design - Manager ask developer to create Design Document for very simple change .. Developer didnt want to do that but he *reluctantly agreed* on that / कृपा दिखाना Deign means to *reluctantly agree* to do something you consider beneath you. When threatened with the loss of her fortune, an heiress might deign to get a job, but she might look down her nose at the people she'd have to work with. Deign has the same origins as dignity. Both descend from the Latin word, dignare, meaning "to deem worthy." *If you deign to do something, you don't feel it's worthy of your lofty stature, but you do it anyway *— it's like you're doing someone a really big favor. Instead of admitting his wrongdoing, the politician who is accused of taking bribes might indignantly declare, "I won't deign to dignify your ridiculous accusations with a response!"

despotism

/M - Despo + tism - One who is despo ( desperate) in rulling his country and will show arrant despotism* (Despotism is a way of ruling in which the leader has total, unchecked power)*/. Joseph Stalin purged the Soviet Union of all his opponents in order to rule the country through despotism. He didn't have many friends. Despotism can also *describe tyranny, the wielding of power through cruelty and terror. *It's often used in reference to a country that's ruled by a dictator, but despotism can describe any situation characterized by oppression and threats. When your sister threatens to send all of your friends embarrassing baby photos of you if you don't let her control the TV remote,

Denounce

/M - Devil + Announce - Announce(*Portend*) karna publicly (*Condemn Publicly, formal accusation*) ya phir formal complain karna ki koi aadmi Corrupt hai ya bura kaam kar raha hai ..Devil ki harqate kar raha hai .. / Verb - अभियोग लगाना ,निंदा करना ,दोषी ठहराना , बदनाम करना , सूचित करना 1.*to condemn or censure openly or publicly:* /Ex -to denounce a politician as morally corrupt./ 2.*to make a formal accusation against, as to the police or in a court.*

Dichotomy

/M - Di + tomy - Tomy naam ki billi ko 2 bhag main batna is *dichotomy ( द्विभाजन)* / *A dichotomy is an idea or classification split in two. When you point out a dichotomy, you draw a clear distinction between two things.* *A dichotomy is a contrast between two things. When there are two ideas, especially two opposed ideas — like war and peace, or love and hate — you have a dichotomy. *You often hear about a "false dichotomy," which occurs when a situation is unfairly represented as an "either/or" scenario. For example, the statement "All cars are either small and efficient or large and polluting" creates a false dichotomy because there are some cars that don't fit into either category. /The dichotomy comes from Asay referring to revenue and the Register referring to adjusted net loss per share./

diaphanous

/M - Dia ( through) + Fans - Fans are *diaphanous (Transparent)* at higher speeds/ *If a dress is so see-through that light shines through it, it's diaphanous. You could also call it "sheer" or "transparent," but diaphanous sounds much fancier.* If you want a classic example of diaphanous clothing, check out all those nineteenth century Romantic paintings of goddesses clad in lightweight gowns flouncing around in the middle of forests at night. Those gowns are diaphanous, and so are the fluttery translucent muslin curtains in your kitchen window and the gauzy tutu your little sister loves to wear. The Greek root, diaphanes, "see-through," combines dia-, "through," and phainesthai, "to show."

Diatribe

/M - Dia + Tribe - A bitter (*कठोर समालोचना*) comment was made by Tribe leader to invoke people against another tribe / It's pretty overwhelming when you ask your friend a seemingly innocuous question, like "Do you like hot dogs?" and she unleashes a diatribe about the evils of eating meat.* A diatribe is an angry, critical speech.* *With most diatribes, the speaker thinks he's well informed and knows something the listener doesn't, while to most listeners the diatribe is so angry and unhinged that it's just a waste of time. * / British banker receives death threats for anti-Singapore diatribe/

diabolical

/M - Diablo (Devil in Spanish) - devil Intentional - शैतान का/ *Diabolical means "evil.*" This is a strong word. Too much math homework might seem unfair, but it probably isn't diabolical. Diabolical is related to the Spanish word diablo, which means "*devil.*" In many religions and mythologies, you can't get any more evil than a devil, so diabolical is a powerful term, stronger than even despicable, which is another strong word for things that are hateful. *Diabolical things are also intentional. If you got hit by lightning, that's awful and harmful, but it's not diabolical. If someone deliberately runs you over with a car, that's much more diabolical.*

Dianoetic(Dia+netic)

/M - Diana + tic - Diana ke accident ke upar boht saari hypothetical theories hain , but by looking at evidences and facts its clear that she was totally drunk and was at fault . This thinking is called dianoetic , caused by logically reasoning rather than intuit mind/ Adj - proceeding to a conclusion by reason or argument rather than intuition /Happiness, therefore, consists in the combination of dianoetic and ethical virtues./

derange

/M - Dis + Arrange - to mess some ones closet and disarrange it , he will go *derange ( Crazy or completely confuse)* / *1. driven Insane 2. throw into great confusion or disorder* /Some of you actually believe that the squirrels around campus are the slightly deranged reincarnations of English majors who couldn't get jobs after graduation./ /One need not be "deranged" to see Walker's policy as ridiculous./

Dissonance

/M - Dis + Honest - When you are not honest with your parents then they can stop your credit card payments and that will raise a *conflict मतभेद* between you and them ..You may want to show your gussa by playing Drums in your room *बेसुरापन */ *Disagreeable sounds can be called dissonance. You know it's dissonance if you have the strong desire to cover your ears with your hands.* Racket, noise, dissonance — all can describe sounds that are not pleasant. While some musicians purposely add a little dissonance into their melodies to create an unexpected sound, others, like someone who just started drum lessons, creates dissonance by accident. *Dissonance can also be a conflict between people or opinions, like the dissonance you feel when you want to do something but your parents say "no."*

disposition

/M - Dis + Position - In bad situations or positions , true *disposition (Mood , or general attitude about life स्वभाव तबीयत) * comes out . / *Someone's disposition is their mood or general attitude about life*. If your friend woke up on the wrong side of the bed, tell her that she might need a disposition makeover. Disposition comes to us through Old French from Latin and refers to the positive or negative way a person views the world. In contrast, a person's character is determined by his or her inner moral values, and one's personality reflects what one is like as an individual. * An animal with an excellent disposition is cooperative and friendly towards people. If you are cheerful, you are often said to have a sunny disposition.*

Di*SS*ent

/M - Dis + Sent - I don't agree (*Publicaly Disagree*) to Send your son to boarding School in early age / To dissent is to *publicly disagree with an official opinion or decision*. Dissent is also a noun referring to public disagreement.

Dissemble

/M - Disassemble - On box , IKEA show full picture of sofa but when you order ,it comes in disassemble way and you need to spend good time to assemble it . This is just a trick to *deceive , false appearance ढोंग करना*customers. / *To dissemble is to hide under a false appearance, to deceive *. "When confronted about their human rights record, the Chinese government typically dissembles." Dissemble is a little more complicated than a straight lie or denial. When you dissemble, you disguise your true intentions or feelings behind a false appearance. * To dissemble is to pretend that you don't know something, to pretend that you think one way when you act another way. * "My boyfriend was dissembling the whole time. He was a married father of two."

discourse

/M - Discussion + Course - * Discussion बातचीत करना * on choosing Course for Phd / *If you use the word discourse, you are describing a formal and intense discussion or debate.* The noun discourse comes from the Latin discursus to mean "an argument." But luckily, that kind of argument does not mean people fighting or coming to blows.* The argument in discourse refers to an exchange of ideas — sometimes heated — that often follows a kind of order and give-and-take between the participants*. It's the kind of argument and discussion that teachers love, so discourse away!

Discursive

/M - Discussion - When you discuss things with your friends , sometimes you just wander from one idea to another and then another . But in the same discussion sometimes you think about logical options for implementing the idea . *this wandering and thinking of logical options quite opposing but both means Discursive* / Adj 1.passing from one topic to another, usually in an un-methodical way; digressive(Straying from main point or cause) /a rambling discursive book/ 2. of or relating to knowledge obtained by reason and argument rather than intuition , dianoetic /Her discursive dissertation on Colonial American women was well-argued and well-reasoned. Her professors were most impressed with her work./

disparage

/M - Display + Rage - When you *disparage(It means to belittle or degrade a person or idea.)* someone you show your rage and anger towards them ./ *Disparage is a specific way to describe a certain kind of insult, the kind that secures the insulter's place as superior.* It often refers to an opinion or criticism lobbed in print or via word of mouth, not necessarily an act done to someone's face. If someone or something is being disparaged, you will often find a competing interest in the wings. /In due time, all the people who mocked you will go from disparaging you to asking, "Hey... how'd you do that?"/ /"There were a number of disparaging comments that started to come up," Bullock said./

Eulogy(U+logy)

/M - EU(Europe Union) + Log - Europe main jab koi marta hai toh uske praise main ek Speech likhi jaati hai ..usko boltey hain eulogy / noun *बड़ाई* 1. *a speech or writing in praise of a person or thing, especially a set oration in honor of a deceased person. * /"I will, at any point in my life, other than giving a eulogy, try to make people laugh," he said. / /"The entire film industry is mourning her this week," said Zanuck's wife, Lili Fini Zanuck, in a eulogy at the service. / /To tell the story will be the task of the eulogy I must begin tonight. /

Earl

/M - Early - Pehle ke zamane ke bade log / इंगलैंड के सामन्तों की विशिष्ट पदवी Noun - *A British nobleman*

Efficacy

/M - Effectiveness - * क्षमता, गुण, प्रभाव */ The degree to which a *method or medicine brings about a specific result is its efficacy*. You might not like to eat it, but you can't question the efficacy of broccoli as a health benefit. Efficacy is a more formal way to say effectiveness, both of which stem from the Latin verb efficere "to work out, accomplish." *The effectiveness, or efficacy, of something is how well it works or brings the results you hoped for*. A scientist does research to determine the efficacy of a vaccine or medicine under development. If it is efficacious, it will cure or prevent a disease.

Eccentric(Ek+Centric)

/M - Ek + Centric - Board ke paper main har question ek centric circle ke hi aaye , that is *eccentric ( Unusual) */ 1. *conspicuously or grossly unconventional or unusual* /"famed for his eccentric spelling"/ 2 . not having a common center; not concentric 3. *a person with an unusual or odd personality*विलक्षण व्यक्ति

eclectic

/M - Electric - Tesla ki Electric car main usne sab vehicles ke best parts le kar apni gaadi main laga dee hai .. and *He calls his car as Eclectic Car* / Adjective 1. (in art, philosophy, etc) *selecting what seems best from various styles, doctrines, ideas, methods*, etc 2. *composed of elements drawn from a variety of sources, styles, etc *

Alleviate

/M - Elevate - Elevator lightens your burden by puling you from 1st floor to 20th floor . This also *alleviates( Lightens)* your tension to not carry your laptop through stairs / Do all these words make your head ache? If so, take an aspirin to alleviate, or relieve, your pain. The verb, alleviate, stems from the Latin root, levis "light" and is related to modern English words such as elevator and levitate — both words implying a lightening of one's load. Alleviate also has this sense of lightening a burden such as physical pain or emotional duress. You can take medicine to alleviate symptoms or do exercise to alleviate stress. Or if you want a bigger challenge: try alleviating traffic congestion or world hunger.

elicit

/M - Elite - If you say something bad about elite people , you will *elicit ( creating or provoking a response)* / *Elicit has to do with creating or provoking a response. A great speech will elicit cheers — a bad speech will elicit boos.* Teachers try to elicit responses from students. If a friend smiles at you, it will probably elicit a smile of your own. *In court, a lawyer might try to elicit mistakes and inconsistencies in the testimony of a witness.* In all cases, whatever is elicited is some kind of response.

Endow

/M - End + Dowry - Protest chaloo hua to End Dowry ..Parents apne bachho ko gift(*Gift of money*) de saktey hai to Start family but wo mandatory condition nahi honi chahiye ...Aur ye toh Aisa Gift hai jo you cant return ..so dont take advantage of it ...Bhagwaan ne sabko kuch na kuch abilities dee hai (*Gift of Ability*) and everyone should use that / To endow is to furnish, but not with furniture. * If you've been endowed with something, it means you've been given a gift — most likely a gift that can't be returned or exchanged, like a sense of humor or athletic ability or trust *. We usually use endow to refer to an ability or a quality, but you can endow someone with money, too. *Endow is related to the word dowry, which is a gift that a man -- or sometimes a woman -- receives from his or her fiancé's family before the wedding*. The practice of giving dowries has fallen out of fashion in most Western countries, but there are still many parts of the world where it's common for the bride's family to provide the groom with an endowment of land and livestock.

Entreaty

/M - End + Treaty - One of the member of fraternity has ended his relationship with the Group because they were not sticking to their rules ..he then Begged/Requester(*Begging/Pleading*) another fraternity to take him in / "Ain't too proud to beg" is what the word entreaty is all about. *When you make an entreaty, you're begging or pleading for something.* An *entreaty is the kind of request you make to King Kong when he's dangling you from the top of the Empire State Building*. It's an appeal you make to someone who usually has the power to grant your wish. Entreaty is often used in the plural: "After all my pleas and entreaties, my teacher still gave me a C."

Endurance

/M - End+insurance : he ended his insurance coz he think he can (Bear pain) and (Hardship) and can (sustain Longer) / Noun - *1.the fact or power of enduring or bearing pain, hardships, etc. 2. lasting quality; duration:*

Enmity

/M - Enemy / Absolute hatred Hindi - *बैर , शत्रुता * /Ex - Only 900 years of enmity stand in the way /

enchant

/M - English + Chant - English main hindi ke Chant sunana ...Log bol rahe baap kya jaadu daala tune(*मंत्रमुग्ध ,Magical Influence*)..and wo ..Khush(*Delight*) hogaye / जादू डालना ,मंत्रमुग्ध होना , Verb - 1. to subject to magical influence; bewitch: /fairytales about witches who enchant handsome princes and beautiful maidens./ 2. to delight to a high degree:

Equivocate

/M - Equi + Vote - Ek aadmi vote karne ke baad aakar bolta hai ki usne Congree and Bhajpa dono ko vote kiya hia ..Logo ke liye Obvious tha ki wo bewkoof (*MISLEAD*) kar raha hai / टालमटोल करना Verb - to use expressions of double meaning in order to mislead /Ex - You may equivocate, you may lie in your business, but you don't lie to the press. /

Efface

/M - Erase + Face - *To Erase the Pain and Bad memories from your face भुला देना , मिटा देना*/ If something is erased or rubbed out, it has been effaced. Teachers get annoyed to find that someone has effaced the blackboard — even the part clearly marked, "Do Not Erase!" You can also efface things that are not physical — like effacing feelings, impressions, or memories. When you efface a memory, you wipe it out as well. Some people believe that their good deeds are able to efface their past wrongs. They'll have to rely on others' opinions to see how well that works.

Arrant

/M - Errant - An Errant kid was making *arrant(Too much , अत्यन्त, परले दर्जे का) * noise and was ear deafening / The word arrant intensifies. An arrant criminal is one heck of a criminal. Arrant nonsense is total nonsense. Do you struggle for adequate superlatives? If so, you might want to add arrant to your arsenal. *It can be used to add emphasis to other words, most often negative words. Arrant rudeness is extreme rudeness. Arrant hypocrisy is very hypocritical. An arrant liar is a world-class liar*. Arrant has a meaning similar to complete or utter. Like other intensifiers, arrant turns up the volume on another word.

Extricate

/M - Ex (Out) + Tricae(Hindrance in Latin) - Get out of your hindrances / *If you need to be untangled, set free or otherwise released from something or someone, you need to be extricated.* So to extricate is to get out of what's hindering you. But it's not always so simple. You just try and extricate yourself from the loving death grip of a grandma who hasn't seen you in awhile! /In some places, navigational traditions became inextricable from spiritual cosmologies./

Expatiate

/M - Ex + Pay + She + Ate - A girl went to dinner with a friend and returned home ..her Boyfriend checked receipt and found someone else paid her bill .. Then she clarified that it was her Ex - Colleague and not the Ex - BF .. *to add details to in order to clear up.*/ The verb expatiate means "*to add details to in order to clear up.*" If your story is confusing to everyone who hears it, certain key parts must be missing. Better expatiate so that people can understand it. To pronounce expatiate correctly, accent the second syllable: "ex-PAY-she-ate." When you expatiate, you add details, usually to something you are writing. *The goal is to make your ideas clearer to readers, perhaps by offering an example to help them understand.* Teachers can tell when you are expatiating and when you are just adding to what you've written, say, to reach a certain length requirement. That's usually called "padding." /Mourdock was not the only Republican candidate to expatiate on the subject of rape. /

expiate

/M - Ex + Pirate - An ex pirate is trying to *expiate (प्रायश्चित्त करना)* his sins by doing service to community / In the fairy tale, the baker must expiate his father's sins by bringing the witch three ingredients for a magic potion: a cow, a cape and a slipper. *Expiate means to make amends or atone for a wrong you or someone else has committed.* After the incident on the hill, a mortified Jill expiated her guilt by buying Jack a brand new crown. The shiny new crown served as compensation, or expiation, for the broken one. That it cost her so dearly made the expiatory gesture especially meaningful to poor Jack.

exult

/M - Exam + ultimate - GRE Exam main Ultimate Marks laakar khushi se naachna (*Celebrate*) / फूले न समाना Verb - To celebrate /Ex Reflecting on Harry Potter's worldwide success, the Sunday Telegraph was moved to exult /

exacerbate

/M - Excess + Acerbic - When you eat or speak to much of acerbic things , you will make situation * Exacerbate (Make Worse , बिगाड़ देना, कटु बनाना)*/ For a formal-sounding verb that means to make worse, try exacerbate. If you're in trouble, complaining about it will only exacerbate the problem. Exacerbate is related to the adjective acrid, often used to describe sharp-smelling smoke. Think of exacerbate then as a sharp or bitter thing that makes something worse. *A drought will exacerbate a country's food shortage. *Worsen, intensify, aggravate and compound are similar, but exacerbate has the sense of an irritant being added in to make something bad even worse.

Exorbitant

/M - Excess + Orbit - Too Much for my Orbit..My Limit ..*Too Much **/ Use the adjective exorbitant when *you want to describe something that is really just too much*! You'll often hear people griping about exorbitant bank fees or exorbitant interest rate.

exasperate

/M - Exhausted and Irritate / * भड़काना , चिढ़ाना To exasperate someone is to annoy him or her to the point of impatience, frustration and irritation*, like when you exasperate a busy waiter by asking questions like "what are all the ingredients in the salad dressing?" and making him repeat the specials five times. *The verb exasperate comes from the Latin word exasperatus, which means "to roughen," "irritate," or "provoke." *To exasperate is to make something that is already bad even worse, like when sitting in traffic that is sure to make you late, you exasperate the person who is driving by bringing up an unpleasant topic, or the addition of twenty more students that exasperates the crowding in the cafeteria.

extant

/M - Existent - Things which still exists and stands out/ Adj - *मौजूदा* 1. in existence; still existing; not destroyed or lost: / There are only three extant copies of the document./ 2. standing out; protruding.

Exuberant

/M - Expensive+Uber+Ant - Ek Ant ne Uber call kiya ek jagah pe jaane ke liye .. thodi der mian ek black Cadillac Car aa kar ruki and bola ki i am the driver .. the car was so expensive and was used as Taxi ye soch kar Ant boht hi Khush ho gayi *feeling really happy and enthusiastic उल्लासपूर्ण*/ उल्लासपूर्ण , उपजाऊ Are you feeling really happy and enthusiastic about something? Describe yourself with the adjective, exuberant! Exuberant can be traced back to the same Indo-European root that has brought the word udder. If you picture the plentiful amount of milk a cow can give, it is easy to remember that exuberant always describes something that is abundant or plentiful like exuberant foliage. *Abundance also comes into play in its primary use today to mean very enthusiastic, full of energy or overjoyed*. When the bell rings on the last day of school, you will be exuberant.

Fracas

/M - F*** +Ass - Kisi ki maarna , to get into Fight / दंगा If your marching band gets *into a fight* with another school's pep squad, your principal might say the fracas was uncalled for and undignified. A fracas *is a noisy quarrel*.

Felicity

/M - Faili hui city - Aisi city jo boht dur dur tak faili ho and jahan ke log boht hi felicitous ho .. * matlab Khush ho * , Jinka Swabhav boht achha and appropriate ho / 1. *pleasing and appropriate manner or style *(especially manner or style of expression) 2. *Felicity is a state of happiness or the quality of joy* . Sitting on the roof with a telescope and iced tea on a clear, starry night is one way to find perfect felicity — a happy place. /His personality was so warm and full of felicity that we felt at ease the minute we met him/

fallacious

/M - False +ious - Take Action on *False Information* , The information may be to *deceive* you / Adj - मिथ्या Something fallacious is a *mistake that comes from too little information or unsound sources*. Predictions that the whole state of California will snap off from the rest of North America and float away have proven to be fallacious — for now, anyway. Fallacious comes ultimately from the Latin *fallax, "deceptive."* The word fallacious might describe an *intentional deception or a false conclusion coming from bad science or incomplete understanding*. A tween's assumption that anyone over 20 can't understand her situation would be fallacious; we have all been young once too. /Most of this narrative is fallacious, and the chances of reversal on appeal are actually rather thin./

feign

/M - Fan - Tum Boht bade fan ho Sunny leone ke lekin you will not show that you will feign , or pretend or imitate that you dont like her / Verb - *pretend to or imitate* choose the verb feign. You might feign indifference when you hear about some gossip, but you're probably dying to know.

Furtive

/M - Fart + ive - One who is farting has to do it *furtively (secretly चोरी छिपे, गुप्त)* , else he will be blamed his entire life for bad smell / The definition of furtive is doing something in a sneaky or hidden way. An example of furtive is a deal that is made between two lawyers, without the awareness of their firms. The adjective, furtive, is related to fūrtum, the Latin word for theft or robbery. This is apparent as the expressions "to give someone a furtive glance" and "to steal a glance at someone" mean the same thing. If a person's manner is furtive, he or she is acting suspiciously words like *Secret, stealthy and sly are all similar in meaning, but they lack this image of a thief's actions*.

Falter

/M - Fault - *One who do many faults and mistakes ..he normally hesitate or stumble before doing any work (हिचक)as he don't want to make any mistake or fault again .*/ Falter means to *hesitate, stumble, or waver,* and everything from faith to voices can do it. So if you want to keep your bride or groom happy, it's best not to falter when it's your turn to say "I do." Experts may falter if you ask them where falter came from, because the origins are pretty unclear. But everyone agrees on the current meaning: *someone who falters is unsteady, wobbly, or unsure.* You might falter while reciting a poem if you forget some of the lines, or falter crossing a rickety rope bridge when fear gets the most of you. But you certainly won't falter when someone asks you the meaning of this word.

feeble

/M - Fee+Able - Fee itna zyada hai colleges ka .I am not able to pay it..and i feel weak / Adj - *Weak*

fetter

/M - Feet + *Tether* (Tied together) - To tether feet with fetter(*Chain*) or tether ( Chain ) to *restrain movement */ A fetter is a shackle or chain that is attached to someone's ankles. *To fetter someone is to restrict their movement, either literally or metaphorically.* You might feel fettered by your parents' rules, even without the chains. A fetter is anything that secures and limits the movement of the feet and legs of a prisoner. To fetter, the verb, could be used literally: the prison wardens would fetter the chain gangs who built many of the railroads in the US., but it usually means something has been done to restrain someone's behavior: "we finally managed to fetter our sons' computer use with bribery."

feline

/M - Feminine - Ek Ladki ko bilian boht pasand thi (*Cat Family*) and us ladki ki aadatey bhi bili jaisi hi thi (*Sly , Stealthy, Treacherous* )/ Adj 1. belonging or pertaining to the cat family, Felidae. 2.catlike; characteristic of animals of the cat family: a feline tread. 3.sly, stealthy, or treacherous.

feudal

/M - Feud - Feud between common man and Nobles in *feudal ( Medieval System सामन्तवादी) * Era/ *Anything feudal relates to the medieval system of feudalism — where the nobility owned the land while everyone else worked it. *It was no fun to be a lowly serf in the feudal system. Though it has roots in Latin, the adjective feudal (and its relative feudalism) were created by historians to describe the social system after it actually took place. Feudal may both look and sound similar to feud as in a long standing fight, but it's not actually related — unless the argument happened to take place in medieval Europe

filial

/M - Filius (*Son in Latin* OR *Filia means Daughter*) - It also means Young Horse * संतानीय*/ If you describe something as filial, you're saying *it's offspring-related *. Depending on who your parents are, your filial duties might include taking out the trash, or washing dishes, or ruling empires. The word filial comes from the Latin words filius, which means "son," and filia, or daughter. In other words, filial is the filius of filius. One way of remembering the word is to the think of a filly, a young horse. The two words aren't related, but it's fun to put them in the same sentence: "*The filly's filial love made the mare a happy mom.*" /Then the eldest son performed the ultimate filial duty, laying a flaming stick upon his mother's lips./

filch

/M - Filth - Its filthy thing to *filch ( Stealing )* / *You can filch money, time, and stuff, but I wouldn't recommend it. Filching is stealing, as in "You filched my cookies!"* Doesn't filch just sound kind of dirty? That could be because it's one letter away from filth, but it's also true that stealing is usually considered a dirty, lowdown deed. No one wants their things to be filched. Filching is similar to pilfering, swiping, lifting, and purloining — other words for taking what isn't yours. We've all probably filched at some point, but thieves make a profession out of filching.

flagrant

/M - Flag + Red - To raise red flag if Some one is doing something BAD (*BAD , Offensive , Disgraceful बदनाम *)/ *Something flagrant is bad — so bad you can't ignore it*. A flagrant foul in sports might send you to the bench, and a flagrant violation of the law might send you to the slammer. The current meaning of the adjective flagrant — *"obviously offensive or disgraceful"* — is thought to derive from the Latin legal term in flagrante delicto, which literally meant "with fire still blazing" and is used figuratively to describe a situation in which the criminal is caught red handed. Aside from a flagrant abuse of the law, the word can also be used to describe anything that is obviously bad — like flagrant bad taste or flagrant abuse of the rules of grammar. /Westminster City Council's planning director John Walker said: "The council will not tolerate any flagrant disregard of the planning system./

phlegmatic(Fleg+matic)

/M - Flame + tic - Ek aadmi ka haath flame main jal gaya ..he went to doctor but was not able to Express . He was too *Dull in explaining pain or feeling * to doctor निष्क्रिय , निरुत्साह/ Yes, phlegmatic has roots in that colorless, mucousy stuff called phlegm, but people who are phlegmatic aren't called that because they have lots of mucus. *They are just a little dull in expressing feelings or showing emotion*

Plod

/M - Flawed - When you made a code and it has so many bugs in it you feeel *Tired and Boring* ..when you reach home *you are almost knackered and cant walk straight* ... / * पैर घसीट कर चलना , कठिन कार्य* When you plod, *you walk slowly, heavily, and deliberately. You might need to plod through the snow to get to the bus stop on time.* Plod evokes a difficulty in walking — like when you trudge through mud or walk slowly up a steep hill. You might plod home at the end of a long day, or plod through an overgrown field on a hot afternoon. *You can also use plod figuratively, to mean "work on something boring or monotonous."* The origin of plod is unknown, but it may have come from the sound of feet on the ground — the sound you make when you plod

Fledge

/M - Fled - A baby bird fled from his step mothers house as soon as he had feathers and was big enough to* fly उड़ने योग्य बनाना* / *When baby birds fledge, they grow feathers that are big enough for flying. Just after they fledge, birds take their first practice flights.* You can use the verb fledge in several ways — first, to describe what happens when a bird's feathers grow in. A mother bird — or human — who cares for and raises a young bird can also be said to fledge it. You can also talk about the process of putting feathers on something, especially a hunting arrow, this way: "Once you fledge the arrow, you can use it with your bow." The Old English root word is flycge, "having feathers, or fit to fly." /Most pelicans are banded before they fledge when they're easier to catch and band. /

Fluster

/M - Flush + ter - When he went to restroom and the flush didnt work , he was *Flustered (घबड़ाहट, हलचल मचाना , Agitated , upset)* that what people will think about him / *To fluster someone is to make them feel upset or agitated.* A challenging math problem might fluster you, or even a glance from an admirer. *If your co worker is about to give the biggest presentation of his life, you'll probably only fluster, or upset, him if you point out that his socks don't match.* Use the adjective form, flustered, to describe someone when they're feeling this way. Most of us get flustered once in a while, but if you're "easily flustered," it happens to you quite often. Don't worry, though; that just gives you more opportunities to practice using this vocabulary word.

Foment

/M - Foe + meant - Enemy ko bhadkana *भड़काना* / Stand outside the school cafeteria passing out flyers with nutritional details on school food, and you may foment a revolution--foment means *stirring up something undesirable, such as trouble*. /The fracas has fomented outrage online and given rise to a Change.org petition to save the dogs./

feud

/M - Food - A *feud (Fight)* on food is there from centuries , the only difference is now its between poor and rich / A feud is a long-standing fight, often between two families. In Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare describes the lovers' long-feuding families, the Capulets and the Montagues. Feuds do not have to be violent—what characterizes them is long-standing hostility. Ethnic groups can sometimes be said to be feuding. Kids in school who refuse to sit at the same lunch table over a period of years could describe their relationship as a feud.

Follies

/M - Foolish + Stage : Stage pe *recent events ko parody* ke tarah dikhana / Noun - *a theatrical revue*.

Coerce(Co+arse)

/M - Force - * Too much pressure or manipulative techniques * to ask someone to do something is called Coerce/ You can bring a horse to water, but you can't make him drink. You can coerce — or pressure — someone to attend your office holiday party, but you can't make them have fun. If you're at a point where you feel like you need to coerce someone into doing something, it might be more civilized to just give up. * To coerce is to manipulate, use aggressive arguments, pressure unfairly, or threaten * — really, this isn't very civilized behavior, is it? Handy synonyms for this verb include force and pressure. In a gangster film, you might hear a character say he "put the squeeze" on someone — another way of saying he coerced them.

faction

/M - Fraction - Small Group / 1.a dissenting(doesn't agree to standard belief's) clique /The universality of Paul's message resonates today, when emphasis on group rights and political factions has again become political fashion./ /Some factions there also swore allegiance to Islamic State, cementing their vow by beheading a soldier and posting the video online./

Frieze

/M - Freeze - puraani history ko freeze kar ke ek *band of pictures* main decorate karna Cieling pe ya door pe / *A frieze is a decorative band*, usually, but not always, above a doorframe or on the wall near the ceiling. You may find a frieze of sculptured angels too formal for the trim of your bedroom wall. You might not think of a frieze in the same category as a painting or a statue, but it can be a true work of art.* One famous frieze is painted in a large circle on the inside of the United States Capitol building; it shows famous events in American history.* Another is at the Parthenon, a temple from ancient Greece. Don't confuse frieze with the more common term freeze, though they are pronounced the same way.

Trench

/M - French - France ne WWII main Germany se bachne ke liye gaddha khoda zamin main (*To Cut , Fortification on Ground, Encroachment*) / Noun -* खोदना , समुद्री खाई , अतिक्रमण करना* 1. Fortification. a long, narrow excavation in the ground, the earth from which is thrown up in front to serve as a shelter from enemy fire or attack. Verb 1.Entrench - to surround or fortify with trenches 2.to make a cut in; cut into; carve. 3. to dig a trench.

Fringe

/M - Fridge - Fridge ka (*outer, Secondary*) cover jismain jhalare (*Fringe*) nikle ho ./ Noun - बाह्य सतह , किनारा , लटकते धागों वाली किनारी 1. an outer edge; margin; periphery: 2. something regarded as peripheral, marginal, secondary, or extreme in relation to something else: /* Ex - the lunatic fringe of a strong political party.*/ 3. to serve as a fringe for, or to be arranged around or along so as to suggest a fringe: /* Ex - armed guards fringing the building.*/

funambulist

/M - Fun + Ambulance - Zyada Fun karne ke liye ek aadmi ek patli se Rope pe chal raha tha (*A tightrope walker*)..Achanak Gira and someone has to call Ambulance / Noun 1. A tightrope Walker

fervor

/M - Fur + war - A war to stop killing and using innocuous animals fur . It will be fought with *fervor ( feelings of great warmth and intensity जोश )*/ Use fervor to describe an intensity of emotion or expression. Fans of the Los Angeles Dodgers show so much fervor that they "bleed Dodger blue." /Even President Roosevelt was swept up in the fervor./ /Hundreds of thousands of people looked on, in an event that quickly took on the fervor of a religiously infused political rally./

Glib

/M - Galib - Poet whose poems are smooth and sometimes have *thoughtless* lines in it / Adj - *चिकनी चुपड़ी बातें करने वाला* A hiring manager might think you're being * glib, or slick and insincere *, if you say you've led a successful multinational corporation when you were actually in charge of flipping burgers for a fast-food restaurant chain. The word glib might be used to describe the slick car salesman who uses his polished sales pitch to talk his customers into buying lemons. In fact, the word comes from old German and Dutch words for *"slippery," *another word that could be used to describe the very same salesman. In addition to meaning *"smooth" and "persuasive," *glib can be applied to the kind of *thoughtless comment* that could get you into big trouble. Telling your boss that you had a "hot time" with his daughter is the kind of glib remark that could end your career. /This Sunday's fight doesn't have as catchy a sobriquet, but given the national pride at stake this is no time for glib rhymes./

gait

/M - Gate - I saw a man running from Bank's Gate toward his car , he was wearing black suit and i wasn't able to see his face , when police came then i realized that he was robber and i can only help Police with his *distinct manner of running/walking* / Some people have a very *distinct gait, or manner of walking or running चलने का ढंग *, which allows you to recognize them from far away. Walking with two legs is a pretty straightforward task, so most of us (with the exception of runners) don't think about our own gait very often. However, when four legs are involved, the definition of gait becomes more complex. * In horseback riding, gait is used to refer to the particular sequence or pattern of footsteps that the horse is using. * Well-known gaits include the trot, the gallop, and the canter.

Gavel

/M - Gave + Mallet - *Wooden Hammer* / You know *that wooden hammer a judge slams down on his desk when he's trying to bring order to the court*? That's a gavel. Judges aren't the only ones who use gavels. They are common in governments large and small, where they are used to bring order to the often unruly rooms where government happens. *But they are also a sign of who's in charge. The practice of turning control from one party, or one person, to another, is done by "passing the gavel." It's a big deal when the outgoing Speaker of the House of Representatives turns over the gavel to the incoming Speaker*. Sometimes it looks like the hand-off won't happen — a gavel being the ultimate sign of authority and power.

Bovine

/M - Go +Wine - Gaay ne Wine pee lee and was behaving like *bovine ( मंदबुद्धि, गाय गोरू समान*) / If something is bovine, it has to do with cows or cattle, or it reminds you of the slow and seemingly unintelligent ways of cows and cattle. Someone's glacial pace and dull comments might contribute to his thoroughly bovine impression. The adjective bovine is used for anything that has to do with animals from the genus "Bos," which classifies wild and domestic cattle. Mad Cow Disease is technically known as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, and it can be said to have bovine origins. What are known as cow pies are, in fact, bovine droppings. *People can be described as bovine if they are intellectually dull, slow-moving, or somewhat cow-like in their appearance.*

Grotesque

/M - Goat + Ishq - A guy fell in love with A goat and got married ...Thats too (*bizzarre and unnatural*) / Adj 1 .odd or unnatural in shape, appearance, or character; fantastically ugly or absurd; bizarre. 2.fantastic in the shaping and combination of forms, as in decorative work combining incongruous human and animal figures with scrolls, foliage, etc.

grate

/M - Great - Adrak ko grate kar ke chaai main daalne se Chaai boht Great banti hia/ *When you grate something you rip it to shreds, like a pound of solid cheese that you shred for a recipe.* The verb grate entered the English language in the fourteenth century by way of the French word grater, meaning "to scrape." Using grate in this sense, you might grate your teeth or grate a carrot, meaning rub or pulverize. By the sixteenth century the word had taken on the additional meaning of "sound harshly" and "annoy." This evolution makes sense if you think about it: If you've ever had anything really annoy you — "grate on your nerves" — it can almost seem as if a cheese grater has been applied to your nerves and is slowly ripping them to shreds.

Hogged/Hogging

/M - Hag - Hag ke chod dena..isse koi aur washroom use nahi kar paaaye .. (*Selfish*) saala / Verb - 1. to appropriate selfishly; take more than one's share of. 2. to arch (the back) upward like that of a hog.

weary

/M - Hairy - Anil kapoor was too hairy ..itna ki uska Barber bhi thak (*Exhausted Mentally and Physically*) ho jaata tha .. And baaki customers ka Patience loose ho jaata tha (*Impatience*) / *Weary as an adjective means "very tired or worn out," like weary students who finished a long week of studying and taking tests*. Weary comes from the Old English word werig, meaning "tired." It can also describe being extremely bored and sick of something, like on a long drive, you might grow weary of your father's singing voice. As a verb, weary means "to exhaust or wear out," like when the children you are babysitting weary you with their game of running away every time you tell them to get ready to leave the park. /Ex - weary of excuses./ /Ex - Help is on the line for war- weary families. / /Ex- Almost an hour later we get there, weary but exhilarated. /

Arduous

/M - Hard + You+ Us - Kaam jo boht hi tough ho and sab ke liye * कठिन*/ *Use the adjective, arduous, to describe an activity that takes a lot of effort. Writing all those college essays and filling out the applications is an arduous process!* Arduous was first used in English to mean "steep" or "difficult to climb." If you're an outdoorsman, hiking up a mountain is a lot of fun, but if you're a couch potato, it's an arduous trek. Today, the word can be used figuratively for something that is difficult or takes a lot of work. If you spend an arduous week studying for your final exams, you'll do well because you've worked really hard! /His successors will face the arduous task of fleshing out the content of this "pivot." /

hitherto

/M - Heathrow - Until now i have not taken Stop Over at Heathrow Airport(*अब तक , यहां तक*)/ Adverb , अब तक , यहां तक 1.up to this time; until now: 2.to here /Ex -But violence like this was hitherto unknown. /

hogwash

/M - Hog(Pig on farm) + wash - *Hogwash is complete nonsense, lies, or ridiculous actions. Any diet plan that promises you'll lose twenty pounds in two weeks is hogwash.*/ The informal hogwash is perfect for talking about falsehoods and foolishness. Your little brother may insist that his lemonade stand will make him a millionaire this summer, but you know that's hogwash. And many politicians give long speeches that seem, in retrospect, to be nothing but hogwash.

Homily

/M - Home - Home main baith kar Aastha Channel main *Inspirational Saying* Sunana / Noun- 1. a sermon, usually on a Biblical topic and usually of a nondoctrinal nature. 2.an admonitory or moralizing discourse. 3.an inspirational saying or cliché.

hegemony

/M - Hug + Money - The one who poops Money ..jo nikalta bhi paaisa hi ho .. Aisa aadmi can be (*Leader*) of Financial Banks and can show (*Dominance*) on Competitors / Noun - 1. leadership; predominance.

Harried

/M - Hurried - Ek choro ka group dukaan main chori ke liye jaata hai ...one of the group member enters store and start talking to one of the salesman ...then second members enters store and start engaging other salesman ..after few mins 4 more member hurriedly enters the store and asked them for multiple things .. there main aim was * to distract and bother the 2 salesman - परेशान* / When one army sends raiding parties into another's territory, they're harrying them. They're not making an all-out attack, *they're just trying to bother and distract *the other army. Although harry is not a word you hear commonly now, it does frequently occur as harried — which is an adjective used to describe what it feels like to be asked for things from all sides. You might feel harried during final exams, or two days before Christmas, if you haven't yet started your shopping.

Emboss

/M - I + Am + Boss - He said I am boss so bring me all the (*decorated gifts decorated with raised Ornaments*) / Verb - नक्काशी करना 1. to raise or represent (surface designs) in relief 2. to decorate (a surface) with raised ornament. /Jacket design is what helped emboss books with a cool factor hitherto lacking. /

imperious

/M - I + Am + Precious - One who think they are precious and important always have *Imperious ( घमण्डी , अभिमानी Someone who is imperious gives orders in a way that shows they feel superior or more important than other people) * behavior / You might want the smartest kid in the class as your lab partner, but not if they have an imperious attitude and boss you around. /Marian remembered her grandmother Isabella as an imposing woman, tall and imperious, who ruled her family with an iron hand./

impiety(im+paity)

/M - I + Am + Pretty - She thinks that she is pretty and can wear her shorts at any place ..even to church ..*but thats Disrespect for Sacred अधार्मिकता* / Impiety is a *disrespect for the sacred*. For example, visitors are advised not to wear shorts or tank tops when touring certain churches and cathedrals in Europe, because doing so is viewed as impiety by those who worship there. English offers many options to describe disrespect. Impudence, insolence, sass, and irreverence are a few choices. Impiety sets itself apart from these in that *it describes a lack of respect for a deity, like a god or God, or for worship itself*. Piety is devotion or reverence, so impiety is a lack of devotion or reverence — such as making fun of other people's religious beliefs.

Impinge

/M - I + Am +Pingra - A pigeon was saying to other pigeon , I am feeling like I am trapped in a Pingra for life .(*They have encroached or infringed my Rights*) to be Free ..I should break this pingra by (*Striking , Dashing , Colliding *) my head into it again and again .. At least it will (* make impression*) to them that i am not Happy / Verb अतिक्रमण करना , Impression , Strike ,Collide 1.to make an impression; have an effect or impact (usually followed by on or upon): / to impinge upon the imagination; social pressures that impinge upon one's daily life./ 2.to encroach; infringe (usually followed by on or upon): /to impinge on another's rights./ 3. to strike; dash; collide (usually followed by on, upon, or against): /rays of light impinging on the eye./

idiolect

/M - Idiot Lecture - Ek professor ka idiotic Lecture ..jo wo apni bhasha main kuch alag se hi bolta hai /*Language use that is typical of a particular person*

Cantillate

/M - Ill + Cant +Ate - Ek aadmi bimaar tha and khana nahi kha paa raha tha ..then wo sur laga ke baar baar gaa raha tha Cant Ill Ate .. Cant Ill Ate ...Cant Ill Ate (*To chant , remember something*)/ Verb - to chant in a melodic way (to remember something)

Immutable

/M - Im + Mutation ( Change) - *that doesn't change* /

Impugn

/M - Important + Gun - Kisi ki Important baat sahi nahi lagne pe ..Uska oppose karna (*विरोध करना , पर संदेह करना*) ..Phir bhi wo agree nahi karey toh verbally and physically argument karna.(*Arguments*)..Tab bhi nahi maane toh GUN chalana/ /Verb -वाद-विवाद करना ,विरोध करना , पर संदेह करना/ *To impugn means to call into question or attack as wrong.* If your usually grumpy brother is suddenly nice and sweet, you'll impugn his motives if you're smart — he probably just wants something from you. *The root of impugn is the Latin pugnare which means "to fight," so when you impugn, you are fighting or attacking, but by saying that something is false or wrong. *If a candidate has a record that cannot be impugned, his or her opponent might go for a character attack. If you take pride in your work, you will be especially insulted if someone impugns your professionalism or integrity.

Invective

/M - In + Active - Ek Maalik apne inactive naukar se kuch kaam karne bolta hai ..he didnt listen .. tab maalik uspe *Boht Gusse* se chillata hai / Noun Invective is *harsh, abusive language*, like, "you dirty rotten scoundrel." I'm sure you can think of harsher and more obscene examples, but we won't get into them here. /But Kolomoisky, who is known for his talent for invective, exploded with rage./

Inebriate(inni+briate)

/M - In + Aib - Ek bande ne apne dosto ko party pe bulaaye aur bade aib se 10 saal purai whisky ki bottle peene ke liye nikala , Logo ne bola bhai ye toh mast cheez hai . bande ne bola bhai aaj main tum sab logo ko * inebriate (get them drunk , Nashe main laana , Beautiful or thrilling )* karna chahta hun / *If a party host wants to inebriate her guests, she'll serve them many alcoholic drinks *. In other words, she'll try to get them drunk. * Use the verb inebriate to describe what happens when someone or something intoxicates a person*. If you realize that your lemonade is inebriating you, you probably accidentally ordered an alcoholic drink that tastes like lemonade. *You can also use inebriate to describe something that's beautiful or thrilling: * There is nothing like watching the sun rise over the mountains to inebriate me. Verb 1. to make drunk ,become drunk 2. fill with sublime emotion Noun 1. A Chronic Drinker

Indentation

/M - In + Dent - Process in which you make dents , Marks , cuts or notches on Metal , stone *निशान* / An indentation is a notch, cut, or dent in something. If you take a hammer to a piece of metal, you will make a series of indentations. The dent in indentation shares a root with your dentist, and an indentation is basically like a tooth mark. Except some "teeth" are larger than others — a meteorite leaves a huge indentation in the ground, just as a sharp pencil could make a tiny indentation in your finger. You can talk about conceptual indentation, too. *Loving the novel Anna Karenina might make an indentation in your general aversion to reading*. It's that's good. /Traveling there, he noticed an indentation in the ground that had been cleared. /

Insofar

/M - In + So + Far - I will walk *Insofar (As Much , to the extent , Main Itna hi karunga)* as you will ./ Use *insofar to mean "as much" or "to the extent."* You might, for example, say, "I will get my math homework done insofar as I can. The adverb insofar is somewhat old fashioned and uncommon these days, but it's a good way to talk about doing something to a certain degree or extent. *You might accuse your boss of treating her employees well only insofar that it improves her business, or decide that math is only interesting to you insofar as it seems useful in daily life. * *The British form of insofar is in so far.*

infernal

/M - In + funeral - At the funeral service , I saw an *Infernal( things that seem they are from Hell ,नरक ) * grave digger who was burning *Hot , Fire */ * Things that come from Hell, or seem like they do, are infernal * . If your father tells you to stop listening to that infernal music, he thinks your tunes are hellish on the ears. The word infernal comes from infernus, the Latin word for underground.*A related word is inferno which means a really big fire, the kind that you might find in Hell*. *Although it might be used to describe something really hot or something evil, infernal is usually used when someone is complaining about something they really don't like such as the infernal dog next door that keeps barking.*

intrigue

/M - In +Trick - When someone trick you from inside(*Plot Against You*) , wo tumharey dost ho saktey hai jo tumme *Interested ho ya curious* ho / Noun - षड्यंत्र An intrigue is a *secret plot*. If you ever become the monarch of a small island kingdom, keep watch for signs of any intrigue against you. Intrigue comes from the Latin verb *intricare*, to entangle, and is related to intricate. It can be a noun, meaning underhanded plot, or a verb for the act of plotting. Agents of two powers opposing powers intrigue against each other. In the late nineteenth century it also came to mean *the feeling of curiosity or interest*. If someone's ideas intrigue you, you want to know more about them. /Mr Modi's countrymen were also intrigued, with some Indians asking on Twitter if he was going to pick up a new language./

incongruous

/M - India + Congress - Congress is out of place in India (*Out of Place , Inconsistent*)...Its Bhajpa's time ../ Adj - Inconsistent , Inappropriate , Out of Place /The most incongruous book covers of all time / /Jay Rayner on ethnically incongruous restaurants/

Indemnity

/M - India + Enemy - Indian Main aaj kal terrorism ke upar Insurance Coverage kaafi aa rahe hai ..it is just to protect against Loss or Harm of terrorism activity -* हानिपूर्ति* / Indemnity is *protection against loss or harm — it is most often used in insurance*. If you suffer an injury or there's damage to your house, an indemnity makes up for the loss — if it's part of your insurance. *An indemnity may also keep something or someone from being held responsible for harm.* *Protection indemnity is mainly offered for unlikely *events. If you regularly crash hot-air balloons, you won't get indemnity for the next one you rent. In fact, the balloon rental company will probably demand their own indemnity in case you crash again.

Inexorable(In+exreable)

/M - India + Exorcist - Indian main exorcist boht hi *stubborn* hotey hain , they follow there rules diligently like Jhaadu marna , skull lana aur boht sara rakh laana . No one can stop them from doing this , so they are *called Inexorable cause of their stubborn nature* / *When a person is inexorable, they're stubborn. When a thing or process is inexorable, it can't be stopped.* This is a word for people and things that will not change direction. An inexorable person is hard-headed and cannot be convinced to change their mind, no matter what. You can also say that a process, like the progress of a deadly illness, is inexorable because it can't be stopped. A speeding train with no brakes is inexorable; it's not stopping till it crashes. *When you see the word inexorable, think "No one's stopping that."*

Indite

/M - Indian + Elite - *Indian Elites who write or compose like Javed Akhtar लिखना */ The verb indite, rarely used today, means "*compose" or "put down in writing*," like when you find a quiet place to sit down with your notebook and pen and indite a journal entry or a first draft of a short story /Who indited such flagrant blasphemy against the Holy Scriptures?/

instantiate

/M - Instant + Ate - 3 bachho ko humney khana khilaya ..unhone itne tezi ke saath khana khaya ki poocho mat .. that give (*evidence of*) their poor condition / Verb 1. to provide an instance of or concrete evidence in support of (a theory, concept, claim, or the like). /* Ex - The organization he heads is, in some ways, the ultimate instantiation of a trained scientific elite. */

Snub

/M - Snob - A snob can snub *(अनदेखी करना refuse to acknowledge, reject outright and bluntly )* other people / To snub is to ignore or refuse to acknowledge someone. If you want to snub your former best friend, you can refuse to even look at her when you pass in the hallway. *When you snub someone, you deliver an insult by pretending to not even notice someone that you know. There's an element of disdain and rejection to a snub, as if you're too good to even acknowledge the person. As a noun, a snub is that act of cold rejection*. Your former friend probably noticed the snub, and she'll probably snub you from now on. *Snub also means "very short," like the nose on a bulldog.* /Oh, how Americans can snub immigrants—once their own immigrant forefathers have made a place here./ /If the Premier League imposes its rules to the letter, Chelsea would be fined for snubbing the broadcasters who fund the team's success./

Lofty

/M - Softy - Softy ke ice cream ki tarah (*गगनचुम्बी , high In Rank, Superior *) / Adj ऊंचा,घमण्डी , गगनचुम्बी 1. Extending high in Air 2. Exalted in Rank , Eminent 3. arrogantly or condescendingly superior in manner; haughty: / to treat someone in a lofty manner./

Solidarity

/M - Solid + Charity - A team had solid charity Planned for poor Kids ...this made all of the team members to come together (*Community of Feeling/Purpose*)/ noun एकजुटता ,समन्वय 1.union or fellowship arising from common responsibilities and interests, as between members of a group or between classes, peoples, etc.: /to promote solidarity among union members./ 2.community of feelings, purposes, etc. 3.community of responsibilities and interests.

stolid

/M - Solid - *A stolid person can't be moved to smile or show much sign of life, in much the same way as something solid, like a giant boulder, is immovable. Both are expressionless.*/ It's hard to get excited about the word stolid. It refers to emotionless people or things, and it even sounds pretty dull. Your face may be stolid, as you plod through the unemotional history of the word born in the 17th century of little more than Latin words for "foolish." In some definitions, stolid does have more complimentary synonyms, such as "dependable" or "calm," but these can be overshadowed by other words for stolid — "empty," "blank," and "vacant," to name a few.

Instigate

/M - Institute + Gate - Principal ne ek bande ko boht choti se baat ke upar School ke Gate se bahar nikal diya ..jab ye baat uske dosto and claass walo ko pata chali toh unhone Protest kar diya ..(*Provoke or Stir Up उकसाना , भड़काना)/* When you instigate something, *you start it, but the word carries conflict with it.* If you are suspended for wearing a political t-shirt, the incident might instigate days of protest by students and faculty. Instigate comes from the Latin word instigare "to incite." People who are instigators often begin trouble but then back off and let others break the rules. If you instigate a food fight in the cafeteria, you might throw the first spoonful of mashed potatoes, but then you stop and let all the other students carry on the chaos. When something is instigated, the outcome tends to be unknown. The plan you instigate might not lead to the desired result. /Much press redounds to hate speech, which can instigate destruction./

interlude

/M - Intermission - *Break*/ *An interlude is a brief period of time that comes in the middle of something.* You might enjoy a relaxing lemonade interlude in the middle of a tough day at your road-paving job. *Any block of time that comes as a break or a respite from an activity can be called an interlude *, so you could talk about a quiet interlude after a noisy birthday party, or an interlude of peace after years of war. Interlude is often used to describe the pauses between acts of a play or during an intermission. In fact, the original meaning came from the Latin interludium, which means "between a play".

Squalid

/M - Squirrel + Lid - Squirrel ne Potty kar ke Lid close nahi kiya ...itni smell ho gayi and boht ganda (*Flithy , Unclean*) washroom hogaya / Adj - *गन्दा ,घिनौना* 1. foul and repulsive, as from lack of care or cleanliness; neglected and filthy. / Ex - The urban poor often lived and worked in squalid and dangerous conditions. /

Iota

/M - Iowa - Iowa is a small state in US and no one cares one iota about it , that is they doesn't care about it even * one little bit* ./ If you don't care one iota about something, it means you don't care about it even one little bit. An iota is something very small. An iota is the smallest letter of the Greek alphabet. The expression "not one iota" comes from the Bible (Matthew 5:18): "For truly, I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot, will pass from the Law until all is accomplished."

jaunty

/M - Jaunty Rhodes - Jaunty Rhodes is a *Jaunty (ज़िंदादिल ,मस्ती भरा , ख़ुशदिल)* person/ A jaunty hat is one that's stylish and cheerful at the same time, a quality that can be accentuated if the person wears it in a jaunty fashion, perhaps off to the side or over one eye. Playing the part of a jaunty person is easy if you're feeling upbeat and chipper and want the world to know it. Elves are often jaunty in their own way. Sporting their spiffy outfits and featuring that trademark cheerful spring in their step. The fact they always seem so lively and eager to chat only increases the jaunty impression they make. One can't be blamed for wanting to take a jaunt with the jaunty little guys.

gibe

/M - Jeeb - Kisi ko jeeb dikha kar chidhana *Insulting Comment चिढ़ाना */ "Loser! Bonehead!" the kids shouted, tossing those words and other gibes at the people who offered themselves up to the annual humiliation of the harvest-fest dunk-tank. A gibe is an insulting comment. To gibe is to insult.

Ingenue(En+jenu)

/M - Jenau - humare yahan jab tak ladki ka janau nahi hota hia usko tab tak *innocent mantey hian , Gentle , Sweet etc etc* . Janau ke baad ladkian chandalika ho jaati hian /The term is used to describe the *innocent girl * stock character in film or literature. She's usually gentle, sweet, virginal, and pretty naive — which makes her susceptible to the harsh dangers of the world.

Jibe

/M - Ji + BE - BE main sab bacche teachers ki baat pe *agree* hone ke liye Jee Jee kehte they , * So jibe is to Agree or compatible with someone * / *To jibe with someone is to agree with them. * Jibe can also mean "be compatible with or similar to." *If two people jibe, they get along quite well.* *A jibe can also be an insulting remark as another way to spell gibe*. If someone directs that kind of jibe at you, the best response is a really good comeback. And in nautical terminology, * jibe refers to a particular manner of changing the course of a ship *. How did this word come to have such different meanings? Your guess is as good as ours. Just try to remember that if you want to jibe with others, don't insult them.

Squire

/M - Squirrel - In Tree kingdom , a squirrel is a *squire (landowners जमींदार)* or tree owners and normally gets * squired (*Escorted अनुरक्षक *) by pigeons and other birds living on that tree / *Squire or Esquire *is a British term for a country landowner or gentleman. You can use squire to describe a refined and powerful man, or as a verb meaning *to escort *: when the queen visited, the police chief squired her around town. You'll encounter squires in 19th-century English novels, and you'll need to understand who they are if you're going to get the subtle class distinctions that often drive the plots of these novels. During feudal times squires were young men who assisted knights. For their loyalty, they were given land, making them and their descendants rich and powerful. If you had land, you could live off the rent your tenant farmers paid, and you'd be free to be a gentleman.

Statute

/M - Statue - UP Govt ne Mayawati pe rok laga dee ki you can make your own Statue .. The law was passed that no CM can make their own Statues and waste Government's money* कानून */ A statute is a formal law or rule. Whether it's enacted by a government, company, or other organization, a statute is typically written down. Local governments can pass all kinds of statutes, or written laws, to govern their citizens. A city's government might try to restrict the consumption of alcoholic beverages in public, or make it illegal to pet cats on the weekends. Of course, silly statutes like no cat-petting on weekends can be pretty hard to pass. /*They used a statute that never gets used and didn't even address our lawsuit in their claim. /

jingoism

/M - Jingo - Jingo is a group of British People who want to go for war to Prove Superiority of Britain ..They show aggressive behavior and can stir up war Thirst to prove their country is superior / *कट्टर राष्ट्रवाद* Jingoism is fanatical, *over-the-top patriotism*. *If you refuse to eat, read, wear, or discuss anything that wasn't made in your own country, people might accuse you of jingoism*. Jingoism comes from the word *jingo, the nickname for a group of British people who always wanted to go to war to prove the superiority of Britain*. *Now we use jingoism for that kind of aggressive, chauvinistic behavior in any country, or for things intended to stir up war-thirst and blind patriotism*. If you see a TV show tries to get viewers to support a military cause without a critical look at whether war is necessary, call it jingoism. /Most Russians get their news from state- controlled broadcast outlets, which have moved beyond mere propaganda into outlandish conspiracy theories and unhinged jingoism./

jaunt

/M - Joint - To go out for *Jaunt ( सैर , Pleasurable Trip) * to get joint / Running out to get pizza to bring back before the big game? *This short, quick, pleasurable trip could be called a jaunt *(unless of course, you get your pizza from Italy, that's called "time to get a closer pizza place"). *Jaunt was used in the 17th century to describe a journey on a horse just long enough to tire the horse out*. Nebraska has what they call a Junk Jaunt, which is a yard sale that includes up to 40 towns and stretches nearly 300 miles and draws up to 20,000 people. That's more than enough to make any horse tired, but they call it a jaunt nevertheless.

haiku

/M - Kaiku - ek Maharashtrian Kaiku Kaiku bol rha tha Japan main ..Logo ne bola bhai ye Haiku hai ..*poem jo 3 line ki hoti hia */ Noun - a major form of Japanese verse, written in 17 syllables divided into 3 lines of 5, 7, and 5 syllables, and employing highly evocative allusions and comparisons, often on the subject of nature or one of the seasons.

Lucid

/M - LUC (root for Light) - The passage was (*Easy Understood*) and had (*clear perception*) ..Also the Shining Sun Light was making it Shine (*Bright , Shinning *)/ Adj 1. Easily Understood , Comprehensible / The seven-page memo on Russia and the former Soviet Bloc wowed Clinton for being "so lucid [and] so well-written." / 2. Clear Perception or understanding /"Memory has always fascinated me," Kandel wrote in his lucid and engaging 2006 book, In Search of Memory. / 3. Shining or Bright 4. Clear , Pellucid , Limpid /They were not so lucid as I stalked my hunting ground that night at Temenggor lake. /

laconic

/M - Lack + ic - *A person who lacks word in describing a Situation* / Adj *रूखा और संक्षिप्त , नपा तुला* Laconic is an adjective *that describes a style of speaking or writing that uses only a few words, often to express complex thoughts and ideas*. A more laconic way to write that last sentence might be this: laconic means brief. There's a friend of yours who doesn't talk very much, and when he does, he says maybe three words and then becomes quiet again. You could describe that friend as laconic. The word comes from *Laconia, a region in ancient Greece where the local Spartan rulers gave very short speeches*. Being laconic can be bad when it sounds rude to be so brief, but it can be good if you're in a rush to get somewhere /a laconic reply./ /She is laconic, matter of fact, and frequently speaks in "life is a journey"-type metaphors and aphorisms—all part of her charm. / /He pulls the reader in with his unpretentious, laconic style, and with his refusal to shy away from acknowledging his own flaws. /

Largess

/M - Large + Ass - Large Ass people are generally generous towards society with good value of *largess (Gifts)*/ Noun 1. generous bestowal of gifts. 2. the gift or gifts, as of money, so bestowed. उदारता /During that robust year, Goldman employed 30,522 people and showered them with $20.2 billion of largess. / /After all, she was the recipient of the largess at the center of this case, not a director or perpetrator of it. /

Lien(Leen)

/M - Lean - *Agar tumharey finances lean ho jaye and you are unable to make Home Loan Installments* then the bank may claim your home / *A lien is a claim against the property of someone who owes money. It's pronounced like "lean," which might also describe your meager finances if a lien has been placed on your home.* When someone doesn't make payments on a loan, the bank may put a lien on that person's property, claiming ownership of that property until the overdue payment is received.

stoicism

/M - Stock + Ism - One who plays with stocks and dont show his emotions when he gets Good Profit or Good Loss * आत्मसंयम* .. he knows that having control over emotions can make him strong / If you *rarely show emotion or feeling, that's stoicism*. *Your stoicism helps you endure physical or emotional discomfort without complaint*, a helpful trait for long car trips with annoying people. The noun stoicism, pronounced "STOW-ih-siz-um," comes from Stoicism, *the ancient Greek philosophical school, which taught that reason could overcome destructive emotions for a more virtuous life* . Having great control over one's emotions and responding calmly to misfortune are the marks of stoicism. If you take the good and the bad in stride without drama of any kind, your stoicism is admirable.

Strife

/M - Strike - Strike was called when Management and Employees went on *Strife (Fighting or Arguing Violently )* / Strife is the *act or state of fighting or arguing violently*. The years leading up to the U.S. Civil War were characterized by great strife between northern and southern states over slavery and the role of a federal government. *This word applies to major issues and events, such as war and religious conflict: a period of civil strife *. Like its Old French source, the original meaning of the English noun strife and the English verb strive had to do with an argument or quarrel. But the verb strive has lost that earlier sense, and now means to try hard to do or achieve something.

stultify

/M - Stunt + ify - When a stuntman makes stunt which doesnt look good , you can say that it *Stultifies (When something stultifies you, it drains you of your energy, enthusiasm, or pleasure. बेकार कर देना)* you / A well-acted Shakespeare play can be a thrill. A poorly-acted one can stultify like nothing else. *The verb stultify is sometimes used in place of "bore" or "exhaust," but only if something is so boring or exhausting that it makes you feel as though you might just die. * It's a very negative word. If you're in a relationship that's stultifying, you should find a way out. Relationships should make you feel more alive, not less. Constant construction noise can have a stultifying effect, leaving a person almost unable to function.

Leaven

/M - Leave - When King leave the courthouse after giving life to a murder convict , everyone rise in respect of the King ..Everyone in the courthouse was so * transformed and changed the way they see their king (To Transform प्रभावित करना , असर*/ Leaven, as a noun, is that *which causes transformation*. It's the source of yeast that makes your bread rise, it's the risen bread, and it's anything that changes the nature of something else. Coming from the French verb levare, which means "to raise," leaven changes everything. It makes dough go from flat to loaf, and it's also the term to describe the risen dough before it's baked. And leaven can be anything that causes transformation — "*Winning the lottery will be the leaven that allows you to travel the world.*" Additionally it's a verb: "When you bake bread, you leaven the dough to make it rise." /Most, but not all, of the songs were leavened by her gregarious sense of humor./

stupefy

/M - Stupid + fy - when a stupid students answers complex question that *stupefies( Stunned ) * whole Class / Don't be embarrassed if the magician's tricks stupefy you. It means you're amazed. Who doesn't want to be stopped in his tracks sometimes? Stupefy looks a lot like stupid. But intelligence has nothing to do with being stupefied, which comes from Latin and means "to make stunned." *Anyone can be stupefied by something scary, mysterious, or just plain remarkable. * Think of tourists visiting New York City for the first time. They stare up at the skyscrapers, lost in wonder. Taking that moment to let themselves be amazed? Nothing stupid about it, unless they step on someone's foot, of course.

Levee

/M - Lever - Lever jo paani rokne ke liye use hota hai its Like a *Dam* / बांध , दरबार *A levee is an embankment, like a dam, constructed to prevent the overflow of a body of water*. It can also mean a formal reception. How do these two words relate? Read on.. In French, lever means to lift and se lever means to rise, literally "lift yourself." When the king rose from his bed and received visitors, that was a levee. When you raise up dirt or other materials to build a dam or levee, that's also a levee. Now, official levees don't involve kings--but you might hear of "a governor's levee at the state capital." And levee can be used as a verb, meaning to make an embankment, or shore up. /Army Corps of Engineers wants to build a 10-mile channel to divert water away from downtown Findlay and a levee outside the city./

licentious

/M - License + ous - Nowadays Entertainment industry has got the license to indulge in *licentious(अनैतिक ) *activities / *Someone who is licentious behaves or speaks inappropriately, usually in regards to sex.* What some might call a licentious senior citizen, others would simply refer to as "a dirty old man" (or woman). We usually talk about licentious behavior, but there also can be licentious photographs. Besides being inappropriate, licentious behavior is also usually regarded as immoral. If at all possible, therefore, licentious is a description you should seek to avoid for yourself

levity

/M - Lightness -*Levity literally means "lightness," and it's often an attempt to inject some lightness or humor into an otherwise somber situation. */ Joking that your dead grandmother "never looked better" could inject some levity, or frivolity, into her funeral, but your relatives might find your joke inappropriate to the occasion. Telling your Aunt Edna a joke while she recuperates from a skiing accident could provide the levity needed to brighten her mood. Yet levity is often used to describe humor that's not appropriate to the occasion, like telling your Aunt the joke, "Two corpses walk into a bar..." after her husband has just died.

Lineage

/M - Line+Age - *Line of Age* / descent from an ancestor; ancestry or extraction.

Livid

/M - Live +Video - The officer was *livid(बदरंग,बहुत अधिक नाराज़)* with other his subordinate when he saw his subordinate watching India vs Pak Live video/ The definition of livid is discolored by a bruise or someone furious with anger. If you're livid, you're furious, in a black cloud of anger. *The Latin root this word comes from means "bluish-gray" or "slate-colored," and you can also use livid to describe the color, such as a livid bruise or a livid sea. Livid, even when it means "bluish-gray," has the sense of something not quite right If the sky is livid, there's something ominous about it*.Similarly, if your skin is livid, there's something wrong — you're either covered with bruises or you're at death's door, anemic and ashen. But livid is used most often to describe fury.

loquacious

/M - Location +ous - One girl was talking about Atlanta as a place to live .. 10 Min ho gaye 30 Min ho gaye and she was still talking(*Talkative*) ..Baap re baap / Adj - गप्पी 1.talking or tending to talk much or freely; talkative; chattering; babbling; garrulous: / a loquacious dinner guest. /

Long

/M - Longing - Aise Desire karna jo you know ki Long Gone and cant be achieved / Verb 1. *to have an earnest or strong desire or craving; yearn: which you know cant be attainable* . / to long to relive one's childhood; / / to long for the warmth of summer /

Lull

/M - Lull - Ek aadmi jo Lull pad gaya ho .. *Calm* ho gaya ho / See lull, think "calm." It could be the noun form (like "the lull before the storm") or the verb: one can lull someone by calming them (as in lulling a baby to sleep with a lullaby). The noun lull is often used in relation to a storm, but the term has a broader meaning as well. Lull can be used to describe any temporary period of calm or diminished activity, like the quiet time before the lunch rush in a restaurant or the brief period of tranquility before the doors open for a pre-Christmas sale. The word's verb form means "to soothe or to make someone feel relaxed." When used as a verb lull can turn deceptive, and it is often used to convey a false sense of security.

macabre(Ma+Kaabra)

/M - Ma + Kabra - Maa movie main bacchey ki maan kabra se nikal kar aati hia usey bachane ke liye , aur jinhone uska khoon kiya tha ussey badla leti hia . Aisi kahanion ko Macabre boltey hai jo *Horror and violent *hoti hia/ The adjective macabre is used to describe things that involve the horror of death or violence. If a story involves lots of blood and gore, you can call it macabre. /macabre tales of war and plague in the Middle ages/ /macabre tortures conceived by madmen/

Mar(Maar)

/M - Maar - Maar khana mummy ke haath se jab sofa set pe tum Pen se mark laga dete ho ..Wo mark ko Mar (* make imperfect, destroy or injure severely , A Mark or flaw that spoil the appearance of something )* / We often think of things that mar as immediately noticeable, like scratches, scars, and blemishes, but sometimes mar describes other ways of ruining something. *For example, an unexpected run-in with a difficult person can mar your relaxing day at the beach, just as an unpleasant memory can mar a peaceful state of mind.* The thing to remember is, it only takes one scratch, one mean comment, or one negative experience to mar something that is otherwise fine.

Maculate

/M - Makku + Late - Makku(*Mexican*) Office main late pahucha toh sab boley, Tu Mexican ke naaam pe Daag hai (*Spotted, Stained , Impure*)/ Adj दाग़ लगाना 1. spotted; stained. 2. defiled; impure. Verb - To Pollute /* Fortunately, the embarrassment that my maculate appearance might cause was evitable/

Smidgen

/M - Manjan - Munjan zyada nahi use karna chahiye , we should take smidgen of it coz it has chemicals which can harm you ..so smidgen of munjan daily will keep your teeth shiny / Noun - a very small amount or part /a smidgen of jam for your toast./

peril

/M - Maril - In Marathi that means marega .. So that means there danger to Life ..Sambhal Jaaa * ख़तरा , आशंका */ If you realize *mid-climb that your rock climbing rope is frayed*, you might be in peril. The word peril means *imminent danger to life and limb*. Peril comes from the Latin peric(u)lum, meaning danger. Today it's often used in tandem with the word *mortal, which relates to death*. For example, you're in mortal peril when you're flying down a cliff-side trail on your mountain bike and you hit loose gravel. Peril can also describe dangers of a less physical sort, though it's less common. If your employer sinks your 401K into what turns out to be a Ponzi scheme, he's put your retirement in peril.

Macerate

/M - Maserati - The guy liquidate everything he has to buy Maserati .. He Enjoyed for few months then he realized that he is financially (*weaken*) by it ../ Verb कमज़ोर बनाना ,भिगोना 1.to soften or separate into parts by steeping in a liquid 2.to cause to grow thin. 3. Weaken /Bring it to a boil on top of the stove and then let it sit overnight to macerate. /

Maverick

/M - Mava + Rickshaw : Ek aadmi ne mava ka rickshaw banaya which was (*Unorthodox*) . Log bolne lage bhai ye banda (*Lone Wolf , Rebelious*) hai kuch alag hi sochta hai ..Thode din ke baad uske rikshe ko ek (*आवारा पशु*) ne kha liya / Adj - अपरंपरागत Unorthodox , Unconventional /a maverick fiscal conservative willing to raise taxes./ Noun - स्वतंत्र विचारों वाला , मालिक रहित बछड़ा , आवारा पशु , विद्रोही 1. an unbranded calf, cow, or steer 2. a lone dissenter, as an intellectual, an artist, or a politician, who takes an independent stand apart from his or her associates: Lone Wolf /a modern-dance maverick. / 3. a person pursuing rebellious, even potentially disruptive, policies or ideas: Rebel , Loose Canon / Ex - You can't muzzle a maverick./ 4. Maverick, an electro-optically guided U.S. air-to-ground tactical missile for destroying tanks and other hardened targets at ranges up to 15 miles (24 km).

mendacious

/M - Mendicant - Mendicants are know for their mendacious (*intentionally untrue झूठ*) reasons for begging / *A mendacious person is one who tells lies habitually and intentionally.* Don't get stuck at the water cooler or bus stop next to someone you consider mendacious! People may tell "white lies" if they forgot your birthday or really don't like your new haircut, but if you catch someone intentionally manipulating you with a falsehood, that person is just plain mendacious. *So think of the most deceptive, insincere, perfidious, duplicitous, false person you've ever met, and then add the word mendacious to that list* /Criticism of the Israeli occupation is mendacious and evil and must never, ever be seriously considered. / /They created well-intentioned rules—which most mendacious lobbyists have found a way to ignore legally. /

mercantile

/M - Merchant + Tile - A merchant opens tile business to *mercantile (व्यापार संबंधी) * dreams/ What do merchants want to do? Buy and sell things to make a profit. The adjective mercantile describes these kinds of efforts and goals. Many people have mercantile dreams of opening a store where they can sell things they love and interact with people in their community. Sometimes, however, the word mercantile has negative connotations. *Exploiting factory workers, polluting the environment, wasting natural resources? All these reflect the dark side of the mercantile pursuit of profit* /He loaded many vessels in a year; particularly to Philadelphia, where he was born, and was connected with a great mercantile house in that city./

Lint

/M - Mint - cotton from Mint tree use to *dress wounds* / * पट्टी , बत्ती , रोआँ * cotton or linen fabric with the nap raised on one side; used to dress wounds

Besmirch

/M - Mirch Lagana - Apne dost ko kisi teacher ke baare mian mirch lagana, i.e Besmirch karna*(To besmirch means to dirty or tarnish, particularly someone's reputation)*/ like when you call Billy a cheater at kickball (even though you know he's just better at bunting than you). Besmirch may sound kind of funny, but it goes hand in hand with other hurtful words *like defame and slander. It can also mean to literally stain something.* So that time you tracked mud all over the new white carpet and then blamed it on your little brother? That was a double besmirching — dirtying the rug and then falsely accusing a sibling.

Terse

/M - Mother Teresa - All her achievements,efforts everything has been consolidated, confined and put into a single *terse(brief and to the point; effectively cut short)* word "MOTHER"./ Terse means brief, or using very few words . If your teacher tells you to make your writing in your essay style terse and to the point, he's saying *use as few words as you can and be simple and clear.*

mirth

/M - Mother at Birth - Mother was too *mirth (Mirth is a formal or literary term meaning fun and enjoyment as shown by laughter.प्रसन्नता , हुलास)* after seeing her child / If you and your friends stayed up all night at a sleepover laughing, you might refer to that as a night of mirth. In 1905, Edith Wharton published a novel "The House of Mirth," whose title derives from Ecclesiastes: "The heart of the wise is in the house of mourning; but the heart of fools is in the house of mirth." *But studies show that when human beings laugh, smile or otherwise engage in mirthful activity, our brains release hormones that help us live longer.* Mirth may be foolish, but it's good for you.

mortify

/M - Moti + fire - When a moti auraat was scolding her husband in front of his colleague he was really *mortified(Embarrassed शर्मिंदा करना )* by it / *To mortify someone is to cause them extreme embarrassment.* Your mother may not have been trying to mortify you when she showed up at your senior prom with a bunch of unicorn balloons, but she did. The root of the verb mortify is from the Latin word mors, which means "death." To mortify something used to mean to destroy its life, but now mortify is mostly used when you feel so ashamed or embarrassed you "want to die." To punish yourself through deprivation from food or another desire, you can mortify that compulsion, but it's probably best to just mortify your parents by showing up at their work place with a new mohawk.

Motley

/M - Moti + lee - Ek moti ko different different cheeze kharidhne ka boht shauk tha , kabhi wo different kapde kharidati thi , kabhi same costume 5 colors ne ..logo ne uske naam pe ek word rakh diya *Motley (diverse , heterogeneous , unorganized ) */ If you've encountered the word motley, it's most likely in the phrase "motley crew," *which means a diverse and poorly organized group*. Think of a band of pirates, or the assorted characters who became The Fellowship of the Ring. Verb 1. make something more diverse and varied *विभिन्न प्रकार का* Adj 1. consisting of a haphazard assortment of different kinds

nefarious

/M - Nephas (Crime in Latin) - Related to Crime/ * अति पापी* Describe a person's actions as nefarious if they are *evil or wicked*. Batman and Superman are always fighting evildoers and stopping their *nefarious plots.* Nefarious comes from the Latin *nefas "crime, impiety." *If something is nefarious, it is criminal, evil, malicious and wicked. Thinking of superheroes can help you remember the meaning of the word, but it is often used in much less exciting circumstances. News reporters investigate corrupt politicians in order to uncover the nefarious activities. And, if you don't pay for your downloaded music, you have gotten it by nefarious means. /But in this latest spy drama, the nefarious Americans have a co-conspirator: the recalcitrant German intelligence service/

Nuance

/M - New + Ounce - An ounce was added to a pound to remove the Nuance (*A slight or delicate variation in tone, color, meaning, etc. बारीकी)* in weight . *What makes singers brilliant is not how loud they can sing a note, but how many nuances they can evoke through their approach.* Pronounced "NOO-ahns," this noun was borrowed from French in the 18th century and derives ultimately from Latin nūbēs "a cloud." Think of clouds--subtle gradations in color to understand this word. When you say a work of art was nuanced, it means there was a lot to it, but incorporated subtly. A fine shade of meaning: *"I liked the film, but I know I missed some of its nuances."*

Noxious

/M - No+oxygen+us : No oxygen can be *Noxious ( हानिकारक , Injurious to physical or mental health* ) to us/ Something noxious is harmful and could be even fatal — whether it is colorless, odorless, and invisible like carbon monoxide, or dark, strong-smelling, and obvious, like black smoke from a fire. *People are called noxious too when they hurt others with cruelty or mental anguish*. While obnoxious might come to mind when seeing the word noxious, obnoxious is a much less damaging adjective to describe someone annoying. Most uses for noxious involve real physical or emotional damage unless the word is used in exaggeration. /the noxious gas fumes made the dog pass out" to "his cologne was so noxious I had to exit the elevator and take the stairs./

Nostrum

/M - Nostrils - Nostrils se khoon aane ko rokne ke liye , ek Road ke kinare baba ne (*रामबाण दवा*) dee ..He was well in 1 day / noun रामबाण दवा 1.a medicine sold with false or exaggerated claims and with no demonstrable value; quack medicine. 2.a scheme, theory, device, etc., especially one to remedy social or political ills; panacea. 3.a medicine made by the person who recommends it. 4.a patent medicine. /Compared to real professors who leave gallons of ink on their students' papers, virtual grading is a nostrum. /

Supine

/M - Su + Pine - Peena and Su Su kar ke , seedhe lait jaana can be described as *supine (When Lying Face up)* , this also say that you are *lethargic* and will not *resist* if you curse him / One can be described as supine when lying face up ("his favorite yoga poses were always the supine ones"); or, if one is very passive or lethargic ("supine in the face of their threats and insults"). The adjective supine comes from a Latin word, supinus, which means "thrown backwards" or "inactive." Whenever a person or animal is lying on its back, belly-up, it is supine. When your hand is open, palm-up, it is also supine. *Supine can even describe a person who gives insufficient resistance, or who is lazy and ineffectual.* "When Jack refused to object to the landlord's repeated — and gouging — rent increases, he was supine."

Dote

/M - Note - Making notes that what he likes , what he wants in his Birthday and then *showering him with your love and attention that is Dote* / Who doesn't love to have someone dote on them? * If you dote on someone, you shower them with love and attention.* Sounds like the life! Parents that dote on their children too much might find themselves in trouble down the road; all that unadulterated devotion is a surefire way to spoil your kid. The problem is that those who are doing the doting are often too smitten to see when the object of their affection is acting like a complete jerk. No wonder dote is related to a German word that means "to be foolish." That connection might also explain the use of dote to mean acting senile in one's later years /Connolly says she camped and fished with her family and doted on her younger brother, walking him home from the bus stop./

oology

/M - OLOO + EgG - Science that Studies Ooloo's egg(Birds Egg) / Noun 1. the branch of Science that studies birds' eggs.

Obstinate

/M - Ob + Stay + Neat - One who is * obstinate (Beyond Stubborn , जिद्दी) * on following rules for cleanliness will do anything to follow it / When someone is beyond stubborn, use the word obstinate instead: "You obstinate old mule! Get out of my way!" While stubborn may have positive or negative connotations, obstinate is most definitely negative, because it implies a kind of hard-headed determination not to change your mind even when it might be best to rethink your position. "The obstinate Man does not hold Opinions, but they hold him," wrote Samuel Butler way back in the seventeenth century. The word still does the trick if you want a put-down for someone you think is being a pig-headed fool or a stick in the mud.

Objurgate

/M - Object + Your + Gate - Society *objurgate (express strong disapproval of निंदा करना)* home owner to put gate with Black Color on it/

Objurgate

/M - Object - To object / 1. Censure Severely 2. express strong disapproval of

obsequious

/M - Obsessed + Qui ( Yes in French) - The one who is obsessed with you and can do anything to win favors / *ख़ुशामद , चापलूसी* If you disapprove of the *overly submissive way someone is acting* — like the teacher's pet or a celebrity's assistant — call them by the formal adjective obsequious. Obsequious people are usually* not being genuine *; they resort to flattery and other fawning ways to stay in the good graces of authority figures. An obsequious person can be called a* bootlicker, a brownnoser or a toady*. You can also say that someone gives an obsequious bow, a gesture that means, "*your wish is my command.*" /Even the initial singing of the Met's typically superb chorus, portraying the king's obsequious, not-to-be-trusted courtiers, was a little imprecise and unfocused./

Discr*EET*

Discreet - * Prudent , Secretive * Discreet describes someone or something that is appropriately *quiet, prudent, and restrained* .If you are wearing a discreet gray suit, it is unlikely that anyone at that business meeting will notice you. Often people use discreet not only to indicate modesty or carefulness, but also to show a sort of secretiveness along the lines of "You're going to keep this a secret, right?" If no one in your family knows that you like to dress up as a bear, but then your cousin finds out, you may ask him to please be discreet.

Outlandish

If something is outlandish *it's bizarre or unfamiliar, far outside the boundaries of expected or normal behavior*. Driving around the city in a golf cart and eating spaghetti with pineapple sauce are both examples of outlandish behavior. It's easy to imagine how the word outlandish originated. *The Old English root is utland, which literally means "out-land," or foreign*. Now, it would be inappropriate to refer to a foreigner as outlandish, unless, say, he shows up to the office in a red patent-leather Speedo and a ten-gallon hat.

Prohibitive

If something's *so expensive you can't touch it, it's prohibitive*. That Ferrari in the showroom? You may want it, but its price is prohibitive. Prohibitive originally referred to something (often a law) that prohibits or forbids something, but came to mean conditions (often prices or taxes) so high or great they restrict or prevent something: "To some, the cost of child care is prohibitive

fop

If you know someone who's* obsessed with how he looks and what he's wearing* , you can call him a fop. If you're a fop, you make sure you're always well dressed. /A name like Nigel Farage, were it to appear in a historical novel, might indicate a tendency to foppish indolence and swagger/ /In contravention of stereotypes about stiff-upper-lipped Brits, Oliver is more foppishly energetic a host than either Jon Stewart or Stephen Colbert/

patronize

If you patronize a business, you *shop there regularly*. But if someone patronizes you, it's not so pleasant — they talk to you as *if you were inferior or not very intelligent*. Patronize comes from Latin *patronus "protector, master," related to pater "father." So if you patronize a person*, you talk down to them like a father might do to his child or a master to his apprentice. If you want to take an advanced class and your advisor warns you of all the hard work, you can tell him to stop patronizing you — you know a hard class involves hard work. This sounds much better than saying, "*I'm not stupid!*"

dextrous

If you're dextrous, *you're graceful and skilled*. A dextrous magician can wave her hands around and appear to pull a rabbit out of thin air.

Perplex

If you're perplexed, *then you're confused*. Different things perplex different people. In football, a tricky defense will perplex a quarterback. Complicated formulas can perplex math students. When people do weird things, it can be perplexing. Anything hard to understand might perplex you. Perplexing also means to make something more complicated. So when you see the word perplex, think "*Huh?*"

Adulation

If you've ever been to a pop concert filled with screaming fans you've probably been exposed to adulation —* praise so over-the-top it's almost embarrassing अतिप्रशंसा. चापलूसी.* The Latin word adulatio means "flattery." It's made up of the roots ad ("to") and ulos ("tail"), As anyone who's seen a crazed fan drooling over a celebrity knows, *adulation is one of the more doglike of human behaviors.*

Alchemy

In medieval times *alchemy meant the mysterious science of trying to convert one form of matter into another using fire, potions, spells, and all kind of other tricks.* Alchemists often got a bad rap for their obsession with trying to turn base metals into gold, but in fact true alchemy was concerned with a far loftier ideal — that of finding a "universal elixir" that could overcome death. If your favorite but perpetually losing team picks up a couple of new players and the result is suddenly an unbeatable combo, that's *alchemy — any seemingly magical act involving the combining of elements into something new.* /It's alchemy for a disenchanted age, rendered plausible to Westerners by translating esoteric tantric terms into the language of glands and hormones./

transcend

It would be nice to transcend the narrow limits of this brief definition, and go to *greater lengths* to describe this word's glories! Transcend means to *move upward and beyond something*. No doubt you know about the words transcontinental or maybe trans fats? The prefix *trans is used to mean "beyond, across" and transcend takes this even farther by adding in a sense of upwardness with the stem cend*. A pop artist with a lot of talent might transcend the genre of pop /A board on the wall lists "patrons of rare character": people who have transcended "regular" status and graduated into legends./

Marshal

Marshal derives from the Old French mareschal, for stable officer. The stable officer had charge of the horses, *tending to them, putting them in order, readying them for action*. If you are a marshal, you're an officer. *If you marshal yourself, you get yourself ready, preparing for action.*

Para Magnetism

Molecules *are attracted* to the magnetic field due to unpaired electrons Like Aluminium

Inertia

Noun 1. *a disposition to remain inactive or inert* /Add to this the political inertia and collective frustrations over a lack of jobs and rising prices, and Karzai's popularity has soared on the street./ 2. The tendency of a body to maintain its state of rest or uniform motion unless acted upon by an external force

Sloth

Noun 1. Any of several slow-moving mammals of south America and Central America Adj - Slothful - disinclined to work or exertion

Pleb

Noun 1. Common People , Aam Log *Plebeian - Common Man , Working Class patrician - Higher Class *

Entrails

Noun 1. Internal Organs of person or Animal specially a deal one .

dendrochronology

Noun the science dealing with the study of the annual rings of trees in determining the dates and chronological order of past events. .

Exemplar

Noun *प्रतिमान, नमूना* 1.a model or pattern to be copied or imitated: /Washington is the exemplar of patriotic virtue./ 2.a typical example or instance. 3.an original or archetype: /Plato thought nature but a copy of ideal exemplars./ 4.a copy of a book or text.

Nexus

Noun , सम्बन्ध, Connected Group , Core 1. *Link , Connection* /But the trend toward stability also is about finding the nexus between fashion and function. / /This book will be required reading for anyone in politics or journalism, or anyone curious about their complicated nexus. / 3.*The Core or Center , as of a matter or Situation .* /Like it or not, money is at the nexus of energy and emissions decisions. /

Spinoff

Noun - 1. *Businesses wishing to streamline their operations often sell less productive or unrelated subsidiary businesses as spinoffs * . For example, a company might spin off one of its mature business units that is experiencing little or no growth so it can focus on a product or service with higher growth prospects. The spun-off companies are expected to be worth more as independent entities than as parts of a larger business. 2. *a product made during the manufacture of something else* /It was bought by Conde Nast in 2006 but now operates as a spin-off enterprise of the firm's parent company Advance Publications./

Diction

Noun - 1. *Style of Speaking or Writing as dependent upon choice of words * / Good Diction/ 2. *Elocution - a person's manner of speaking or reading aloud in public*

Advert

Noun - 1. Advertisement Verb 1.* to remark or comment; refer* (usually followed by to): /He adverted briefly to the news of the day./ 2.*to turn the attention (usually followed by to)*: /The committee adverted to the business at hand./

prejudice

Noun - 1. any preconceived opinion or feeling, either favorable or unfavorable. Hindi - *पूर्वधारणा* /Ex - The war against prejudice is never-ending. / / Ex - Racism in the UK: can we really measure racial prejudice? / 2. Damage or Injury Hindi - *हानि करना* /Ex - a law that operated to the prejudice of the majority./

connotations

Noun - 1. the associated or *secondary meaning* of a word or expression in addition to its explicit or primary meaning: A possible connotation of "home" is "a place of warmth, comfort, and affection.". / As used by the left, "bourgeois" not only retains its connotations of traditional political enmity but also implies an airy / Hindi - संकेतार्थ

cuticle

Noun - 1. the nonliving epidermis that surrounds the edges of the fingernail or toenail. 2. The Epidermis Hindi - *छल्ली*

adversity

Noun - 1.*adverse or unfavorable fortune or fate*; a condition marked by misfortune, calamity, or distress: /Ex - Friends will show their true colors in times of adversity. / 2. an adverse or unfortunate event or circumstance: / Ex - You will meet many adversities in life*/

Incubus

Noun - 1.any demon or evil spirit. 2.a nightmare. 3.an imaginary demon or evil spirit supposed to descend upon sleeping persons, especially one fabled to have sexual intercourse with women during their sleep.

Clique

Noun - an exclusive circle of people with a common purpose /She just always had a smile on her face and transcended peer groups and cliques and had a friend in just about every social circle."/ /Five of the moms of this clique are very tight and not very nice to the other three moms./

patron

Noun - *सहायक , दर्शक , ग्राहक , संरक्षक * 1. a person who is a customer, client, or paying guest, especially a regular one, of a store, hotel, or the like. 2.a person who supports with money, gifts, efforts, or endorsement an artist, writer, museum, cause, charity, institution, special event, or the like: 3 .Ecclesiastical. a person who has the right of presenting a member of the clergy to a benefice.

epitome

Noun - /A.P + Tomb - Andhra Pradesk ke tombs jo hain wo sabse achhe hai and that's best in there class , Boht Small Articles bhi aaye hai praising them (*साक्षात् उदाहरण*)/ 1. If you're talking about a *typical example of something, call it the epitome*. The cartoon character Garfield is the epitome of the fat, lazy, food-obsessed cat. Coming to us from Greek through Latin, epitome refers to something that is the *ultimate representative of its class. *Are you the epitome of the hard-working student or do you believe in study in moderation? 2.a brief abstract (as of an article or book) /Shay is the epitome of a pampered young man./

hunch

Noun - 1. a premonition or suspicion; *guess*: /Ex - I have a hunch he'll run for reelection./ /Ex - Here's a Hunch where you might find some answers online / Transitive verb - 1. Arch , to thrust out 2. *Push or Jostle* /* Ex - to hunch One's back */ Intransitive Verb - 1. Lunge Forward 2. Stand , Sit or walk in a bent posture /Glenn Gould, hunched over his piano in characteristic form /

thesaurus

Noun - a dictionary of synonyms and antonyms,

Chaise

Noun - आराम कुर्सी , Gold Coin 1.*a light, open carriage, usually with a hood, especially a one-horse*, two-wheeled carriage for two persons; shay. 2. *a chaise longue, especially a light one used out of doors. * 3. A gold Coin of France

Stride

Noun - लम्बे डग से चलना , प्रगति 1. a long step or pace 2. the Distance measured by such a step 3.a regular or steady course, pace, etc. 4.a step forward in development or progress: /Rapid Strides in Mastering Algebra /

condominium

Noun - सहाधिकार 1. Condo 2. joint or concurrent dominion.

valor

Noun . 1. the qualities of a hero or heroine; exceptional or heroic courage when facing danger (especially in battle) /The Governor's Medal of Valor is the highest honor awarded to a state police officer for heroism in the line of duty/ /But it may face competition from the V-280 Valor, which is being developed by two other American firms, Bell and Lockheed Martin./

Obituary(O + bitchuary)

Noun- 1.*a notice of the death of a person, often with a biographical sketch*, as in a newspaper.

eyesome

Pleasant to look at

acquiesce

Silent Consent , Silent Agreement /M - Aqua + Essence(Sense of something) - One was saying that big predators like Sharks and Whales are essence of Ocean , other thought no its the deepness and sense of unknown . But he *acquiesced( चुपचाप स्वीकार करना , सहमति देना)* with whatever first guy said / *Acquiescence is an agreement, usually a willingness to go along with what someone else suggests. "Sure, I don't mind," "That sounds like a plan," and "Good idea" — these are all ways to show your acquiescence.* The word acquiescence, pronounced "ack-we-ESS-sense," comes from the French word of the same spelling. The first record of its meaning as "*silent consent*" occurred in the 1640s. Acquiescence, in addition to "agreement," can also mean "acceptance without protest." Often when you offer acquiescence, you give in to another person's plan, perhaps because you are afraid to object or you don't have a better idea of your own. /Only when Republicans mustered enough votes to pass legislation requiring a vote on the agreement—which passed with a veto-proof majority—did Obama acquiesce./ /In fact I would have been surprised if he had acquiesced and simply headed home with all his troopies./

Arresting

Something arresting *commands your attention. It's stunning, and you can't turn away.* When the police arrest someone, they capture them. Likewise, when something is arresting, it captures your attention because it is so sensational. An arresting sight — like the Grand Canyon — makes you want to keep looking at it for hours. An arresting song is one you always want to hear. An arresting story is captivating and engrossing. Something arresting is not only entertaining; it's mesmerizing.

egregious

Something that is egregious stands out, but not in a good way — it means "really bad or offensive," like a tattoo on a man misspelling his girlfriend's name.

Fly-by-night

The *definition of a fly-by-night is an unreliable person who is generally not known and who cannot be trusted*. An example of fly-by-night person is the description used for a salesman who promises the world but doesn't deliver. An example of a fly-by-night is a contractor who takes your money to produce your kitchen cabinets and then never produces them.

Obsolete

The definition of obsolete is something that is no longer being used or is out of date. An example of obsolete is the vcr. An example of obsolete is a Sony Walkman.no longer in use.no longer in general use; fallen into disuse.

Trinket

The word trinket refers to an *inexpensive, flashy ornament or piece of jewelry*.

Live/Eat high off/on the hog

To be in *prosperous condition*

Catatonic

Use the adjective *catatonic to describe someone who is in an unresponsive stupor*, as if suffering from a mental disorder. Sometimes in the summer it gets so hot that people lose all their energy and get catatonic. Catatonic can also be used to describe something that is related to psychiatric problems. *Catatonic schizophrenia, for example, has symptoms that can include physical immobility, unresponsiveness, or strange movements.* The weird thing about the word catatonic is that it *can either mean not moving at all or moving in a frenzy* — or it can mean having totally rigid muscles or having totally relaxed muscles.

Simmer

Usually when you're making a soup, you want to bring it to a boil and then let it simmer, *cooking it just below the boiling point to get all the flavors to release*. The word simmer is usually used to describe the temperature just below boiling or the process of cooking something at that temperature. *But it can also be used to describe a feeling that's been simmering or slowly developing over time. It's also a word used to describe suppressed anger — that feeling just before you boil over*. Just in case you do boil over, you might need to take a moment to simmer down, a casual expression that means, "Chill out, my friend. /Rebellion has long simmered in the Conservatives' more right-wing factions, where many want Britain to pull out of the EU./ /The public acrimony has dissipated somewhat, but bitterness clearly still simmers below the surface./

culminate

Verb 1. reach a climax or point of highest development. /The effort culminated here with a two-day event, which includes a walk, entertainment and more at Lexington Senior High School/ /For Hamilton, it was the continuation of a difficult weekend after he suffered three incidents on Friday practice, culminating in a crash in the rain/

Affect

Verb In everyday speech, *affect is a verb. It means to influence something*, such as in the headline from the Albuquerque News, Affect is most often used as a verb meaning "to have an impact on," as in "The tornado barreling towards us will affect our picnic plans." /In the following fiscal year, 57 municipalities would be affected./ /Roof's former stepmother, meanwhile, said the 21-year-old had been affected by "internet evil"./

Scuttle

Verb 1. *To Run with quick , hasty steps * /The ancient sea creatures, distant relatives of modern-day horseshoe crabs, scuttled beneath the currents./ /Replays showed Bucknor watching the ball fly until it neared the base, then scuttling out of the way as it headed toward the grass./ 2. *To Abandon , withdraw from ( as Plans , Hopes , rumors etc)* /The Education Secretary was also a muted voice when the Obama Justice Department filed a lawsuit aimed at scuttling Louisiana's innovative voucher program./

Unfrock

Verb 1. *to deprive (a person in holy orders) of ecclesiastical status* /"Hold your tongue; it was I who made you Metropolitan, and I unfrock you./

Stint

Verb 1. *to limit to a certain amount, number, share, or allowance, often unduly; set limits to; restrict.* /Don't stint on the food. They stinted for years in order to save money/ 2. an unbroken period of time during which you do something /a two-year stint in the army./

Linger

Verb 1. *to remain or stay on in a place longer than is usual or expected, as if from reluctance to leave*: /We lingered awhile after the party./ 2. *to remain alive; continue or persist, although gradually dying, ceasing, disappearing,* etc.: /She lingered a few months after the heart attack. Such practices still linger among the older natives./ 3. *to dwell in contemplation, thought, or enjoyment*: /to linger over the beauty of a painting./

Abide

Verb 1. Tolerate , Stand /I can't abide dishonesty / 2. Accept without oppositions or questions . /to Abide the verdict of Judges / 3. to wait for; await: /to abide the coming of the Lord./ 4. To remain steadfast or faithful to /If you make a promise, abide by it./ 5. to have one's abode; dwell; reside: /to abide in a small village/ 6. to remain; continue; stay: /Abide with me/

Elude

Verb (used with object), eluded, eluding.चालाकी से बच निकलना ,बचना 1.*to avoid or escape by speed, cleverness, trickery*, etc.; evade: /to elude capture / Synonyms: shun, dodge. 2.*to escape the understanding, perception, or appreciation of* /The answer eludes me. /

Renounce

Verb *छोड़ देना* 1. to give up or put aside voluntarily: /to renounce worldly pleasures./ 2.to give up by formal declaration: /to renounce a claim./ 3.to repudiate; disown: to renounce one's son.

subdue

Verb *वश में करना, कुचल देना , शान्त करना, जीतना* 1. To Conquer and bring into Subjection 2. To reduce the intensity , force or vividness of( Sound , Light , Color , etc) 3.To repress /It took a blow to the head from Clark and the assistance of three deputies to subdue her. / /Because of these women, rape is now a punishable crime in Haiti, rather than a weapon used by the powerful to subdue activists. /

Caucus

Verb - 1.* Meet to Select a candidate or to promote a policy* 2. a closed political meeting /The Republican caucus in the House is 89 percent white men, says Wasserman. /

Coalesce

Verb - *Together*

Bewilder

Verb - *चकित करना , हैरान करना* Bewilder is a *fun-sounding word for confusion-causing*. A complicated math problem will bewilder many students. A magician's tricks should bewilder the audience. Mystery stories should be a little bewildering, at least until the end. Sometimes, being bewildered has a more emotional element. If someone you know died in a freak accident, that would bewilder you in a very sad way.

ford

When you're out hiking in the wilderness, you may have to ford a river if there's no bridge. Roll up your pant legs because you'll have to wade through the water at a shallow point. *The verb ford describes crossing a body of water on foot at a shallow point or driving across it in a vehicle.* The idea is that you're not using a bridge or a boat to cross the water. *Ford also has a noun form, meaning a shallow point in a river or stream. *So if you ever have to ford a river, make sure you cross at the ford — the shallow point — or you could get very wet.

Chip Off the Old Block

a child who resembles a parent in behavior, looks, or abilities

Antechamber

a waiting room /*Ex- A bookshop in the old days seemed a kind of antechamber to Fairyland. */

Anagram

a word or phrase spelled by rearranging the letters of another word or phrase /*Ex-If an anagram is a derivative rearrangement of essential elements, then one might be disposed to argue that such has been their rise in influence and prestige that almost every new digital product seems to be an anagram of Apple.*/

Apposite

adjective -उचित , उपयुक्त 1.*suitable; well-adapted; pertinent; relevant; apt*: /* Ex -The inky-black raven - an apposite omen for Britain today /

Shilling

an English coin worth one twentieth of a pound

Sastruga

n. A long wavelike ridge of snow, formed by the wind and found on the polar plains.

anthesis

the time when a *flower becomes sexually functional * /Example - During anthesis, these attractive purplish-red flowers emit a strong foul odor/

Antedate

to be older than; to have come before make it of older era Hindi - पूर्वदिनांकित करना /* Ex - "Why does Dickens so habitually 'antedate' the action of his fiction to the period of his childhood?" */ /* Ex - It appears to antedate the Qur'anic inscriptions in the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem */

lope

verb * 1. Run Easily * /For the final leg of the visit, we took a loping lap around the massive warehouse where most of the grunt work takes place./ /When he rounded the last bend before the house and didn't see anyone on the street, he broke into a lope./

Dwell

verb - *बस जाना , ध्यान लगाये रखना* *To dwell in a home is to live in it. To dwell on something — usually something bad, like a failed romance or terrible service in a restaurant -- is to think or speak about it at great length.* Dwell has been part of the English language for over 1,000 years. The definition of the word has evolved considerably since its first recorded use in the ninth century when Old English dwellan meant "lead astray" or "hinder." *If you constantly dwell on the bad things in life, it could hinder you from seeing the good or lead you astray to the negative. *If you keep complaining, your friends might tell you to stop dwelling on it or, if they're really annoyed, they'll say, "Get over it!" /to dwell in Happiness / / Dwell we , But in the suburbs / /to dwell on a particular point in Argument / /It is probably unwise of me to dwell too long on the source of the bowl of tiny ayu fish that were deep-fried alive in front of me /

shambles

कसाईखाना , गड़बड़ Originally a word for a slaughterhouse, shambles now usually means "*one heck of a mess*," as in "You were supposed to clean your room, but it's still a shambles! *When the job market is in a shambles, people have trouble finding work. *When a supermarket is in a shambles, there might be melons and milk spilled all over the floor. If everyone in a classroom is talking and yelling at once, the class is a shambles, because no one can hear each other or get any work done. People say things are "in shambles" or "a shambles" — they mean the same thing. However you say it, a shambles is chaotic, disorderly, out of hand, and off the hook — a major, five-alarm mess.

intimate

घनिष्ठ ,अन्तरंग ,सूचित करना Adj -*very private; closely personal*: verb -*to indicate or make known indirectly; hint; imply; suggest.*

meadow

घास का मैदान The noun *meadow is another word for a hayfield*, but offers a much more picturesque view as an open field of lush grass filled with butterflies and birds, with room to run. It can also refer to a piece of land found along a river.

Latent

छिपा हुआ Latent is an adjective that you use to *describe something that is capable of becoming active or at hand, though it is not currently so.* The adjective latent is a tricky word to define because it refers to something there but not there. That is, latent means something that is capable of becoming active or at hand but has not yet achieved that state. The word arrived in Middle English from the Latin word latēre which means "to lie hidden." *It can have somewhat negative connotations because it is often used in a medical context, as in a latent illness or infection, but it can also mean good things, such as someone discovering they have latent talents or capabilities.*

prevail

जीत लेना, प्रबल होना *Prevail means to successfully persuade someone of something.* If you were a Presidential advisor and you convinced him to make a National Day of Pet Appreciation, then you prevailed upon him to recognize pets. *Prevail can be used for different kinds of success. If you prevail upon someone, you have influence on them. If you prevail over someone, you win.* Say you're a big fan of a losing team. You might cheer, "*Despite all odds, we will prevail!*" To use prevail there has be some kind of contest. That could be internal, like when you're on a diet and your desire to eat chocolate cake prevails over your discipline.

smudge

दाग , धब्बा an irregularly shaped spot /From a patrol altitude of about 1,500 feet, cruise ships look like smudges on the horizon and sailboats are white dots with long wakes./ /Further research may be needed to determine whether marsupial southpaws, like their human counterparts, also struggle with smudged notes and poorly designed spiral-bound notebooks./

Smear

दाग , धब्बा . मानहानि , कलंक Noun 1. vilification 2.Smudge Slang 1. to defeat decisively; overwhelm: /You use a juvenile smear and provide no reason why she is unqualified. Smells like a progressive two-faced political argument to me. / *smear campaign -a campaign to tarnish the reputation of a public figure, especially by vilification or innuendo. *

Dissertation

निबन्ध,लेख *A dissertation is a long piece of writing that uses research to bring to light an original idea. *Don't go to grad school unless you're prepared to write, say, a 300-page dissertation on some topic. In everyday speech, we sometimes accuse people of delivering dissertations when they overload us with dull information. *If you're annoyed with a long memo from your office manager about keeping the kitchen clean, you could mutter to a coworker, "How'd you like that dissertation Felix posted about rinsing out our mugs?"*

virtue

नैतिक गुण Virtue is the quality of *being morally good*. If you're writing a screenplay and you want it to be a real tearjerker, make sure your hero is full of virtue. The word virtue comes from the Latin root vir, for man. At first virtue meant manliness or valor, but over time it settled into the sense of moral excellence. Virtue can also mean excellence in general. One of your virtues might be your generous willingness to help out your friends. The phrase by virtue of means "as a result of" or "by authority of." You will achieve success by virtue of hard work (or by virtue of inside connections). /This may seem obvious, but I find the design to be one of the Watch's chief virtues./

discern

पहचानना If you can *make out, pick out, or distinguish something, you can discern it*. This is a word for recognizing and perceiving things. Discerning has to do with being able to *see or hear something*. In a loud room, it can be hard to discern one person's voice. If there's not much light, you'll have trouble discerning the words on a page well enough to read. If you have sloppy handwriting, then it's hard to discern what you wrote. When you can discern something, you can tell what it is; you can identify it. /Discerning how much of an influence exposure to these chemicals might play is complicated, however, by the obesity epidemic./

Absolution

पाप-क्षमा *Absolution is a religious concept for purging someone of sin, granting them absolution. The word is used for other kinds of forgiveness too*. *When you sin or make a mistake, you usually want absolution — which is like forgiveness. In many religions, if you confess your sins, you can be granted absolution*: /Father Corby had famously given absolution to the men of the Brigade before they went into action in the Wheatfield on July 2./

wade

पार करना To wade is *to walk through water*. If you've been fishing without a boat, chances are you've gone for a wade to reach your precious prize (and if it got away, exaggerated how big it was.) Wading doesn't have to be literally through a liquid; *any action that involves a laborious slog through something that offers resistance is a wade.* Just try reading Moby Dick. And if you want to get into a fight? Wade right on into the brawling crowd. Or if its verbal fisticuffs you're after, wade right on into the debate.

Shamble

पैर घसीटकर चलना *When you shamble down the street, you move slowly and shuffle your feet. People who shamble along are usually tired, elderly, or sad.* An exhausted hiker might shamble along the final mile of trail after weeks of walking, and your grandfather might be the speediest one in his nursing home, passing up the residents who shamble along with their walkers. A kindergarten teacher might call to her class, "Don't shamble! Pick up your feet and let's go to the library!" Shamble probably comes from the outdated adjective that means "ungainly or

phlegm(flem)

बलगम Phlegm is a thick secretion of mucous. It's hard to sleep when you have a bad cold and your throat is full of phlegm.

Embankment

बांध Noun - a long artificial mound of stone or earth; built to hold back water or to support a road or as protection

Lope

लम्बा डग, छलांग 1. a long, easy stride. 2. a step forward in development or progress:

Timbre

स्वर विशेषता Timbre is a word that describes the *tone or unique quality of a sound*. If you play the same note on a piano and on a guitar, each note will have its own timbre.

Thwart

/M - Throat - If some one squeeze your throat then he wont be able to do any thing..*you will prevent him from Carrying out his nefarious plans विफल करना */ A villain's worst nightmare is the superhero who always seems to thwart his efforts, preventing him from carrying out his plans to take over the world. Thwart is a word you'll hear in a lot of action movies, and usually it's the hero who is trying *to thwart the evil plan of some super-villain. * Yet even mere mortals can be thwarted in their efforts; the word simply means to prevent someone from carrying out his or her plans. *An aggressive driver can thwart your attempt to snag a parking space at a crowded mall by pulling into the space before you * . An aggressive shopper at that same mall can thwart your efforts to buy the last Dancing Snoopy doll by grabbing it off the shelf first. /Previous players had exploited gaps in the rules to thwart all movement toward the camps. /

Tether

/M - Tied Together- The ball is *tethered बांधना* to a pole by a *Tether ( Rope )*)/ Both a verb and a noun, tether keeps things tied together, or is the tie itself. Remember, when you tether that chair to those balloons, use a strong tether. You don't want to drop from the sky because you tied them together using a cheap piece of rope. Think of the childhood game tether-ball.* The ball is tethered to a pole by a tether. Tether usually refers to a rope or a chain, but it can also refer to an invisible bond or link*. For example, the Internet can serve as a tether that links you to your pen pal in Germany. The love between a mother and her child keeps them tethered to each other for a lifetime. And whenever astronauts go for jaunts outside the space station, they tether themselves to the station using wires and a hook.

lumber

/M - Timber - Ek aadmi lakdi(*Processed wood*) kaat kar usey bechne ke liye apne Ghode gaadi se market le jaa raha tha ..The load was too heave ..uske horse awkward tarike se chal rahe they (*Awkward in Movement* ) ..Finally he sold 90% of Lumber and stored rest 10% as Useless with Useless Articles in a room ./ *लकड़ी ,बेकाम की चीज , काठ कबाड़, * 1. to cut timber and prepare it for market. 2. to become useless or to be stored away as useless. 3.to fill up or obstruct with miscellaneous useless articles; encumber. 4. awkward in movement

tautology

/M - Toh+ Toh + Logy - *Tautology is useless restatement, or saying the same thing twice using different words. अनुलाप "Speedy sprint" is a tautology because sprint already means "speedy running."*/ *In the study of logic, a tautology is a statement that is necessarily true under any interpretation. * "It will snow tomorrow, or it will not snow tomorrow" is an example. No argument here — it's true any way you look at it.

topical

/M - Top - a news reader was showing the Top news of the day (Current, Now) and in that news there is a medicine which can be applied on Top of your Skin (*Surface of Skin*) / किसी स्थान संबंधी When some information or *news is current and of immediate interest*, we say it is topical. This might be a news story or a bit of gossip, or just a subject that is of current importance. *If it's "now," it's topical*. There are several meanings of the word topical, but one clue can help you remember them all: that inside word "*top*." You often hear newscasters refer to the "top" stories of the day—they're current, and that makes them topical. That same little word "top" can help you remember the medical meaning of topical: *pertaining to the surface of the skin*. A cream applied to the "top" of your skin is a topical medication. Remember that clue, and you'll be "tops" too. /Once upon a time I would have taken my topical crème prescription and complained about his grumpy demeanor./ /For more topical parenting tips, sign up for TIME's free weekly parenting newsletter./

treacherous

/M - Trench + Dangerous : Ek Adventure Trip bana to go on scuba diving in one of the most (*Dangerous*) Trench in Indian Ocean . But Scuba Instructor jo tha wo boht hi ( *Unreliable , Unstable and Untrustworthy* ) insaan tha .. So we cancelled the trip / /M - अविश्वास्य, अस्थिर,जोखिम भरा Adj 1 .characterized by faithlessness or readiness to betray trust 2.deceptive, untrustworthy, or unreliable. 3.unstable or insecure, as footing. 4.dangerous; hazardous: /Ex - a treacherous climb. , making road conditions treacherous/

trivial

/M - Tribal - In some tribes cannibalism is a *trivial (Not Important or Significant ,तुच्छ )* thing to talk about / Something that is *trivial is not important or significant*, such as the trivial details you shared with me about your trip to the post office this morning *Trivial can also describe something that isn't deep or meaningful, like a trivial movie that you'll forget about after the credits roll*. It comes from the Latin word trivium: tri means "three" and via is "road." So a trivium is a "place where three roads meet," meaning a crossroads — just something ordinary. So something that is trivial is not worth remembering; it just isn't important

euphemism

/M - U + F*** + Off - He wanted to say U F*** Off , but applied * Euphemism (कठोर शब्दों के स्थान पर मधुर शब्दों का प्रयोग) * and said .. I would like you to leave me alone / *Pardon me, but when a polite term is substituted for a blunt, offensive one, you should call it a euphemism.* Euphemism is from Greek euphemismos, meaning "good speech," and it's a way that we paper over uncomfortable things with more pleasant-sounding words. These days we tend to use euphemisms when talking about anything having to do with elimination of bodily waste: toilet, bathroom, and water closet were all originally euphemisms. *The military is also notorious for using euphemisms, like saying "neutralizing the target" instead of "killing someone."* /The point and subject is perfectly clear, but disappears just a little into the moist air of euphemism./

ubiquitous(Ubi+ Quit+us)

/M - Uber +Quit+us - We were in Atlanta downtown at 11:00 PM and ordered Uber for going home . Strangely even after 20 minutes he didn't come, we were quite agitated. But then we saw another Uber driver and reached home safely . Uber is Ubiquitous that is its found everywhere./ (adj.) *present or existing everywhere*

oaf

/M - Uff - When you see an *oaf (is the boring, ill-mannered person गंवार)* uff comes from your mouth/ There are many ways to be an oaf: you can be loud, insensitive, rude, or just plain stupid. The word is related to the Old English word for "elf," and originally meant a changeling — an elf's child, a little darling not known for good manners — and you probably wouldn't want one of them at your party either

Vagary

/M - Vague - Cheese jo boht hi ajeeb ho ...jinka koi ata pata nahi ho ..*unexpected and unpredictable * / A vagary is an *unexpected and unpredictable change उतार-चढ़ाव *, and the word is usually used in the plural. You might know from experience that the *vagaries of winter weather make planning a vacation in February a risky proposition*. Vagary traces back to the * Latin root meaning "wander," and you can think of a vagary as something that wanders*. Events or situations that seem to change at random have vagaries. Whether the hottest new boy band will succeed or not is dependent on the vagaries of teenage enthusiasms. The vagaries of the real estate market will determine whether that swamp property you just bought is a gold mine or a disaster.

Vanity

/M - Vain - Conceited / *Vanity is the quality of being vain, or having a ridiculous amount of pride. If you have excessive vanity in your appearance, you probably spend long hours sitting at your vanity table doing your makeup or plucking your nose hairs.* If you pride yourself on looking absolutely perfect and refuse to do any work that might dirty your clothes or mess up your hair, someone might accuse you of vanity. Often vanity is empty, like the emperor's in The Emperor's New Clothes. If someone pays to have her own book published even though it's really bad, we say it is a vanity printing. /It's a funny nexus of, obviously, a certain amount of vanity because you're acknowledging that you're going onstage and asking people to look at you./

veracious(Vere+cious)

/M - Veer + Cious - Jo Veer hotey hian wo *Veracious (सत्यवादी )* bhi hotey hain / Someone who is* veracious सत्यवादी speaks the truth* — like your brutally honest friend who always lets you know what she thinks about your outfits, your hairstyle, your lasagna recipe, and your taste in movies. Think of a veracious person as someone who is like a witness under oath in a court of law, someone who speaks "the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth." Don't ask a question of a veracious friend unless you really want to know the answer. *The adjective veracious can be applied not just to people but also to things that are true or accurate, such as "a veracious story" or "a veracious statement."*

Vigor

/M - Viagra - After Having Viagra you will feel *Life and Energy* / Or Vigour Noun -1. active strength or force. 2.energetic activity; energy; intensity: /Ex - She pursued the task with passion and vigour / Hindi - जोश

whim

/M - Vim - Ghar main kapde dhone ka sabun khatm ho gaya tha , ekaek dimaag main khaya aay ki chalo Vim use kartey hian . *Es sudden impulse , Ekaek Khayal ,Change of Mind ko Whim boltey hian*/ A whim can be a sudden impulse or a change of mind, like if you go shopping for school clothes but instead buy a pink cowboy hat.

Vulpine

/M - Vulgar + Pine - He was drunk and people were making vulgar jokes on him . Even though he was reacting with *Vulpine(लोमड़ी जैसा ,Crafty , intelligent , slightly predatory ) * Smile / *You may encounter a vulpine smile, a vulpine movie director, or a vulpine laugh — whatever it is, be on guard. The word vulpine describes something that is crafty like a fox.* The word vulpine traces back to the word vulpes, the Latin word for "fox," and the word can be used literally to describe something directly related to a fox. Nowadays, however, you're more likely to hear it used to describe something that has the characteristics of a fox. Many cultures associate the fox with cunning and shrewdness, and *the word vulpine has come to be used to describe something that has a crafty, intelligent, slightly predatory quality.*

Waffle

/M - Waffle - Waffle House main Waffle khana aur *gibber* karna / 1. *to speak or write equivocally: * / to waffle on an important issue. / 2.to talk foolishly or without purpose; idle away time talking.

vexing

/M - Waxing - To wax vexing (* Annoying चिढ़ पैदा करने वाला*) hair / Anything vexing is bothersome or annoying. The noise of a car alarm is extremely vexing to everyone around. *To be vexed is to be irritated or exasperated, so anything vexing creates irritation or exasperation. *A splitting headache is vexing. A talkative neighbor can be vexing. Filling out a form is usually vexing. If you're trying to get somewhere and there's traffic, that's a vexing situation. Unfortunately, life is full of vexing situations.

weasel

/M - Weasel - Nevale chalak hotey hian and chup chap se ghar main khana dhundhne aatey hian . Aise logo ko jo Sly , Sneaky , chalak ya chor and jhut boltey hian unko Nevala ya weasel keh saktey ho / *A weasel is a sneaky and sly person.* Your weasel of a friend has a habit of "forgetting" his wallet every time he goes out to dinner with you.You can call someone who cheats and lies a weasel, or you can use the word literally, to refer to the small furry mammal called a weasel. The furry kind of weasel is known for its short legs, long neck, and musky smell. In fact, the word's Proto-Germanic origin wisand carries the meaning of a stinky animal. /But unless they start from the viewpoint that honourable members are almost certainly dishonourable weasels, they risk being seen as patsies./

Wither

/M - Weather - Harsh Weather main Crops * नष्ट हो ya सूख ya मुरझा jaatey hian (wither) * ho jaatey hian / losing vitality and fading away shrivel up or shrink Wither means to *shrivel up or shrink*. If you forget to water your plants for six weeks, they'll wither — they'll dry up and you probably won't be able to bring them back to life. *In addition to shrinking, the verb wither can also refer to losing vitality and fading away, like people who wither as they age*. They slowly lose their physical stamina and grow feeble. People also start to physically shrink at a certain age. In that way, they wither in both senses. Not only do they wither by losing their youth, they also wither by shrinking.

wail

/M - Whale - Ek bachha whale dekh kar *wail ऊँची आवाज़ में रोना * karne laga / *To wail is to let loose a long loud cry.* If you're feeling truly miserable, take a deep breath and wail as loudly as possible. When it comes to expressing unhappiness, wailing lies at the extreme end of the spectrum. So, it's best to save this response for life's most unpleasant moments — unless you're a jazz musician. *In jazz terminology, wailing on one's instrument is actually a good thing.* What's the connection between an eardrum-shattering expression of misery and a hot jam session? The answer to that question may depend on your personal musical preferences.

Whit

/M - Wheat - South Indians *boht kam (Whit ,Tiny Part of Something)* khatey hain / *Wit - Mental Sharpness , Keen Sense of Humor Whit - Tiny Part of Something* Whit indicates a bit of something, and usually something abstract like a feeling or emotion. You might feel the last whit of your confidence depart when your teacher hands out the 32-page final exam. *Don't confuse whit with wit, meaning mental sharpness or keen sense of humor. Let's hope you have more than a whit of wit in your personality!*

yearn

/M - Why + Earn : Why Earn?? To fulfill your (*Desires*)..Which may include a Beautiful Car..Jispe tum kaafi din se (*Attract*) ho ../ *Strong Desire , Attracted * Verb इच्छा करना , लालायित होना 1. To have a strong and earnest desire /to yearn for a quiet vacation./ 2 .be moved or attracted: / They yearned over their delicate child./ /Ex- The poor don't yearn for fish and chips/

Wrought

/M - Wrought Iron - jo cheez mold , shape kee jaa sakti ho usey wrought boltey hian jaise Wrought Iron / *Wrought is an adjective that means "molded," "shaped," or "manufactured." A wrought-iron fence has been shaped to fit a particular ornamental style.*Wrought is most often used to describe the shaping, altering, molding, and manufacture of various metals, like iron, steel, aluminum.

bray

/M - Y +Bra - Y girls need Bra ...sun kar sab hasne lagey gadhe ki tarah(*Laugh Loudly and Harshly *) / Verb -* A loud harsh sound, as the cry of an ass or the blast of a horn. laugh loudly and harshly Hindi - कर्कश स्वर में हँसना , रेंकना

zealot

/M - Zeal(Dedication or Enthusiasm) + Lot - Too much of Zeal or enthusiasm can lead people to refuse other perspective and contracting beliefs , Aise logo or things ko Zealotry boltey hian / *Zealotry is believing so strongly in something that you are completely intolerant of different beliefs or opinions.* A government's zealotry might lead it to outlaw free speech and arrest journalists. Zealotry comes from the noun zealot, or "fanatic," which is rooted in the Greek zelotes, "a zealous follower," ultimately from the Greek zelos, "zeal, ardor, or jealousy."

Scintilla

/M - a scintilla of doubt - A tiny bit of Doubt / It might take more than a scintilla of English vocabulary knowledge to know that scintilla means a tiny bit of something. *Scintilla is a long word for describing a tiny thing*. It comes sandwiched between the words a and of in phrases like "*a scintilla of doubt*" or "not a single scintilla of evidence." If you're uncertain of the pronunciation, remember: it rhymes with chinchilla and the c is silent, just like in science. *Similar words you can use to talk about tiny bits of something are iota, smidgen, speck, and whit.*

Barnstorm

/M - barn + storm - Tornado has severely damaged all the barns in villages surrounding Atlanta . Atlanta mayor toured these villages and provided ration and support .. he also gave Speeches at all stopover to support his upcoming campaign / 1. *to conduct a campaign or speaking tour in rural areas by making brief stops in many small towns. * 2. Theater. to tour small towns to stage theatrical performances. 3. (of a pilot) to give exhibitions of stunt flying, participate in airplane races, etc., in the course of *touring country towns and rural areas. * /I half-expected him to barnstorm out in riding boots and harangue us, Mussolini-style, underlit from a plinth. /

Lament

/M - lame(असंतोषजनक, लंगड़ा) + Ant - People were *lament(to feel, show, or express grief, sorrow, or regret.)* about an ant who just loss his legs / *If you are really upset or sorry about something, you might lament it. A lament is full of regret and grief.* If you lament something, then you feel sorry about it. You could lament a mistake you made, or you could lament a horrible thing that happened to a friend. Also, a lament is an expression of grief. So if you keep saying how sorry you are about something, someone could say, "Enough of your laments!" There's also an old literary form called "a lament," which expresses feelings of loss in a long dramatic poem.

pentameter

/M - panch+meter :- 5( Penta) meter ki Heroic poem jismain Utaar Chadhav ho / Noun - unrhymed verse of five iambic feet; heroic verse.

paltry

/M - party - Ek party main food was in such a *paltry (A paltry amount is so small it's not even worth thinking about. तुच्छ , मामूली) * Quantity that we didnt think of eating at all/ In the novel "Oliver Twist," when Oliver is given a paltry amount of gruel — not nearly enough — he asks, "Please, sir, can I have some more?"* Paltry is a laughably small amount — the waiter might chuck a paltry tip in the garbage. If you have only 50 cents in your bank account, it's such a paltry amount, you may as well be broke. * It can also mean "not worth considering" or "not important." If you keep breaking your promises, your friends will get sick of your paltry excuses *

Reparation

/M - repair + action = usne damage karne k *baad ( प्रायश्चित*) karne ke liye reparation kia / Amends, acts of atonement, or satisfaction given as a result of a wrong or injury Hindi - प्रायश्चित ,क्षतिपूर्ति

tacit

/M - taste It - A competition was organized in which you have to taste the food and then tell ingredients of it . I tasted Kheer and it was *tacit (Implied or Understood) * that it was made from Rice , Milk , kesar , Sugar and dry fruits / Something *tacit is implied or understood without question*. Holding hands might be a tacit acknowledgment that a boy and girl are dating. The adjective tacit refers to information that is understood without needing to acknowledge it. For example, since we know that the sky is blue, that kind of assumption is tacit. *Lawyers talk about "tacit agreements," where parties give their silent consent and raise no objections.* /Paid attendance had been capped at 90,000 — a tacit acknowledgment that last year's six-figure crowd had been too large to manage/ /Governments all over the world are struggling to combat illegal fishing, and some are even giving it tacit support./

Tergiversate(Tar + gaay + ver+ seth)

/M - टालमटोल करना / *Use the verb tergiversate when you need a fancy way to describe someone who's beating around the bush, or being deliberately unclear.* *A politician who really doesn't want to answer a reporter's question is likely to tergiversate, or talk and talk without ever taking a definitive stand.* Your relatives may even tergiversate at holiday gatherings when uncomfortable topics come up. The Latin root word, tergiversari, literally means "to turn one's back," or more figuratively, "to be evasive."

Malign

/M - बदनाम करना / *If you malign someone, you badmouth them — just like the jilted girlfriend who tells the whole school her ex has bad breath and head lice.* When you habitually malign people, you risk being described as "a malign influence" — in this case, malign is an adjective that describes a harmful or even evil person or thing. Whichever way you use the word, its connection to wickedness can be found in its Latin root, malignus, "wicked or bad-natured," which combines male, or "badly" and -gnus, "born /Today I am announcing a one year plan to radically diminish Glenn Beck's malign influence: stop buying his books! /

Steep

/M - भिगोन/ 1. *Steep also means to soak in, as in steeping a tea bag in boiling water* /If the rods are steeping in salt water, it could shorten their life span./ 2. *to immerse in or saturate or imbue with some pervading, absorbing, or stupefying influence or agency: * /an incident steeped in mystery./

levy

/M - वसूल करना , कर लगाना / Use the word levy as you would use the word tax: "When the state government imposed a levy on soft drinks, thousands of citizens took to the streets in protest." The word levy can act as either a verb or a noun in a sentence. *The noun levy refers to a charge, such as a tax, fine, or other fee, that is imposed on something. The verb levy is used to describe the act of imposing or collecting the charge. *If you need to raise money, for example, you may decide to levy a fine on your family every time you have to make the coffee in the morning. (Be careful though: your family may also take to the streets in protest.)

infuriate

/M -* In+Furious */ क्रोधित करना Verb To Anger , Annoy / Ex - Dozens of English councils are poised to infuriate ministers by raising council tax just short of the threshold that would trigger a referendum./

Fawn

/M -Fan - *He is big fan of yours and can do anything to win favors* / *चापलूसी करना* A fawn is a *young deer*, but it's also a verb meaning to *try and win favor by flattering*. You might fawn over Bambi if you want to hang out with the cute and fuzzy gang. As a verb, fawn either refers *to an attempt to get on someone's good side, or, oddly enough, to give birth to a deer*. If you're a human, fawning is an age-old art that might get you what you want but can be very unattractive. If you ever come into possession of a great fortune, watch out for sudden friends who want to fawn over you and shower you with presents. They probably have dollar signs in their eyes. /The days of obsequiousness, fawning and groveling are over./

moor

/M -Moork - Captain shouted to his crew Moorkh *moor लंगर डाल* the ship/ *To moor is to tie up a ship*, as in to moor the ocean liner to the docks. Or, if you're reading Victorian literature, a moor could be a mossy meet-up spot. *This word of many hats can also be a noun — a moor is mossy land covered in bushes and grass.* The spooky dogs in Sherlock Holmes's The Hound of the Baskervilles lurk in the moor. With a capital "M," *a Moor can refer to a person descended from Muslims of northwestern Africa*. It's usually used as a verb, though, meaning to fasten a boat — probably related to the Old English word mærels "mooring rope." Say the word in a deep voice and it almost sounds like the foghorn on a ship that's about to moor in the harbor on a foggy night.

Parsimonious

/M -Parsi + Money - Parsi log boht hi kanjoos hotey hain , wo paise nahi kharch karna chahtey , aise logo ko Parsimonious kehtey hain / The definition of* parsimonious is people who are cheap, frugal or unwilling to spend money*.An example of *someone who is parsimonious is someone who obsessively watches every dime of his money*.

prosody

/M -Pro + Sodhi : Pro bankar SOdi ki poem main Uttar and chadhav ki Study Karna (*Science of Poetic Meters*) / Noun - 1. The science or study of Poetic Meters and Versification 2. the stress and intonation patterns of an utterance.

Synapse

/M -Sin + Apse - Sin kar ke uski (*information exchange* )karna aapse */ A junction where information is transmitted from one neuron to the next.

balk

/M : Bal+Kheechna - Agar tum kisi ka Bal kheecho gey aur ussey kaam karne bologey toh woh kaam ke liye definitely Refuse kar degi / Verb - रोकना - Refuse to proceed or to do something /Ex - He balked at making the speech./

Diffuse

/M : Different+use : Different Different tarike se Laptop ko use karna ..koi as Entertainment Purpose se use karta ha koi Study purpose se ..The laptop is (*Spread*) like Jam on bread / *Verb - 1 . Spread Adj - 1. characterized by great length or discursiveness in speech or writing; wordy.*

grueling

/M : Guru + Ling : Guru ne apne ling ka baar baar use kiya .. after a while he was feeling ( * Tired*) / थकानेवाला Adj 1. exhausting; very tiring; Noun - A severe Experience esp Punishment

travesty

/M : Tara + Awasthy - Tara is a renowned standup comedian who is expert in *travesties (उपहास का विषय बनाना , हास्य जनक बनाना A travesty is a cheap mockery, usually of something or someone serious, such as a travesty of justice.)* / A travesty is a silly imitation, like a tall young man dressed up like a little old lady. Travesty and transvestite both come from French travesti meaning "dressed in disguise," so it helps to remember the definition of travesty by thinking of that football player in drag. A travesty can be more than that, though. A travesty of justice, for example, is a court case that makes a mockery of the system, or so you might think if the verdict isn't in your favor

Tenacious

/M : Ten+ Asians : Ten Asian countries come together to save world from Global Warming by using *tenacious( दृढ़ , pertinacious, persistent, stubborn, or obstinate )*strategy / *Use tenacious to mean "not easily letting go or giving up," like a clingy child who has a tenacious grip on his mother's hand.* *A strong grip or an unyielding advocate might both be described as tenacious, a word whose synonyms include resolute, firm, and persistent.*

Hem

/M किनारी सिलना , किनारी / *When kids grow taller, their parents sometimes have to let out the hem in their pants so they'll be long enough. The hem is the very bottom, folded edge of a piece of clothing.* Most of your clothes have at least one hem in them — at the ends of your sleeves, the bottom of your skirt, or along the edge of your t-shirt. When a person sews a hem, whether he's making a dress or a pair of curtains, he folds a very small amount of fabric under two or three times and stitches along the edge in a straight line. *In Old English, the word hem means "a border."*

Proclivity

/M- *Acclivity- an upward slope; Declivity- a downward slope; Proclivity - a natural inclination (झुकाव , रुझान, प्रवृत्ति)* / When you have *a proclivity, it feels automatic — you like what you like; you don't even have to think about it* /Young people have a proclivity for risk seeking behaviors./ /This weakness is matched by a White House proclivity to respond to questions about Iran's performance by attacking those who raise them./

Impecunious

/M- *Im + Pecunia ( Old Latin word for Money ) - Without Money निर्धन, दरिद्र* / If you are hard up, broke, penniless, or strapped for cash, you could describe yourself as impecunious. Then maybe you could make some money teaching vocabulary words. Impecunious comes from the *old Latin word for money*, pecunia, combined with the prefix im, meaning not or without. But impecunious doesn't just mean having no money. *It means that you almost never have any money*

Onerous

/M- *Onus ( in Latin means Burden) - दुष्कर कष्ट साध्य */ Adj 1. Burdensome , taxing , heavy 2. Not Easily borne , wearing If something is onerous, it is very difficult to deal with If one teacher gives you three hours of homework a night, that's rough. But if all of your teachers do it, that makes the task of completing your homework an onerous one, to say the least. *In legal usage, onerous describes a contract or lease that has more obligations than advantages.*

Sanguinary

/M- *Sang( Blood in french) खून का प्यासा ,रक्तपातपूर्ण* / Adjective 1. *full of or characterized by bloodshed; bloody*: /a sanguinary struggle./ 2. *ready or eager to shed blood; bloodthirsty. * 3.composed of or marked with blood.

Somnambulist

/M- *Somna(Sona, sleep) + amble(walk) - नींद में चलने वाला, निद्राचारी* / Noun someone who walks in her sleep. /She's a somnambulist and once set a house on fire./

Soothsayer

/M- *Sooth ( Truth , Reality) + Sayer - One who predicts truth or Reality of future is called Soothsayer भविष्यवक्ता* / *The definition of a soothsayer is a person who is able to predict the future*.

Atrophy

/M- *Trophy - The word "trophy" refers to something that sits on a shelf and is admired, while atrophy is a condition of being shelved, or made inactive and lifeless. क्षीण होना, क्षय*/ Noun 1. a decrease in size of an organ caused by disease or disuse 2. any weakening or degeneration (especially through lack of use) /I'm getting no exercise and not walking, so my legs are atrophying./

Defunct

/M- *de(means without) + funct(function) - So defunct is something which doesn't function anymore or doesn't exists any more निष्क्रिय, समाप्त* / *Defunct describes something that used to exist, but is now gone.* A magazine that no longer publishes, like Sassy, the girl-power mag from the '90s, is defunct, for example. Although defunct comes from the Latin word defunctus meaning "dead," it's not usually used to describe a person who's no longer with us, but rather institutions, projects, companies and political parties — you know, the boring stuff.

Hyperbole

/M- *hyper(beyond the limit)+ bol(means speak) - A Description that is too much exaggerated for emphasis. An example of hyperbole is saying you are so hungry you could eat a horse.*/ Praising your favorite sports team is one thing, but if you call the team the most incredible group of humans ever to walk the earth, then you're going overboard and indulging in hyperbole.

Execrable

/M- .exe + crap = The .exe is a crap and *Execrable (Unpleasant and Poor Quality)* and is of no use / Execrable is something extremely unpleasant or poor quality. A house with bugs, bad smells and roof leaks is an example of a house that might be described as execrable. Execrable is often used as a harshly critical term in the arts, when a reviewer really wants to throw the book at something. *Perhaps part of the power and nastiness of execrable lies in the word's similarity to excrement (feces , waste material )* — but that's a vocabulary word we're not touching in this entry! /Anything, for example, to take our minds off the execrable "dining experience." / /So I'm not criticizing her, and I'm certainly not defending DW Griffith's execrable opinions. /

Soporific(Soprific)

/M- 100 + Periodic table - If someone asks you to write Periodic table 100 times then definitely it will make you *Soporific (something that tends to make you tired or that makes you sleepy or drowsy )*/ Adj 1. Sleep Inducing 2. inducing mental lethargy

Fortitude

/M- 40 + Dude - A war hero killed 40 enemy soldiers in Vietnam war and saved few of his team amidst heavy fire . *Quality of standing face to face with your adversities is called fortitude* / The definition of fortitude is having strong will in the face of danger or pain. An athlete who continues a race in spite of an injury is an example of fortitude. When someone has fortitude it means that they have emotional power or reserves and the ability to withstand adversity. People who have fortitude are described in an admiring way for their courage

Epicure

/M- A.P + Curry - A.P Chicken Curry is very famous and All the *epicures (food lovers) * just love to eat all day / *We call a person who truly loves food—food at the highest levels—an epicure.*Occasionally, you might find the word epicure used for a person who loves something else, but an epicure is usually someone who delights in fine food.

Obfuscate

/M- Ab + Fuss + cat = A cat who's running for President , was asked a question about fuss surrounding his net worth . He Obfuscated(समझ के परे करना , अस्पष्ट करना* the answer / 1. to confuse, bewilder, or stupefy. 2.to darken. 3. to make obscure or unclear: /to obfuscate a problem with extraneous information./ /Stop obfuscating who the enemy is that we are at war with./ /Letting developers take advantage of that should make the Watch much more useful — whereas apps at the moment are a bit obfuscated./

obviate

/M- Ab + wait - Train Operator ne bola we need to wait as Storm is coming , this will obviate any bad things / Verb - 1 . *to anticipate and prevent or eliminate (difficulties, disadvantages, etc.) by effective measures; render unnecessary: बचना* /So they get written down, obviating the point of their complexity./ /It can obviate the need for branches, which keeps costs low./

Exonerates

/M- Action + Narrate : Police ne court me jhooti kahani narrate ki isliye judge ne apraadhi ko acquit(Clear of charges) kar diya but then apraadhi ne bola mujhey *Exonerate (निर्दोष सिद्ध करना, अपराध के अभियोग से मुक्त घोषित करना )* karo/ To exonerate someone is to declare him not guilty of criminal charges. This word is pretty much only used in reference to proceedings in a court of law. The word with a similar meaning that might be familiar is *"acquit*."

Indolence

/M- Adolescence - Once u reach adolescence u will become more and more *indolence (lazy आलस ,निष्क्रियता)* / Adjective 1. disliking work or effort; lazy; idle /an indolent person./ 2. Causing Little Pain (Pathology) /an indolent ulcer that is not painful and is slow to heal./

Ascetic

/M- Aesthetic - Yogi log *aesthetic ( sundar , khoobsoorat) * and comforts cheezo se door rehtey hian , Aise logo ko *Ascetic (आत्मसंयमी, योगी)* bhi boloa jaata hia / The *definition of an ascetic is a person who lives a life of strict self-discipline, contemplation and without pleasures and comforts*. An example of an ascetic is a monk.

Aloof

/M- Alag + Roof - taking alag roof for you that will make you *aloof (सबसे अलग-थलग,अकेला ,at a distance, either physically or mentally.* ) from your family / Aloof is defined as Someone who's aloof isn't warm and friendly, instead being distant and reserved. *That emotionally cold and detached fellow who keeps to himself, drinking espresso and reading French philosophy, would best be described as aloof.

Obliterate

/M- All+ Be + Literate - Lets all-be-literate and *obliterate (destroy मिटा देना )* illiteracy completely from this world / When you see obliterate, think of evil alien invaders that zap a planet with a destructive ray. In one blast, the planet and all of the people on it are vaporized. The planet is truly obliterated, or completely wiped out. A long time ago, obliterate had to do with blotting out words on a page. This is why you see the word literate in there. *Today it means to erase or destroy completely so that there is nothing left. While you can still obliterate text, you can also obliterate hope, an opponent, or all traces of your presence. Whatever you obliterate is completely gone.*

Altruism

/M- All+ true + nice - One who is always Nice toward others is altruistic * selflessness ,निःस्वार्थी , परोपकारिता , दूसरों के हित के लिये जीने का सिद्धान्त, The definition of altruism is caring about other people and their needs without regard for your own needs.*/ If you see a stranger getting beat up on the playground and you rush in to rescue them, you have done something unselfish to help another person, otherwise known as an act of altruism.*Use the noun altruism to refer to feelings or actions that show an unselfish concern for other people* In science, altruism refers to animal behavior that could be harmful to the animal itself but that contributes to the survival of the animal group. Charity is an example of altruism.

Alacrity

/M- Allah + City - ISIS says that in Allah's state there will be no difference between Classes and all the work done for common people will be done with *Alacrity उत्साह , प्रफुल्लता */ Noun - liveliness and eagerness /Books by politicians continue to appear with stunning regularity and frightening alacrity, not so much written as belched./ /She can swing between these two poles with fierce alacrity, leaving you winded and frustrated./

Annex (n)

/M- And + Next : And next to his building he *annexed (An annex is an extension of, or an addition to a building)* another small office on parking lot for his second business / Annex is defined as an additional part of a building or a nearby building which is used as part of the main building.The definition of *annex means to attach something, particularly to a larger entity*.An example of *annex is to acquire new states into a country* Nazi Germany took the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia in 1938 and added it to their own territory.

Adroit

/M- Androit - Androit phones are adroit *(someone who is very Skillful at doing something निपुण, दक्ष)* in multitasking/ The definition of adroit is someone who is very skillful at doing something. *An Olympic Gold medalist in skiing is an example of someone who is adroit at skiing.* An adroit leader will be able to persuade people to go with his ideas. An adroit sculptor can turn a lump of clay into an object of great beauty. If you've ever studied French you know that * droit means "right," both as in "right of free speech" *and as in "left and right," and à droit means both "turn right" and "properly." Once English people borrowed à droit, they changed the meaning slightly, from doing something "properly" to "doing something well." You may have heard the expression "surprisingly adroit," as in, "For a guy whose wife does all the cooking, he is surprisingly adroit in the kitchen."

Plaudit

/M- Applaud it / *As its sound might suggest, plaudit is indeed related to "applaud" and "applause." In fact it's really just a fancy way of saying "praise" or "acclamation."* Plaudit is used more in a literary sense than in spoken English, and particularly applies to the reception of a work of art, most notably a play. /Her portrayal of Juliet won the plaudits of the critics,a demonstration or round of applause, as for some approved or admired performance./

Arcane

/M- Ar + Kane - Kane's face always remains *Arcane( Esoteric,गुप्त, रहस्यमय)* , as he uses a mask./ Adj 1. requiring secret or mysterious knowledge /"the arcane science of dowsing"/

Artifice

/M- Artificial + Ice cream - A Seller was selling artificial ice cream to kids by saying its very good and is for a dollar only . Bachhe bhi itne bewkoof nahi they , unhey samajh aa gaya ki ye humey * Artifice (Manipulate , bewkoof ) * kar ke paise nikaal raha hai The definition of an *artifice is a skill or craft that is clever but often manipulative* or tricky. If *a politician pretends to be angry as a way of rousing the anger of the voters and getting more votes, he's guilty of artifice — a subtle and crafty trick*. /He is unfailingly polite and contrite, still slightly awkward with the artifice of campaigning after all these years. /

odious

/M- Audio - When you listen to audios of people deriding others you will start hating *odious( Extremely Unpleasant or Hated घृणास्पद)* behavior of these people/ *If something is odious it's hateful. If you become a historian of slavery, you'll learn all the details of that odious trade.* Synonyms are hateful, contemptible, detestable, and abominable.

Blight

/M- Bad + Light - A blight is a disease that hurts plants and makes their leaves wither, Urban blight refers to a part of the city where things are falling apart./ क्षति , हानि 1. to destroy; ruin; frustrate: /Illness blighted his hopes./ 2. to cause to wither or decay; blast: /Frost blighted the crops./ /The Department for Communities and Local Government said environmental crime, including dog fouling, "blights communities and poses a risk to human health"./ /And Dennis Hathaway, president of the Coalition to Ban Billboard Blight, said the city's record of punishing companies with illegal outdoor advertising is "abysmal."/

Abasement

/M- Basement - Brazil soccer team ne 2014 World Cup ka Semifinal loose kar diya apni bewkoofion ki wajah se , sab * Sharm ( Abasement , अपमान )* and gussa feel kar rahe they . Gusse se bachne ke liye Brazil team basement main band ho gayi / *humiliation or disgrace, अपमान* *The noun abasement is good for describing the feeling of shame or disgrace that overcomes people who do something embarrassing or dishonorable.* A political scandal or huge election loss can result in abasement for an entire party, and tripping and falling in the middle school cafeteria can cause a thirteen year-old's abasement.

Bigot

/M- Bee+ goat: Bee goat ko kisi bhi haal mei *bigot (tolerate अपने मत का हठी)* nahin kar sakti / *A bigot is someone who doesn't tolerate people of different races or religions.* If you have an uncle who is a bigot and tells racist jokes at Thanksgiving, you may need to talk to him and tell him it's not okay. A bigot can also be someone who refuses to accept other ideas, as in politics. This word was borrowed from Middle French, but the French word is of uncertain origin. In Old French bigot was a term of abuse for Normans, and possibly related to the oath bi got "by God." *In English and French, a bigot was originally a hypocrite, a person who claims to have certain moral beliefs but whose behavior doesn't match those beliefs*. A bigot was specifically a hypocritical professor of religion, but the connection with the current sense of bigot is not clear/ /Well, making a big deal out that actor's blonde whiteness means you're bigot/

dike

/M- Bike - Cycling Competition on top of *Dikes ( Structure made of earth or stone that's used to hold back water. तटबंध,नहर)*/ If you visit the Netherlands, you can see their elaborate system of dikes, without which much of the country would be underwater. *The verb dike means to enclose with a structure, like a wall or embankment, intended to hold back water*. The Netherlands diked an inland sea, used pumping and other water control measures, and was able to reclaim flooded areas.

bilk

/M- Bill - An employee showed incorrect bill to *bilk (ठगना, deprive somebody of something by deceit. cheat somebody out of what is due, especially money, hinder or prevent (the efforts, plans, or desires) )* money / Ever paid a restaurant bill only to discover they charged you for stuff you never had? What they did was bilk you — cheat you out of money that was justly yours. * Shady companies are forever bilking their investors.*

Blithe

/M- Bliss - *The definition of blithe is cheerful , blissful , carefree or lacking in concern*./ The adjective blithe used to mean happy and carefree, *but over time it's acquired a new understanding of someone who isn't paying attention the way they should.* If you have a blithe disregard for authority, you might just smile vaguely when a teacher is yelling at you to continue writing on the lockers with a Sharpie. If you're dancing to music while driving, and pass blithely through a red light, chances are you will be pulled over and given either a ticket or a talking to. /Sadly, Republicans—who have repeatedly slammed Obama for this kind of blithe incoherence—are not immune to the same disorder. /

Bombast

/M- Bombay +Blast - Bombay blast ke baad , all politicians were found to *bombast (डींगे हाँकने वाला , Bombast is a noun meaning pretentious or boastful talk)* their and their party's name for the work they have done / 1.pompous or pretentious talk or writing

Brawn

/M- Brown - Brown and Black people are *brawnier (The definition of brawny is being strong and muscular. गठीला,बलवान,हट्टा-कट्टा)* then white people/ Brawn refers to muscles and physical strength: people often contrast brains and brawn. Therefore, if *someone is brawny, they have large muscles and are quite strong. Many athletes are brawny, especially ones such as weightlifters and football players*. Tennis players and jockeys are usually smaller and not so brawny. *A brawny person is big, strong, rugged, and tough. If you'd like to be brawnier, go to the gym.*

Burgeon

/M- Bulge (Swell or protrude )+on : You may get a tiny bulge on your face because of burgeoning(फैलना, फूलना , बढ़ना , grow or blossom) pollution in your community / Use the verb burgeon to describe something that is growing, expanding, and flourishing.If you have a green thumb, in the spring your flower gardens will burgeon in a cacophony of color.* If you don't have a green thumb, your collection of plastic plants will burgeon. Although burgeon means to grow and flourish, it doesn't necessarily have to apply only to plants. Your town can have burgeoning downtown development. Your tiny retirement account can burgeon into an excellent emergency fund if you invest even a small amount each month. You may have a burgeoning career as an accountant if you fix financial problem of your company.

buttress

/M- Butts - What do they do? They provide you with a * buttress (To buttress is to provide support for a building, or to provide support and justification for an argument or idea.*) on tough surfaces / *You can buttress an argument with solid facts or your financial portfolio with safe investments. You may find that giving compliments to everyone you meet buttresses your popularity* . To buttress is to sustain or reinforce. *A buttress is a structure that adds stability* to a wall or building, and this innovation played a significant role in the evolution of architecture.

Cantankerous

/M- Cactus : The definition of cantankerous (*झगड़ालू ,कलहप्रिय*) is someone who is bad tempered, grumpy or looking for an argument and is like Cactus / If someone is cantankerous he has a difficult disposition. That person in our neighborhood is the cantankerous old man,do not argue with him — he'll always argue with you loud .Some synonyms are cranky, bad-tempered, irritable, irascible.

Candor

/M- Can + do - When you say to your manager that you Can do these things and cant do other things then your Manager can appreciate your *candor (स्पष्टवादिता, the quality of being open, honest, and sincere.)/* If someone tells you they think you are dumb, you might reply with, "While I appreciate your candor, I don't think we need to be friends anymore." *The corresponding adjective is candid*, as in "I want you to be candid. Do these pants make me look fat?" Candor is from French candeur, from Latin candor, from candēre "*to shine, be white." The color white is associated with purity, *which is a now obsolete meaning of candor.

Carping

/M- Car + Ping - the car pinged(घरघराना) when I put in low-octane gasoline and my wife started *Carping( petty and unjustified criticism that just won't stop नुकता-चीनी,मीन मेख निकलना )*my car . / People who find fault with you at every turn, who appreciate nothing and complain, complain, complain, are carping. Enough already! Your annoying aunt Mildred who constantly picks on you, listing all the things she thinks are wrong about the way you dress, the style of your hair, who you're dating, and where you're working? She's carping. *Carping can also be used as an adjective, to describe someone who is overly critical and impossible to please — like that carping food critic who ruined the debut of your new restaurant.*

Celerity

/M- Celebrity = News about Celebrities personal lives spread with *Celerity (means fast moving तेजी, तेज गति )*/ *Gossip often travels with celerity*, as do children trying to get to a big plate of cookies. You may want to study for exams with celerity, but using a slower, more methodical approach will often yield better results.

Censorious

/M- Censor - *The definition of censorious is harshly critical. If your boss yells at you for everything you do, even tiny minor mistakes, he might be described as censorious* / Censorious, an adjective, describes* people who are so critical, they find something wrong in everything*. The sky is too blue. Your dog is too friendly. The zebra has too many stripes. You get the idea. A censorious person makes others say, "So...is there anything you do like?"

Sentinel

/M- Centennial - Centennial lake pe walk kartey huey jaatey appko hamesha *Sentinel (a person or thing that watches or stands as if watching. )* hona padta hai kyunki koi bhi office wala wahan dikh sakta hai and shaam barbaad kar sakta hai/ *A sentinel is a guard, a lookout, a person keeping watch*. its often a soldier, but not always. If you're watching a pot, waiting for it to boil, you're standing sentinel over it — and incidentally, it won't boil until you leave. Etymologists think sentinel stems from the *Old Italian words sentina, meaning "vigilance," and sentire, "to hear or perceive." It's a close cousin of sentry, which means the same thing.* You can use sentinel as a noun or a verb. A kid in a snowball war might be the sentinel, *patrolling* the entrance to the fort. *Wolves stand sentinel over their kill,* stepping aside only for the alpha male, who always eats first.

Charlatan

/M- Charlotte + Ton - If someone says that SS ton bats are manufactured in Charlotte USA then you know that the person is a Quack who is trying to deceive you with false claims , or you can call him *Charlatan ( धूर्त्त, कपटी व्यक्ति, नीम-हकीम , ढोंगी)* / Beware of charlatans who try to sell you access to the fountain of youth or to a Ponzi scheme disguised as an exclusive investment fund. *A charlatan is one who pretends to possess knowledge he or she lacks* Other words for *charlatan are impostor, cheat, or pretender* .Only fools and charlatans know everything and understand nothing."

Choleric

/M- Cholera - Before the advent of modern medicine, most folks believed that health and disease were the result of the balance of "humors" in the body. *If you were quick to anger, you were thought to have too much choler in your system. You were called choleric तुनुकमिज़ाज,क्रोधी */

Circumspect

/M- Circumstance + Inspect - A kind of person who inspects circumstances before speaking, and such people are generally *considered as prudent and cautious who take less risk एहतियाती चौकन्ना */ Circumspect is defined as cautious and unwilling to take risks. If you have two choices and always choose the least risky one, this is an example of a time when you are circumspect.* If you are circumspect, you think carefully before doing or saying anything.

Clairvoyant

/M- Clear + Voyage : Columbus ne voyages pe jaane ke pehle apni *Clairvoyant( Psychic , Tarrot Card Reader )* se mila , Jo usey batati hia ki future kaise hoga , kya uski yatra safar hogi ki nahi ?/ If you can predict the future, you may want to keep your clairvoyant powers to yourself. Otherwise everyone will be knocking down your door asking for the next winning lotto numbers. *A clairvoyant individual is believed to possess psychic abilities or a higher level of insight than other humans who can only use the regular old five senses.* Through dreams, visions, Ouija boards and crystal balls, they can see what happens in the future. But before 1851, clairvoyant didn't have the same mystical meaning that it does today — it merely meant a "clear-sighted person."

Collusion

/M- Collision - Collision or coming together (*Agreement or accord *) for an illegal or immoral reason is Collusion . Like if you plan to create a team for robbing Bank ./ Noun 1. *Secret Agreement* /Davis also wants to uncover evidence of collusion between Vinci City Hall and powerful state officials./

Hone

/M- Cone - Cones are sharp and you make them sharper by honing(Fine grained stone used to sharp cutting tools , To Sharpen Skills or make something more effective) it on the Slab / *The verb hone means to sharpen skills. *When you practice shooting baskets every day after school, you are honing your skills as a basketball player. Hone, the verb, literally means to sharpen with a hone, a whetstone used to sharpen cutting tools. Use hone to describe someone working hard, perfecting or sharpening skills, as in "She is honing her skills as an actress by working in community theater." Hone, which rhymes with phone, is from the Old English word, han, meaning "stone, rock."

Overt

/M- Cover - Opposite of Covert is *Overt ( non-secretive. /खुल्लमखुल्ला)* / The definition of overt is something that is out in the open .An example of overt is public displays of affection. An overt attempt to get your teacher off-track might fail. Instead, try asking subtle questions about her kids, and she'll stay off topic all class.

Cower

/M- Coward : A coward rat will *Cowers (Shrink in fear दुबक जाना )* when a huge , hungry cat approaches /In the distant past society has been brainwashed to cower, like Pavlov's dog, at the "anti-Semite" or "bigot" charge.

Credulous

/M- Credit Card- People who takes credit card from every slick salesman calling them are *credulous (gullible भोला-भाला व्यक्ति )*/

Coddle

/M- Cuddle - Too much cuddling coddling , thats *too much indulgence* / Verb 1. Cook in Nearly Boiling Water 2. * Treat with excessive Indulgence * /A further coddling of Greece may embolden these other debtor nations to ask for more favorable terms./

Deplore

/M- De + Explore - When you dont want to explore new place crowded with people and noisy then you can say you *deplore(आक्षेप करना, निंदा करना, hate ,)* noise and crowd / The verb deplore is used to express *strong disapproval of something.* If you really, really hate the way your mom makes meatloaf, then it's safe to say you deplore it. Deplore comes from Latin roots that mean to bewail or lament. *So if you deplore something, you object to it because it brings you sorrow or grief*. People often deplore things that they regret or feel bad about. You might deplore the inhumane treatment of animals or the deforestation of the Amazon.

Desecrate

/M- De + Sacred - *to disrespect or To spoil sacredness. अनादर करना , अपमान करना */ *To desecrate means to treat a sacred place or thing with violent disrespect.* The news sometimes reports on vandals who have desecrated tombstones or places of worship. When preparing for a foreign occupation, the military instructs troops not to desecrate sacred sites and risk offending the local population. You can also desecrate someone's memory if you spread malicious lies about him after his death.

Derogatory

/M- De+ Rog = If you make fun of someone's sickness or Rog then that's *derogatory (Insulting , Disrespectful ,अपमानजनक) *remarks / Something that's * derogatory is insulting,insulting. or disrespectful.* If you make derogatory comments, that means you say things that are unflattering, unkind, or demeaning. *Derogatory language is meant to hurt, and it usually does.* If you feel offended or insulted by what someone says, the person probably said something derogatory. *Racial, sexist, and homophobic slurs are all derogatory.* Insults that mean someone is stupid or crazy are derogatory.

Deleterious

/M- Delete + ious - You should delete all the spam mail from inbox or else they can be *deleterious हानिकारक* to your PC / My parents were worried that their divorce would have a deleterious effect on us kids, but in the end it was less harmful than watching them fight all the time. For most plants, a lack of sunlight has very deleterious consequences, but there are some plants that actually do very well in the dark. It's a wonder, given how well-established the science is, that we continue to do things that are deleterious to the fragile ecosystem. We must be willing to live with the deleterious effects.

Luscious

/M- Delicious - One which is delicious for taste or smell is *Luscious ( सुस्वादु , मोहक, something that is very pleasing to the sense of taste or smell )*/ An example of something that would be described as *luscious is a rich and delicious breakfast. Calling something luscious means it's juicy, delicious and otherwise incredibly pleasing to the senses,which goes for good looking people as well as a fine piece of chocolate cake.* An adjective meaning richly appealing or scrumptious, luscious is actually believed to be a shortened version of delicious.

Deprave

/M- Deprived - When people are deprived of basic amenities , they try to full fill that by going on *Deprave (अनैतिकता*, दुराचार, दुष्टता, अनैतिकता)* paths/ *Depravity is defined as immorality or evilness, beyond bad behavior . It is a total lack of morals, values, and even regard for other living things*, like the depravity of a serial killer. You can see the verb deprave in depravity. To deprave is to make something bad, often to the point of moral corruption, like the parental fear that a bad influence will deprave their good kids.* Depravity is behavior that is morally corrupt or otherwise deemed wicked.* Don't confuse depravity with deprivation, meaning "being denied something that is necessary."

Deter

/M- Dexter - Dexter deters *( Discourage , frighten ,भय दिखाकर रोकना,डरा कर रोकना)* away his sister from coming to his secret laboratory / To deter is defined as to keep someone from completing an action by giving them fear or doubt. Deter means to discourage. Many believe that the use of capital punishment deters people from committing murder. Others think that is hogwash. "Hopefully *the idea of being expelled will deter kids from cheating in school.*" Teddy Roosevelt's foreign policy dictum "*walk softly but carry a big stick*" was meant to deter other countries from messing with the United States.

Didactic

/M- Didi + Act - Didi always acts in a way that she is teaching something, that's didactic (*उपदेशात्मक,शिक्षाप्रद*)/ The definition of didactic is used for teaching. This word is often *used negatively for when someone is acting too much like a teacher*.When you're didactic, you're trying to teach something. Just about everything teachers do related to teaching is didactic: the same is true of coaches and mentors. Most people want to see a story and be entertained when going to the movies, and *if it feels like the movie is just telling you what to think, that's didactic in a bad way.*

Dilatory

/M- Die + Late + ry - Yamraj ko late aane ka chaska lag gaya tha , har death pe wo late hi pahuchtey they , issey Yamlok ko boht nuksaan ho raha tha . Yamraaj ke *Dilatory ( someone who causes delay or is slow to take action. )* ko theek karne ke liye unhone saath main bhains rakhwa dee jo samay ki paband thi / The definition of dilatory is someone who causes delay or is slow to take action. An example of dilatory is a person who asks a million questions and demands extensive research simply to slow a project down. *The adjective dilatory comes from the Latin root word dilator, a noun that means someone who puts off things, or a procrastinator.* /The police, he says, have been dilatory, not pushing for testing and not pursuing suspects who were readily available for questioning./

Dirge

/M- Die - When you die , People will sing *Dirge ( sad song or poem expressing grief) * , but only if you have done good work for mass in your lifetime . / Dirge is any sad and mournful song, poem, or hymn composed or performed in memory of someone who has died . You can also say that something mournful sounds like a dirge, using the word in a more poetic sense. /However, at night, he had to quiet his pipes; the lady across the street was not a fan of dirges./ /There's a self-evident history of music romanticizing pain: torch songs for abandoned relationships, dirges for tragic deaths, pleading hymns hoping to persuade./

Defer

/M- Differ - If you dont differ between rich and poor, colors and ethnicity then you can defer autonomous ideologies and beliefs / 1. *courteous regard for people's feelings 2. a disposition or tendency to yield to the will of others 3. hold back to a later time* /The court's precedents call for deference to an agency when the law is unclear./

Diffident

/M- Difficult - *One who has difficulty of expressing himself in front of others , one who is shy and lacking in self-confidence or is reserved , is diffident शर्मीला, संकोची * / The adjective diffident describes someone who is shy and lacking in Self confidence showing modest reserve.

Disseminate

/M- Dis (Apart, in diff direction) + Semin( Seeds) - Think about a farmer , sowing seeds of Knowledge , information . Once the crop is harvested and distributed , it will permeate the world with Knowledge and Information . This is called Disseminate ,* to spread Knowledge and Information as far as possible * / Think about a protester distributing a hand out at the beginning of his protest or a wrong information broadcasted ,an Information, once spread around in all directions, cannot be pulled back in. Think about false rumors or political smear campaigns and you'll understand that dissemination is usually a one-way process.

Discord

/M- Dis + Accord (agreement).- Lack of Agreement , Lack of Harmony , मतभेद/ /M - Dis (Different) + Cord( heart) - Different hearts / *Discord is defined as lack of agreement or lack of harmony*. An example of discord is when a singer tries to sing along with a piano that is out of tune and is not hitting the same notes. An example of discord is when people from opposing parties get together and discuss politics.

Dispassionate

/M- Dis + Passion - One not effected or carried away by passions or feelings . Like Surgeons , Arbiters etc . / *Dispassionate describes someone who is not getting carried away by—or maybe not even having—feelings.* It's something you'd want to see in a surgeon, who keeps cool under pressure, but not in a romantic partner. Dispassionate is the opposite of passionate, and while passions are said to run "hot," dispassionate people are often described as "cold." A city marshal whose job is it to evict people behind on their rents must conduct their job with dispassionate fairness, but still, no one wants to be their friend.

Docile(Doh + cell)

/M- Domicile ( Place where you Live ) - Delhi main college admission ke liye Delhi ka Domicile certificate chahiye hota hia ..Unka manana hai ki agar aapke Delhi ke rehne waale ho yaa aapke paas wahan ka domicile certificate hai toh aap * Docile (aaraam se handled and sikhaye jaa saktey ho)* hogey / Adj - Easily taught or handled /a gentle old horse, docile and obedient/

Drawl(Draw)

/M- Draw - The definition of a drawl is a way of speaking with draw-out vowels.* खींच कर बोलना , गुनगुनाते हुए बोल* /

Lummox

/M- Dumb + Ox - A dumb ox is a *lummox (A clumsy , stupid person,awkward or goofy person.)* / Use the noun lummox when you need an informal, old fashioned word for a klutz. Though it can easily be seen as a serious insult, calling someone a lummox these days is fairly unusual and is more likely to be done in an affectionate or teasing way.

Engender

/M- En+ Gender - Engender is a fancy way of saying "*to make happen,(to be produced or caused; come into existence उत्पन्न करना) *" like when you engender the spirit of teamwork and cooperation by encouraging others and doing your share of the group's work./ To engender is defined as to cause something to happen or come into being. give rise to; cause to happen or occur, not always intentionally

Incantation

/M- Enchant -She enchanted Magical words "Abra ka dabra " , bestowing the magic of her sacred *incantation ( जादुई मंत्र)*/ Noun - A ritual recitation of words or sounds believed to have a magical effect /"Bless you, bless you, bless you..." she chants as she points her fingers at each of us, bestowing the magic of her sacred incantation./ /We are, then, in the realm of the occult, strange gods and incantations, illustrated in an energetic visual style./

Inimical

/M- Enemi+ cal - Not Friendly , harmful / /a climate inimical to health/ /a cold, inimical gaze./

Enfranchise

/M- English + France - People from France doesn't need to be Enfranchised (* to grant a franchise to; admit to citizenship, especially to the right of voting. मताधिकार देना *) to work or study in England / The verb enfranchise is used when *a group of people are given voting rights or freedoms they didn't have before*. Many people under the age of 18 would like lawmakers to enfranchise their peer group so they can vote. You may know the word disenfranchised, an adjective that describes people who lack rights or liberties. To enfranchise is to give or restore rights to the disenfranchised. /The reform bill enfranchised every Indian citizen above 18 to vote in elections./

epistle

/M- Epsilon- is a letter in the greek alphabet and *Epistle is a long, formal letter*./ Several books of the Bible consist of epistles. If you're used to emails and text messages, you might be surprised by the idea of the epistle — a letter that is very long and also very formal. An epistle isn't something you dash off in a few minutes while waiting for the bus. Epistles take time and thought to write, almost like doing a research paper. The Bible is full of many epistles — that's where many people have seen this word.

Extol

/M- Ex + Tall - My Girlfriend always *extol (/ स्तुति करना, गुणगान करना, praise highly )*tall guys highly in front of me. And so our relationship ended! / If you extol something, you praise it very highly. In some translations of the Bible, the word honor is replaced with glorify. /As my 30s neared and I went on my first real date, I extolled the virtues of traditional courtship./ /She then extolled the kitchen's many features, including the linoleum, the cabinetry and the Magic Chef range, which "has the new chrome legs."/

Exegesis

/M- Executed + Jesus - To *Exegesis (Interpret , व्याख्या )* the execution of Jesus / *Exegesis is defined as a critical analysis, interpretation or explanation of a written work*.If your teacher gives an explanation of a difficult text you are reading, she is giving you an exegesis on it. An exegesis is a critical look at a text. Often times, religious rules are based on an exegesis of a text. For instance, some Jewish people do not eat meat and dairy in the same meal based on an exegesis of a law in the Torah that says you should not eat a calf cooked in its mother's milk.

Extradite

/M- Extra + Diet - Convict was* extradited ( प्रत्यर्पण करना, भागे हुए विदेशी अपराधी को योग्य अधिकारी के हाथ मैं सौंपना) *to his home country when he start having extra diet . He use to eat three person's meal alone which was quite tough to maintain for poor country/ Extradite is defined as *to send a person back to the country where he or she committed a crime.*When a government extradites someone, it delivers that person to another country or state, usually to be tried for a crime. Treaties between countries often require them to extradite suspected criminals.

Extraneous

/M- Extra( Means Outside Ordinary in latin) - Too much of extra information and too little relevant information is called Extraneous *(irrelevant , unrelated things , असम्बद्ध , विषयेतर,बाहरी)*/ Extraneous is information in a research paper that is in no way related to the topic. An example of extraneous are issues that have nothing to do with the main subject. *Extraneous details are ones that don't matter.*

Fitful

/M- Fit(Daura) + Full - Bachho ko fits kabhi bhi aata hai , its like continuous On and Off / Adj 1. *occurring in spells and often abruptly* ,अनियमित /fitful bursts of energy/ 2. *Intermittently stopping and starting , On and Off * /fitful (or interrupted) sleep/

Flout

/M- Flaunt - Office and Common places pe rule hai ki you cant smoke , Tab bhi kuch log Electric Cigarette flaunt kartey huey dikh jaatey hian . They break the rules , rule is not about spreading smoke its also about spreading bad manners ..Aisi aadat ko jismain *you break the rule openly or show hatred towards rule is called flout* / Flout is defined as to openly show hatred or disregard toward someone or something. An example of flout is to refuse to abide by a specific law because you don't agree with the law.

Ossify

/M- Fossify - Fossil fuels are *ossified( hardened, rigid )* by layer of dust which preserve it / Verb 1. *to become bone or harden like bone. 2. to become rigid or inflexible in habits, attitudes, opinions, etc.: * /a young man who began to ossify right after college./

Fractious

/M- Fracture - Jo log jhagdaalu hotey hian , ya baat nahi suntey logo kee , yaa Bad tempered hotey hia wo log aaye din haath pair tudwa ke aatey hian ..aise logo ko *Fractious झगड़ालु उद्दंड *boltey hian / The definition of fractious is someone who is bad tempered, or someone or something that is difficult to control.An example of fractious is a group of angry protesters.

furtherance

/M- Further+ enhance = or improve hona/ *Advancement , Promotion*

Hiatus

/M- HI+AT+US - If anyone says 'Hi' on the way, we should take *hiatus (gap, break or interruption. क्रमभंग ) * from whatever we are doing and greet back . / A temporary gap, pause, break, or absence can be called a hiatus. *When your favorite TV show is on hiatus, that means there are no new episodes — not forever, just for a little while*. Even things that go on for a long time take a break once in a while: one kind of break is a hiatus. If someone has to leave her job for a time, she's going on hiatus. A touring band will need to take a hiatus if the lead singer gets in an accident. *The key thing about a hiatus is that it's an interruption of something that was happening, but it's not a permanent break*

Hedonism

/M- Hayden - Matthew Hayden is a perfect example of Hedonism (*सुखवाद*)/ *Strictly speaking, hedonism is the belief that pursuing pleasure leads to the greatest ethical good* In practice, though, the ethical part sometimes gets lost in the pleasure part. Hedonism originally hails from the Greek word hedone, meaning "pleasure."*In Ancient Greece, hedonism really did have an ethical component, and its adherents really believed that society would be best served if you as an individual cultivated those things that gave you the greatest pleasure, instead of the self-denial inherent in other philosophies and religions*. Over time the philosophical aspect of hedonism has faded and we are left an idea that looks to us very much like, well, Las Vegas. In ethics, the doctrine that pleasure or happiness is the highest good in life. Some hedonists, such as the Epicureans, have insisted that pleasure of the entire mind, not just pleasure of the senses, is this highest good.

Heresy

/M- Her + Essay - Most of the essays written by her are *heresy(विरुद्ध मत)* against popular beliefs. / *A heresy is a belief that doesn't agree with the official tenets of a particular religion; heresy is the maintaining of such contrary beliefs.* Heresy can be used figuratively: to disagree with the school committee's decisions is considered pure heresy by the faculty. You'll often come across this word in a religious context — the Latin root haeresis, "school of thought or sect," was used by Christian writers to mean "unorthodox sect or belief." This comes from the Greek hairesis, "a taking or choosing," from hairein, "to choose." *A person who chooses to believe in heresies is called a heretic.*

Hieroglyphics

/M- Hero + Graphic - If you do good things through out your life then people may give you status of Hero and put your story in *Hieroglyphics (Written language consists of pictures rather than letters and words चित्रलिपि से संबंधित)*/

Hidebound

/M- Hide + Bound - *Someone who's painfully old fashioned, with chauvinistic, conservative ideas and beliefs about the world can be described as hidebound. संकीर्ण विचारों वाला* / Hidebound things — or people — are stuck in the past, unable to change. Your boss's hidebound attitudes about gender make him reluctant to hire women for most jobs. A hidebound culture can make a school, family, or workplace difficult and unpleasant for anyone who doesn't fit those narrow-minded concepts.

Histrionic

/M- History + Iconic - To play one of the icon from history book like Hitler on stage can be *histrionic ( Overly dramatic behavior or something related to acting, or a personality where someone is prone to drama and overreaction. नाटकीय) */ *Anything that has to do with actors or acting can be called histrionic*, like a Broadway actor's histrionic voice projection that would sound strange in everyday life but is perfect for the stage. *The adjective histrionic, pronounced "his-tree-ON-ic," comes from the Latin words histrionicus and histrio which mean "actor.*" It can describe things that have to do with acting on the stage, but * it can also describe a person who in regular life is a little too dramatic and even over-acts,* like your friend whose histrionic rantings make a trip to the grocery store seem like a matter of life and death. /Residents accuse the council, the government and above all Britain's sometimes histrionic media for portraying the city as a trough of extremism/ /Ms. Mason has long since established herself as a much-decorated diva in the Barbra Streisand school of dramatic histrionics./

Impoverished

/M- I +am + Poorished : I am very poor and you can say that i am *impoverished कंगाल , आर्थिक रूप से नष्ट* / *Impoverished describes being really, really poor, either from having no money or being in bad health.* A person who lives on the street is impoverished, and a country may become impoverished after a devastating war. Living an impoverished life means that your finances and health are not in good shape, and in fact you could die because you can't support yourself. A corrupt and greedy government makes its citizens impoverished, and too much pollution will create impoverished soil that isn't healthy enough to grow delicious vegetables.

Idiosyncrasy

/M- Idio (One's own)+ Psycho + crazy - Idia + If a person has an * idiosyncrasy (व्यक्ति का असामान्य व्यवहार., विशेष सनक , पागलपन) * he or she has a little quirk, or a funny behavior, that makes him or her different. If you only say goodbye in French, never in English, that would be an idiosyncrasy./ The definition of an idiosyncrasy is an unusual behavior, mannerism or reaction of a person or group of people. Idio seems like it means stupid, but really* it is Latin for "one's own,*" as an idiosyncrasy is one's own particular, Putting salt in your hot chocolate or needing the light on to sleep or tapping your head while you think are all idiosyncrasies. A machine such as a DVD player has an idiosyncrasy if you have to do something weird to it to make it work like having to bang it on the back left-hand side to stop it from skipping.

ignominy

/M- Ignore + Mini - If you think that BMW Mini cooper is small and bad car then take a test drive before you want to *ignominy (बदनाम, अपकीर्तिकर ignominious is something that is contemptible or degrading, or that makes you deserving of public shame)* its name / Walk into class in your underwear is to feel what the word ignominy means. *Ignominy is a noun meaning great public shame, disgrace, or embarrassment, or a situation or event that causes this.* The shame can be major or minor: to suffer the ignominy of defeat/the ignominies of old age.

Alibi

/M- Imagine a kid giving self-justification for something he broke or is accused of, and he says : Ali (are) + bi (Bhai) suno to, maine ye nai kia hai.. / *अभियुक्त का यह कहना कि वह घटना स्थल पर उपस्थित नहीं था*अनुपस्थिति का कारण 1. Excuse /"every day he had a new alibi for not getting a job"/ 2. a defence by an accused person that he was elsewhere at the time the crime in question was committed or the evidence given to prove this . /The complaint alleges the lunch was merely to establish an alibi. / /But like Knox, Sabrina changed her story several times and her alibi has yet to be corroborated. /

Ameliorate

/M- Imli + rate - Imli *ameliorates(सुधारना, स्थिति को बदतर से बेहतर करना)* bad tasting soup to something which you can digest / To ameliorate is to step in and make a bad situation better. You could try introducing a second lollipop to ameliorate a battle between two toddlers over a single lollipop. *The verb ameliorate comes from the Latin word meliorare, meaning "improve."* Food drives can ameliorate hunger. An air conditioner can ameliorate the discomfort of a stiflingly hot summer day. A sympathy card can ameliorate grief. Family therapy can ameliorate severe sibling rivalry.Anything that can lift a burden or make something better can ameliorate.

Ingrate

/M- In (Not) + Gratus(grateful) : A person who is not grateful or one who shows no gratitude / A *friend who stays at your house for a month and then leaves without so much as a "thank you," is an example of an ingrate*.

Incarceration

/M- In + Carcer(Jail in Latin) / *Incarceration is the state of being in prison* If you don't fancy incarceration, don't go through with that bank heist. There are many different types of incarceration.If you commit a crime and get locked up, that's one form of incarceration .Some people might feel that school is a form of incarceration.Some highly *religious people think of the body as an incarceration of the spirit*. A great synonym for this word is captivity.

Inconsequential

/M- In + Consequence - महत्त्वहीन/ The definition of * inconsequential is something unimportant or something that doesn't matter *

Inscrutable

/M- In(Not) + Screw - You cant screw a person who is *impossible to interpret or read*..these type of people are called inscrutable / Any person or thing that's mysterious, mystifying, hard to read, or impossible to interpret is inscrutable. You ever notice how it's hard to tell what some people are thinking? Those folks are inscrutable. A good way to think about what inscrutable means is to consider cats and dogs. Dogs wear their hearts on their sleeves, shaking when they're afraid and bouncing up and down when they're happy. Dogs are definitely not inscrutable, because you can tell what they're thinking and feeling. On the other hand, cats are very difficult to read. Even longtime cat owners aren't always sure what's going on with their kitty. Cats are very inscrutable animals.

Ineffable

/M- In+ fable - Fable hoti hai ek choti si story , jo aapki gyan de , wisdom de . Kuch fables aise hotey hain jo aapke samajh se pare hian .Aisi cheez jisko aap describe nahi kar saktey ho ya samjha nahi saktey ho usko Ineffable kehtey hain (*अकथनीय, शब्दों से परे)* When you find* something hard to express or difficult to pin down, it's ineffable*.

Insipid

/M- In+Sip+it - Indians jab kheer ya koi achhi cheez khatey hian and baad main thodi cheez katori main bach jaati hia usko utha kar pee jaatey hain that means ki sabzi ya kheer tasty bani hia and has too much flavor in it . Lekin if they dont do it thats * Insipid , बेस्वाद नीरस */ *Something insipid is lacking in flavor or interest.* You'll probably find the generic poems inside of greeting cards insipid. * Insipid comes from the Latin insipidus, the opposite of sapidus or Sapid which means flavorful.* Because spices and salts are left out, hospital food is usually considered insipid. The most common use of the word is in a metaphorical sense for dull or flat. You might think that your goody-two-shoes cousin is the most insipid girl you've ever met.

Incipient

/M- Inception - *Inception and Incipient is the Beginning or the early stage of existence आरंभिक , शुरुआती दौर* / Incipient means something is in an early stage of existence. In its incipient form, basketball was played with a soccer ball and peach baskets for goals. Bouncy orange balls and nets came later. It is important to note that *when something is in an incipient stage, there is a chance it will never come to completion*. So be on the lookout for incipient trouble or an incipient crisis — you might be able to prevent it from happening.

Ensconce

/M- Iskon - Iskon temple is such a peacheful place that you would like to *Ensconce(to settle securely or snugly,to cover or shelter; hide securely,सुरक्षित होकर बैठ जाना)* yourself / *If you ensconce yourself somewhere, you settle in for quite a while*, such as when you're home with the flu and ensconce yourself on the couch with the remote control, tissues, your phone, and a big glass of orange juice. /I found her in the library, ensconced in an armchair./ /He ensconced himself in the closet in order to eavesdrop./

Cajole

/M- Kajol - Kajol was cajoling(*खुशामद करना To cajole is to try to get someone to do something, often using flattery, kindly tones or gentle prodding.*) Sharukh khan in DDLJ to help her/ To cajole someone is to persuade them by using insincere compliments or promises. If you say "Please, pretty-please, I'll be your best friend," when asking for a stick of gum, you are cajoling the gum holder. An example of cajole is when you try to coax your friend into making your favorite dinner by commenting several times what a great cook she is and how much you love her food. *The origin of this word is probably a blend of two French words meaning "to chatter like a jaybird" and "to lure into a cage."* When you cajole that guy into lending you some money, picture him as the bird going into the cage.

Caldron

/M- Kala + Drum - Caldron is a vessel, for cooking देग़, कढाई / * A caldron is a large cooking pot, large kettle or boiler, often with handles. *

Lachrymose

/M- La + Cry + Mouse - When mouse named La died ,whole basement was filled with *Lachrymose (शोकपूर्ण mournful , tearful)* sorrow/ Lachrymose is not a word used much in everyday speech; you wouldn't say, for example, "I feel a bit lachrymose today." No, you'd probably say, "I feel a bit weepy today." *Lachrymose is generally confined to use as a written critical term, often meaning much the same as sentimental. Books and plays and films can all be lachrymose,* if their intent is to induce shameless sniveling.

Labyrinth

/M- Lab + Rinse - Chemistry professor asked his students to clean and rinse Lab , students see it as Labyrinth * (complex system of paths or tunnels in which it is easy to get lost भूलभुलैया )* with so many aisles with different apparatus . / A labyrinth is a structure with many connected paths or passages in which it is hard to find your way. *In figurative use, a labyrinth is a complicated situation: our tax code is a labyrinth of rules and regulations.*

Languid

/M- Language + Guide - Going to new place with Language translation guide is very tedious and *Languid ( lazily, slowly or weakly. सुस्त , कमज़ोर)* thing for me / *Describe a slow-moving river or a weak breeze or a listless manner with the slightly poetic adjective, languid.* *Languid comes from the Latin verb, languere "to be weak or faint" and is a somewhat literary word for something that doesn't use much energy*. If someone says goodbye to you with a languid wave of the hand, there's not too much movement involved. *You can describe yourself as languid when you have that feeling of not being entirely awake — kind of lazy in the mind*.

Laceration

/M- Laser + Operation - Nowadays Laser can be used for *Laceration(Tear , Cut or gash ( deep cut) घाव)* in Operations/ When you get your hand caught on a nail and cut yourself so deeply you need stitches, this is an example of a laceration. A laceration is a tear, cut, or gash( deep cut). Your heart can also get a more figurative laceration when you see your love kissing another. Either way, ouch. A laceration implies that there is a tearing or jaggedness to the wound. A surgeon would not make a laceration on a patient, but an incision. Lacerations are reserved for things like barbed wire, errant nails, and fickle loves.

Alleviate

/M- Levitate - Lightening of one's burden emotional or physical pain/ *The definition of alleviate is to make something easier to deal with or endure.* Do coming annual examination make your head ache? If so, practice regularly to alleviate, or relieve, your stress. *You can take medicine to alleviate symptoms or do exercise to alleviate stress.* Or if you want a bigger challenge:*try alleviating traffic congestion or world hunger.*

Lithe

/M- Light - Anything which is light in weight can easily be moved and *bended.(graceful, flexible body. लचीला) */ Have you ever seen people who can bend so easily, they can touch their heels to the back of their heads? That person is, in a word, lithe.

Titter

/M- Litter - To *titter (दबी हुई हँसी)* on the mess made by your Grand Dad is probably not a good idea/ *A titter is an awkward laugh at something that you shouldn't be laughing at,दबी हुई हँसी* like during dinner when Uncle Marvin makes a joke about your mother's new hairstyle. If you try to hide your laugh, it's probably a titter. *A laugh that you can't keep in but also can't let out, that's a titter. *It usually happens in situations where you shouldn't be laughing, like listening to your English teacher talk about a date he went on the night before, or when someone tells you a joke in a library. A titter is kinder than a snicker, less noticeable than a giggle, quieter than a chuckle, and way less fun than a chortle. Life's a joke, laugh it up!

Lynch

/M- Lunch - Assume you are having Lunch and a fly keeps on disturbing then you can *Lynch( is defined as for a mob to murder someone without a proper trial, To lynch is to murder, or unlawfully kill.) * it When an angry mob kills someone they believe is guilty of a crime, they lynch that person. When a group of people murders someone, especially by hanging him by the neck, they are usually said to lynch him.

Machinations

/M- Machine - A complex machine was used in *machination(crafty and involved plot to achieve your , षड्यंत्र, साज़िश ,छल)* of killing Osama Bin laden in Pakistan / When a James Bond villain comes up with a plan to destroy the world, he doesn't use a simple plan. No, he uses a machination Not surprisingly, machination derives from the *Medieval French machina, meaning "machine*" /After all of that action, series 9 promises to show a more sure-footed Doctor, one who's better equipped to contend with the machinations of Missy./ /For the past week, much of the media's attention on Bush has focused on the internal machinations of his staff and political operation./

Marsupial

/M- Mahra + Su - Kangaroo apne bacho se itna pyaar karety hain ki wo unhey door hi nahi karna chahtey ..aur baaki logo apna pouch dikha ke bolti dekho Mhara Su kitna sundar hai..aise Mammals ko Marsupial boltey hian / The definition of *a marsupial is a type of mammal where babies are born before they are fully developed and then continue to grow in a pouch on their mother's stomach.* A kangaroo is an example of a marsupial. The most famous marsupial is the kangaroo, but there are many others, such as wallabies, opossums, koalas, and wombats. What makes *marsupials different from primates or rodents* (who are also mammals) is that* the mothers have pouches to hold their young*. This is *because when marsupial babies are born, they're not quite ready for the world, so the pouch gives them a chance to grow and be safe before having to live on their own*. When you think marsupial, think "pouch."

Maladroit

/M- Mal (means bad at doing something)+adroit(it means skillful - *अनाड़ी ,अकुशल* / The definition of *maladroit is awkward or showing a lack of skills. An example of a *maladroit person is an employee who cannot accomplish the simplest tasks of the job, a person who lacks skill.

Malefactor

/M- Mal( Evil , Bad) + factor ( to perform ) - One who performs bad , evil things is *Malefactor (अपराधी * ) *Someone who has committed a crime or has been legally convicted of a crime* A malefactor has done something illegal and has been or will be convicted, such as the malefactor who was videotaped stealing money from a cash register.

Malediction

/M- Mal(Evil) + Diction( Style of Speaking or Statement) - * Evil Statement or Curse अभिशाप */ The definition of a *malediction is a curse or words or speech intended to bring about destruction or evil *. When a fortune teller gets mad at you and puts a curse on you, this is an example of a malediction.

Malinger

/M- Mal(bad , Evil )+ Linger (stay in a place (longer than necessary).- if you *malinger(बीमारी का बहाना करना, जी चुराना.)* and want to linger in bed whole day then you parents will know that you want to watch India's ODI match / Malinger is defined as to* fake sick or to exaggerate an illness in order to skip school, work or some other undesirable event*. When *you pretend you have a stomach ache so you do not have to go to school, this is an example of malinger*.

Malady

/M- Mala D - Mala D is a contraceptive pill , and if you take too much of it , you may get *Malady ( बिमारी, disease, ailment or unpleasant condition.)*/ Malady keeps you home, sick in bed for days, or something that causes you to have trouble or to suffer, like jet lag — a malady that affects travelers.

Menagerie(Mane+jry)

/M- Manage + Jerry - Tom and Jerry main itna jhagda hogaya ki finally Jerry ko *Menagerie(Zoo, Collection of Live Animals) * bhejna pada / Noun 1. a collection of live animals for study or display

meander

/M- Mandir : delhi ka ek mandir itna bada hai ki we didnt know ki kahan se start karey so we roamed Clueless (*wander aimlessly*) then finaly we found a short cut( *Indirect Rasta* )/ दिशाहीन घूमना Verb - 1 . to proceed by or take a winding or indirect course /The stream meandered through the valley./ 2.to wander aimlessly; ramble: /The talk meandered on./

Masochist(Maso+kast)

/M- Massa On Chest - Ek bande ke chest pe boht masse they , ek din uska dimaag kharaab hua aur usne bola ki main khud se inhey kaat kat nikal dunga , Logo ne bola bhai issey boht takleef hogi . He said ,* i am masochist and i obtain pleasure from pain* / The definition of a* masochist is someone who obtains pleasure from suffering mental or physical pain, punishment or humiliation*. If you call someone * a masochist, you either mean that they take pleasure in pain*, or — perhaps more commonly — that they just seem to.

Matriarchy

/M- Mater ( Mother) + Archy ( Rule) - A matriarchy is a social system is which women have more power in the community than men /

Magnanimous

/M- Mega + Animous( Life , lively , Soul ) - *The definition of magnanimous is big-hearted, noble and generous of spirit उदार, महामना ,बड़े मन ,दिल वाला ,*/ Someone who can look the other way when he has been wronged and who can pardon the person who has done the wrong is an example of someone who is magnanimous. *A person can show that over-sized spirit by being noble or brave, or by easily forgiving others and not showing resentment* It implies superiority, and is something you should say of others rather than of yourself.

meddle

/M- Middle - To come in middle , is like *meddling (दखल देना*)into someone's affair / Meddle is defined as intrude in someone else's life or business. An example of to meddle is for a person to involve herself in her best friend's professional life.

Milieu(Mill+u)

/M- Mill + You - Ek bandey ne bola , main tumse milloonga tumharey *Milieu* main . bandi ko samajh nahi aaya , baad main usko samjha ki mere ghar ke aas paas , mere neighborhood , *Surrounding* mian / A *milieu is both "surroundings" and everything that makes up the surroundings*. Your milieu is your world, or the context you come from. Sometimes a milieu shapes a person, as when a "milieu of abuse and poverty," inspires someone to improve things for others.

Obdurate

/M- Ob + Durable - Anything which is durable can withhold bad circumstances and will *Obdurate( अटल , Stubborn )* to its idea or philosophy / *Obdurate is a formal word meaning stubborn.* If you want to major in English, but your parents are obdurate that you should go premed, they might go so far as to threaten not to pay your tuition.

Olfactory

/M- Oil Factory - Your nose is the "factory" where odors are processed. What visual is to the eyes, olfactory is to the nose. *The definition of olfactory is related to the sense of smell.* Nerves that help your sense of smell are examples of olfactory nerves. Though we typically think of dogs as the olfactory champions of the world, what with their remarkable ability to sniff out practically anything, the true title belongs to the polar bear. *Healthy, adult polar bears possess olfactory gifts that boggle the mind: they can smell a seal under the ice from over a kilometer away* One way to try to remember the meaning of the word olfactory is to think of factory.

Ominous

/M- Omen - Ominous *(अपशकुन,अनिष्टसूचक, मनहूस)* and the related word omen both come from the 16th century Latin word ōmen "foreboding." However, unlike omen, which is a sign of something good or bad to come, ominous always describes something unpleasant or threatening / The definition of ominous is something that suggests bad things will happen soon. An example of ominous is a dark cloud before a thunderstorm.*If something looks or sounds ominous, be careful, a threat or an unpleasant event is at hand*. If you see an ominous frown on your boss's face, you're in trouble!

Omnipotent

/M- Omni (All) + potent (powerful) = *Supreme Power सर्वशक्तिमान*/ *Omnipotent comes from the Latin words for total (omni) and power (potent)*. Omnipotent is frequently used for deities, but can apply to any exaggerated description of power. *If you think that love rules the world, then to you, love is omnipotent.* On the other hand, if you think that brute force wins, then maybe your idea of an omnipotent person is a mob boss. The stress is on the second syllable: om-NIP-uh-tent.

Opulent

/M- Opal (Rare Gem)- People who have opals in their closet are normally *Opulent (दौलतमन्द wealthy)*/ *The definition of opulent is displaying or having a lot of wealth.*Opulent is a word that you will hear a lot around rich people looking to show off.

Vacillate

/M- Oscillate - Oscillating between two very good options , Sometimes you are not able decide and that is called to *Vacillate (दुविधा,अनिश्चितता,)* . Best thing to do in those circumstances is take Both / Verb *1. be undecided about something* 2. Move or sway in a rising and failing or wavelike pattern * /"the line on the monitor vacillated"/

oust

/M- Out -/ *Oust is defined as to get rid of something or someone.* An example of oust is to kick a tyrant out of power.To oust is to "expel," "kick out," or "remove and replace."A sports team is ousted from a tournament if they lose an elimination round. *Oust often implies both removal and replacement.* The automobile, for instance, ousted the horse as the preferred means of travel. When a politician ousts someone from office they are taking that person's place in office.

Overwrought

/M- Over + Wrought - Wrought iron which has *overwrought (Overly decorated ,अति उत्तेजित)* style / Adjective - 1. Extremely or excessively excited or agitated /to become overwrought on hearing bad news; an overwrought personality./ 2 elaborated to excess; excessively complex or ornate: /Summer is, after all, the season to cast aside the inessential and the overwrought./ /In an overwrought metaphor, the town is soon clouded by a dust storm./

Plummet

/M- P+ Comet - Comet P69 was *plummeting ( तेज़ी से गिरना )* towards earth / The verb plummet means "to drop sharply," like eagles that plummet toward earth, seeking prey, or school attendance that plummets when there is a flu outbreak. To correctly pronounce plummet, say "PLUH-met." *This verb describes something that drops sharply or quickly, like a roller coaster that plummets down a hill, temperatures that plummet overnight, or sales of roses and candy that plummet after Valentine's Day.* If something plummets, this doesn't mean it will stay down or low forever, just that it has experienced a sharp drop.

Peccadillo

/M- Pakka + Dillo - Ek bihari dusrey ko bol raha tha sorry maine Chawal kuch zyada hi pakka diya . I know you are hungry and its a *Peccadillo( small mistake or Sin)* , Please maaf kar do / The definition of a peccadillo is a small or unimportant sin or wrongdoing.When you break a minor rule, this is an example of a peccadillo.

Palatable

/M- Palate(roof of mouth)- things which can be edible or tolerable सुस्वाद, स्वीकार्य/ Early anatomists believed that the sense of taste was located in the palate .The palate is the roof of the mouth, the combination of structures that separates the mouth from the nose. The definition of palatable is *something that is either satisfactory or fit to consume Something that is palatable is acceptable to one's sense of taste—literally or figuratively.*

Palliative

/M- Pale - When someone is suffering from very high severity of Jaundice , the likelihood for getting treated is very less in that case doctors only give *palliative( मुख्य रोग का इलाज किये बिना दर्द को कम करने के लिए की जाने वाली चिकित्सा )* medicines to relieve pain / The definition of* palliative is a treatment or medical care designed to reduce pain without treating the underlying cause of the pain*When a person has advanced cancer and is given morphine to feel better but not to treat the cancer,* this is an example of palliative care.

Pallid

/M- Pale( Yellow ) - *Pallid is someone who is abnormally pale, especially someone lacking in color and excitement पीला* / An example of someone who would be described as pallid is a person who is sick and who looks very pale and devoid of color .* Some books can also be called pallid if they lack in color and excitement *.

Veneer(Va+Neer)

/M- Paneer - Paneer is really good ,soft , sapid food . If you have Butter paneer then tum haath chakhtey reh jaaogey , But and its big but .. eating paneer can increase sugar , Cholesterol and Blood Pressure in body which is quite dangerous .. Isliye isey * Veneer (can be anything that makes something look more elegant or attractive than it ) * kehna chahiye Upar se boht Elegant hai but harmful effect utne hi kharab hia / A *veneer can be anything that makes something look more elegant or attractive than it is. * If someone smiles at you while making some passive-aggressive remark like, "Gee, you actually look really nice today," you could say that her inner meanness is showing through her * veneer of sweetness.*

Pariah

/M- Paraya - Sautela beta thinks that he is Paraya and was treated as a *pariah( out casted by everyone अछूत) * , but was not true , he was outcasted due to his bad behavior / *A pariah is someone that has been soundly rejected by their community.* Your constant gossiping might make you a pariah on campus. * Pariah takes its name from a tribe in Southeast India. The pariahs were drummers, sorcerers, and servants who became untouchables in Indian society because of the unsanitary jobs they did *

Parched

/M- Parked - Parked car in open, becomes * Parched (hot or dry ,शुष्क , सूखा, भूना हुआ ) * / Something *parched is excessively dry and hot*, in *extreme need of water, like a desert, a neglected plant, or your throat after a five-kilometer run*.

Parochial(paro+kee+al)

/M- Paro + Ki +Akal - Devdas movie main paro ki Akal ko boht hi *संकीर्ण aur narrow minded* dikhaya gaya hai / The definition of * parochial is something related to a church or someone who has a narrow or simplistic view on life.* In general though, parochial refers to a narrow or limited point of view — that is, an outlook that extends no further than the limits of the parish. *You may feel that there is no room in your life for the parochial attitudes of the older generation ,so you remain open-minded as you age!*

Poise

/M- Paused - One who is *Poised (The definition of poised is a calm and assured person. An example of poised is someone sitting quietly in the lotus position.संतुलित)* is taking pause form hustle bustle of life / If you're poised you're self-possessed and in full control of your faculties. *You're balanced, grounded, and ready for action.* A poised person exhibits composure and self-assuredness, which comes in handy, for instance, during a job interview, giving a public talk or debate, or playing sports. *Watching the Olympics, you may wonder how gymnasts remain so poised when competing on the balance beam, considered the sport's most mentally and physically challenging event. Poised also means ready or on the verge: *You can be poised for a leadership position, poised for battle, or poised to become music's next pop star.

Percipient

/M- Perceive - One who is capable of perceiving is percipient / The word is *Characterized by ease and quickness in perceiving* .Having the power of perceiving,especially perceiving keenly and readily.

Parry

/M- Perry Hilton - If you ask Perry about her intimate relationship with her co-actor , she will parry the questions / 1. *impede the movement of (an opponent or a ball)* 2. *avoid or try to avoid fulfilling, answering, or performing (duties, questions, or issues)* /to parry an embarrassing question./

Proletariat(Po + le + tariat )

/M- Petroleum - Petroleum pump ke maalik toh paise boht kamatey hian baithe baithey .. Milaawat kartey hian tax bachatey hai and Salary kam dete hain apne Jaib main paise daalne ke liye .. Wo kabhi ye nahi sochtey ki jo aadmi 10-10 ghantey khada hokar petrol bharta hia har mausam main uska kya hoga .. koi bhi care nahi karta *proletariat (मजदूर) *kee/ श्रमजीवी*, सर्वहारा, मजदूर श्रेणी का मनुष्य Adjective proletarian means *means working class, blue collar, plebeian and those who are certainly *not aristocratic * That's because back in ancient Rome, a proletarian was a member of the proletariat, the class of society that had no wealth and didn't own property. The only thing these proletarians had to offer was their hard work and their children.

Mellow

/M- Pillow - pillow is *mellow (soft and smooth)* and you can get *carefree, calm and peaceful sleep* / Mellow defines someone or something that is calm, smooth and free from harshness. A person *who is calm and peaceful and doesn't get upset easily is an example of a person who is mellow.* Coffee that has a smooth, calm flavor and that isn't harsh is an example of coffee that would be described as mellow.

Plethora

/M- Plenty - *Plethora means an abundance or excess of something प्रचुरता , बहुतायत *. / *Plethora means an abundance or excess of something*. If you have 15 different people who want to take you on a date, you have a plethora of romantic possibilities. *If you run a theater and all the seats are taken, that's a full house. But if the seats are full and people are standing in the aisles, you have a plethora of patrons.*

Pliable

/M- Plier - Plier is a tool which is used to bending and twist * pliable (लचीला,Easily Influenced Person)* materials without breaking them. / *Pliable means bendable but not breakable. Wax is pliable, good leather is pliable. If you describe a person as pliable, it usually means that he's easily influenced*, like a nightclub owner who takes orders from a crime boss.

Plumage

/M- Plum + Age - In a fiction , Plums get *plumage (पंख , bird's feathers )* when they age . *If you like the looks of the color and pattern formed by a bird's feathers, then you like its plumage.* The word plumage traces back to the French word plume, meaning feather, and it's a way of referring to all the feathers that form the color and patterns of a particular bird. For example, birdwatchers study illustrations of birds so that they can recognize, say,* a golden hawk in flight by its plumage.*

Poseur

/M- Pose+ Your - An actor was posing like Michael Jackson with his new Lather jackets for the camera , but he was looking nothing more than a *Poseur (a person who habitually pretends to be something he is not दिखावा करने वाला,ड्रामेबाज )*/ "Strike a pose," sang Madonna in her most famous song, "Vogue." But if the pose you're striking is fake, pretentious, or arrogant, you're a poseur. Be yourself: it's cooler. It's one thing to be smart, funny, or cool. It's another thing to pretend to be that way: that's the life of a poseur. (Say it in the French way: poh-ZUHR.)

Posterity

/M- Posterior+ty - Posterity is the future generations of a family which will come after present generation वंशज , भावी पीढ़ी/ If you save something "for posterity," you're hoping that years later people will appreciate it, like a time capsule you bury in the yard. The word comes from the Latin word for "post, after." *It's also related to the word posterior, which means "behind, to come after in time." *In legal terms, posterity refers to the offspring of a person and it often has to do with inheriting property and who is entitled to do so.*

ponderous

/M- Pound - *The definition of ponderous is something weighted down, slow and heavy, or something dull and tedious नीरस*./ When you call Frankenstein ponderous, it's not because he likes to ponder the great questions of life. It's because he moves like a Mack truck, only slower and less gracefully. Ponderous also describes a person's manner, or their manner of speaking. If it does, this is a person you will want to avoid. They're solemn, speak slowly about things that are boring, and get to the punchline of a joke about seven years after anyone with half a brain has figured it out for themselves.

Prerogative

/M- Pre + Rog - Government has given *prerogative ( विशेषाधिकार , सुविधा)* to disclose your ethnicity , race and gender in forms before seeing doctor for any Rog / Noun 1. a right, privilege, etc., limited to a specific person or to persons of a particular category: /It was the teacher's prerogative to stop the discussion./ /the prerogatives of a senator./ /If President Obama decides he needs a new diplomatic team, that is his prerogative. /

Preamble

/M- Pre + amble(Walk) : Preamble walks before the speech भूमिका प्रस्तावना / *A preamble is a brief introduction to a speech* , like the Preamble to the Constitution that starts out "We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union...do ordain and establish this Constitution."

Presentiment

/M- Pre + sentiment - *feeling of foreboding or intuitive feeling about something bad that will happen in future पूर्वाभास*/ When *you have a strong feeling of dread and are convinced that your wedding day is going to be a disaster, this is an example of presentiment.* Some people call it a "gut feeling." For example, if you leave for a trip and something doesn't feel right, you may chalk it up to just being nervous. But later, when your flight is cancelled and you lose your luggage, you may remember that little twinge — the presentiment that something bad was about to happen.

Precocious

/M- Pre(Before) + Coquer(Ripen) - Something that is ripening prematurely can be called as *Precocious.(उम्र से पहले परिपक्व,समय पूर्व शारीरिक अथवा मानसिक रूप से विकसित होना .)*/ That high school hoops phenom who plays like an NBA pro? The sixth grader who's already asking questions about organic chemistry? *They're both precocious — meaning they're way beyond their years in skill or knowledge.* When you look at the Latin roots of precocious, it all makes sense. When pre (meaning "before") joins coquere (meaning "to ripen"), you have something that is ripening prematurely. And in the case of precocious, you are usually describing young people who have some adult-like quality about them. Maybe it's their vast vocabulary, maybe it's their ease with Calculus, or maybe it's just applying lipstick.

Precarious

/M- Precaution - We have to take precaution before doing (precarious *संकटपूर्ण, खतरनाक , unstable, perilous*) situations / Adj - 1. *dependent on circumstances beyond one's control; uncertain; unstable; insecure ; dangerous; perilous; risky: * /a precarious livelihood./ /He held a precarious tenure under an arbitrary administration./ /the precarious life of an underseas diver./ /a precarious assumption./

Precipitous

/M- Precipice - Imagine you are standing on the precipice , you will grasp the sense of *precipitous (a sharp, steep drop, perilously steep)* decline . Adjective 1. abrupt, sheer, perpendicular. /In 1965, despite the precipitous decline in the worker-to-retiree ratio, Social Security paid its bills with a 2.2% payroll tax. / /Negrial walked the precipitous path, down a steep hill littered with rubble and glass, to his house/

Perdition

/M- Prediction - Har granth main chaho aap Kuraan , Geeth , Bible lelo , har kisi main ye prediction diya hia ki ek din kayamat aayga and gates of *Perdition ( Hell , Suffering )* will open and human kind will be perished/ In the Christian religion, * perdition is defined as a state of eternal punishment you experience after death if you were a sinner who did not repent to God.* An example of perdition is hell. If you hear someone say *"the fires of perdition," they're talking about the fires of Hell*. You can also use * this word for a more earthly kind of suffering. Just as people say "I'm in hell!"*

Precipice

/M- President + Piss - Imagine a situation in which the president is on *precipice (the edge of a steep cliff, scary situation ) * and pisses on his pants / Cartoon characters often end up on a *precipice, the edge of a steep cliff*, where their chubby toes curl and cling as they totter and eventually fall, making a hole in the ground below and getting up again. Most real people avoid precipices. Unless you're a skilled climber or mountain-sport enthusiast,* a precipice is a scary thing *. Some imagine falling off and making the sharp drop, while others get dizzy just thinking about looking down. In modern use, precipice also describes how it feels to fall, or fail, in areas of life that don't involve mountains, such as being "on the precipice of losing everything." /And twice, pushed to the precipice, Williams regrouped, resisted and wound up winning, as she so often does./ /The sight of an economy on the precipice hit global markets hard Monday, driving stocks down in the United States and across Europe./

Profane

/M- Pro + Fan - Agar main Aamir Khan ka Pro fan hun aur aap mere saamne Aammir ke baarey main *profanr (Treat someone or something disrespectfully, especially someone or something sacred अपवित्रता)* words words bol rahe hian toh mujhey boht hi bura lagega / Profane is the sort of language you use to deeply offend people with how little respect you show something (usually religious). /During the game, fans broke into a profane chant in Spanish directed toward Trump/ /"The allegation that this toy is saying anything offensive or profane is not true."/

Prodigal

/M- Pro + girls - Girls pro hoti hian kharcha karaane main *अपव्ययी, फजूल खर्च* / *Use the adjective prodigal to describe someone who spends too much money, or something very wasteful.* Your prodigal spending on fancy coffee drinks might leave you with no money to buy lunch. Prodigal usually applies to the spending of money. In the Bible, the Prodigal Son leaves home and wastes all his money. *You could also use this word to describe something that is very abundant or generous in quantity, such as prodigal praise.* /That shift encapsulates the situation for the title character, a middle-aged prodigal son returning to his mother's farm after years abroad./

Prolific

/M- Productive - Can be Intellectually productive or fertile, fruitful / Adj 1. *Intellectually Productive* /A Prolific writer / /And all captured through the camera lens of Harvey Riedel, one of the Madison County's most prolific photographers./ 2. *bearing in abundance especially offspring , fertile , fruitful .* /flying foxes are extremely prolific/ /a prolific pear tree/

Enunciation

/M- Pronunciation - उच्चारण - Enunciation is more than pronouncing words clearly; it's expressing them well, too*/ *Enunciation is the act of pronouncing words.* Make sure your enunciation is clear when ordering in a restaurant so you don't get French flies instead of French fries. *Enunciation is from the Latin word enuntiationem, meaning "declaration." Enunciation is more than pronouncing words clearly; it's expressing them well, too*. No one would mutter a declaration! People with excellent enunciation (also known as diction) are likely to end up broadcasters, announcers, actors, or in other jobs that require public speaking. Politicians need to have good enunciation. People who mumble or speak too quickly have poor enunciation: it's hard to understand them, because their words slur together. /In addition, while speaking quickly, you're more likely to make mistakes in your enunciation, and you have less time to think through your words./

Proponents

/M- Propose - If you are in favor of something you will propose the idea to your parents , and hence you can be called as * Proponent (समर्थक )*/ *Proponent means someone who is in favor of something*. You might be a proponent of longer vacations, but your parents are proponents of a longer school year. /Proponents say it made the financial system safer by making banks less risky./

Pusillanimous

/M- Pusill( Very Little) + Animus (Hatred)- if you hate bitter-gourd very much , but if your strict father ask you .. Do you Like bitter-gourd , you will *pusillanimously(कायर, डरपोक)* say yes dad little bit / *The definition of pusillanimous is lacking in courage, strength or determination.* A person afraid to make decisions for himself is an example of someone who would be described as pusillanimous. The pusillanimous person stays quiet, doesn't get involved, waits for someone else to take a stand — not out of laziness, but out of fear.

Vapid

/M- Rapid - You can make an Interesting topic *Vapid (Uninteresting , Dull)* If you cover it in rapid manner/ The definition of vapid is* someone or something that is uninteresting or lacking flavor*. An example of vapid is a silly conversation about the weather.

Reticent

/M- Rati + Saint - Sant named rati was quite *reticent (Restrained , Quiet , formal , or one who doesnt talk much )* in speaking about material happiness / *Reticent means either quiet or restrained. If you're reticent about your feelings, you like to keep them to yourself, and you're probably quiet in rowdy groups where everyone is talking over each other.* The original meaning of reticent describes* someone who doesn't like to talk*. Be careful in your context, however. *Reticent can refer to someone who is restrained and formal*, but it can also refer to* someone who doesn't want to draw attention to herself or who prefers seclusion to other people*.

lax

/M- Relax- relax and let others do whatever they want ..thats Lax / 1.lacking in rigor or strictness 2.lacking in strength or firmness or resilience /The BIS also warned that banks might have an "incentive" to opt for more lax risk adjustments to flatter capital ratios./

Reprieve

/M- Relive - *A reprieve is a break in or cancellation of a painful or otherwise lousy situation. If you're being tortured, a reprieve is a break from whatever tormenting you. अस्थायी रूप से हटाना(दण्ड या प्राणदंड की थोड़े समय के लिये रोक) * / For some, a night at the opera is a night of punishing boredom during which the only reprieve is the intermission. For others, it's baseball that feels like torture. The seventh-inning stretch is the only reprieve from a night of endless waiting. Often, you'll hear reprieve used when a court or governor decides not to execute a prisoner. That prisoner is given a reprieve and will be allowed to live. He probably won't get a reprieve from prison, though, unless he's found innocent.

Desist

/M- Resist - You should *Desist ( रोकना, बंद करना,stop,cease)* resisting / If you want to insist that someone stop doing something, the word desist is a solid choice. "Cut it out!" the new neighbor asked the teen girls to desist from playing any more loud, screeching music from that long-haired boy-band. *It's often used as part of a legal order called a "cease and desist," which forces an action to come to a halt. * *"Cease" is a synonym for desist, so using the two together says "stop it!" loud and clear — and kind of redundantly.* "If she will desist from camping on the lawn in front of the star's Hollywood home, she won't be arrested."

Respite

/M- Respite: despite of this important work you are taking *respite.(a pause from doing something as work)*/ *A respite is a break from something that's difficult or unpleasant. If you're cramming for exams, take an occasional walk to give yourself a respite from the intensity.*

Pontificate

/M- Ricky Ponting : Ricky Ponting *pontificates (Talk in Dogmatic and Pompous (arrogant or conceited) * about his team success over England in Ashes ./ To pontificate is to express your opinion in an annoying way, often because you go on too long or because you are too much of a know-it-all. *Pontificate comes from the French word pontiff, another word for the Pope, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church. As a verb (pronounced pon-TIF-i-kate), it meant "to perform the functions of the Pope or other high official in the Church.*" The noun pontificate (pronounced pon-TIF-i-kit) refers to the government of the Roman Catholic Church. Another word for this is the papacy

Rife

/M- Ripe ( Fully Grown or developed ) - When you are fully ripe , you will open gates for *rife( In widespread existence, practice, or use; परिपूर्ण, ज्यादा increasingly prevalent. Abundant or numerous,)* opportunities ./ If your supervisor at work describes your new position as "rife with opportunities for advancement, then rejoice! That means your position offers many opportunities for advancement. Not to be confused with the word ripe ("fully grown or developed"), the adjective rife means "abundant" or "frequently occurring." When used in a sentence, rife can follow the word that it's describing, as in "development was rife during his administration" or "speculation was rife before the announcement."

Rotund

/M- Round - The definition of rotund is round, or fat, or with a full sound. गोल, गोलाकार / An example of something rotund is a man with a very big waistline. A opera singer's voice is an example of something rotund. Rotund describes anything that's plump or round, like a teapot or your chubby Aunt Agnes.

Sacrosanct

/M- Saikaro(thousands)+Saint - If thousands of Saint say same thing then its Sacrosanct(* परमपावन,अलंघनीय, The definition of sacrosanct is something too important to interfere with or something that must be kept sacred.)* nct. Sacrosanct is often used to describe religious rituals and traditions, which isn't surprising considering that this adjective comes from the Latin word for something that is protected by a religious sanction. A church, for example, might consider its Sunday service to be sacrosanct — a very important and holy ritual that cannot be changed or canceled. It's a bad idea to criticize or change any custom or tradition that people consider sacrosanct — they won't be happy about it.

Salutary

/M- Salute (Latin - Good Health) स्वास्थ्यवर्धक, हितकारी / Adjective 1. favorable to or promoting health; healthful. 2. promoting or conducive to some beneficial purpose; wholesome. /There were, however, salutary effects to capital controls and currency devaluation./ /Switzerland's private banks are close to ridding themselves of undeclared European accounts, a salutary process but one which has undermined efforts to grow their businesses./

Sanctimonious

/M- Sanctity + monious - पाखण्डी, दिखावटी तौर पर नैतिक/ *The sanctimonious person sounds like a hypocrite when he preaches against the evils of drugs, while he drinks one beer after another.* Sanctimonious is a twist on the words sanctity and sacred, which mean holy or religious. A sanctimonious person might think he's holy, but their attitude comes across more like "holier-than-thou." Though sanctimonious people might try to act like saints, their actions are far from pure or holy, which just makes them sound like hypocrites.

Sentient(Sen+Shant)

/M- Sentiments - Someone *Sentient can have sentiments , can feel *. Living things can have sentient , non living cant / Adj *1. endowed with feeling and unstructured consciousness 2. consciously perceiving *

Chicanery(She + Canery)

/M- Shikari - Shikari who uses *chicanery (छल-कपट, हेरा-फेरी)* to lure prey into his plot / The definition of *chicanery is using trickery or dishonest means to deceive or achieve some purpose*. An example of chicanery is dishonest actions by politicians to get elected*. This tricky kind of deceit and manipulation is called chicanery. *Besides chicanery, another word for trickery is shenanigans* Whereas the former is always used in the singular and involves deceptive language, the latter is usually used in the plural and refers to the actions of a person.

Skirmish

/M- Skirt+Miss - Agar tumhari teacher ne jissey tum Miss boltey ho , wo Skirt pehan kar school aayi hon and tumne unpe kuch comment kar diya toh obvious see baat hai ki Panga ho jaayega ..ya Skirmish jhagda ho jaayega / *A skirmish is a small fight — more a dust-up than a full-out battle — and it can refer to a physical fight or just a battle of words. It is definitely confrontational.*

Smorgasbord(S+morgas+bored)

/M- Some+More+gas+board - Brazil is only country in world which gives you option to choose your fuel or gas , you can choose Ethanol , Natural Gas etc etc . Other countries are trying to create a *Smorgasbord (Collection Containing variety of Sorts) *for its citizen / Noun 1. a collection containing a variety of sorts of things /a veritable smorgasbord of religions/ 2.an assortment of foods starting with herring or smoked eel or salmon etc with bread and butter; then cheeses and eggs and pickled vegetables and aspics; finally hot foods; served as a buffet meal

Solace(Saw+less)

/M- Soul + Ace - I find solace in sleeping. Whenever i am tired , irritated or frustrated , I think of sleeping as its ace (Champion) in the field of giving *Solace (दुःख कम कर देना , शांत करना)* . It rejuvenates me of my lost energy and prepares me to fight again/ The definition of solace is a decline in grief, or consolation. When you go see a friend who is feeling sad and you offer comfort and listen to your friend talk about his problems, this is fan example of giving solace. *If something eases your disappointment or grief, consider it a solace. If you're sad, you might find solace in music or in talking to your friends*. *Solace and consolation are synonyms meaning relief from grief or disappointment*

Espouse

/M- Spouse - To *Espouse(Choose and follow , Support )* a belief or principle and make it your Spouse / Use the verb espouse to describe the actions of someone who lives according to specific beliefs, such as your friends who espouse environmentalism and as a result walk whenever possible instead of taking the car. * Similar to marriage, if you espouse a belief system, the idea is that you've chosen to wed yourself to it.* /One likely candidate trying to soften the party's language is Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who espouses what he calls "the kindness of conservatism./ /And plenty of people dream of the lifestyle espoused by organizations like Dynamite Circle/

Saccharin

/M- Sucrose - crystalline substance 500 times sweeter than sugar; used as a calorie-free sweetener

Specious(Spee+cious)

/M- Suspicious - Suspicious things do look right or perfect but is not the same , Arguments which follow same theory are called Specious / Describe Specious as an argument that seems to be good, correct, or logical, but is not so.We live on the earth, therefore the earth must be the center of the universe was a specious theory of the solar system.*Something that is specious is attractive in a deceptive way*.

Lampoon

/M- Tampon - When boys *lampoon (व्यंग्य करना, ridicule , satire )* use of tampon in class , its not only bad but can cause some serious legal issues / Verb - ridicule with satire Noun - a composition that imitates or misrepresents somebody's style, usually in a humorous way /You know it's not going well when even an editorial cartoonist lampoons you./ /Capitol Steps The comedy group uses songs to lampoon the government/ /"You guys are holding me up," Mr. Biden told one group on Thursday, flashing the warm familiarity for which he is known, and sometimes lampooned./

Tranquil

/M- Tank + Fill - When a tank is filled with water even a slight disturbance disturbs its tranquility ( *When a place or your state of mind is peaceful, quiet and serene, it is tranquil.calmness शांत शांतचित्त) * / Adj 1. (of a body of water) free from disturbance by heavy waves /a lake of tranquil blue water reflecting a tranquil blue sky"/ 2. not agitated; without losing self-possession /She became more tranquil / /"tranquil life in the country"/ Like a pond with no ripples,tranquil means calm and placid. A pleasant state of mind, with nothing to agitate or cause anxiety, can also be considered tranquil. As you struggle through your yoga poses, the teacher might annoyingly exclaim how tranquil you should be feeling And when you and your siblings bicker over every little thing, your parents are wishing the house were more tranquil. An example of tranquil atmosphere is a hammock on the side of the ocean on a quiet day.

Turpitude

/M- Tapori - ek tapori jo *morally turpitude (नीचता)* harkatey karey , jo wo buri aadatey karey jo morally sahi nahi ho , jaise Murder , Rape , Con , bribe lena / *If you are guilty of turpitude, you should be ashamed of yourself. Turpitude is a word that represents depraved behavior.* Prisons are filled with criminals who have engaged in acts of moral turpitude. Turpitude comes from the Latin word turpitudo, which means "repulsiveness." Corrupt politicians get booted out of office for acts of turpitude, like taking bribes in exchange for lucrative government contracts. *Turpitude often follows the word moral, and acts of moral turpitude are usually crimes that are unusually sick or corrupt.* /"Crimes of moral turpitude" was a notoriously vague term that encouraged racist law enforcement, although Skinner himself was white./ /The Alabama Constitution dictates that people convicted of felonies involving "moral turpitude" are not able to vote./

Tenuous

/M- Tennis - In TENNIS most of the players have *tenuous (thin, weak )* bone structure , I know its not true though / *If something is tenuous it's thin, either literally or metaphorically*. If you try to learn a complicated mathematical concept by cramming for 45 minutes, you will have a tenuous grasp of that concept, at best. Tenuous comes from the Latin word tenuis, for thin, and is related to our word tender. Something can be physically tenuous, like a spiderweb or ice on a pond. *We more often use it in a metaphorical sense, to talk about weak ideas. Tenuous arguments won't win any debate tournaments. Synonyms for tenuous, also used physically or metaphorically, are flimsy and shaky.*

Digress

/M- Tigress - Tigress goes for hunting but in way she sees a handsome tiger so she *digress (go off topic when speaking or writing विषय से भटक जाना )* from hunting and goes after him / An example of digress is when you are writing a paper about causes of crime and you start to instead write long paragraphs about defenses to crimes.

Timorous

/M- Timid - *Timorous is like Timid( scared and shy , fearful डरा हुआ)* / An example of timorous is a child who cries and hides behind their mother when around strangers. A timorous person is timid or shy, like your timorous friend who likes to hang out with close pals but gets nervous around big groups of new people. *The adjective timorous is actually the Latin word for "fearful." But timorous is a specific kind of fearfulness — the kind that strikes people before giving a speech, or walking into a crowded place where people are socializing*. Also called "shy" or "timid," timorous people often become more comfortable when they see a familiar face in the crowd.

Torpor

/M- Topper - *Torpor आलस, सुस्ती is the state of being inactive or having apathy *and its quite opposite to what is a topper who is naturally diligent / Torpor is a state of mental and physical inactivity. "After a huge Thanksgiving meal, my family members fall into a torpor; no one can even pick up the TV remote."

Totter

/M- Tot + er - Tots *totter(लड़खड़ाते हुए चलना to rock or shake as if about to fall *) roll and enjoy the outdoors / If you spin yourself around until you are dizzy, you will likely totter if you try to step forward. *Totter is a verb that means "move unsteadily, as though you are about to fall down.*" To totter is to move in a wobbly, unsteady manner. When a person totters, they look like they are going to fall down. *In a boxing match, a boxer might totter after taking a blow to the head. During an earthquake, buildings may totter, or sway, appearing as though they may fall down. *Totter can also imply a rocking motion; a playground seesaw, for instance, is sometimes called "a teeter-totter.*"

Tawdry

/M- Towel + Dry - In a public locker room, a person who dries his body with a towel in front of everybody is *Tawdry (vulgar and gaudy दिखाऊ, घटिया)*./ *Tawdry means cheap, shoddy, or tasteless. It can be used to describe almost anything from clothes to people to even events or affairs*. You know that shiny black slip you picked up for nothing at a garage sale and used as the skirt of your lion-tamer Halloween costume? It's a bit tawdry. But it would really be tawdry if you wore it on a regular day out. Tawdry things often have a hint of desperation and immorality — like tawdry extramarital affairs or tawdry tales. With tawdry decorations and jewelry, quality has been exchanged for lots of flash and shine.

Tractable

/M- Tractor - You can think of a *tractable(निर्देशों का पालन करने वाला ,सुविधाजनक)* person as someone who can be dragged about easily, like a plow being dragged by a tractor. If your little brother quietly obeys your instructions and waits for you at the food court while you and your friends wander around the mall, he's probably a tractable child, meaning he's obedient, flexible, and responds well to directions. Adj - 1.adj easily managed (controlled or taught or molded) 2.readily reacting to suggestions and influences

Transgress

/M- Trans + Grass - If you transfer public park grass to your backyard that's *transgressing(Violating)* the law / Verb 1. to violate a law, command, moral code उल्लंघन करना, हद पार करना /Buying the book says, "Look at me transgressing the taboos that are meant to hold us down," he added./ /Maguen has helped the VA define an event as morally injurious if it transgresses "deeply held moral beliefs and expectations."/

Traverse

/M- Travel - To Travel Across is traversing पारगमन, तिरछी रखी हुई वस्तु,पुल / *The verb traverse means to travel across an extended* area. Her dream was to traverse the country by car, so she could meet new people and see all the kitschy sites — like the giant roadside tire in Michigan or the shoe house in Pennsylvania." *The verb traverse can also mean "to span," to span a physical space or time.* "The bridge traversed the river, linking the two cities." *Traverse can be used for any crossing, but it often is used when implying the crossing will be difficult. "* She was exhausted from traveling in the snowy conditions, but she still had to *traverse (cross)an icy bridge before she would arrive safely home."*

Trite

/M- Try + it - She made the same dish again and again with nuances and then will give it to his kids to try it and his son said "Mom not again this *trite (repeated too often; overfamiliar ; through overuse, घिसा-पिटा )* "/ When you want to indicate that* something is silly or overused, you would call it trite*. Trite has a Latin root, the past participle of terere, meaning "wear out." . The antonym of this word is original. /That saying is so common it may be regarded as trite and therefore worthy of ignoring./ /"Knowledge is power," may be a trite statement, but it is also true./

Unctuous

/M- Uncle Chips - People who finish their Uncle Chips and then try to get a portion of yours are *Unctuous(oily, greasy or slippery in feel or character, खुशामदी , मतलबी )*/ You might know the idea of the adjective unctuous by other words like "oily," "smarmy," or overly "flattering." *When a person is unctuous, you can't trust their kindness, because they usually want something in return.* /This sort of opportunistic hypocrisy becomes unctuous when it wears the clothes of moral superiority./

Usurp

/M- Use+Your + Power - If you take over your neighbor's backyard and claim his in-ground swimming pool as your own, you might seize control of, or * Usurp (छीन लेना, अन्याय से ले लेना) * his yard, but he'll probably call the cops on you./ Leaders who usurp power don't ask for permission to take control of their country. They seize power, often with the help of a large army of followers. A usurper doesn't have to be human. A brand-new radio station can usurp the most popular station in town by playing a better mix of music

Vacuous

/M- Vacant - Vacuous is a things which are stupid and meaning less , things which can be perceived with Khaali Dimmag or No dimaag/ *Vacuous is reserved for the harmlessly stupid and truly meaningless or Dumb things *. An example of a vacuous comment would be a politician promising to make things better without explaining how.

Vagrant

/M- Vague + rent - Kuch homeless logo ne socha ki street pe rehne ke bajaye , 3 -4 homeless log mil kar ek ghar rent pe kyun le lete hain. They tried finding a house but all the owners said we dont give homes to *Vagrants (People living on the Street , खानाबदोश)* as they dont have any steady income / The definition of *vagrant is living on the streets or wandering*. An example of the use of vagrant as an adjective is in the phrase "a vagrant family," which means a family who constantly moves from place to place without ever having a home.

Variegate

/M- Various+Gates - In a contemporary society they have decided that everyone will have * different shape gates with different colors to make society more variegated */ Verb *1. make something more diverse and varied* /No one quite expected Pluto, let alone Charon, to be so lively and variegated./ *2. change the appearance of, especially by marking with different colors*

Envenom

/M- Venom / 1 . to fill with bitterness or malice , मलिन करना /But now this same thing is done more cruelly, with weapons envenomed, and with devilish engines./ /The war in Syria, which pits mostly Sunni rebels against President Bashar al-Assad and his Shi'ite allies, has envenomed sectarian feelings across the region./

Vertigo

/M- Vertical + Go - When you climb vertically and you look down , you will have sense of dizziness or lack of balance thats called Vertigo / Vertigo is a sense of dizziness or a lack of balance that is usually caused by looking down from a great height.

Vehemence(Veeh+ mence)

/M- Wah + immense - Wah , that weightlifter lifted 2000 pounds with his *vehemence (immense force) power* , he broke the World record / Adj 1. Extremely strong, powerful, or intense emotion or force. , Fervid /vehement dislike/ /vehement deluges of rain/ /a vehement defense/

Venal

/M- We + Null - Ek Traffic police waale ne bina kisi reason se humey rok liya , Usne gaadi ke papers check kiya and sab kuch dekhne ke baad bolta hia ki aapka PUC expired hai ..Humney bohot bola ki sir ye kal hi expired hua hai and we will renew it today but wo nahi mana . Usne hint diya paise khilane ka , humne bola sir we are null , we dont have money . But wo nahi mana and finally we had to pay him 100 Rs . Aise *corrupt or makkar logo ko jo bribes lete hian unhey Venal kehtey hain*/ The definition of * venal is corrupt or willing to take bribes*. Venal people are considered sleazy and untrustworthy. They're often criminals. No one is perfect, and most of us have venal motives at some point.

Unwitting

/M- Wit is mental ability , a a witty amusing person who makes jokes/ *Unwitting is someone who doesn't know certain important information*, such as unwitting computer users who don't know that an online shopping site is tracking all their activity. Unwitting can also describe* something you do almost automatically,* like the unwitting way you double-check that the door is locked when leaving the house. *Wit means "clever," so something that is unwitting is not clever.*

estrange

/M- Ye+Strange: Ye Strange hai and *keep Away From it* / *मनमुटाव पैदा करना , छुड़ाना ,दूर कर देना* Verb - 1. To turn away in feeling or Affection , Make Unfriendly or hostile /The necessity for traveling on business has estranged him from his family. / 2. to divert from the original use or possessor. /Ex - The collapse of his self-control was even less pardonable last season when his dissatisfaction over being stuck at West Ham saw him estrange himself from the club with offences that brought suspension /

Sallow

/M- Yellow - *The definition of sallow is skin that looks a little yellow *(.पीली त्वचा , बीमारी में पीला पड़ जाना ,.फ़ीका कर देना,) */ An example of sallow used as an adjective is sallow skin which is when a person's face looks yellowish because of an illness.

Abrogate

/M- a + boy + gate: Imagine a boy making sighs for a girl standing in front of her gate ,seeing that her brother ask her to come inside , *abrogating(निरस्त करना, तोड़ देना , Abolish, Cancel , Revoke)* boy's dream./ Abrogate means to abolish or avoid. When someone cuts in front of you in line, they are abrogating your right to be the next one served. When you cut in line, you are abrogating your responsibility to those who were in line before you /North Korea abrogated the agreement when it felt able to do so, and has gone on to test nuclear weapons/

Dolt

/M- bolt - * jiske dimag ka screw ya bolt dheela ho मंदबुद्धि, गोबर-गणेश */ The definition of a dolt is a stupid person. An example of a dolt is a person with no common sense.

Brevity

/M- brief + tea - If you take very brief break for tea then that can be called a *brevity ( The noun brevity means shortness or conciseness. An example of brevity is a point made quickly and clearly. संक्षिप्तता)*/ You can use brevity for things that are literally short, like the brevity of an elevator meeting, or the quality of fleetingness, like the brevity of youth. Brevity is also a style of speaking or writing with economy. "Brevity is the soul of wit," remarks Polonius in Shakespeare's "Hamlet," suggesting that witty people know how to make a point without unnecessary words

Brusque

/M- brush+ kyun - I dont want to brush and kiss you directly, thats *brusque (अशिष्ट, रूखा )*/ *marked by rude or peremptory shortness* If you ask a salesperson with help finding something and all you get in response is a brusque "Everything's out on the shelves," you'll probably take your business elsewhere. *A brusque manner of speaking is unfriendly, rude, and very brief.* Brush and brusque are not related, but they sound similar--when someone is brusque, you often feel that they are trying to give you the "brush off." Near synonyms for brusque are curt, short, and gruff. Brusque (pronounced "brusk") was* borrowed from the French word meaning "lively, fierce," from Italian brusco "coarse, rough.*"

bulwark

/M- bull + work - Bulls were carrying bricks to create *bulwark (fortified wall, to provide protection) * from great Ashokan Kingdom . / *The definition of a bulwark is something or someone that provides defense or protection. An example of a bulwark is a fort.*

Defoliate

/M- de(without, not having) + Folio(folios..green leaves) / 1 .deprived of leaves निष्पत्रित करना 2. strip the leaves or branches from पौधों की कटाई छंटाई करना /The voracious appetites of their larvae can quickly defoliate large tracts of forests./

Flippant

/M- flip + pant - Ek bande ne Apne Grand dad ke funeral main ulti pant pehan lee .. he thought ki isse sab log ka mood thoda theek ho jaayega aur situation thoda light hoga .. but *he disrespected everyone* ..this is called flippant thats *lack of Serious Attitude or Disrespectful* / The definition of *flippant is disrespectful or the lack of a serious attitude*.An example of flippant is when you make a sarcastic comment in response to a serious question. Make a flippant comment about your friend's mother and the odds are good that they'll be offended.

Heed

/M- heed sounds like seed - If you sow a seed and do not *heed (to give careful attention to, सावधानी , ध्यान देना )* on watering and manuring , it will not dry up / 1. to give careful attention to:

hypocrisy

/M- hypo(Under) + Critical - If you follow a belief or principle and if its very critical for your life then you should not behave in *hypocritical (Actions or words that go against someone's beliefs)* manner पाखंडी , ढोंगी / *People who go to church but don't believe in god? People who are vegetarians on a moral basis but wear leather jackets? They are engaging in hypocrisy, or behavior that is different from what they say they believe.* A hypocrite is a person who practices hypocrisy: what they say is not what they do. Many times kids are enraged by their parents' hypocrisy when parents make their children follow rules they don't follow themselves.

Catharsis

/M- katha (a religious story in hindi) - Satyanarayan Bhagwaan ki katha jo sunta hai wo *Catharsis (leads to the purging , release of emotional tension , दुःखमुक्ति )* feel karta hai / *The definition of catharsis is letting out your anger or frustration* so you can feel better. An example of catharsis is talk therapy. Use the noun, catharsis, to refer to the experience a person can have of *releasing emotional tension and feeling refreshed afterwards.

Obstreperous

/M- ob+street +peru : Streets in peru are very *obstreperous(The definition of obstreperous is someone that is noisy and hard to control. ऊधमी , boisterous*) because of outboud traffic / You've probably seen an obstreperous child in the grocery store, pulling away from her mother, screaming at the top of her lungs. If you've been to a large concert where the band doesn't come on stage for hours, you might have been part of an *obstreperous crowd: increasingly impatient, with fights breaking out, things thrown up onto the stage*, and demands being shouted, "Give us some music before the night is out!" *Some people are kind and gentle with strangers, but around their own family turn obstreperous, shouting "You never loved me!*" at their mom when she gives them the smaller of two cookies. /Brazil's obstreperous Congress, which is dominated by unreliable allies of the government and outright opponents, has so far not managed to thwart them./

Officious

/M- official - Though officious sounds like official, it means being annoyingly eager to do more than is required.*अकारण हस्तक्षेप करने वाला , The definition of officious is offering unwanted advice or services, often in an overbearing way*./ An example of something that would be described as officious behavior is a neighbor who wants to meddle in your life and constantly brings you food and gifts.. Officious is a tricky word as it seems like it might mean something like office or official. Instead, it is a word to describe someone that acts more official than they actually are. *People who are officious are busybodies. They want to make their opinions known and followed, despite not having any kind of real power.*

Prescient

/M- prescient means pre+event i.e. *pre knowledge of event* / भविष्यद्रष्टा , मौसम/ आर्थिक /भौगोलिक स्थिति की पूर्व सूचना देने वाले व्यक्ति *The definition of prescient is knowing what is going to happen before it happens.* A fortune teller who can tell the future is an example of someone who is prescient. To be prescient is to have foresight or foreknowledge. We can use this word to describe people themselves, or what they say or do at a given moment. You probably know that the Latin prefix pre- means "before," so you might be able to figure out that the word prescient, from the verb praescire, means to* "know beforehand*."

Destitution

/M- prostitution - When some is in *Destitution (गरीबी, अभावग्रस्तता )* of either money , love or even hope , they sometimes get pulled towards bad things like Prostitution ./ Destitution is an unfortunate state in which a person lacks something important — like Money, food, companionship, or even hope. If someone is in a state of destitution, he is experiencing utter despair.

Tumult

/M- tu+main =tu tu main main *कोलाहल ,हो-हल्ला*/ *Tumult is a situation of confusion and chaos, especially when there is a lot of loud noise involved . A tumult is a state of noisy confusion.* Very often a crowd of people will cause a tumult.Your mind can also be in tumult, when you're confused and overwhelmed by strong emotions. If you want an adjective to describe these types of bewildering situations, use *tumultuous. *

palisade

/M- पहले + shade ( कवर - फेंस ) : जानवरों की सुरक्षा के लिए पहले * Palisade ( कटघरा, लकड़ी का घेरा, बाड़ )* लगाना जरूरी है / A palisade is a heavy-duty fence that's strong enough to keep out intruders, like one you might see around a military camp.

Amorphous

/M-(A + morph +: Something that doesn't have a distinct form or shape is * Amorphous अनाकार ,आकार विहीन )*/ The definition of amorphous is something that does not have a distinct form or shape. A ghostly shadow is an example of an amorphous shadow . In a broader sense, *the word describes anything that lacks a distinct shape or organizing theme, be it a work of art, a political movement, or even someone's direction in life.* /That nonfiction is capacious, amorphous, that it contains a multitude of subjects and approaches./

Capacious

/M-*Capacity - When something is really big, large and roomy and holds a tons of space in it is capacious.*/ like a woman's capacious purse that is so big, people mistake it for a piece of luggage. Have you ever seen a Fourth of July hot dog eating contest? As you watch people wolf down 60 or more hot dogs in a matter of minutes, you must be thinking, "Where do they put all that food?" Well, it helps to have a capacious stomach. The suffix -ous adds "full of" to capacity; capacious is literally "full of capacity." If something is capacious, it has plenty of extra room.

Burnish

/M-Burn + ish - Apne Jale huey izzat ko theek karne ko * Burnish (To burnish is to polish or shine inanimate objects) * kehtey hain / An example of burnish is to shine a bronze statue. A gloss only achieved by loads of polishing. Likewise, you can burnish resume, by polishing it until it's perfect. A caution about usage: burnish in the physical sense is usually reserved for inanimate objects a woman will not be happy to hear that her appearance is "burnished to perfection." But your car will thank you. Also, one of the most common non-physical things to be burnished? A reputation. People are forever burnishing them — and its opposite, besmirching them (i.e., making them dirty).

Exculpate

/M-Ex+ culprit - Mumbai police caught an ex culprit just to show people that they have done something but Judge *exculpated (दोषमुक्त , Not Guilty)* him on the basis of no concrete evidence ./ /M - *Ex + Culpa ( Blame in Latin) - Free from Blame* / To exculpate means to find someone not guilty of criminal charges. If you've been wrongly accused of robbery, you'd better hope a judge will exculpate you, unless you want to go to jail because you've heard prison food is amazing. *" Exculpate is similar in meaning to exonerate. When you exonerate someone, you clear a person of an accusation and any suspicion that goes along with it. Exculpate usually refers more directly to clearing the charges against someone.* So if that judge exculpates you from the robbery charge, everyone in town might still think you did it. Get him to exculpate and exonerate you.

Headstrong

/M-Head +strong - Headstrong is a person who are determined to have their own way because you have a strong belief that your view is the best one / *Headstrong describes something that's disobedient or willful. If you're headstrong, you want to do what you want to do.* When you refuse to complete your homework because you want to watch a football game, you're being headstrong. A closer look at the word headstrong can give you a hint to its meaning — the combination of the words head and strong. You're determined to have your own way because you have a strong belief that your view — what you have in your head — is the best one. Being a headstrong person is not always a bad thing. *Sometimes headstrong people make history because they fight traditional values or outdated rules that need to be changed.*

Lance

/M-Lance Klusener - who pierces the field with his shots / *A warrior during the Middle Ages most often carried a lance, or a long, pointed spear, as a weapon.* Throughout history, soldiers mounted on horseback have often carried some variation of a lance — something long and sharp for jabbing at enemy warriors. Lances were carried as far back as ancient Roman armies and as recently as Plains Indians after they were introduced to horses in the eighteenth century. *The Latin root word, lancea , means "light spear" or "Spanish spear."*

Maelstrom

/M-Male + Storm : When male Lions fight , they create *Maelstrom(आर्थिक उथल पुथल, बवंडर, शक्तिशाली जलावर्त्त , violent, turbulent situation, or a very powerful )* among tigress and cubs , as there whole future depends on it / When an economy or a government fails, the situation is often described as a maelstrom. All the forces at play--banks, governments, consumers--are trying as hard as they can to protect themselves.

Savant

/M-Rakhi Savant - Rakhi Savant is a Savant (*Scholor , over the top smart , जानकार , विद्वान )* person in stupidity / A savant is someone over-the-top smart, a scholar. The definition of a savant is a scholar or learned person.Savants have almost super-human abilities in art, music or memory - and not all are born that way.

Transcribe

/M-Trans (Over) + Scribe ( Write) - *मुद्रित या लिखित रूप में बदलना, प्रतिलिपि करना*/ *If someone asks you to transcribe something, they want you to listen to it and write down what was said, word for word. Speeches, interviews, and trials are often transcribed for records.* You might want to transcribe a recording of an interview onto paper, or maybe you need to transcribe all the notes you collected from an important meeting. /But Hughes did not take the job seriously; with his sights set on more glamorous endeavors, he did little more than transcribe the recordings./ /They transcribed lines from favorites in spiral-bound notebooks to memorize and perform/

embark

/M: Em(Dog) + bark :Em was a dog who use to Bark when his Master (*Starts a New Journey , Invest*) or when he starts an enterprise for manufacturing Drones / आरंभ करना ,जहाज़ पर चढ़ना Verb - transitive 1. to board a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle, as for a journey. 2.to start an enterprise, business, etc. / Ex - who embarked on an hour-long spree of violence / Intransitive 1.to venture or invest (something) in an enterprise. 2.to put or receive on board a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle. .

impudent

/M: Improper+Dentist : Improper Dentist who is (*Disrespectful*) and who broke my tooth/ Adj - गुस्ताख , निर्लज्ज , Disrespectful /Ex - I refuse to say another word to you. You're just contemptible and impudent enough to publish it/ /At which point the Thought Police kicked the door down and arrested me for impudent reasoning/

Marshalsea

/M: Marshal+sea : Marshal ne Sea ka Kiraya manga Dolphin se , Dolphin nahi maangi toh Marshal ne usey uske Court(*Marsha Court*) main bulaay and kirya nahi dene ke jurm main jail (*Debtor's Prision*) Bhej Diya . / Noun - 1 .the court of the marshal of the royal household. 2 . a debtors' prison in London

Broach

1 . *bring up a topic for discussion* .चर्चा चलाना 2. a decorative pin worn by women 3.*if you put a hole in something in order to get out what's inside you broach it छेद बनाना* /When he had broached with Otis combining folk with soul, he didn't intend for the soul element to disappear, as Duck Dunn believed it had/

Inadvertent

1 . *unintentional* /* An Inadvertent Lie/ 2. *Not Attentive , Heedless , Lack of Attention * /To this extent, Trump's nonsense might have the inadvertent consequence of making his GOP rivals appear less ridiculous by comparison./

Lame

1 .disabled in the feet or legs 2.pathetically lacking in force or effectiveness /What a Lame story / 3.a fabric interwoven with threads of metal

raconteur(Rae+Contour)

1. * Story Teller* /M - Racoons - In all the animated movies , Racoons are *Raconteurs (gifted storytellers)*, telling stories of angels , Cinderella etc / able to spin amusing tales from everyday life. Who is the biggest raconteur in your group? He or she's the one who always tells the best stories — or jumps in when another storyteller isn't being vivid enough.

inferno

1. * any place of pain and turmoil नरक 2. a very intense and uncontrolled fire नरक* /The heat of the inferno melted and fused its painted and plastered materials into a dense, lustrous abstraction./ /"The need to quell the raging inferno of human rage and revulsion within the confines of the 7th District was emergent," the motion reads./

visage

1. *Appearance conveyed by a person's face* /M - Visa + Age - Once you spend more than $100 on shopping , your *visage (Appearance conveyed by a person's face)* insinuates a wary feeling when you enter home / 1. the appearance conveyed by a person's face 2. the human face (`kisser' and `smiler' and `mug' are informal terms for `face' and `phiz' is British) /With the chiseled visage of a Hollywood star, Captain Mark is epically cool./ /But there's a gentleness to his demeanor that belies the rough-and-tumble mountain man visage./

festoon

1. *Decorated* /Ex - No one seems to be writing those super catchy theme tunes that seemed to festoon the telly of yesteryear./ /Ex - Pardew is a great believer in motivational slogans, and such Churchillian statements festoon his training ground for his players' benefit / 2. a string or chain of flowers, foliage, ribbon, etc., suspended in a curve between two points. 3. Dentistry. to reproduce natural gum patterns around the teeth or a denture.

Heretofore

1. *Hitherto , अभी तक . अब तक * *When someone says heretofore, they're describing things that have happened up to the present moment. This formal word means "thus far" and often appears in legal or other official documents.* This is an old-fashioned word, but it refers to something timeless — events in the past that have gone on until now. To sell a new shoe, an advertiser could say, "Heretofore, there has never been a shoe like this." After a disaster, someone could say, "Heretofore, we never experienced such a catastrophe." *This word draws a line in the sand between the past and the present. This word means about the same as as yet and until now.* /This is not all bad — sometimes trolls, by engaging political leaders or spokesmen, bring transparency to a heretofore hidden set of policies./

Postulate

1. *Something taken as self-evident or assumed without proof as a basis for reasoning. * 2. *Presenting Idea , Belief* /*M - Post Office + Late - Post Office pe late hone pahuchne ke baad ..Ek unpadh ne unse 5 Rs ka Stamp Manga (* To Ask , Demand , Claim) ..Post Office ne unhey 1Rs ke 5 Stamp diye ..Ispe Unpadh ne bola kyun ?? They Replied ki bhai 1 ko 5 baar jodogey then wo 5 hi hoga ..Ye (*Fundamental Principle*) hia and tumhey padhna chahiye ..*(should not take for Granted)*/ Also meant *Presenting Idea or theory * *Assume something or present it as a fact and you postulate it. Physicists postulate the existence of parallel universes, which is a little mind-blowing.* Anyone who has suffered through geometry class is familiar with some of the greatest hits, like Euclid's postulate and the point-line-plane postulate. Those are propositions that have to be assumed for other mathematical statements to follow logically. *As a verb (pronounced "POST-you-late") it describes the act of presenting an idea, theory, belief, or concept.* Hindi - स्वसिद्ध /*Even people who postulate a creative God usually acknowledge that his existence shifts the big question rather than resolving it. */

Sublime(Sib+Lime)

1. *Too Good* /M - Subji + Lime - LIme ki sabji jo boht hi achhi ho and awe inspiring ho . *.Too goood */ In common use, sublime is an adjective meaning "*awe-inspiringly grand, excellent, or impressive भव्य, विशिष्ट ,पूजनीय*," like the best chocolate fudge sundae you've ever had. You might describe a spine-tingling piece of music as "a work of sublime beauty." With the, the word also functions as a noun meaning "something that strikes the mind with a sense of grandeur or powe": "Never need an American look beyond his own country for the sublime and beautiful of natural scenery," wrote Washington Irving. *The beauty of music or nature can be awe-inspiring, but sublime is also useful for describing everything from an impressive serve in tennis to a jaw-droppingly good taste sensation * /Earthquakes of such vast power, too, are sublime, and speak to deadly forces beyond our power to conquer, or even fully grasp. /

embody

1. to give a concrete form to; *express, personify*, or exemplify in concrete form: to embody an idea in an allegorical painting. 2.to provide with a body; incarnate; make corporeal:to embody a spirit. 3.to collect into or include in a body; organize; incorporate. 4.to *embrace or comprise*. Hindi - साकार करना ,सम्मिलित करना /How the England football team came to embody Englishness / /Luton has come to embody the failures of multiculturalism/

pivot(pee+vet)

1.* any thing or person on which something or someone functions or depends vitally: * 2. to turn or rotate, like a hinge *मुख्य या केन्द्रीय स्थान , धुरी * /Instead they decided to pivot to a completely different gadget, a digital pen, and wait for Moore's Law to catch up with a fast-enough processor./ /He then pivoted to a polemic on the billionaire Koch brothers, who back conservative causes./

diaphragm

1.*a thin disk that vibrates when receiving or producing sound waves*, as in a telephone, microphone, speaker, or the like. 2.Anatomy. a muscular, membranous or ligamentous wall separating two cavities or limiting a cavity. गर्भ-निरोधक , झिल्ली

antic

1.*foolish Behavior 2.Prank * /M - Antique - Telling an old and antique item as the modern invention can work out as an *Antic (An antic is a prank to the extreme. It's outrageous, but it's usually meant to be funny. *) When the senior class steals the principal's car and manages to get it inside the gym, the antic may be condemned by the school, but everyone else probably thinks it's hilarious. The noun antic is most commonly used in the plural form, as in "*the coach was growing tired of his star player's silly antics after scoring.*" Sometimes antics can lean toward the not-so-funny side as well.*Really ridiculous behavior, that is more foolish than funny, can also be called antics. *Antic can also be used an as adjective, as in "her antic stand-up routine had everyone rolling in the aisles." It more infrequently can be used as a verb meaning basically "to act like a clown." /Elsewhere, though, Puig's antics were met with some hostility, at least initially./

clogs

1.any object that acts as a hindrance or obstruction 2.footwear usually with wooden soles

Hit One's Stride

1.to achieve a regular or steady pace or course. 2. to reach the point or level at which one functions most competently and consistently: /The quarterback didn't hit his stride until the second half of the game./

Parish

A Local Community Church

Bristle

A bristle is a stiff hair — the kind men shave off their face or the kind badgers have all over. *Bristle also means to get angry.* Tell an animal rights activist you use a badger's bristle shaving brush and you'll get the idea. *The emotional meaning of to bristle comes from the fact that most animal bristles used by man are so-called erectile hairs — the ones that stand up on the neck or along the back of animal when it's angry or surprised* A common word associated with bristle is hackle, another name for such erectile animal hairs. Thus the saying "to get one's hackles up," which is pretty much identical to bristling /Trump bristled at the speculation, rampant among rival consultants, that Laudner is being paid far more than the typical rate./ /The chief justice bristles at accusations that the court's decisions are motivated by partisan politics./ /He was nearly bald; his mustache was a thick brush of white and silver bristles; his hearing aid worked intermittently./

stereotype

A generalized belief about a group of people an idea, trait, convention

Schizophrenia

A group of severe disorders characterized by disorganized and delusional thinking, disturbed perceptions, and inappropriate emotions and actions.

Chronicler

A historical record or register of facts or events arranged in the order in which they happened. A person who is an authority on history and who studies it and writes about it

Lobbyist

A lobbyist is someone hired by a business or a cause to persuade legislators to support that business or cause

Chronometer

A timepiece; a watch; a clock

Transitive Verb

A verb that needs a Direct Object to complete its meaning . .Transitive verbs are action verbs that have an object to receive that action /Some verbs can be transitive in one sentence and intransitive in another: turned is transitive in "Brenda turned the wheel sharply" but intransitive in "Fred turned when I called." / Intransitive verbs are action verbs but unlike transitive verbs, they do not have an object receiving the action.

Parody

A work that closely imitates the style or content of another with the specific aim of comic effect and/or ridicule. /Ex - UK copyright laws to be freed up and parody laws relaxed/

Acerbic

Acidic /M - Acidic - To taste or speak bitterly , like you just ate some thing acidic . This taste or tone can also be called as *Acerbic (Bad Taste or tone )*/ If you say something acerbic, or harshly bitter, to someone, it can leave a bitter taste in your own mouth that lingers, and the acerbic, or acidic, words can eat away at the person on the receiving end too. It is fitting that the first part of acerbic sounds like the first part of "acid," because the Latin source of acerbic is acerbus, "sour-tasting." Acerbic speech is like acid, because it is sour and corrodes, or weakens, relationships. There are ways to use sharp words for humor, and some comedians are known for their "acerbic wit," but just as you would take safety precautions in using acid in a science lab, you should be cautious using acerbic in conversation

transcendent

Adj *Transcendent describes something so excellent that it's beyond the range of human understanding.* Transcendent shares the prefix trans, meaning "across," with many familiar words such as transport (carry across), transcontinental (across a continent), and transparent (light shines across). *Transcendental meditation carries people across to a higher consciousness*. So something transcendent goes across boring reality into super awesomeness in a world all its own. It moves you. Angels are transcendent, and even your favorite novel can be transcendent. Beware of someone who finds the cheesecake transcendent; she may tend to exaggerate. /She transformed an obscure single written two decades earlier by George Usher, a local musician, from a middling power-pop number into something transcendent./

timid

Adj *घबराने वाला , डरपोक* Timid means "*overly cautious or fearful,*" like a timid driver who drives very slowly or avoids highways altogether. *Timid comes from the Middle French word timide, meaning "easily frightened, shy." Those who are timid often worry that things will go wrong: a timid eater orders bland food to avoid the possibility not liking the flavor of something new, just as a *timid partygoer* talks to people he already knows, afraid that he won't be able to talk to strangers. /The Obama Justice Department was too timid and short-staffed to hunt down the bad guys. /

Telling

Adj 1. * powerfully persuasive * /"a telling presentation"/ 2. * disclosing unintentionally * /"a telling smile"/

Sluggish

Adj 1. Moving Slowly /a sluggish stream/ /a sluggish worker/ 2. Not Active /a sluggish market/ 3. Lazy or Slothful

Inane

Adj 1. Silly or Senseless ,stupid, vacuous, ridiculous, pointless.

Tender

Adj 1.soft or delicate in substance; not hard or tough: /* a tender steak. */ 2.young or immature: /* children of tender age. */ 3. easily moved to sympathy or compassion; kind: /* a tender heart. */ 4. An Offer

obscure

Adj If something is obscure, it's *vague and hard* to see. Be careful if you're driving in heavy rain — the painted lines can be obscure. Obscure comes from *Latin obscurus, which can mean "dark, dim," "unclear, hard to understand," or "insignificant, humble.*" We tend to use obscure in the metaphorical senses: *an obscure sound is unclear, an obscure village is hidden away in the countryside, and an obscure poet is little known and probably insignificant*. Obscure can also be used as a verb. If you get really nervous when you speak during a debate, your embarrassing twitches and shaking hands can obscure your argument.

diminutive

Adj 1. *Very Small* Noun 1. *a word that is formed with a suffix (such as -let or -kin) to indicate smallness*

Stingy

Adj 1. *unwilling to spend* /she practices economy without being stingy/ 2. *deficient in amount or quality or extent*

Ripe

Adj 1. at the highest point of development especially in judgment or knowledge, mature /A ripe Mind/ 2. Fully prepared or Eager , ready "the colonists were ripe for revolution" 3. most suitable or right for a particular purpose, good, right; /"the time is ripe for great sociological changes"/ /Conservatives attacked the report and its conclusion that white supremacists and a few angry military veterans were ripe for recruitment, and DHS backed off./

sparse

Adj 1.not dense /trees were sparse/

piercing

Adj 1.painful as if caused by a sharp instrument *भेदता हुआ* 2.*having or demonstrating ability to recognize or draw fine distinctions *

Diachronic

Adj *ऐतिहासिक* 1. of, relating to, or studying the development of a phenomenon through time; historical /His research encompassed the full range of synchronic (single-period) and diachronic (historically aware) aspects of language study/

caustic

Adj *जलानेवाला* , तीखा 1.*capable of burning, corroding, or destroying living tissue. * 2.*severely critical or sarcastic:* / The New York Times published a caustic diatribe against American Airlines by the novelist Gary Shteyngart. /

Synchronic

Adj *समकालिक* 1. concerned with the events or phenomena at a particular period without considering historical antecedents / synchronic linguistics Compare / 2. Synchronous /Reality seems to blur as you experience a spate of synchronic, even mystical moments. /

Mercurial

Adj - 1. liable to sudden unpredictable change. /mercurial twists of temperament/

Expedient

Adj - 1. *Suitable to the circumstances 2. inclined towards method or Means that are Advantageous rather than fair * Noun - 1. *something suitable or appropriate, esp something used during an urgent situation * The adjective expedient describes something that provides *an easy way to achieve a goal or result*, but it's not necessarily a moral solution. Politically expedient means something you do to advance yourself politically. Use expedient when you want to hint that a particular solution or strategy has certain benefits and advantages but is not completely fair. /Should the government, which promised to protect airline passengers last year, do the expedient thing — or the right thing? / /But Mr. Kim's defiance, at times unshakeable, has been known to soften when politically expedient./

Despicable

Adj - *deserving to be despised, or regarded with distaste*, disgust, or disdain; contemptible: Hindi -* घिनौना* / Ex - deserving to be despised, or regarded with distaste, disgust, or disdain; contemptible: /

ravenous

Adj - *खूँखार , भूखा ,लालची* 1. Extremely hungry /Ex - feeling ravenous after a hard day's work. / 2. extremely rapacious: / a ravenous jungle beast. / / M - Ravan - Raavan ki tarah Lalchi(Miser) , Khunkaar(Rapacious) and Bhookha(hungry) /

Esoteric

Adj - *गोपनीय* Pssst... do you know the secret handshake? If you haven't been brought into the inner circle of those with special knowledge, esoteric things will remain a mystery to you. In the olden days, *achieving esoteric knowledge meant getting initiated into the mystical arts, learning secrets unknown to regular folks. गोपनीय * Now when a subject is called *esoteric it's usually something not so mystical but still hard to penetrate*: financial accounting might seem esoteric for people who get easily stumped filling out their tax forms. *Americans might find the sport of cricket to be esoteric, but the rules of baseball* can be just as impenetrable to outsiders. The infield fly rule? Totally esoteric.

Vascular

Adj - Biology - pertaining to, composed of, or provided with *vessels or ducts that convey fluids*, as blood, lymph, or sap.

Abstruse

Adj - difficult to penetrate; incomprehensible to one of ordinary understanding or knowledge

donnish

Adj - thought to resemble or suit a *college don, particularly because of a pedantic*, scholarly manner Hindi - पांडित्याभिमानी

eminent

Adj- *विशिष्ट ,सुप्रसिद्ध* 1.high in station, rank, or repute; prominent; distinguished: 2 .conspicuous, signal, or noteworthy: 3.prominent; projecting; protruding:

adsorb

An agent capable of holding other molecules onto its surface by physical or chemical (chemisorption) mean

Decathlon

An athletic contest comprising ten different track-and-field events and won by the contestant amassing the highest total score.

Anadromous

Ana(Up, Against) - Fish spends most of life at sea and spawns in freshwater i.e go against the current to give birth . Salmon Fish.

epidermis

Anatomy - 1. *The outer , Non vascular , nonsensitive layer of the Skin* , Covering the true skin

Capitulate

Capitulates - *Capitulate ( Give Up , Surrender) means to give in to something. *"The teachers didn't want to have class outside, but the students begged so hard, she capitulated." Because capitulate relates to the military, and Romans were all about their military, Latin has a lot to say about this word. *In Latin, caput means head, capitulum little head. Think with this word how, at the end of a battle, someone bows their head in defeat, and often that is when heads roll. * Recapitulate - *To recapitulate means to go back and summarize. At the end of an oral report, you might say, "So, to recapitulate, I've made three points," and then you name them.* Recapitulate is a long, scary-looking word that actually means something simple and easy. It comes from the Latin re- "again" and capitulum "chapter," which comes from the word caput "head." Think of recapitulating--or recapping, for short--as putting nice little caps on all the bottles you've opened up--tightening everything up.

Chauvinist

Chauvinist -*Superiority of his People * Chivalrous -*Courteous and Attentive to Girls* *A chauvinist is someone who blindly and enthusiastically believes in the superiority of his cause or people. कुल आदि को उच्च समझने वाला* .If you grew up in New York and refuse to eat at any pizzeria beyond a five-mile radius of the Empire State Building, you could be described as a New York pizza chauvinist. *The put-down "male chauvinist pig" describes a man who believes that women are not as intelligent or worthy of respect as men. Often when we hear the word chauvinist, we think of arrogant men*

Anabolism

Constructive metabolism; the process of building up larger molecules from smaller ones.

Artery

*A blood vessel that carries blood away from the heart*

BoBos

*middle Class Gypsy* Adj - They are '*bourgeois bohemians*' - or 'Bobos' Adj - mix of money and liberalism. people who are anti corp and anti materialsim but are actually materialistic. vote liberal and make good money

coeval

/M - Co + Eval : Evolved or born at the same time/

Gerontocracy(Jere+ta+cracy)

/M - German + Cracy - Old German (*OLD*) people ruling over a state / Noun- a state or government in which old people rule. /* Ex- With a gerontocracy that locks the young out of its economy and politics/

onus

/M - O + Nurse - Nurses plays important role , they have *onus( burden , responsibility , obligation)* of healing patients to well being / Noun - a responsibility, task, or burden

picaresque

/M - Picture + esque - Aisi jagah jaana jo boht khubsoorat ho ..lekin normally u need to hike or (*do Adventure*) to reach there/ involving clever rogues or adventurers especially as in a type of fiction

procrastinate

/M - Pro+Crast :Looking Pro(*Forward*) to work Cras(*Tomorrow*) - Delay Karna / देर करना , टालना Verb 1. To defer Action , Delay 2. defer; delay. / Ex - Procrastination is the disease eating away at student productivity - and with exam season upon us, we're facing an epidemic. An American study estimates that over 70% of students "exhibit [this] behaviour"./

Blunderbuss

/M - Thunder + Bus(gun in Italian) - 1. a clumsy unsubtle person , oafish ,भद्दा बेवकूफ़ 2. an obsolete short musket with large bore and flared muzzle, used to scatter shot at short range /The blunderbuss police operation did nothing but infuriate the protesters./ /The cumbersome and divisive blunderbuss process of impeachment should be a rare recourse./

annul

1. * Cancel officially 2. Declare invalid* /The Urgent Matters Appeals Court cited a lack of jurisdiction as the reason for annulling the earlier court's ruling./

Indulgent

Adj 1. Lenient or Overly generous *Someone who is self-indulgent gives themselves a lot of treats. Parents who are indulgent cave to every desire their child expresses.*

wary

Adj - सावधान 1. watchful; being on one's guard against danger. 2.Cautious /*Ex - You had to be wary when you traveled, I realized, but you also had to be open. */

after while crocodile

Good Bye Until Later

thicket

Noun -* a thick or dense growth of shrubs*, bushes, or small trees; a thick coppice

Paramount

The definition of *paramount is something of utmost importance or something that is the most important*. An example of paramount is national security. Paramount goes way beyond "important." It's absolutely critical. Something that is of paramount importance has a great urgency to it.

sparks

creative environment

FerroMagnetism

the strong attraction of a substance to a magnetic field Like Iron

Pharaoh

the title of the ancient Egyptian kings /American Pharaoh/

Cut a Swath

to make a *pretentious display; attract notice*: /The new doctor cut a swath in the small community./

To Egg Someone *On*

to urge or encourage

asafetida

हींग

Pathogenic

*Capable of Producing Disease*

Crepuscular

*If the light outside is fading, you can call it crepuscular. Anything that resembles dusk, or happens at that time of day, is crepuscular*, whether it's gloomy indoor light or the sky at twilight. Some animals are also crepuscular: they tend to be most active in the evening. The Latin root word says it all — crepusculum means "twilight." /This crepuscular conflict requires a new vocabulary and a familiarity with a new type of history. /

Misogynist

*Misandry - One who hates Men Misogynist - One who hates or doesn't trust Women* /M- Mis(Wrong , Hate), and gyne(female) - One who hates or doesnt trust women /

Baroque

*Overly Decorated , Irregular* /*M - Bada + awk = seventeenth century ke bade awk ornaments the (baroque)*/ Irregular An artistic style of the seventeenth century characterized by complex forms, bold ornamentation, and contrasting elements Adj. Overly decorated Hindi - अलबेला /*Ex - It's very baroque, romantic and deliciously sentimental in a retro way.*/

curb

*When you're using the word curb as a noun, it's the raised edging beside a street. When curb is a verb, it means to restrain or hold back, like when you curb your impulse to laugh while watching a badly acted play*.

Approbation

/M- Approval - Approbation is an official, important-sounding, and somewhat old-fashioned word for *approval or praise.*/

Fecund(Fake + End)

/M- Fake + Andey - Ek farmer ne muragiaan paali , uski murgian itni fertile thi ki wo roz 10 andey deti thi .. Farmers ke paas itne andey ho gaye ki finally usey fekne padey ..Farmers ne bola why i have these *fecund ( too Fertile or productive, Prolific)* Chickens / Adj 1. intellectually productive 2. capable of producing offspring or vegetation

Hoary

/M- O + Ree - O ree chori , maan bhi jaa baat meri ..in an *hoary(Old , ancient)* song from Lagan / 1. showing characteristics of age, especially having grey or white hair 2.ancient /This question opens up a hoary old argument that is guaranteed to annoy teenagers: just how hard is the current GCSE?/ /But the series is not above rolling out hoary anti-Semitic stereotypes./

Tedium

/M- Stadium -Watching 5 days cricket test match is a *tedium (थकाऊपन , उबाऊपन)*thing / Noun 1. the feeling of being bored by something tedious 2. dullness owing to length or slowness /The tension - or you might say the tedium - would be prolonged ever further./ /After a few opening scenes showing the pomp of an assembly and the tedium of a classroom, adult supervision all but vanishes./

Tirade

/M- Tired - You get tired after a hearing * tirade ( कड़ी निंदा , violent emotionally charged words ) * about Phone from your Grand mother / *A tirade is a speech, usually consisting of a long string of violent, emotionally charged words.* Example of tirade is an outburst against an illegal practice; tirade is a speech filled with condemnations.

Precinct

/M- precinct = prec + in + ct = precious -in-city / इलाका, पुलिस लाइन पुलिस हेडक्वार्टर/ *A precinct is an area that has a clear boundary line around it*, making it easier for the police to know where a crime is taking place, or where you should go to vote. *The word precinct has also come to mean police headquarters in a particular district*. If you're being held at the precinct, you're at the police station local to where you committed your crime.

Torpid

/M-tortoise - Tortoise are torpid (* Slow, sometimes look inactive and lifeless , UN-energetic निष्क्रिय, सुस्त *)/ 1. in a condition of biological rest or suspended animation 2. Slow and apathetic

solicit

/M: So+letme+Sit : ..He requested his teacher to gain favor(*Gain Favor*)on Practical Exams*/ *धंधे के लिये लुभाना ,प्रार्थना करना* Verb - used with Object 1. to seek for (something) by entreaty, earnest or respectful request, formal application, etc.: 2. to offer to have sex with someone in exchange for money. /He solicited aid from the minister. / /No Soliciting allowed in this building /

beamish

/Mnemonics - Beam ki tarah ..(*Optimistic*) *thrilled, full of optimism

crystallize

1 *make free from confusion or ambiguity; make clear 2.cause to take on a definite and clear shape *

apprehension

1. * Fear , Doubt * , 2. * Capture of a Criminal * 3. *Understanding of An Idea * Lucky you! Apprehension has three meanings: 1)*the capture of a criminal हिरासत* /Police apprehension of the burglar was aided by two alert teenagers./ 2)*the understanding of an idea समझ;* 3)*A fear, doubt, or misgiving. शंका , भय* /Any apprehension that Favre might have felt about how fans might react disappeared after the response for tickets/

Reckon

1. *make a mathematical calculation or computation* 2. *Guess , Expect , Believe, Suppose*

Obtuse

1. Adj - of an angle; between 90 and 180 degrees 2. Adj - *mentally slow or emotionally insensitive सुस्त 3. not sharp or pointed * /For anyone to be willfully obtuse in these times is a luxury none of us can afford./ /And that's probably me being obtuse to leave it open at the end.

Plum

1. Fruit 2. Exactly , Completely (used as intensifiers) /"I'm plumb (or plum) tuckered out"/ 3.a highly desirable position or assignment /"a political plum"/ /Top fundraisers get access to campaign officials and to the candidates themselves, as well as consideration for plum appointments such as ambassadorships./

cog

1. Noun - tooth on the rim of gear wheel 2.Verb - join pieces of wood with cogs 3. Noun- *a subordinate who performs an important but routine function* /"he was a small cog in a large machine"/

Zenith

1. The highest point; the peak. 2. The point in the sky directly above the observer. /*Ex - Humans have reached a genetic zenith, says evolution expert */

Impregnation

1. Treatment with material that penetrates the pore structure 2.The establishmnet of a pregnacy by implantation

Paradigm

A *paradigm is a widely accepted example, belief or concept, a standard perspective, or set of ideas*. A paradigm is a way of looking at something. A paradigm is a new way of looking or thinking about something.*When you change paradigms, you're changing how you think about something.*

grizzly

A grizzly is a large North American species of bear also known as a silvertip bear. When you go camping and hiking in the western United States, park rangers might teach you what to do if you see a grizzly.

Couplet

A pair of lines that end in rhyme

Score

A written form of musical composition *A Set of twenty things*

Defuse

Defuze Verb - 1. to remove the fuze from (a bomb, mine, etc.) 2. *to grow less dangerous; weaken. * /M : Detach+Fuse :Fuse ko nikalna(DETACH,REMOVE) from bomb so that it gets weak .(Weaken) /

Pelicans

Fish eating aquatic bird

Catadromous

Fishes that migrate from fresh water to spawn in the ocean ...Like Seal

animation

Full of Life and Energy

De*S*cent

If *you're on your way down, you're making a descent, whether that's as a passenger in an airplane that's landing*, or if you're tumbling down a staircase you just slipped on.

Knackered

Tired

Abstract Away from

To *remove from Consideration*

Take In Stride

To Deal With Calmly , Cope with Successfully /She was able to take her sudden rise to fame *in stride.*/

lurk

To lie in wait as in ambush. Secret/Hidden Hindi - घात में रहना

collar

When it's a verb, *Collar means "apprehend" or "arrest," as when a police detective finally collars an elusive bank robber.* This meaning arose from the 17th century use of collar, "grab someone by the neck."

Allude

When you *allude (Make a Reference to)* to something, you don't identify it or mention it specifically. If you allude to the fact that a cop is sitting right behind you, your friends might stop talking about their plans to rob a bank. /He also alluded to new initiatives, to commence later this year, that will, "...broaden from Cancer to other women's health related causes"./

couch potato

a person who watches a lot of television and does not have an active style of life

devour

/M - Devar - Devar eating greedily at Bhabhi's Mayke / *Eat greedily*

Industrious

1.*characterized by hard work and perseverance*

liquidity

How quickly and easily an asset can be converted into cash

Active Voice

The *Subject Performs the Action* /1. Over One third of the students failed the Exam. 2. She Slammed the Brake when Car sped downhill /

erudite

(adj.) scholarly, learned, bookish, pedantic /Mnemonics - Rude (*Scholar*) /

Conspicuous(kans+piqui+us)

* Easily Noticed , Attracting Special Attention * /M - Conspiracy - Aisi Conspiracy jo sabko pata ho ..and log pehle se hi jaan le ki ye Conspiracy kar raha hai ..(*Easily Noticed , Visible *)/ Adj - 1.easily seen or noticed; readily visible or observable: a conspicuous error. 2.attracting special attention, as by outstanding qualities or eccentricities: Hindi - ऐसा स्थान या व्यक्ति जिस पर सब की दृष्टि पड़े / He was conspicuous by his booming laughter. /

frenzy

* बावलापन* /*M - Free + enzyme = body ne aise free enzymes release kiye ki wo excitement se wild hogya*/ A state of wild excitement Hindi - बावलापन

analogy

* समानता When you draw an analogy between two things, you compare them for the purpose of explanation.* The movie character Forest Gump made a silly analogy famous: "Life is like a box of chocolates."

Diacritic

*1. a marked difference, distinction* 2. mark added to a letter or symbol to show it puncutation .

Detrimental

*1. harmful , damaging * /M - Mental - Mental things *Detrimental (harmful , damaging )* hoti hai / *Detrimental is a formal way of saying "harmful." Anything detrimental hurts, hinders, or puts a damper on something. Detrimental things do damage.* Have you ever heard "*Smoking may be detrimental to your health" and wondered what it meant? It means that smoking is bad for your health: it's going to harm you in a bunch of ways. *Detrimental is a more official, formal way of talking about things that do harm. A dog who likes digging holes can be detrimental to a garden. If you're writing a paper and want to pick an alternative to harmful that sounds more formal, detrimental is a great choice.

aphorism

*A brief, cleverly worded statement that makes a wise observation about life.*

Chronic

*A condition that develops slowly and lasts a long period of time.*

Decoy

*A decoy is a fake version of something used to play a trick or lead you into danger*, like the cork duck decoys hunters put on the pond to make the real ducks think it's safe to stop by.

Harbinger

*A harbinger is something that comes before and that shows what will follow in the future. The robin is a harbinger of spring--its presence means spring is coming soon.* /The appearance of a ghost is often thought of as a harbinger of death./ /He urged the international community to intervene, telling Geo News the latest tension could prove a "harbinger of disaster" for South Asia./

pedestal

*A pedestal is a base or foundation that supports something like a statue or work of art.* Think of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C. where a statue of Lincoln sitting in a chair is raised up on a huge pedestal. Think of the physical stand or support when you use pedestal figuratively to mean a place of superiority. If you put someone on a pedestal, you honor that person or place him or her above you, as you might a piece of valued art. If you want to knock someone off his or her pedestal, you think that person is too arrogant and you want to do something to humble him or her.

pompous

*A pompous person is arrogant or conceited. *He'll walk into a party with an inflated ego, ready to tell anyone who will listen that "I'm kind of a big deal." *Today we associate the adjective pompous with self-important jerks.*

Talisman

*A talisman is an object believed to bring good luck ताबीज *

Expedition

*An expedition is an organized journey that is undertaken for a particular purpose*, like a group of scientists launching an expedition to South America to seek out a new medicinal herb.

Moribund

*Approaching death; about to become *obsolete Hindi - अन्त के करीब /*M- More + बंद = ab more nhi hai aage kuch, bas band hogya( coming to an end)*/

pejorative(Pa + Jorative)

*Be Little* / M- Poha + Creative : Poha Competition hui jismain every one has to make poha and present in a creative way .. At the time of presentation boht si auratey dusre ke poha ki buraiyan karne lagi (* Be Little or Speak Negatively* ) / Adj - Describing words or phrases that belittle or speak negatively of someone Hindi - निन्दात्मक /Ex - General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, which also manufactures the Avenger and Gray Eagle unmanned aircraft, says the word drone has "pejorative connotations"./ /The description of East Jerusalem as 'occupied' East Jerusalem is a term freighted with pejorative implications which is neither appropriate nor useful/

Anatomy

*Body Structure , Deep Examination * Science dealing with how body is structured. Structure determines function. An Analysis or deep examination /* Ex- Anatomy of Disappearance */

disdain

*Dis Respect , Unworthy , Scorn* Verb - 1. *to look upon or treat with contempt; despise*; scorn 2 .to think unworthy of notice, response, etc.; consider beneath oneself: Noun - a feeling of contempt for anything regarded as unworthy; haughty contempt; scorn. / Ex - to disdain replying to an insult. /

Animus

*Dislike* /M - Enimy + Us - I have strong (*Dislike*) for traitors among us ../ Noun - 1. Strong Dislike 2. Motive , Intention or Purpose Hindi - उद्देश्य , वैर-भाव / Ex - Carnival of Animus /

Immanent

*Essential , Mental Act performed . Something immanent is spread throughout something — it's innate, intrinsic and inborn. It also means something that is totally mental.* Both meanings of this word have to do with internal things. *Sometimes, immanent means a quality that is essential to something. Psychologists claim the need to love and be loved is an immanent trait of human beings — we all have it. Some people think there is an immanent spirit or force in nature. Also, immanent things are ideas and feelings that only exist in your mind — they remain within. If you keep your ideas to yourself, they're immanent.* 1. Quality that is Essential /Stake is much higher, a level of trust has to be immanent and a positive medical treatment outcome is not guaranteed. / 2 .of a mental act performed entirely within the mind /A cognition is an immanent act of mind/

Philippic

*Extreme निंदा करना , Bitter Rant (निंदा करना)* /M - Philip - Alexander the great's Dad who brought Greece under their rule .Demosthenes famous Greek Orator warned Athenians about their attack but no one listened ...tab usne Greek ke logo ko uksaane ke liye boht hi Gallian dee and Shaap diya ..*निंदापूर्ण वाक्य , Bitter Rant* / 1. any speech or discourse of bitter denunciation. शाप 2. *A philippic is a bitter rant against someone or something * . Unfortunately your impassioned philippic condemning your parents' midnight curfew rule only resulted in you being grounded for a week. * The word philippic originates from the Greek word philippikos, the name given to the speeches of the famous Greek orator Demosthenes, who warned the Athenians against Philip II of Macedon. The Greeks didn't listen to Demosthenes, however, and then Philip and his son Alexander the Great ended up bringing all of Greece under Macedonian control. Too bad for the Athenians! *

Nod off

*Fall Asleep* /* No + doing anything + I,m off = drift off while doing something*/ to doze or begin to fall asleep, usually while doing something else

Pity

*If you feel pity, you feel sympathy for someone else's suffering.* A documentary on prisoners who have been wrongfully convicted might make you feel pity for them. Use pity as a noun or a verb. You feel pity for the really bad singer so you try to look attentive, but then you pity yourself for having to suffer through his terrible rendition of "Somewhere Over the Rainbow." We also say something is a pity if it's something to be sad about. It's a pity that your computer crashed right after you finished your paper.

Innate

*Immanent - Existing from Birth , Internal * Adj 1. Existing from Birth 2. Internal

Apostrophe

*In addition to being a punctuation mark, apostrophe can also be a literary device in which the speaker of a poem talks to someone who is not there*. A famous example of this is Walt Whitman's "O Captain! My Captain!" in which he addresses the deceased Abraham Lincoln: "O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the bells."

heave

*Lifting Heavy Objects* /M - Heavy - *When you heave something, you haul or lift a heavy object*. / *You might not realize how fat your cat has become until you have to heave him out of the way to make room for yourself on the sofa.* You heave a heavy object when you lift it, like when you heave piles of wet snow out of your driveway with a shovel, and you can heave yourself out of bed in the morning, if it takes a huge effort to get yourself into a vertical position. You can even heave a heavy sigh, which simply means you sigh loudly. To vomit is also sometimes described as heaving, describing the unpleasant effort of your stomach muscles.

Shibboleth

*Motto or Catchphrase* / M - Shibum+late - Shibum and uske dost .. Lait lait ke Bol Bum jaa raha tha .. Sab log unko Dur Se hi pehchaan rahe they (*distinguish*) ..Raste main wo zor zor se BOL BUM BOL BUM chilla raha tha (*Slogan*) ..aisa manana hai ki logo ki manokamna poori hoti hia (*belief with Less Current Meaning*)/ *A shibboleth is like a motto or catchphrase* that members of a group tend to say, like the conservative shibboleth that the only good government is a small government. /Ex - Utility is our national shibboleth: the savior of the American businessman is fact and his uterine./

Apostate

*Noun पक्षत्यागी * An apostate is someone who has *deserted his cause.* The word apostate originally comes from a Greek word that meant "runaway slave." Now, apostate has a religious or political tone to it, so someone might call you "a political apostate" if you ran for office as a Republican during one election and then ran as a Democrat in the following election.

Inductee

*One who is inducted, especially a person newly admitted to military service* Someone who is drafted into military service One of the persons who compose a social group (especially individuals who have joined and participate in a group organization)*a person inducted into an organization or social group*

haughty

*Snobbish* Adj - *disdainfully proud*; snobbish; scornfully arrogant; supercilious: / Ex - Next to the palm tree, three haughty girls with pocket mirrors gossip as they reapply their makeup. /

Dogma

*Stating opinions without proof * Assertive of unproven ideas an official system of principles or tenets concerning faith, morals, behavior, etc., as of a church.

Sage

*Use the word sage for someone or something wise and judicious*. Thanks to the sage advice of your friend, you didn't write your teacher an angry e-mail! Although you might think of a wizard when you hear the word sage, really it means a wise man. Today you see it used to refer to someone who has insight in a particular field.* If someone is a policy sage, he knows just what advice to give politicians to make them understand the issue and respond successfully to it. In a totally unrelated use, there is also a plant called sage that is useful in home remedies and cooking.*

Heist

*When a man with a gun walks into a bank and says, "Give me all your money," that's a heist or a robbery at gunpoint.* Heist, pronounced "hīst," is a slang word for an armed robbery. It's also a slang word used to describe the act of stealing or breaking into someone's house to steal their stuff. In other words, it's a burglary. Heist can also act as a verb: "If you've heisted a diamond ring, you've stolen it."

ebb

*When something ebbs, it is declining, falling, or flowing away* . The best time to look for sea creatures in tidal pools is when the tide is on the ebb — meaning it has receded from the shore. Ebb is often used in the phrase, "ebb and flow," referring to the cyclical changing of the tides from low to high and back to low again. This sense of cyclical change can also be applied to other things. If you want to make money investing, you have to weather the ebb and flow of the stock market.

hive

*a place swarming with busy occupants* the colony of bees inhabiting a hive. *Hub , Center*

intuit(in+two+at)

/M - *Intuition* / An effortless, immediate, automatic feeling or thought, as contrasted with explicit, conscious reasoning

bromide

/M - Bromide - *Salts of Hydrobromic Acid which was used as a Sedative also is a trite/* Noun 1. a trite or obvious remark 2.any of the salts of hydrobromic acid; formerly used as a sedative but now generally replaced by safer drugs /But strikingly, when pressed to name truths that need telling, Mr Christie's backers mostly offered conservative bromides./ /His address was long on bromides and short on substance./ /The best paternal bromides should be endlessly applicable./

derring-do

/M - Daring + Doer / brave and heroic feats

Delible

/M - Deletable / *Capable of Being deleted*

ecclesi

/M - Ek Lassi -Ek lassi sardaron ko christian(Church) bana saktey hain ../ *having to do with the church*

expound

/M - Extra Pound - If given recipe directions include "some sugar," "some onions," and "some flour" as ingredients, you might ask the chef to *expound ( Explain or Provide details ) * by adding measurements of how much of extra pound to use /

gobbet

/M - Goblet - Goblet main boht kam quantity main koi drink ko taste karne ke liye dena (*छोटा टुकड़ा*)/ a piece or portion (as of meat); a small fragment or extract; *a small quantity of liquid*

inimitable

/M - In (Not ) + Imitated - Things that are truly one of a kind and cant be copied /

Languish

/M - Language + ish - If you go to Germany and you don't know German , you will be *languished (Pitiful , weak , दुर्बल , कमजोर होना)* in boredom / To languish is to become pitiful or weak because you're sick, in love, or stuck somewhere. A prisoner might languish in jail, longing for her freedom. Languish, like languid, is from the Latin word languere which means to "be weak or faint." *Your houseplants might languish in a dark dry corner. A Romantic poet might languish on a velvet couch with the back of her hand to her forehead. People in operas love to languish: *

Liturgy

/M - Lethargy - Iron Man was so lethargic that whole US worshiped together*(Public Worship)* for his sickness.. And he was asked to work for a month at Homeless shelter (*Public Services*)/ Noun - पूजन पद्धति 1. Public Worship , Ritual 2. the forms of public services officially prescribed by a Church

lineation

/M - Line+Action - *Lines ko Arrange karna Poetry Action ke liye */ noun - 1. a division into lines. 2. an arrangement or group of lines. /Ex - She relies almost exclusively on lineation and tone for her effects, and writes spare, pointed lyrics of remarkable power /

Limpid

/M - Liquid - Water is the pond was so (*Clear and Transparent*) and because wind was not blowing it was calm (*Completely Calm, Without Distress*)/ Adj पारदर्शक , स्वच्छ , निर्मल 1. clear, transparent, or pellucid, as water, crystal, or air: /We could see to the very bottom of the limpid pond./ /a limpid style; limpid prose/ 3. completely calm; without distress or worry: /a limpid, emotionless existence./

listeria

/M - Listerine - Listerine se gargle karne se Muhn Ke (* bacteria* ) marr jate hain / *Bacteria , Pathogenic for Human* / Ex- Both salmonella and listeria are found in multiple foods./

mendicant

/M - Mandi + cant - There is a statute which aver that *mendicants ( भिखारी)* cant beg inside Mandi / *People who live off begging can be called mendicants*. However, you probably wouldn't call your kids mendicants, even though they beg you for stuff, because the word mendicant also implies extreme poverty. *The noun mendicant can also refer to a man belonging to a religious order, such as the Franciscan Friars — who do not own personal property but live together in a monastery and survive off alms donated by others*. As an adjective, mendicant describes someone who lives such an existence.

Meter

/M - Meter + Poetry - Meter Lambi poem ko uske rhythm ke liye measure karna / Measure the rhythm made by the arrangement of words in poems

flinch

/M - Pinch - When you pinch someone really hard he will react in * flinch ( React to pain दर्द की शिकन पीछे हटना) */ To flinch is to react to pain by wincing, pulling away, or cringing. Often it's used to describe a person who shows a moment of weakness or fright: * he was so tough, I thought he'd never flinch, but snakes really freak him out.* To flinch is to pull away suddenly or recoil when something frightens or hurts you. People flinch at different things. Needles, for example, cause some people to flinch, while they're not even noticed by others. If you can withstand something awful without showing it, you're likely to hear someone say "Wow! You didn't even flinch!" Think of it as a combination of flee and pinch. If you don't flee when you get pinched, you don't flinch.

Pristine(Pris+teeen)

/M - Priest - Priests and Nuns are suppose to be *Pristine (completely free from dirt or contamination)*/ *If something is pristine it's immaculately clean or has never been used. *So please check your shoes before walking on a pristine white carpet. A long, long time ago pristine was used to describe primitive or ancient things. It wasn't until 1899 that the word grew to mean "unspoiled" or "pure." Ecologists strive to preserve pristine rain forests, just as vacationers are always looking for a pristine strip of beach to lounge on. A new car should arrive to you in pristine condition, and hopefully you'll do your best to keep it that way.

bumpkin

/M - Pumpkin - An Bumpkin (*An awkward simple rustic person*) acting like he is Pumpkin.

Sibyl

/M - Sibal - Kapil Sibal ki Biwi Fortune bata sakti hai(*Sorceress*) / Noun - a female prophet or witch or or sorceress

Hasten

/M- Hurry - जल्दी करना/ *The verb hasten means to move at a high speed. If you hasten to your room, no one will know that you came in late.* Hasten comes from the word haste, which means* "excessive speed or urgency." The words hurry and hasten are synonyms. *Hasten can also mean "to make happen quickly," like when you open a window in the kitchen when you are cooking to hasten the room's cooling down. Hasten also means "to be quick," like when you hasten to tell everyone that the rumor going around about you isn't true. /"This has got to be the oldest way in the human race to hasten death," he said. /

Misnomer

/M- Mis(wrong)+Name= An Incorrect or unsuitable Name /

Truant

/M- Taunt - Colleagues taunt each other for *Truanting( कर्तव्य से भागने , वाला गैर हाजिर रहने वाला )* work / 1. one who is absent without permission 2. someone who shirks duty

Upbraid

/M- Up+ Braid - Hair Stylist ne ek bandi ke braid ki waaat laga dee thi , bandi ka dimaag kharaab hua aur wo *Upbraid(scream and curse at someone for an error he made.)* karne lage hair stylist ke upar/ Verb - *express criticism towards*

Colossal(Kolo + sal )

1. *विराट , विशाल* /M - Colosseum - Colosseum in Rome is *colossal (विराट , विशाल)* / Colossal describes something so large it makes you say, "Whoa!" You might have a colossal amount of homework, or see a colossal pyramid while vacationing in Egypt. *Colossal can refer to an item's physical size, like a giant redwood tree, but it can also be used to describe the force or scope of something — like the colossal force of a thunderstorm* that knocked down the redwood tree, or the colossal scope of your school project on the history of the redwoods that seems like it will never, ever end. It comes from the Greek word kolossos, meaning "gigantic statue."

Sanction

1. Approval 2. Impose a penalty

Champion

1. a person who backs a politician or a team etc.****a person who defends a person or cause*

whirlwind

1. a small spinning windstorm 2. *a confused rush*

Nuzzle

1. rub noses 2. dig out with the snout /"the pig nuzzled the truffle"/ 3. move or arrange oneself in a comfortable and cozy position /Now, the horse is front and center, waiting for the next treat, eager to nuzzle her caretakers./ /It takes a while — and a lot of hesitation — but the couple reunites, and nuzzling affection reigns./

Monotony

1.Mono Tone - Lack of variety in pitch or Cadence 2. Wearisome (Tiresome , Tedious )

smack

1.a blow from a flat object (as an open hand) 2.deliver a hard blow to 3.* have an element suggestive (of something)* /"his speeches smacked of racism"/

Succubus

1.a demon in female form, said to have sexual intercourse with men in their sleep. Compare incubus (def 1). 2.a strumpet or prostitute.

Clergy

A body of officials who perform religious services, such as priests, ministers or rabbis. /Ex - Clergy on the catwalk as designer vestments spread/ Hindi - *पादरी लोग*

Coherent

Adjective 1. *Logically Connected , Consistent * /a coherent argument./ 2. *Sticking Together.* /a coherent mass of sticky candies./

Affable

Adjective *diffusing warmth and friendliness*

Discr*ETE*

Discrete - * अलग ,विभिन्न* Discreet - * Prudent , Secretive * Discrete means separate or divided. A discrete unit is a separate part of something larger. A room is a discrete space within a house, just as the transmission is a discrete part of a car engine. If something is discrete, it has its own space. An ice cube comes from an ice tray, but it has its own discrete compartment. A student government might have discrete committees for different projects *Anything distinct and separated is discrete.*

gnarled

Knotted, twisted, lumpy

Spiff up

Make Neat Smart or Trim

Sinister

People who are *left-handed* might feel unlucky having to use a desk designed for right-handers, but there probably wasn't any sinister, *or evil*, intent behind the design. Or was there?

hack around

Slang. *To Pass the time idly* .

communitarianism

Social reform movement of the nineteenth century driven by the belief that by establishing small communities based on common ownership of property, a less competitive and individualistic society could be developed. /** Small Communities **/

Diamagnetism

Substances with no unpaired electrons are *weakly repelled* by a magnetic field . Like Water

hit the nail on the head

To describe exactly what is causing a situation or problem

freight

Verb 1 . loaded , burden Hindi - *भरना* / a story heavily freighted with private meaning. / /It took all night to freight the ship./ Noun - *Cargo , Goods * Slang - *Cost or Price* , especially when high / I'd like a larger house, but can't afford the freight. /

rakishly

With a careless, casual look; dashing

Ukase/Diktat/Fiat

an authoritative decree, official edict

cerebrum(ceree+brum)

anterior portion of the brain consisting of two hemispheres; dominant part of the brain in humans

Diactinic

capable of transmitting actinic rays.

accipitrine

of or relating to or belonging to the genus *Accipiter (or to typical hawks)*

to make the fur fly

to cause serious trouble.

Exorcism

*Exorcism, when it's used literally to mean evicting bad spirits, is a religious term.* The word can also be used as a metaphor for *getting rid of something negative*: "Finally telling you the truth felt like an exorcism."

Laugh to scorn

* Mazzak bana dena kisi ki baat ka * To ridicule , *Deride* / Her good advice was laughed to scorn./

Expatriate

*Expatriate is someone living in a foreign country,left his or her homeland or compelled to leave one's homeland. .* An example of a an expatriate is a Canadian who has moved from Canada to be married and employed in the United States.

Meteoric

*1. Very fast * Because meteors move through the sky so quickly, *we often refer to something moving very fast* as meteoric. A newly-popular singer might be said to experience a meteoric rise to the top. (The fall can be meteoric, too.) /In a sense, we did have a meteoric rise, but we had put in our 10,000 hours./

strive

*परिश्रम करना* *To strive is to endeavor, reach, or strain for something above or beyond.* We strive for self-improvement, a better world, or success in general /"She has a Type A personality, where she always wants to strive to be the best."/

lout

* गंवार* /M - Laat- Lootera main Ranveer ki Ganvaro waali Acting(*Gawar*) ko laaat maro/ Noun - an awkward, stupid person; clumsy, ill-mannered boor . Hindi - गंवार

illicit

* ग़ैरकानूनी illicit means not allowed by law or custom*. An illicit drug trade is one that happens under the radar of the law. Illicit usually refers to something that is not morally proper or acceptable, such as an illicit affair with a married man, or illicit sex. Illicit is from Latin illicitus, from the prefix in- "not" plus licitus "lawful."

heap

* ढेर A great big pile of something is a heap *. Your sloppy brother might keep all of his clothes in a heap on his bedroom floor.

Trench On/Upon

1. *To Encroach or infringe on * 2. To Come Close to /His remarks were trenching on poor taste./

bayonet

1. a knife that can be fixed to the end of a rifle and used as a weapon 2. stab or kill someone with a bayonet

dally

Dally means "*to waste time.*" When you dally, you will cause a delay because of your dawdling. You have probably heard the expression "to dilly-dally" — which means "to dawdle." Well, if you take the dilly out of dilly-dally to get just dally — you still have pretty much the same meaning. *Dally has other common definitions, such as "to flirt" (especially without care of the result) or "to play."* The light tone is probably an echo of its origin, which is likely the French word dalier, meaning "to amuse oneself."

Acumen

Noun - चतुरता, Smart *If you have acumen, you are very sharp at what you do* . You hope your accountant and your surgeon are both known for their acumen. The noun acumen comes from the Latin word acumen, meaning "a point," or "sting." *If you are able to make pointed decisions, if you have a sharp intellect, if you make good strategic moves, if you are successful in your field, or if your business instincts are spot-on, you have acumen*. Even if you inherit an entire wholesale furniture dynasty from your grandfather, you could end up with nothing if you don't have his business acumen. / Ex - remarkable acumen in business matters./

banter

Noun - हंसी-दिल्लगी करना , छेड़ /M - Banner - Banner + Laughter - Logo ne Hassi thitoli ke liye(*Playful , Teasing Remarks*) ek bada banner bana liya and road par laga diya / 1. an exchange of light, playful, teasing remarks; / Ex - The golf is pretty good, the banter better. / /Ex - The banter is witty and entertaining. /

Hypochondria

Noun - Chronic and abnormal anxiety about imaginary symptoms and ailments रोग होने का भ्रम

Asylum

The definition of asylum is *protection, a place of rest or safety or a place where people go when their mental condition keeps them from being able to live on their own*. A hospital for the mentally ill is an example of an asylum. A country that accepted a person from another country that was in danger is an example of a country that gave asylum to that person.

Congruous

appropriate or fitting *compatible* /Germany and the US were "fully congruous" on Iran/ Hindi - संगत

osteosis

bone illness

apogamy

Asexually

effused

/M - Enthusiasm + fused /*marked by great enthusiasm*

Renaissance(Renai+sance)

* Rebirth* rebirth of art, culture, and intellect started in Italy

josh(Jaw+sh)

* मज़ाक करना * 1. *Good Nature banter* 2. banter in a teasing way.

Extrinsic

*अनावश्यक* Extrinsic means *not connected to the essential nature of something.*

Insurgent

*An insurgent is a rebel or a revolutionary, someone who takes up arms against the authorities.* So think of an insurgent as a fighter who rises against the people in power Often insurgents are considered terrorists because they use violence to intimidate people.

rampant

Adj 1. unrestrained and violent 2. (of a plant) having a lush and unchecked growth

Underwrite

आर्थिक समर्थन का वादा करना आर्थिक उत्तरदायित्व लेना बीमे से सुरक्षित करना

Calligraphy

/M - Kaali + Graphy : Kaali ki sundar Handwriting hai / *the art of writing beautifully*

amicable

*The adjective amicable means "friendly" — but in particular, use it when describing relations one might otherwise expect to be unfriendly*. The end of a romantic relationship that's less than amicable might involve broken dishes or broken bones.

Oculate

Adj 1. possessing eyes 2. *relating to or resembling eyes*: / Ex - oculate markings /

Amity

noun 1. *friendship; peaceful harmony*. 2. mutual understanding and a peaceful relationship, especially between nations; peace; accord. Hindi - मित्रता

infusion

*act of introducing* or instilling a quality; liquid solution

pique(Peek)

*To excite or irritate someone .* /*Mnemonics:- Remember Q in pick ..it says kyun mujhey pick kiya */

Cartography

/*M - Kato + Graph - Accenture ke Graph ko kaat kar ...usey Ghar se office ke Map main Banana */ Noun - the production of maps, including construction of projections, design, compilation, drafting, and reproduction.

Nadir

/*M - Na+gir = Lowest point jahan se or jyada neeche koi nahi gir sakta */ lowest point Hindi - पतन , पताल

chums

/M - Hum - *Friends , Pals* / friends, pals, buddies

Contraceptive

device, method or agent that prevents conception

Ludicrous

(adj.) ridiculous, laughable, absurd /*Hacktivists cry foul over US government's 'ludicrous' cyber crackdown*/

pelt

(v.) *to throw a stream of things*; to strike successively; to hurry /Czechs pelt their president with eggs at Velvet Revolution anniversary/ Noun - the untanned hide or skin of an animal. /Ex - with pelts reaching record prices at auction/

iconoclast

* 1. Bold thinkers , परम्परा तोड़ने वाला* /M - Icon + Clash - *Are you always challenging the establishment? Or provoking popular thought by attacking traditions and institutions? Then you're definitely an iconoclast.* / To be called an iconoclast today is usually kind of cool — they're rugged individualists, bold thinkers who don't give a hoot what tradition calls for.

esquire

/M - Ass + Acquired - Ek gaddhe ko Knight ka title mil gaya he was tooo happy /- n. *A title of dignity, office, or courtesy.*

inward- looking

Adj - *self centered* , Narrow minded

Collage

Noun 1. *any collection of diverse things* /a collage of memories/

goblet

Noun - 1.a vessel for drinking, usually of glass or metal, with a base and stem but without handles

repent

Verb - *The verb repent means "to feel sorry for something you've done." When you repent, you acknowledge what you did and vow to change your ways.*

Despise

Verb - *to regard with contempt, distaste, disgust*, or disdain; scorn; loathe.

Allay

*Appease * /M - Allah - If you pray Allah then you will feel (*relieved , to put to rest* )/ Verb शान्त करना , कम कर देना 1. To put to rest , calm , quiet 2. To lessen or relieve; mitigate; alleviate: /He wanted to allay suspicion that the Watergate probe was being driven by such an obvious Nixon adversary—when in fact, it was. /

penchant(pen+shant)

*A penchant is a strong preference or tendency*. If you have a penchant for pizza, you either eat it daily, or wish you did. /One wonders whether an establishment-backed Bush is the right candidate to appeal to a state with a penchant for "mavericks."/

Rigor

*Austerity , कठिनाई* Or Rigour Noun - 1. *strictness*, severity, or *harshness* 2. severity of living conditions; hardship; *austerity*: Hindi - कठिनाई / Ex - Building vigour from rigour /

Impending

/*M- I + Am + Pending - Please complete me as soon as possible */ Adj 1. about to happen; *imminent*: /Last year, rumors surfaced of his impending nuptials but he apparently got cold feet. /

Scion

/*M- Son - Son having (Ci) in between - see my son*/ Descendent, twig used for grafting.

collywobbles

/*Mnemonics:- Wobbling Flies in Stomach **/ Butterflies in stomach, upset stomach .

Dormant

Asleep; not in an active state

Larceny

Larceny is the legal term for stealing. Grand larceny is when you take something worth a lot of money, petty larceny when the stolen item is worth relatively little. *चोरी *

buxom

Marilyn Monroe and the triple loop roller coaster: What do they have in common? *Some serious curves*. But you could only call the lady buxom, or totally voluptuous. If she's a brick! House!, then she's certainly buxom. It's a polite way of saying stacked, quite curvaceous, and especially well endowed in the bosom area. This body type used to be the ideal, long before waifish supermodels took over the catwalk. Yet busty women everywhere are certainly holding out hope that buxom makes a comeback.

Mettle

Mettle - *The Courage to Carry On* Meddle - *To interfere with someone or something* /Politicians meddle with existing taxation arrangements at their peril./

Liberal

Favorable to progress or reform; believing in maximum possible*individual freedom; tolerant, open-minded; generous(adj.)*; a person with such beliefs or practices (n) *A person whose views favor more govt involvemnt in business, social welfare, minority rights, &increased govt spending*

Potable

The definition of potable is something that is *safe to drink.* Unspoiled milk is an example of something that would be described as potable If something is potable that means it's safe to drink. In developed countries, tap water is usually potable. Puddle water is not.

hogg/hogget

any of several other *domestic animals*, as a bullock/sheep, that are one year old

Futile

fruitless 1. *unproductive of success 2. producing no result or effect *

cud

the portion of food that a ruminant returns from the first stomach to the mouth to *chew a second time.* /Why is it that cows need several stomachs and have to ruminate/

To Egg someone

to pelt with eggs

Collate

verb - *collate specifically means to put pages in a correct order . The word can be used more generally to mean to put anything into the proper sequence क्रमवार लगाना, तुलना करना*.

Speck

*Speck - a small or tiny piece of something Speckle - Small spots of contrasting color*

Suspender

/* M- hold + suspended pants*/ two straps that pass over the shoulders to hold up pants

Unconscionable

Not controlled by conscience; unscrupulous Hindi - अनर्थक

Penury

/M - Penny - Jo log apni life fenke huey sikko/ pennies pe chalatey hian ,jo boht gareeb hotey hian unhey Penury kehtey hain / Noun 1. *a state of extreme poverty or destitution*

whodunit

/M - Who + Done+ It ? - A novel on murder jiska title ho Who Done It ? / *a story about a crime (usually murder) presented as a novel or play or movie*

ecclesiastical

/M - ecclesi -Ek lassi - Church Related / Adj - गिरजाघर संबंधी 1. *of or relating to the church or the clergy*; churchly; clerical; not secular.

jalopy

/M -Ek car jo har taraph se Jal peeye matlab har taraf se jung lag gaya hai .. *खटारा* ho gayi hai/ खटारा unpretentious automobile. / Ex- A jalopy is a model one step above a ''junker''/

caseous

/M : *Case of cheese* / of damaged or necrotic tissue; cheeselike

Tome

/M- To Me - When you are asked to read a * tome(Really Large Book) * Then you may say with surprise "To me"??? / The definition of a tome is a large academic book.

Congruent

Adj 1. Agreeing , Correspondence , Congruous 2. Same shape or size

Hack into

Computers . To *Break Into Computer*

billow

Verb - 1. become inflated 2. rise and move, as in waves or billows लहराना 3. move with great difficulty Noun - बड़ी लहर /"You just see huge, billowing clouds of smoke in the air," she said./ /Beneath a sky made opaque by billowing dust, a mechanised shovel driver steered his vehicle toward the vast wall of an open coal mine./

vestments

ritual garments worn by the clergy clothes

Tarnish

दाग To tarnish is *to become dull or discolored*. Silver tends to tarnish easily, which is why your mother is always having you polish the family silver. As a noun, a tarnish is the dull layer of corrosion that sometimes forms on metal items, usually the result of the metal reacting to oxygen in the air. *Metals are most likely to tarnish, but so can anything that once felt sparkly and bright but has lost its luster — even you*. If the new kid just beat you in chess, your reputation as the best chess player in your class has started to tarnish. Better not lose again!

veil

* A veil is a cloth covering the head and face, mostly worn by women. Wedding veils are drawn back when the groom hears, "Now you may kiss the bride." (Or else the groom gets a gauzy mouthful.) * This is a technical term for part of an embryo or mushroom, but it's usually a covering for the head and face. Priests wear veils during certain Catholic ceremonies, and a grieving widow might wear a veil at her husband's funeral. To veil also means to conceal something. You could veil your attempt to steal some cookies by turning the TV up loud as a distraction. When something — like a lie — is "thinly veiled," people can see right through it.

ravel

* Ravel is an interesting verb, in that it can mean both "tangle" and "untangle." So if you work to ravel yarn into a neat ball, your cat may come along and try to ravel it again.* The first syllable in ravel is accented and gets the short a sound, as in apple: "RA-vle" How can a word mean both one thing and its opposite? In the case of ravel, the answer is sewing: As threads come unwoven from a cloth, they become tangled on each other. Since untangling is never far from tangling, ravel covers both meanings. /His simplicity is intact; the threads of his brown cloak haven't been ravelled./ /It identifies signs of "ravelling" - damage to the asphalt that leads to cracks and potholes./ /Quiet and unassuming, Henríquez's novel ravels slowly and surprisingly, and without an iota of sentiment, delivers an original coming-to-America tale./

Agnostic

* Theist - Who Believes in God Agnostic - A believer and Disbeliever in God . Atheist - Doesn't Believes in God * * संशयवादी* In 1869, English biologist T.H. Huxley coined this noun referring to someone whose religious beliefs lie somewhere in between those of a theist and an atheist — that is, * a believer and a disbeliever in God * . Huxley combined the Greek prefix a-, meaning "not," with gnostos, "known." It can be used as a noun or adjective, and it can also refer to uncertainty about questions other than the existence of God: * "Some philosophers remain agnostic as to whether people have free will." *

pervert

* पथ भ्रष्ट करना , दुरुपयोग करना , बिगाड़ना* *A pervert is a person who doesn't behave normally, often when it comes to sex* : perverts pervert the accepted rules of society. The most common use of pervert is as a word for people who are deviant sexually: that could mean a lot of things, ranging from being kinky to being dangerous, such as pedophiles. * Perverting also means changing or subverting something * . A cop who breaks the law is perverting the law. A criminal who convinces other people to become criminals is perverting them. * So when you think of pervert, think change — change for the worse. *

dispose

* सुव्यवस्थित करना , दे देना , Inclined , चाहना* If you dispose of something, *you get rid of it*. Don't want that sweatshirt with the clown's face on it? Give it away, throw it out, even sell it — these are all ways to dispose of that awful shirt. The verb dispose comes from the Latin word disponere, meaning *"put in order," "arrange," or "distribute"* — like when you dispose volunteers to collect trash at a park. The word of usually follows dispose when it means "getting rid of something." Another meaning is "*make willing or open to something, Incline* " like your childhood love of reading that disposes you to becoming a life-long reader.

haul

*1. move or take something, usually big and heavy 2. lot of something that you caught or won* To haul is to *move or take something, usually big and heavy* , and put it somewhere else. If you've ever moved to a new house, then you know that having to haul all your stuff there can really take the joy out of moving into a new place. You'll want to reserve haul for situations in which carrying something takes a lot of effort and ain't a lot of fun. You don't haul a sack of feathers, for example. You haul a bag of boulders, or a box of books. Haul is usually a verb, but you can also use it as a noun, * when you're talking about lot of something that you caught or won. We went digging for clams—look at our haul! After winning at blackjack, take your haul and hit the road. Don't risk losing it all on roulette. *

concussion

*A concussion is a violent blow, especially to the head, that often injures the brain or causes a loss of consciousness — an all-too-frequent occurrence, unfortunately, in contact sports like football or boxing. * First used around 1400, concussion originates from the Latin concussionem, which means "a shaking." Your brain certainly gets "a shaking" when you take a heavy blow to the head, which sometimes causes injury or permanent damage. It's not just people, though, who get concussions; a building can also suffer from a concussion during an earthquake

gallop

*A gallop is a horse's fastest gait, a full-on run सरपट दौड़ाना*. A loud noise might cause a trotting horse to panic and break into a gallop. Any four-legged animal can run at a gallop, although the word most often describes horses and ponies. To run this way is also to gallop: "I watched the horses gallop around the track." You can even use the word to emphasize a person's fast and heavy gait: "My little brother has to gallop around the house a few times before he'll go to bed." /A well-timed prank, or a misunderstanding, can gallop across the world on Twitter and Facebook in minutes, accelerating with every share and retweet./

Ether

*Common Anesthetic , A substance that was said to fill all space and make all bodies , Sky * *Ether is a chemical that used to be a common anesthetic that you inhaled before undergoing surgery*. In most countries, doctors have replaced it with less flammable, safer drugs. The chemical ether is a colorless liquid that's still used as an anesthetic in some developing countries and as an industrial solvent. The Latin root is aether, which means "*the upper pure, bright air*". Ether was originally a scientific term for what 19th century physicists called "the fifth element," a substance that was said to fill all space and make up all bodies. *In modern times, ether has come to be a literary term that refers to the sky*

Epigram

*Epigram - short clever remarks , Aphorism Epigraph - Epigram written on an Object * /M - A.P + Gram(Gaon) - In AP's every gram or village its written that "Never confuse Education with Intelligence" , hence they teach students to be Intelligent than educated . This *epigram, short clever remarks सूक्ति* definitely make sense/ *An epigram is a short, clever remark *. One of Oscar Wilde's many memorable epigrams is "I can resist everything but temptation." Epigram comes from the Latin word epigramma, which means "an inscription." If you've ever seen an inscription on, say, the back of a watch, you know the writing has to be brief. It won't surprise you, then, that epigrams are very short poems, sayings, or famous quotations, like Benjamin Franklin's "Little strokes fell great oaks," a memorable reminder to keep working toward big goals or to pay attention to little details, the opposite of an epigram from our era: "Don't sweat the small stuff. *An epigraph is a kind of epigram, but it's written on an object, like a coin, a building, or a book*. An epigraph often comes at the start of a novel or short story, and gives the reader a little hint about what's to come:

insignia

/M - * In + Sign - an insignia is a sign or badge that shows your connection to some organization.* / An insignia is a badge you wear to show your position or affiliation. If you're an Eagle Scout, you can wear that insignia, or, if you're a Red Sox fan, you might wear the team logo as your insignia. The word insignia includes the word "sign" — an insignia is a sign that shows your connection to some organization. Military officers wear insignias that indicate their rank. When you watch the president of the United States give a speech, you'll see on the lectern the official presidential insignia — the circular seal with the eagle inside.

Epilogue

/M - A.P + Log - A.P ke log har baat ke baad usey summarize kartey hian ki ...toh bhaijaan aap samjhey na , ye yun hua ..This last statements which * wraps up whole story is called Epilogue* / If you like to read the end of a book first, then maybe the epilogue is for you. The epilogue is a short piece that wraps up the end of a story. The noun epilogue can also refer to the short speech at the end of a play that one of the characters speaks directly to the audience. In Shakespeare's play The Tempest, the epilogue is a 20-line monologue spoken by Prospero. Epilogue comes from the Greek word epilogus meaning the conclusion of a speech

accentuate

/M - Accent + u + Ate - If you use a lot of emphasis to describe part of a meal, as in "the steak was SOOO good, and I liked the salad too," you "accent" what "-u" "-ate," or * accentuate ,To accentuate something is to emphasize it. * , the highlight of the meal — the steak./ There is an old song with the lyrics "Accentuate the positive, eliminate the negative." The drawn-out pronunciation of the word accentuate (ack-SEN-chew-ate) draws attention to the word, which is exactly what accentuate does: it draws attention to something. Sometimes, though, a negative quality gets the focus, as in "his bad mood did a lot to accentuate his reputation as a grump," but the negative is usually an unintentional way to get attention.

benign

/M - Be + Nine : Ek bande ko BE ke first sem main 9 marks aaye out of 100 , he was so depressed ki aage kya hoga .. tab uske dost ne bola bhai ye benign (* मामूली, unharmful , mild *) baatey hain and tere career pe koi asar nahi hoga / Someone or something that is benign is gentle, kind, mild, or unharmful: a benign soul wouldn't hurt a fly. Benign describes a range of qualities, all of them positive. When talking about a person, it means "gentle." In reference to weather or climate, it means "mild." In some other contexts, it simply means "*not harmful*"; you might speak of "a benign tumor" or "an environmentally benign chemical." The word comes from a Latin root benignus meaning "well born," but the implied meaning is "kind" or "pleasant" — it's hard to get mad at someone who has a benign disposition.

Brusque

/M - Brush + k yun - You want to Kiss without brushing your teeth .. that's *Brusque ( rude and unfriendly)*/ If you ask a salesperson with help finding something and all you get in response is a brusque "Everything's out on the shelves," you'll probably take your business elsewhere. *A brusque manner of speaking is unfriendly, rude, and very brief.* Brush and brusque are not related, but they sound similar--when someone is brusque, you often feel that they are trying to give you the "brush off." Near synonyms for brusque are curt, short, and gruff. Brusque (pronounced "brusk") was borrowed from the French word meaning "lively, fierce," from Italian brusco "coarse, rough."

badger

/M - Bugger - Who always *badger , bother* you / *Badger is to bother*. Persistently. On and on. Without stop. Relentlessly. Over and over. Endlessly. It comes from the name of that chipmunk-like animal that burrows into the ground. If you badger someone, you get under their skin. A badger is an animal that digs tunnels under ground to keep warm. To badger can also mean to persuade someone through constant annoying efforts. You might badger your mom to add another hour to your curfew or badger your friend to give you a turn with a video game he has been hogging.

calumny(Calamy)

/M - Column - Writing columns on Daily news paper to *Calumny ( destroy reputation of your opponent or to destroy friendship by falsely quoting them out of context चुगली , बदनामी)*/ Use the noun calumny to *characterize verbal attacks that are meant to destroy reputations or friendships*. You've probably seen political ads during election time that rely on calumny to move voters. Calumny comes from the Latin word calvi, meaning "*to trick, deceive," which is why it can also describe falsely accusing someone or quoting them out of context with the intent to do them harm*. Some political candidates use this tactic against opponents in the hope that voters will be tricked into thinking that the accusations are true. /The Americans should know the character of the men they are dealing with in Singapore and not get themselves further dragged into calumny./

Conniving

/M - Con + Diving - A group of divers were planning their dive near Australia where Sharks presence is highly recorded , One of the diver made plan to send his foe in the water . The person suspected that something is wrong and called him *conniving (षड्यंत्रकारी , धूर्त*)/ *Someone conniving is calculating, scheming, and shrewd — in other words, sneaky and up to no good.* Do you know anyone who is always trying to get away with things? Do they constantly look for ways to get out of trouble or work? Those kind of people are conniving. *This is a word for secretive, shifty behavior.* However, being conniving isn't the worst thing in the world — it's negative, but you probably wouldn't say a murderer is conniving. *It's usually reserved for con men, shady business moguls, and manipulative social climbers.*

Prophylactic

/M - Condoms - This use of the word started because condoms, which are prophylactics, * were originally designed to prevent disease, not pregnancy.* / Describes something that can prevent something negative, such as disease. *Prophylactic surgery to remove a mole can prevent skin cancer.* * If you want to avoid getting sick, you can get a vaccine, take medicine, or have surgery — all of which are considered prophylactic measures. * Delve deeper into the history of this four-syllable word and you'll find the Greek term prophulaktikos, which means to "guard before." Prophylactic can also describe a contraceptive used to prevent pregnancy.

confer

/M - Confirm - Jab tum apne teacher se kuch inputs/suggestions lena chahtey ho then us conversation ko Confer boltey hian , *So confer is to consult together; compare opinions; carry on a discussion or deliberation. Confer can also to bestow upon as gift , favor or honor etc* / If you gab, chat, and talk it up with someone, you have conversation, but if you're looking for input from each other as you talk, you confer, or consult, together. * They had a family meeting to confer about a schedule for sharing the new laptop. * Many uses of the verb confer involve consulting with another person or as a group. * Confer has a second use meaning "bestow," which means to award or hand over something. You can confer a medal on a winner or hero, or you can confer status through a promotion or assignment.* Each year the teacher would confer the special honor of summer hamster-sitter on one responsible student.

contraption

/M - Contraception - Contraception devices has specific purpose of fertility control however the * device is overly complicated , मशीन , Jugaad * / *A contraption is a device that has a specific purpose and is often overly complicated. *If your dad yells, "Get that contraption out of here!" He doesn't appreciate the Rube Goldberg machine you made out of his golf clubs. The word is English, all right, but how it got here is a mystery. It may be from a combination of contrive and adaptation. Contraptions — also called gadgets or gizmos — are devices people make for various purposes. *Often, this word is used when someone isn't quite sure what something is, as in "What's that contraption?" Oh that's just a dog-walking machine made of a roller skate, bacon, and four paper clips.* /These contraptions - and their hopes for a better life - come from a surprising source: an Israeli hospital./

coax

/M - Cox - Cox company se ek bande ko offer aaya , HR manager was *coaxing( Convincing Gently )* him that our company is really good and comes in fortune 100 ./ *When you coax someone, you try to convince him gently, with pleasant words and maybe a little flattery*. You'll have to be patient, as you can't rush someone you're trying to coax. When you coax, you have to be nice about it - you can't threaten or force. You put on a little charm and gently urge, so that the person or thing is happy about being coaxed. You might coax the runaway elephant back into the zoo by patting her gently and talking into her ear. If you wake up with a terrible bedhead, you might coax your hair back into place with the help of a little hair gel and a comb.

Rave

/M - Crave - *If you rave about a book you just read, you're telling people you think it's great, or you're giving it a rave review.* Rave has two levels, one that implies you're very * excited about something and the other that you are too excited, so you seem crazy.* While raving about a movie means to talk it up, being a raving lunatic means you are engaging in a lot of crazy talk. *When you rave about a performance, you talk enthusiastically about it. Take that enthusiastic talking to the next level, and you might be called raving in the crazy sense*

Denouement(Dee+Nuu+ Maan)

/M - Day + New + Mon - Monday should start with new * Denouement (Resolution , अंतिम परिणाम ,फल)* / * You know that part of every movie after the big action scene, where things get explained, and the characters tie up loose ends * ? That's called the denouement, or the showing of how the plot eventually turns out. Denouement is a French word that literally means the * action of untying * , from a verb meaning to untie. The English word is pronounced like the French: day-noo-MON. The last syllable has a nasalized vowel instead of the n sound. You can use it outside the context of plays or novels, too: you might describe the denouement of an argument between two friends. /The denouement of her career came on October 25, 1944, when she sold out Carnegie Hall. / /The denouement itself appropriates the theme of the huntsman who spares the child he is obliged to kill. / /For anyone who cared to watch, the event and its denouement provided a graphic demonstration that the Iron Curtain was crumbling. /

Errant

/M - Errands - She went shopping for doing some errands but then her husband found her in an Arcade with her *naughty, misbehaving* son playing Planes. He scolded that you are doting your children to *wrong direction* / Something or someone described as errant has gone astray or done wrong by going in an unexpected direction. An errant bird might end up in northern Canada while his friends fly to southern Mexico for the winter. *Although errant is commonly used as a synonym for "misbehaving" or "naughty," it also refers to things that are just out of place भटका हुआ*. An errant bomb can hit a house instead of an army base, and an errant lock of hair can get in your eyes. Errant can be intentional, as in "the errant boys skipped school to go to the movies," or unintentional, as in "an errant snowball hit your neighbor instead of your arch enemy." /Israeli media speculated that it may have been an errant rocket that was not intentionally aimed at Israeli territory/

ethereal

/M - Ether +al - One of the patient had *अलौकिक insubstantial* experience after he was given Ether for Anesthetic purpose . He saw that he is flying in Sky and has *delicate and light* wings / Ethereal is something *airy and insubstantial*, such as a ghostly figure at the top of the stairs. It might also be something *delicate and light, like a translucent fabric, or a singer's delicate voice.* Ethereal comes from the Greek word for ether, which is a drug that makes you feel light headed and, in larger doses, causes you to lose consciousness. *An ethereal substance or sound is one that carries the feeling of ether--something you might see in a vision, that might strike you as heavenly or supernatural.* And, what is the mood — is it dreamy and ethereal, or is it dramatic and bold?

explicit

/M - Explicit - *Very Clear* / *Anything explicit is very clear, whether it's instructions or a dirty movie.* Thanks to parental-advisory warnings about "* explicit language" or "explicit violence,*" you might think this word only applies to things that are dirty, naughty, or adult in some way. That is a common meaning of explicit, but it's not the only meaning. * This also means anything that is clear and easy to understand* . Explicit orders are easy to carry out; explicit instructions are easy to follow. When someone is explicit, they're not beating around the bush or being confusing.

Expiate(X+pate)

/M - Extra + Pena + Ate (khana) - A cricketer ate and drank too much on the night before very important match , next day he was in hangover and team lost that match because of him ..he decided that he will Expiate this with quitting alcohol *प्रायश्चित्त करना*/ In the fairy tale, the baker must expiate his father's sins by bringing the witch three ingredients for a magic potion: a cow, a cape and a slipper. *Expiate means to make amends or atone for a wrong you or someone else has committed.* After the incident on the hill, a mortified Jill expiated her guilt by buying Jack a brand new crown. The shiny new crown served as compensation, or expiation, for the broken one. That it cost her so dearly made the expiatory gesture especially meaningful to poor Jack.

Flummox

/M - Flaim + Ox - An ox saw flame coming from a home .. he was flummox(* Bewilder , confound , चक्कर में डालना हैरान करना *) that what is this ? / Does the word flummox *bewilder, confound, dumbfound and generally mystify you? Well, fear no more, because flummox means all of these things!* Things that flummox you are probably not that serious, and often pretty amusing and informal: a TV remote or a crossword puzzle, for example, rather than something major like why your boyfriend or girlfriend broke up with you. (Now that's unfathomable.) Get this: linguists are actually mystified as to where the word flummox comes from — they're flummoxed, in other words. It may come from an old English word, flummock, meaning "to make untidy or confuse," but no one is really sure. Now, what could be more suitable?

Fulminate

/M - Full + Me + Ate - Maine itna kha liya hia ki mera pet ab explode ho jaayega , *Aise baatey ya cheeze jo explode ho unhey Fulminate kehtey hian */ Watch a *bomb fulminate or explode* and hope you're under safe cover. Have your parents fulminate or blow up at you for coming home past curfew and hope you're not grounded for too long. The word fulminate is made up of the Latin root fulmen meaning "lightning flash." Look up at the sky during a violent thunderstorm and chances are you'll catch thunder and lightning fulminate or explode loudly and violently overhead. But you needn't look to the sky alone for this kind of intensity. *If you find yourself in a room with passionate Republicans and Democrats debating, you might see them fulminate *or severely rail against each other's beliefs.

Giddy

/M - Giddy UP - In the show "Seinfield" the character Kramer uses Giddy up to say * Lets Go or ready to go * / *If you've ever spun in circles until you fell to the ground laughing, you know how it feels to be giddy . This adjective can mean dizzy, elated, or — as in the spinning around example -- a lightheaded, lighthearted combination of the two. * The hackneyed phrase "giddy as a schoolgirl" calls forth the image of a kid giggling with her friends over some adolescent foolishness. Giddy has been used to describe someone incapable of serious thought or easily excited as far back as the sixteenth century. Given that, in modern usage, giddy describes someone silly and frivolous, it's interesting to know that the Old English source for this word has a slightly darker tinge: gidig means "insane" or "god-possessed." /The guy ought to have been in giddy spirits, but something was troubling him./ /Better yet, everyone who visits is relatively rich, and many are in a giddy holiday mood./

Dross

/M - Gross - Gross things are *worthless, damaging बेकार , कूड़ा (Dross) * and cannot be used for any purpose , I simply hate them ./ *Things that are a total loss — really worthless or damaging — are dross*. You could call that gunk between your teeth that comes out when you floss, dross. No one wants it, and it's harmful if it stays. *While dross is a noun for stuff that's physically left over or useless*, like the nonmetallic stuff left when metal gets refined, it's also used for people and forms of art. A really bad movie can be called dross, and a low or despicable person can be dross. Debris, or trash, is another form of dross. "Searching the backyard for unexploded fireworks — the dross of Chinese New Year celebrations — was a tradition for the kids and a safeguard for the dogs

hornswoggle

/M - Horn + waggle - Hum sab log Navy pear gaye and waha pe Circus dekha , while returning we saw this guy with Verb- deprive of by deceit /Responding to a tweet from the reporter Chris Sheridan, who wrote that Jackson had been "hornswoggled," Jackson wrote, "I'm okay with the Dallas deal."/ /So calls for greater oversight are welcome, particularly given how Wall Street has hornswoggled some muni issuers over the years./

hagiography

/M - Hug+biography - Aisi biography jisko padh kar itna achha lage ki us bande ko jaa kar Hug kar lo ..*A hagiography is a type of biography that puts the subject in a very flattering light. * / Hagiographies are often about saints. The two halves of hagiography refer to holiness and writing, and it is something written about holy people. Originally, a hagiography was a biography of a saint written without skepticism or criticism. A hagiography idealizes the subject and puts them on a pedestal. These days, a hagiography is not necessarily written about a saint, but it still idolizes the subject. A hagiography makes the subject seems like a hero, or at least a wonderful, nearly perfect person.

Huallabaloo

/M - Hulla + Baloo - Baloo ne chotu ke naye haristyle ke upar boht bada fuss bana diya aur zor zor se hulla karne laga ki tum boht gande lag rahe ho .. Chotu ne kahan stop this *Hullabaloo ( Fuss on something of little or No Importance )*/ * Hullabaloo is a lovely term for a fuss or commotion, usually over something of little or no importance, like a celebrity's new hair style.* * Save hullabaloo for the trivial fuss * . Anything of real importance — a war, a murder, for example — merits a more serious term like "disturbance" or "outcry." Hullabaloo allegedly comes from the sound of lots of people saying "Hullo!" Hullo!" In other words, it's an onomatopoeic word, that is to say it sounds like its meaning, like hiss or tick tock or oink. Curious fact: there's no plural to hullabaloo: hullabaloos is not a word. /Another instance of this antitechnology mind-set is the hullabaloo over honeybees/ /Even the almighty dinner itself soon fades from memory, a testimony to the nature of Washington, where politics, pomp and power ultimately trump celebrity hullabaloo/

Inerrancy

/M - In (No)+ Error - Something that has *inerrancy is completely accurate and cannot be wrong.* Many Christians believe in the inerrancy of the Bible. / You're most likely to come across the noun inerrancy in a religious context. It usually describes Christian religious writing — particularly the Bible — and the word of God. People who believe in a literal interpretation of the Bible are most likely to emphasize its inerrancy. In other words, they think that everything in the Bible is the literal truth. Inerrancy comes from inerrant, which originally referred to stars in the sky, and which is rooted in inerrantem, "not wandering" in Latin.

Ensnare

/M - In(Put In ) + *Snare(Trap ," The world's a snare" )* - To ensnare something is to trap it. Instead of using snapping mousetraps, you might try to ensnare the mice in your kitchen and set them free outside./ While you can use the verb ensnare to talk about literally catching something in a trap, it's also useful for more figurative kinds of traps. Your *French teacher might try to ensnare you in becoming more involved in the French club, or rush hour traffic might ensnare you as you rush to make it to work on time. * The word combines the prefix en, or "put in," and snare, with its Old Norse root snara, "noose or snare."

infidel

/M - Infy + Delhi - Infosys delhin office employees are very complacent their company . They call other company employees as *Infidel (नमकहराम , अशुद्ध , काफिर)* as they think that people from other company doesnt follow Technical standard / *Infidel is a nasty way of referring to someone who does not follow the same religion you do. How can you call people infidels and expect them to believe your religion is tolerant?* Infidel comes to English from the Latin infidelis, which means "unfaithful," although it's almost always hurled at a person of different faith. You can also use the word more lightly to mean someone who doesn't share a common belief or opinion. Cries of "Infidel!" could be heard throughout the dorm when you announced that you didn't root for the local football team.

Innocuous

/M - Innocent - kids were asking innocent questions to Superstar who came to their school . Questions were quite * Innocuous ( Harmless हानि रहित )* like whats your dogs name ?/ Something that's innocuous isn't harmful or likely to cause injury. Public figures like mayors and governors have to expect they'll get critical or even hurtful emails and phone calls, as well as more innocuous feedback. The adjective innocuous is useful when you're talking about something that doesn't offend or injure anyone. Innocuous remarks or comments are meant kindly, and innocuous germs won't make you sick. An innocuous question is innocently curious, rather than aimed to hurt someone's feelings.

Ironclad

/M - Iron + Clad (*Dressed, Covered*) - An Ironclad warrior whose *dress was inflexible and rigid* and whose *Promise or contract can not be contradicted*/ 1. inflexible; rigid: an ironclad rule 2. not able to be assailed or contradicted: an ironclad argument *Something ironclad is either covered in iron for protection or protected in a different way. An ironclad guarantee can't be broken or taken back.* Originally, this word was very literal: an ironclad battleship was clad (covered) in iron * बख़्तरबंद*. Since then, this word is more metaphorical, though it still applies to *things you can trust*. An ironclad contract is unbreakable. An ironclad promise can be believed wholeheartedly. If you were arrested on ironclad charges, you're going to be found guilty. /But at the same time, the numbers aren't quite ironclad./

contrive

/M - Kaun + Drive - Before New York Road trip , Manager has *created a plan* that who and when someone will drive / *When you contrive, you make a plan or a plot. * It may take you longer to contrive your way out of doing your homework than would to actually do it. Even though contrive often has a false or cunning feel to it, it is not always a bad thing. *Mental effort is always required though, as contrive is often used in connection with inventing schemes and plans to make something happen *. Contraption, a complicated mysterious device that does something, is related to contrive. Have you ever seen a Rube Goldberg contraption? When you contrive to do something, your plan may end up being that complicated.

Liaison

/M - Lia + Son - The relation between Son and his mother is called * Liaison (Refer to relationship or Connection मेल-जोल अवैध प्रेम सहकार ) */ *Employ the French-sounding word liaison to refer to a relationship*, a link between people or groups who aids communication. There are two main definitions for liaison that stem from Old French and before that, the Latin word for "to bind." The first definition refers in general to a connection or a relationship that serves effective communication. *The second definition refers more specifically to an illicit relationship, or an affair, and can have a negative connotation.* /Ministers have said the person would act as a liaison between the child, their family and access to any services they may need./ /She is a liaison and guide to the synagogue, whose name derives from Al Azma, a reference to "those who ran away" from Spain./

Lollop

/M - Lollipop - A kid was so happy after getting Lollipop that he was walking in frenzy manner *walk or run in an awkward, galloping way भद्देपन से चलना* / To lollop is to *walk or run in an awkward, galloping way भद्देपन से चलना*. Energetic, long-legged puppies tend to lollop around, stumbling and leaping as they go. When people lollop, they do a kind of goofy gallop — a little kid is much more likely to lollop than her dignified grandfather is. Young animals also tend to lollop, like a clumsy young colt or a bouncy, capering kitten. The verb lollop probably comes from loll, "to lounge idly," which is thought to be imitative in origin — in other words, the word itself sounds like rocking or swinging

Mince

/M - Mice - Mice who *mince ( Chop into tiny bits छोटे छोटे टुकड़े करना )* / To mince is to *chop into tiny bits*. Your favorite soup recipe might include directions to mince four cloves of garlic. When you dice an onion into very small pieces, you mince it, and when you grind meat very fine to make sausage or mincemeat, you also mince. Another meaning of the verb is to soften, or to express something in a gentle way: "She does mince her words when she talks to shy kindergarteners." The Old French root, mincier, means "make into small pieces," and it comes from the Latin word for "small," minutus.

Palpate

/M - Pal (friend) + pate (Stomach) - Ek dost ne apne dost ko bola , jiske liver main pain ho raha tha ki . Let me *palpate ( To palpate is to examine with the hands, by pressing.) * your stomach / Your doctor might palpate your abdomen if you have a pain in your stomach. You're most likely to come across the verb palpate in a doctor's office or another medical context. A veterinarian will palpate a limping dog to feel for broken bones or tight muscles, and it's common for a doctor to palpate the glands in your neck during a routine exam. The Latin root word is palpatus, which means "to touch."

pauper

/M - Pepper - Getting multiple packs of pepper from Domino's shows that you are * Pauper , Poor भिखारी*/ Pauper is an old-fashioned word for someone who is poor — really poor, like the paupers described by Charles Dickens or Mark Twain. The noun pauper has been around for over 500 years, but today, the word tends to mostly crop up in literature. If people use it in conversation, they tend to use the word self-deprecatingly. "I'm sorry, I can't afford to go with you to the movies. I'm living like a pauper this week, until I get paid."

Percussion

/M - Per + Concussion - Dimaag kharaab karne waala Music which involves Drums / * Percussion is music involving drums and other instruments such as gongs, bells, cymbals, rattles, and tambourines. The instruments themselves are also called percussion. * How do percussion instruments differ from guitars, horns, and pianos? They are struck to produce loudness, while the other instruments are strummed or blown into, or have keys that are depressed to produce notes. Percussion comes from the Latin word percussionem, which means "a striking, a blow." And those who think percussion evolved with modern jazz and rock and roll will be surprised to learn the word was first used in 1776 to describe musical instruments.

Perfunctory

/M - Perfection - Once you get perfection in writing Informatica code , you will be doing it in * perfunctory way (Shows little enthusiasm or Interest )* / Perfunctory means done as part of a routine or duty. If you give someone a gift and they look at it like it's roadkill and say nothing about it but a perfunctory "thank you," you might not be giving them another one anytime soon. A person who does something in a perfunctory way shows little enthusiasm or interest in what they are doing. * Many of our everyday greetings are perfunctory. For example, when we say hello and how are you, it's usually done out of habit. *

Platitude

/M - Plate + Attitude - Ek plate pe likha tha * IMPOSSIBLE says I am possible साधारण उक्ति , साधारण बात */ If an executive gives a speech that begins, "This business is all about survival of the fittest. You need to burn the midnight oil and take one for the team," his employees might get sick of listening to these meaningless clichés and tell him to cut the platitudes. The English language contains many old, worn-out clichés, or platitudes. Phrases like "ants in your pants" and "as American as apple pie" are so overused that they've almost lost their meaning. People rely on these tired old remarks when they can't think of anything original to say. Be warned: if you throw too many platitudes into your conversations, people are eventually going to get tired of listening to you

Prologue

/M - Pre + Log - few lines showing Author , Date , Version , Description details are *prologue (आरंभ , आमुख , नाटक का आरंभ) * of an Informatica Log file / With the lines, "Two households, both alike in dignity," Shakespeare begins the prologue to Romeo and Juliet, setting up the idea of two families who hate each other before introducing the lovers in the opening scene. Like its buddy epilogue, which tells you what happens after the end of a story, a prologue is concerned with setup of a story. "As a prologue to what happened in the gym, I'll tell you about the food fight in the cafeteria earlier that day."

Propensity

/M - Pro+ Pen +City - A city where everyone has 10 pens and few of them are best in the class . People have *propensity(Aadat*) to show their new and expensive pens / *A propensity is a natural tendency to behave in a certain way*. We all have propensities — things we tend to do. Dogs have a propensity to bark, and many people have a propensity for getting annoyed by it. * If you have a propensity for something, then it's something that comes naturally to you or something you just do a lot. Some people have a propensity to laugh. * Other people have a propensity for making others laugh, or for being generous, or for getting angry. *It's hard to change your propensities*. Sometimes a propensity is a bad thing, as in a criminal with a propensity for theft or murder.

Syncopation

/M - Psycho + Patient - A psycho patient joined a party and was not finding music exciting enough to dance . He ask DJ to play some music with more *syncopation ( Strong, distinct rhythm that makes you want to move.)*/ Jazz is the musical genre best known for syncopation, using rhythm and beats in unexpected ways to make exciting, finger-snapping music. Syncopation has been around for a lot longer than that, though — it pops up in works by Bach and Mozart, for example.

radical

/M - Ready + Kal - A politician was getting ready for tomorrow's speech in which he will tell his people a *radical (Very New and innovative , Extreme views , If something is considered extremist or very different from anything that has come before it, call it radical.) * idea which will solve Water problem forever / The noun, radical, comes from the Latin radix "root," and in fact, radical and root are synonymous as technical terms in fields such as math and linguistics. *In more everyday language, a radical is someone who has very extreme views, so you could say that their views are different from the root up*. Similarly, a radical flaw or change is a fundamental one whereas a *radical design or idea is very new and innovative*.

Rant

/M - Rent - Ek makan malik ne apne kiraydaro ka rent dugna kar diya .. Kiraydar Students they and unko itna gussa aaya ki they had rant ( *A rant is an argument that is fueled by passion, not shaped by facts.*) with Makanmalik . When the shouting starts on talk radio, or when a blog commenter resorts to ALL CAPS — you're almost certainly encountering an instance of ranting. Rant comes from the Dutch ranten, "to talk nonsense." Rave is a close synonym — in fact, "to rant and rave" is a popular expression. When rant is used as a noun, it means something like tirade. The first recorded usage of rant is from the end of the sixteenth century, in Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor. By the middle of the turbulent seventeenth century, the name Ranters was used as a catchall pejorative for various groups of radical Christian dissenters.

Sate

/M - Satisfied - Sometimes you're so hungry you feel like you could eat a ten-course meal. Other times it takes just a small salad to *sate(Satisfy) * your appetite, or to satisfy your hunger./ The verb sate comes from the Old English sadian, "to satiate," and can be applied to any situation regarding the satisfaction of a need or an appetite. If you have been craving something sweet, your craving might be sated by a bag of jellybeans. However, * if it seems like you can never get enough jellybeans, your appetite for sweets might be described as insatiable, a word used to describe a person or entity whose appetites — literally or figuratively — are impossible to satisfy. *

Quibble

/M - Scribble - Couples were fighting on Scribble over a silly word . Suddenly their son came and said Stop the *quibble (Small Argument or Fight that doesnt matter )*/ *A quibble is a small argument or fight. As a verb, it means to pick a mini-fight over something that doesn't really matter*. "Let's not quibble over price," people will say, usually when they plan to gouge you. It's better to watch figure skating with the sound off, rather than listening to the announcers quibble over a not-fully-rotated knee or the slightly diminished altitude of a jump. Sometimes a quibble between neighbors over two feet of property can escalate into a major feud.

Skiff

/M - Ship + Kid - A kid asked for small ship as his Bday present , instead his parents gave him a beautiful Skiff ..*Small boat छोटी नाव* / A skiff is a small boat. If you decide to purchase a skiff instead of giant yacht, you're probably someone who prefers the quiet, simple life. (Or maybe you just didn't want to spend the money on a yacht.) A skiff may be powered by oars, sails, or a motor, but in any of these cases, a typical skiff can carry only a few passengers. Skiff originally referred to a small boat attached to a large ship; the skiff would have been used for communication with and transportation to other large ships and the shore. Winslow Homer, a 19th-century American artist, often portrayed skiffs in his depictions of marine scenes.

Stickler

/M - Sticker -* Some one who sticks to the rules called Stickler* / *A stickler is someone who insists that things are done in a certain way*. Say you're getting married and want to write your own vows, but your partner's mother demands that you have a traditional ceremony. The mother is a stickler for tradition. *Stickler has its origins in a word meaning umpire, which may allude to a stickler's bossy nature. * Difficult problems or puzzles are called sticklers. It is helpful when remembering the definition of stickler that it has the word "stick" in it. So someone who "sticks" to the rules is a stickler.

tyranny

/M - Tie + Rani - Raja asked his soldiers to tie rani because she didn't give him good wine , Rani pleaded that its such a small thing and please forgive me . Raja didn't heard a word , this show his * Tyranny ( repressive and arbitrarily cruel regime अत्याचार , क्रूरता, निरंकुश शासन) * * Tyranny is a noun that describes a repressive and arbitrarily cruel regime. * Don't accuse your mother of tyranny just because she won't let you play video games all weekend long. One of the root words of tyranny is the Latin tyrannia which means the "rule of a tyrant" and * a tyrant is a "cruel master."* Today, it can mean the repressive regime of a dictator or it can also mean being controlled by something metaphorically harsh like time or work. Maybe the oldest example of a tyranny is that of Tyrannosaurus Rex, or "king of the giant lizards," who many of us grew up thinking was the largest, most predatory and frightening of the dinosaurs who supposedly ruled over the rest of the dinosaur world with its huge, sharp teeth and claws.

tirade

/M - Tired - I am very much tired of listening to all those Gyans my boss gives in office ..his *Tirade (usually consisting of a long string of violent , emotionally charged words कड़ी निंदा )*/ A tirade is a speech, usually consisting of a long string of violent, emotionally charged words. Borrow and lose your roommate's clothes one too many times, and you can bet you'll be treated to a heated tirade. The noun tirade is related to the Italian word tirata, which means "volley." So imagine a very angry person lobbing harsh words and strings of profanity in your direction when you want to remember what tirade means. Although, tirades don't necessarily have to include bad words — any long, drawn out speech or epic declaration can be called a tirade.

dawdle

/M - Waddle - A man was waddling , he was very slow and was falling *behind and wasting time समय गँवाना* of whole group/ *There are lots of words that mean to move slowly. The point of dawdle is that one is moving too slowly, is falling behind, or is not properly focused on making progress.* One way to remember the meaning of dawdle is that it rhymes with "waddle," as in, "a duck waddles." Imagine what would happen if you waddled instead of walked. It would take a lot more time, and your companion might say, "Don't dawdle!" Dawdle implies not only taking extra time but actually wasting it. *A leisurely walk in the woods is one thing, but if you have to get to the theater on time, don't dawdle along the way: you'll miss the curtain!*

wattle

/M - Waffle - Mr. Turkey went to waffle house and ordered 2 Eggs Omelet , after having it his throat skin becomes Red and was hanging from the neck ...it happened coz he has cannibalism . / 1. Noun - *a fleshy wrinkled and often brightly colored fold of skin hanging from the neck or throat of certain birds (chickens and turkeys) or lizards *

waddle

/M - Wah + Dull - Very lazy person who is *walking like duck* / * डगमगाते हुए चलना , बतख की तरह चलना* A duck's walk is a waddle. To imitate it, turn your feet away from each other and take short clumsy steps that make you swing unsteadily from side to side. Ducks aren't the only animals known to waddle. Penguins with their little tiny feet may waddle along the ice, though they move gracefully through the water. *If your footing is unsteady, you might waddle a little too as you tread carefully. * Don't confuse waddle with wattle. A wattle is the red bit of flesh that hangs from the necks of turkeys and chickens. * Wattles waddle back and forth as birds waddle along.*

dollop

/M - dollar +Lollipop- In a dollor you will get only *Dollop (small piece*) of sweet / A dollop is a small, indefinite amount of something. People often ask for dollops of food. English has many words for amounts of something that aren't exact. For example, a load is a lot of something, *but a dollop is a little*. If you're watching your weight, you may *only want a dollop of dressing on your salad*. Most people use a dollop of shampoo when washing their hair. You can't measure a dollop, but it's should be a fairly small amount. If you use a whole bottle of ketchup, that's far more than a dollop /Their destination was Bannerman Island, a dollop of land holding the ruins of a castle./

frail

/M - fragile - *Something that is delicate and fragile can be described as frail*./ Grandma's favorite vase is probably too frail to use for football practice; some of us have learned that the hard way. Frail can also used to describe a person's physical condition: "When I broke my grandmother's vase, she yelled in a voice so loud that it was hard to believe it was coming from her small, frail frame." Another way to use frail is in reference to a person's emotional state. As the poet Sylvia Plath astutely observed, "How frail the human heart must be

Lassitude

/M - lassi + atitude - Lassi pee ke jo neend aur aaraam aata hia wo pura * lassitude (feeling , Tired , weary थकावट)* , ko dur kar deta hain / If you are feeling lassitude, you're weary and just can't be bothered. Couch potatoes make lassitude into an art form. Lassitude might sound like latitude, but the two words don't mean the same thing. *Latitude describes the distance of a particular location from the equator*. Lassitude is the weariness you'd experience after attempting to run a marathon around the equator. Lassitude can also describe a lack of interest, like deciding you'd rather lie on your couch than run that marathon along the equ

Steadfast

/M - study + Fast - One who is determined to completed his Masters in 3 Sem will Study fast and will be * Steadfast ( Firm and determined in belief )* / Someone who is firm and determined in a belief or a position can be called steadfast in that view, like your mom when she thinks you really shouldn't wear that outfit. The word steadfast traces back to the Old English word stedefæst, a combination of stede, meaning "place," and fæst, meaning "firmly fixed." Picture a steadfast person standing firmly in place, not wavering or budging an inch, and you'll have a good sense of what this word means. * Someone can be steadfast in a belief, an effort, a plan, or even a refusal. * Whatever it is, it means that the person will calmly hold firm to the chosen position and follow through with determination

unseemly

/M -* Un Appopriate */ Something that is inappropriate or unacceptable behavior is unseemly. It's a gentler, somewhat nicer word for "inappropriate" than its synonyms, the "in" words: "indecent, indecorous, indelicate, inelegant, inept" — well, you get the idea. Knowing that the "un-" prefix turns a word into its opposite, you'll see that unseemly means "not seemly." Let's look at that word (which is related to our verb seem), because it carries the real meaning. Seemly goes back to around 1200, to the Old Norse word soemr, "fitting, becoming." The negative "un-" was added in the early 14th century to denote the opposite meaning. "Seems" to make sense, doesn't it?

Fusillade(Few+Sil+ade)

When you watch an action movie, the hero's deadly fusillade often results in at least one of his enemies being shot. * The noun fusillade describes a quick round of gunfire.* To correctly pronounce fusillade, say "FEW sill ahd." The word probably reminds you of fuselage, the part of an aircraft where crew members and passengers sit. But the words only sound alike. Fuselage gets its name from its cylinder shape, while fusillade comes from the French word fusil, meaning "musket." Fusillade also can be used in a figurative sense to describe a rapid series of anything, such as a fusillade of punches or a fusillade of questions.

Malleable

*A malleable personality is capable of being changed or trained . A malleable metal is able to be pounded or pressed into various shapes.* It's easier to learn when you're young and malleable.

Ambivalent

*Contradictory, having mixed feelings* /Ex-Why ambivalence has good and bad points/

quintessentially

*Perfect Example of Quality or Class* /M- Quilt + Essential - Quilt is essential in winter ..Lekin Quilt ki Quality and uska Class (*Should represent the Perfect Example *) Pure hona chahiye / Adj -विशिष्ट रूप से representing the most perfect or typical example of a quality or class of pure and essential essence of something /*even that outfit didn't seem quite quintessentially English enough */

Apogee(Apo +Jee)

*farthest or highest point*; culmination; zenith

complacent

*pleased, especially with oneself without awareness of some potential danger or defect* /M Company+Placement - Company main Placement ke baad you feel Self satisfied , *pleased with your self* ...but company ko pata hai ki kisne kiska kata hai / Adjective .pleased, especially with oneself or one's merits, advantages, situation, etc., often without awareness of some potential danger or defect; self-satisfied: Hindi - आत्मसन्तुष्ट , अजागरूक , असावधान / Ex - HMRC faces an enormous challenge in moving to a new contracting model by 2017 and appears overly complacent given the scale of the transformation required/

precedent

*मिसाल , उदाहरण set karna future ke liye* *A precedent is something that sets a standard for future events *. It's hard to say what the legal community would do without the word precedent, since so many legal judgments and decisions are based on what came before. Lawyers and judges often look for a precedent can be used as a guide for a similar case. This word is used elsewhere too. *Your mom might not let you stay up late because it would set a bad precedent for future bedtimes*. A teacher who lets kids chew gum is setting a precedent that gum-chewing will be OK in the future. People often refer to a precedent later on as a reference point for how things should be.

waggle

*लुढ़कते हुए चलना* *move from side to side* move unsteadily or with a weaving or rolling motion /Honeybees use the 'waggle dance' to convey information about the location of a food source to a hive./ /Then he waggled his fingers at us, motioning us into the frame./

trounce

/ M - Bounce - Kisi ko kud kud kar Maarna (*बुरी तरह से हराना*/ Verb - *बुरी तरह से हराना* When you trounce someone, *you win decisively*. If you win a chess match in three moves, you trounce your opponent. When a professional tennis player is in the midst of a tournament, she hopes to trounce her rival, and an ambitious speller might dream of the day she competes nationally and trounces all the other competitors. A victorious army can also be said to trounce the enemy.

Cataplasia

/ M - Catabolism of Plasma (*Degeneration*)/ Noun - degeneration of a cell or tissue

Verse

A single line of poetry

Assent

Assent - *Agreement* Dissent - *Disagreement* *Assent means agreement समर्थन*. If you nod your head in assent, you agree to something or you assent to it. *You can assent in the same contexts as agree, but you'll seem a bit more serious.* As a verb, assent is generally followed by a phrase beginning with the word "to:" *You assent to a plan, an agreement, or to an idea. *Assent is also something that you can give. You can give your assent to marry your partner if he or she asks really nicely. *The opposite of assent is dissent -- which means disagreeing, or even protesting in a formal way.*

Catabolism

Breakdown of body tissue into simpler substances. Bad Anabolism .

Disassemble

Disassemble is to take something apart, like an old car motor

Armada

If an armada is looking for you, that's not good news — *it's a fleet of warships.* Even though armada sounds a little old-fashioned, they still exist. In fact, some armadas look for pirates — another old-fashioned-sounding group that still exists. Though an armada is part of a navy, armada sounds similar to "army,", and it should: they both come ultimately from the same source, the Latin word armata, "armed." Armies and navies are two of the oldest branches of a military power, and an armada is a military fleet — another word for a group of boats or ships.

Braggart

If you know *someone who is a real show off and is always bragging about how great they are, then you might call this boaster a braggart बड़बोला*

Legion

In Roman times, *a legion was a large unit of men in the army, and the word is still used in many militaries. However, it also means a whole bunch of people doing anything.* If someone has many fans, you can say *legion of fans or legions of fans, but either way, that's a lot of fans.* There are legions of stars in the sky. When you see legion, you can be sure there's an awful lot of something.

naive

No one likes being called naive, *since it means you lack sophistication or street smartness भोला-भाला*. A person who is too trusting can be criticized for being overly naive: "You're so naive, you think that e-mail from the Nigerian prince is really going to make you a million dollars!" Naive shares the same root as native, and originally meant *"natural" or "not artificial." *It can still be used in a more positive meaning when describing a charming lack of artificiality, as in "the naive style of folk art made by an untrained painter."

transcendentalism

Noun *Transcendentalism is a philosophy started in the early 19th century that promotes intuitive, spiritual thinking instead of scientific thinking based on material things.* Ralph Waldo Emerson, a famous transcendentalist, summed up the beliefs of transcendentalism when he said, "What lies behind us, and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us." /They produced a kind of pragmatic transcendentalism as their creations involved visitors in heightened experiences of nature and perceptual consciousness./

Tot

Noun 1. Young Child 2. A Small Amount /"a tot of rum"/ Verb 1. determine the sum of , add, add together /Individual performances remain secret, but the total amount lost or gained by the group since the last session is totted up and revealed./

Adultery

Noun 1. voluntary sexual intercourse between a married person and someone other than his or her lawful spouse. /Eighty-eight percent of respondents said adultery is morally wrong. /

Diorama

Noun If you use a shoebox and tiny toys to recreate the Battle of Normandy, you are creating a diorama, or *three dimensional model, of the event*. /"From early on I was interested in science, and those trips stimulated that interest," she said, recalling the venerable taxidermic dioramas as a particular favorite./

Synagogue

Noun 1. *A building for Jewish religious service * /Several times he went to his synagogue seeking spiritual guidance. / 2. A Congregation of Jews who assemble for worship or Religious Study /Ever fewer westerners share the church's-or the synagogue 's-beliefs, and far fewer still attend their services. /

marionette

Noun 1. *Puppet* /It is exhilarating—being maneuvered like a marionette, his feet moving your feet, his hips swinging your hips./

Actinic

Properties of radiation by which Chemical Reactions are produced

abridged

Shorten /M - Bridge - *An abridged version of a book is a shortened version: it's not complete because parts have been cut or omitted*. / Sometimes you have time to read all of something, but other times you don't. When you need to save time, you might need to look at an abridged version of a book. This is also called the "Reader's Digest version" of something, because that magazine publishes many abridged pieces. Reading an abridged text may save time, but don't kid yourself: the stuff left out was important too. If you really like an author, forget the abridged version and read the whole thing.

Etymology

Since you're reading this, then you probably have some interest in *Etymology, is the study of the history and derivations of words.What genealogy is to a family, etymology is to words*.

Hack it

Slang -to handle or *cope with a situation* or an assignment adequately and calmly /The new recruit just can't hack it./

Formication

Tactile hallucination involving the sensation that tiny insects over the skin

Servile

The definition of *servile is someone who is submissive and who is extremely willing to act to please others.* An example of someone who would be described as servile is a person who just does everything others tell her to without question. In fact, *servile also means anything characteristic of a slave.* . After winning the lottery, the ex-slave shed first his servile clothes, later his servile manner. The transformation was complete."

Erratic

The definition of erratic is *something that is not consistent or is lacking in a fixed course.* A mental patient who behaves in a wildly unpredictable manner, happy and kind one minute and angry and shouting the next, is an example of someone with erratic behavior. A new bike rider might pedal erratically up and down the street, swerving and stopping suddenly. Or,your anxiety about getting an important grade could make you behave erratically, chewing your nails nervously one minute and laughing loudly the next. *Things that are erratic are uneven or unpredictable, and the Latin root is erraticus, "wandering, straying, or roving*."

Prone

The path of least resistance is where you'll find prone: it refers to *whatever you're likely to do.* The Latin root of this word is pronare which means to *bend forward*, and it's a handy way to remember both meanings. If you tend to wait to start your term paper until the night before it's due, * you are prone to procrastination — you bend toward it. If you stay up so late you fall asleep face down in the book, you are now prone at your desk.*

Ghetto Feminism / Pink Collar Ghetto

The pink collar ghetto is used to describe the fact that women repeatedly and historically have been concentrated into low wage, underpaid jobs . /* Ex - Tory feminism is holistic, not the ghetto feminism of the impact equalities assessment */

Hinder

The verb hinder means to block or put something in the way of, So if you're in a high-speed car chase with the police, they might put up a blockade to hinder your progress. बाधा पहुंचाना

Dignify

To dignify is to *grant nobility or respect to something. Dignifying raises the status of things.सम्मानित करना* Dignity is a quality of *honor and respect*, so to dignify is to give greater respect and honor to something or someone. The presence of the President would dignify a military ceremony. Medals are given to dignify soldiers. Treating people with respect and taking them seriously dignifies them. Often, this word is used in a negative sense, as in "I wouldn't dignify him with an answer!" That means the speaker doesn't feel the person asking the question deserves respect.

Render

Verb 1. To Present or Submit (accounts, etc) for payment, approval, or action *प्रस्तुत करना* 2. To give or Provide (aid, charity, a service, etc) *देना* 3. to give or exchange, as by way of return or requital: /to render blow for blow / *लौटाना* 4. to Cause to become / grief had rendered him simple-minded /*बदल देना * 5. to translate (something) into another language or form *अनुवाद करना* /The lines suffer from translation; Rilke is notoriously difficult to render into English. /

Morph

Verb - Change Shape *To morph is to change from one shape to another*. A cute bunny, for example, might morph into a killer dragon in a fairy tale or an animated film. Morph comes from the word metamorphosis, which is a Greek word meaning "a transforming." As a verb, it has only been around since the 1980s, when computers allowed animators to make things change shape in an apparently seamlessly way. With the right skills, you can morph a toaster into a highly intelligent robot that helps fight crime, offers dating advice to the protagonist of the film, and still makes an excellent piece of toast. /It lasted a mere four years before morphing back into the disgraceful system it replaced/ /Around them, a restive group of familiars ebbs and flows, its morphing connections nourished by the music and by Denis Lenoir's graceful camera movements./

trot

Verb 1.*run at a moderately swift pace* /During the Dodgers' most glorious moment, she serenaded Kirk Gibson's first-pumping home run trot with "Happy Days Are Here Again."/ /Because climate deniers only have so many myths they can keep trotting out again and again, and meanwhile the science just keeps getting more science-y./

Despair

Verb and Noun 1.* the feeling that everything is wrong and nothing will turn out well 2. a state in which all hope is lost or absent*

Verbose

Verbose is * defined as a person who uses way too many words, or who talks a lot*. An example of *verbose is someone who can talk for five minutes on the phone without pausing for the other person to speak.*

Cronic

Very Potent Marijuana

Egghead

a smart person Hindi - *बहुत ही बुद्धिमान* /Ex - Egghead optimist working to revive urban Tory ism/

dictum

You are what you eat" is a dictum, and so is a law requiring you to curb your dog. *A dictum is a formal pronouncement, a rule, or a statement that expresses a truth universally acknowledged.* Dictum dates from the 16th Century. It descended from a Latin word that means "something said."* In contemporary use, it means more like "something that is officially said."* If the principal of your school issues a dictum declaring "no jeans in school," it's time to go shopping. /In international development and geopolitics, the old real estate dictum often rings true: "location, location, location"./

Valance

a decorative framework to conceal curtain fixtures at the top of a window casing

Anticlerical

a historical movement that opposes religious (generally Catholic) institutional power and influence, real or alleged, in all aspects of public and political life, and the involvement of religion in the everyday life of the citizen. /*One is an anti-clerical sceptic best known as a baroque specialist */

Acrophobia

a morbid *fear of great heights*,a pathological fear of heights. The definition of acrophobia is a fear of being far from the ground.

Caricature

a picture, description, etc., ludicrously exaggerating the peculiarities or defects of persons or things: /* The readers' editor on... the fine line between caricature and stereotype */

Ambient

completely surrounding around

Samaritians

descendants of Jews who had intermarried with non-Jews one who is compassionate and helpful to a person in distress.

denotations

literal,* dictionary meanings of a word*

Effect

noun *Effect is mostly commonly used as a noun meaning the result or impact of something, an outcome.* Effect describes an appearance or impression that's created on purpose, such as the dramatic effect of the bright red walls in your kitchen, or sound effects from your favorite movie * /The interpretation of that ruling has had the effect of giving governors wide authority in determining what documents to make available for public scrutiny./ /Further, there's general agreement that large raises will have large effects./ *Most of the time, you'll want affect as a verb meaning to influence something and effect for the something that was influenced. The difference between affect and effect is so slippery that people have started using "impact" as a verb instead. Don't be one of them! Another trick is to remember that affect comes first alphabetically, and an action (to affect) has to occur before you can have a result (an effect).*

hog

noun 1.a hoofed mammal of the family Suidae, order Artiodactyla, comprising boars and swine. 2.a domesticated swine weighing 120 pounds (54 kg) or more, raised for market. 3.*a selfish*, gluttonous, or filthy person. Hindi - हथिया लेना

oodles

noun , ढेरों , अधिक संख्या 1. a large number or amount /Don't expect oodles of performance, but the price should be right./ /They not only perform their primary function of protecting eyes from harmful UV rays, but also add oodles of style to any warm-weather look./

defiance

open, *bold or hostile refusal * to obey or conform; open disobedience Hindi - चुनौती

Laity

regular church members All the members of the church that have been initiated through Baptism and who are not ordained or in consecrated life. Hindi - समाज , गृहस्त जन जो पादरी नहीं है

Immaculate

spotless

Abeyance

temporary halt to something /M - Obey - To obey Traffic rules diligently , *it will temporarily halt क्षणिक विराम* getting a ticket / An abeyance is a *temporary halt to something, with the emphasis on "temporary."* It is usually used with the word "in" or "into"; "in abeyance" suggests a state of waiting or holding. The word abeyance has a legal ring to it, and for a good reason — appearing in English in the 16th century, it comes from the Anglo-French word abeiance, a legal term for waiting or hoping to receive property. Nowadays, the word is used in a similar way. *Different legal rights, like property rights, can be held in abeyance until matters are resolved.* /The court will then hold the eleven felony allocutions in abeyance. /

Mare Nostrum

the Latin name for the Mediterranean Sea

Teetotalism

total abstinence from alcohol

gourmet

अच्छे खान-पान का जानकार

Gall

असभ्य व्यवहार Gall describes something *irritating, like someone very rude*. If you barge into a bakery and cut in front of a sweet old lady, then you have gall. If someone has gall, they're irritating. In fact, as a verb, gall means "to irritate" like new tight jeans that gall your thighs. *Gall is "bile," too, like what's in a gall bladder. *Back in the days of Hippocrates, if the four humors of the body were out of whack, it affected your spirits. *If you had too much bile, or gall, then you'd be aggressive or depressed*. It's also a noun for "deep feeling of ill will." /The result came out "exactly as I predicted, so it's a little bit galling that it wasn't in my lab," Hinds said./

exhilarating

आनन्दित करना Verb -causing *strong feelings of excitement * and happiness /Ex - an exhilarating helicopter trip /

Gloomy

उदासीपूर्वक ,मनहूस ,अंधकारपूर्ण Adj - dark or dim; deeply shaded dismal or depressing: /* a gloomy view of the future.* /

Abrasion

खरोंच *An abrasion is a scrape*. An abrasion can happen to a person, as in a skinned knee, or to an object, as in what you get when you apply sandpaper to wood.

Scrape

खरोंच आना (n.) an area on the body where the surface of the skin has been removed. e.g. - The child fell off his bicycle and got a scrape on his knee from the rough pavement. Der. (v.) scrape; (adj.) scraped.


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