Wednesday, April 4, 2012

WordPandit Vocab


CABAL



Cabal
According to the dictionary, the word ‘cabal’ carries the following meanings.
1. A small group of secret plotters, as against a government or person in authority. (N)
2. The plots and schemes of such a group; intrigue. (N)
3. To form a cabal; intrigue; conspire; plot. (V)
In terms of application, the word ‘cabal’ signifies a coming together of more than two parties, usually for some
vested interest of their own. To achieve this interest, they generally take the help of plots, schemes and
intrigues. Generally, this term has a negative connotation and its usage does have the implications of negative
influence and insidious planning.
A few example of its usage are:
1. The long beleaguered citizens of Egypt have triumphed, after thirty years of deployment of arbitrary power
by Mubarak and his military cabal.
2. They live in a world of paranoid fantasies, where some secret cabal is supposedly trying to set up a world
government to take away their freedoms.
3. The conservative cabal is shrewd, unified and extremely well funded; they won't let something as simple as
e-mail messages get in the way of their long range plans to permanently take control of the US Government.

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CALAMITY




Calamity
A few examples of some the worst things that a person can experience are as follows: Massive earthquakes,
huge landslides, devastating hurricanes, gruesome terrorist attacks or the onset of deadly diseases.
Well, each of the examples above can be ascribed one word to describe them: each one of them in their own
right is a calamity.
The dictionary definition for calamity is as follows:
1. An event that brings terrible loss, lasting distress, or severe affliction; a disaster. (noun)
Quotes using the word calamity:
The word calamity comes with an amazing bundle of quotes that have been based on this word. Few of the
really good ones are as follows:
1. A foolish son is the calamity of his father: and the contentions of a wife are a continual dropping. - Bible
2. Calamity is virtue's opportunity. - Seneca
3. He who sees the calamity of other people finds his own calamity light. - Arabian Proverb
4. The calamity that comes is never the one we had prepared ourselves for.-Mark Twain
5. When any calamity has been suffered, the first thing to be remembered is how much has been escaped. -
Samuel Johnson
Meaning:
1. An event that brings terrible loss, lasting distress, or severe affliction; a disaster: A hurricane would be
a calamity for this low-lying coastal region. (N)

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CALIBER



Caliber/Calibre
Let us start with a small bit of factual information. And then we can build our word meaning from this little
nugget.
We have at some point of time read or heard about things such as a 22 or 25 caliber guns. What does this
word caliber doing here? In guns and firearms, caliber or caliber is defined as the approximate diameter of the
gun barrel. If we apply a bit of our resplendent common sense, we realize that higher the caliber, higher the
potency of the arm (as the size of loaded gunpowder would increase proportionally).
The dictionary definitions for caliber are as follows:
1. Abbreviation. cal.
a. The diameter of the inside of a round cylinder, such as a tube. (noun)
b. The diameter of the bore of a firearm, usually shown in hundredths or thousandths of an inch
and expressed in writing or print in terms of a decimal fraction: .45 caliber. (noun)
c. The diameter of a large projectile, such as an artillery shell, measured in millimeters or in
inches. (noun)
2. Degree of worth; quality: a college of high caliber; an employee of low caliber. (noun)
Masters Tip to remember Caliber:
Just remember the tip of gun and the damage it can. You surely do not want to fight such caliber/calibre.
Usage examples for caliber:
1. Finding people with the right calibre/caliber and to slot them at the right place is a very tough job for the
HR manager.
2. It is probable that television drama of high caliber and produced by first-rate artists will materially raise the
level of dramatic taste of the nation. -David Sarnoff

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CALLOW


Callow
Origin of the word Callow:
This world has traced its presence in present English through its ancestral form. In Old English, the word
‘calu’ meant ‘bald’. This word came to be applied to young birds, who were born without any feathers and
were bald. So, the first meaning of callow came to be young or inexperienced birds.
As a figurative extension of this reference, this young birds became symbols of inexperience and immaturity.
So, this word came to be used for young people who lacked the necessary experience of life.
The dictionary definitions for callow are as follows:
1. Immature or inexperienced: a callow youth. (Adjective)
2. (Of a young bird) featherless; unfledged. (Adjective)
Masters Tip to remember Callow:
The word can be easily engraved in one’s memory with the help of the most common use of callow: callow
youth. This expression has almost become a symbolic representation, with it being used often by the seniors
to describe youngsters. The picture given below is symbolic of the same.
Usage Examples for callow:
1. This biography shows us the successful evolution of a callow young man into a modern husband and
father.
2. The performance of the youngster was even more credible, as he was playing in a team full of callow
individuals.

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COGNITION

 

COGNITION
Exercise your wheels of thinking and you would know what this word means. In simple terms (skipping the
complex definition that will follow), cognition refers to the process of thinking. It is the identification of
knowledge, of understanding it and perceiving it.
The most common references of cognition that one would find would be in psychology and philosophy. One
would do well to read on cognitive psychology (defined as the psychological study of higher mental
processes, including thinking and perception).
The dictionary definitions for cognition are as follows:
1. The mental process of knowing, including aspects such as awareness, perception, reasoning, and judgment.
(noun)
2. That which comes to be known, as through perception, reasoning, or intuition; knowledge. (noun)
Masters Tip to remember Cognition:
Our simple reference guide for this:
Process of cognition = Process of thinking
This is the simplified and practical meaning for this word with the strange feeling.
Usage Examples for Cognition:
1. The process of visual cognition is something that deeply enriches our experience of the world.
2. The process of cognition can play tricks even on a balanced mind.
3. The mental addition of 2+2=4 is an example of cognition only.

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DEADLOCK
 

DEADLOCK
Imagine this situation: you and your best friend have just come to blows, both are holding each other by the
collar and waiting for the other person to land the first blow. Well, the situation is a deadlock or a stalemate,
with noting happening either way.
The dictionary definitions for deadlock are as follows:
1. A standstill resulting from the opposition of two unrelenting forces or factions. (noun)
2. Sports: A tied score. (noun)
Masters Tip to remember Deadlock:
The ready reference that you can use to learn this word is a lock. Imagine the one on the kitchen door is
locked and the key is lost. And you are extremely hungry. What kind of a situation you are in? You are in a
deadlock, or to put it better, you been caught unaware by a DEAD+LOCK!
Usage:
A few usage examples for deadlock are as follows:
1. The continuing deadlock in the parliament has lead to a situation where in no meaningful work is being
done at the cost of the public exchequer.
2. The talks between United Nations and the Iranian government are aimed at solving the deadlock over the
Tehran’s nuclear program.

DEBACLE


Debacle
If we were to name absolute disaster in a word, the word would be debacle. There are quite a few examples of
these instances which come to mind. One of those is the Japan earthquake, 2011 and the tsunami it brought
about. And to top it all, the release of radiation from the Japanese nuclear plants means we can surely label it
as a debacle.
The dictionary definitions for debacle are as follows:
1. A sudden, disastrous collapse, downfall, or defeat; a rout. (noun)
2. A total, often ludicrous failure. (noun)
3. The breaking up of ice in a river. (noun)
4. A violent flood. (noun)
Usage Examples for Debacle:
1. After the debacle of his first novel, no one could believe that he could write such a perfect novel.
2. The financial debacle of 2008 lead to the wiping of lacs of jobs across the globe.
3. The plague that affects the city is nothing short of a debacle.
Meaning:
1. A sudden, disastrous collapse, downfall, or defeat; a rout.
2. A total, often ludicrous failure.
3. The breaking up of ice in a river.
4. A violent flood.




Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Instill E Alphabets


eccentric [ ik-SEN-trik, ek ]
[ noun, adjective ]
MEANING :
1. (adj.) odd or peculiar
2. (adj.) deviating from the recognized or conventional
3. (adj.) an axis or axle which is not situated in the centre or not having the same centre
4. (adj.) straying from a circular form (elliptic orbit)
5. (n.) a person who behaves in an unusual, peculiar, or odd way or has a peculiar set of beliefs
6. (n.) something that is odd, unusual or peculiar


USAGE EXAMPLE 1 :
His neighbours avoided him because of his eccentric behaviour.


USAGE EXAMPLE 2 :
During her time in Borth, Meryl became known in the village as something of an aloof and eccentric bohemian, wearing exotic hats and constantly smoking cigarettes.

BBC, Portmeirion artist Meryl Watts's work under the hammer, 24 April 2010.


Instill M Alphabets


metamorphosis [ met-uh'-MAWR-fuh'-sis ]
[ noun ]
MEANING :
1. a profound change in form from one stage to the next in the life history of an organism
2. a complete change in the character, appearance or circumstances
3. a transformation by magic or sorcery


USAGE EXAMPLE 1 :
The documentary film was about the metamorphosis of a tadpole into a frog.

USAGE EXAMPLE 2 :
Arthropod hatchling vary from miniature adults to grubs and caterpillars that lack jointed limbs and eventually undergo a total metamorphosis to produce the adult form.

BBC, Arthropods


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Instill P Alphabets



progenitor [ proh-JEN-i-ter ]
[ noun ]
MEANING :
1. an ancestor or a forefather
2. an originator, precursor, predecessor or founder
 
USAGE EXAMPLE 1 :
He is one of the contenders to the title of the progenitor of impressionism.

USAGE EXAMPLE 2 :
The temperate, tolerant Western Europeans are handing themselves over to the leading progenitor of war, slavery, and civilizational disaster of the past fourteen centuries: Islam.
Chronicles magzine, The Eurabian Revolution, by Gregory M. Davis


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protract [ proh-TRAKT, pruh’- ]
[ transitive verb ]
MEANING :

1. to increase the time duration of, prolong or extend in space
2. to draw or plot to scale especially by making use of a protractor and a scale
3. (in terms of anatomy) to jut out or protrude


USAGE EXAMPLE 1 :
The course duration was protracted from 18 months to 24 months.


USAGE EXAMPLE 2 :
Under the agreement, signed after months of protracted debate, Mugabe retained his office.

CNN, Zimbabwe power-share talks resume Wednesday, October 17, 2008


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precipice [ PRES-uh’-pis ]
 [ noun ]
 MEANING :
1. a very steep, vertical cliff
2. a perilous or dangerous predicament or situation

USAGE EXAMPLE 1 :
Successfully climbing the precipice was every rock climbers dream.

USAGE EXAMPLE 2 :

AIG said the company was "disappointed" that competitors were trying to take advantage of the situation, stressing that the mortgage losses that left AIG's parent company on a financial precipice had not undercut policyholders' surplus.

abc News, AIG Shares Fall on Government Stake Deal, By Lilla Zuill, September 24, 2008

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precursor [ pri-KUR-ser, PREE-kur- ]
[ noun ]

MEANING :
1. predecessor or forerunner
2. a harbinger or indicator of someone's arrival
3. (chemistry) a compound formed as a result of a chemical reaction that during the course of the reaction changes into another compound
4. (biology) a substance that gives rise to another substance

USAGE EXAMPLE 1 :
The dark clouds were a precursor to an early monsoon.

USAGE EXAMPLE 2 :
The study was led by investigators from the University of Toronto, who randomly assigned 440 postmenopausal women with osteopenia, the precursor to full blown osteoporosis, to either a high dose of vitamin K1 daily or a placebo for comparison purposes.

The Times of India, 'Vitamin K may not prevent bone loss', 14 Oct 2008

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Sunday, April 1, 2012

Instill I Alphabets


impale [ im-PEYL ]
[ transitive verb ]
MEANING :
1. to fasten or stick
2. to pierce with something sharp or pointed
3. to punish and render helpless by piercing


USAGE EXAMPLE 1 :
He impaled his sword into the dummy targets' chest during practice.

USAGE EXAMPLE 2 :
A 13-year-old boy is recovering in hospital after he became impaled on metal railings at his home in Walsall.
BBC, Teenager impaled on metal spike, 8 November, 2004

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implosion [ im-ploh-zhuh'n ]
[ noun ]
MEANING :
1. an inward blast
2. a demolition technique where a controlled blast causes the structure to cave in and not blow up or explode outwards.

USAGE EXAMPLE 1 :
The teacher explained that this chemical reaction would cause an implosion rather than an explosion.


USAGE EXAMPLE 2 :
The demolition, a job valued at $1 million, was done for free with 10 pounds of explosives by Controlled Demolition Inc. of Phoenix, Md., in exchange for the right to videotape the implosion for promotional purposes.

CNN, Gettysburg tower imploded, Melia Bowie, 5 July 2000

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impermeable [ im-pur-mee-uh'-buh'l ]

[ adjective ]

MEANING :
1. resistant to seepage does not allow fluids to diffuse through

USAGE EXAMPLE 1 :

The impermeable quality of plastic caused it to be used in an assortment of house-hold products.

USAGE EXAMPLE 2 :
Balloon material is sterile, strong and impermeable.

BBC, Health- Balloon material in surgery breakthrough, Jane O'Brien, 5 August 1999

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Sunday, March 18, 2012

Instill A alphabet


annals [ AN-lz ]
 [ noun ]
 MEANING :
1. yearly chronological record of events
2. chronicles or historical account or record
3. record or journal that contains reports of the activities transpiring in an organisation

USAGE EXAMPLE 1 :
 The annals of the war were very well documented.

USAGE EXAMPLE 2 :
 January 30 1972 - forever Bloody Sunday in the annals of the Troubles in Northern Ireland - was not the bloodiest day, but perhaps the most significant in helping to decide the direction and progress of the bitter conflict in the decades that followed.
BBC, Long wait for Bloody Sunday report, by John Thorne, 7 November 2008

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aria [ Ahr-ee-uh', Air-ee-uh' ]
[noun]

MEANING :
1. a melody, air, tune, oratorio or a cantata
2. a striking melody that is sung solo with accompaniment

USAGE EXAMPLE 1:
He is an expert at singing arias often haunting in nature.

USAGE EXAMPLE 2:
A great, distant ship's horn, like a one-note aria.
National Geographic, Online Extra, by Kevin Krajick, September 2003


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apocalyptic [ uh'-pok-uh'-LIP-tik ]
[noun,adjective]

MEANING :
1. (adj.) pertaining to or of an apocalypse
2. (adj.) prophetic, revelatory or ominous or suggestive of a disastrous outcome
3. (adj.) pertaining to or suggestive of a final doom or turbulent end of the world
4. (n.) a system where it is believed that the world will end or be doomed in a violent or disastrous way

USAGE EXAMPLE 1:
The apocalyptic vision of Nostradamus has managed to scare people for centuries.

USAGE EXAMPLE 2:
I thought it was kind of apocalyptic, like it was the end of the world, said Shogren
abcNEWS, Old-Timers Brace for Possible Eruption, by RACHEL D'ORO, February 3, 2009

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Instill the words starting with Q alphabets



quiescent [ kwee-ES-uh’ nt, kwahy- ]
  [ adjective ]
 
         MEANING :
  1. inactive, motionless or quiet
        2. not showing symptoms or causing any trouble
 
        USAGE EXAMPLE 1 :
  He was a quiescent child who loved to daydream.
 
        USAGE EXAMPLE 2 :
  But the 662-mile-wide (1,066-kilometer-wide) moon hasn't always been quiescent. Billions of years ago                               tectonic forces produced an enormous rift similar to the East African Rift Valley on Earth, Nimmo said.
National Geographic, Icy Moon Tethys Had Ancient Underground Ocean, Richard A. Lovett, March 24, 2008