Dear Readers,

The English Language has been a backbone of Present Era, the more you pay a deaf ear towards it, the more you embroil yourself. Because running away from an impediment is futile instead learn to face it boldly. More specifically, if we speak of hot topics like career, education and a propitious life, the English Language is ineluctable. In Exams like SSC CPO and and SSC CGL where dealing with English and General Awareness Section is mandatory, reading this way is beneficial. If you find it arduous to learn new words in a plain mode, ADDA247 is here to buttress your learning skills in a more fun and productive way.
Taking felicitous snippet from well reputed newspaper editorials, our motive is not just to make you learn the English language but keep you updated with the current affairs and events across the world which are important from the govt exams point of view. Either you are a job aspirant or a working person or just want to outsmart others, this is a befitting platform to expedite your performance thoroughly.
It was at the Hay-on-Wye Festival of Literature a few years ago that I realized with horror how low the fortunes of PG Wodehouse had sunk in his native land. I was on stage for a panel discussion on the works of the Master when the moderator, a gifted and suave young literary impresario, began the proceedings by asking innocently, "So how do you pronounce it - is it Woad-house or Wood-house?"
Woadhouse? You could have knocked me over with the proverbial feather, except that Wodehouse himself would have disdained the cliche, instead describing my expression as, perhaps, that of one who "had swallowed an east wind" (Carry On, Jeeves, 1925). The fact was that a luminary at the premier book event in the British Isles had no idea how to pronounce the name of the man I regarded as the finest English writer since Shakespeare. I spent the rest of the panel discussion looking (to echo a description of Bertie Wooster's Uncle Tom) like a pterodactyl with a secret sorrow.
My dismay had Indian roots. Like many of my compatriots, I had discovered Wodehouse young and pursued my delight across the 95 volumes of the oeuvre, savouring book after book as if the pleasure would never end. When All India Radio announced, one sunny afternoon in February 1975, that Wodehouse had died, I felt a cloud of darkness settle over me. The newly (and belatedly) knighted Sir Pelham Grenville Wodehouse, creator of Jeeves and of the prize pig the Empress of Blandings, was in his 94th year, but his death still came as a shock. Every English-language newspaper in India carried it on their front pages; the articles and letters that were published in the following days about his life and work would have filled volumes.
Three decades earlier, Wodehouse had reacted to the passing of his stepdaughter, Leonora, with the numbed words: "I thought she was immortal." I had thought Wodehouse was immortal too, and I felt like one who had "drained the four-ale of life and found a dead mouse at the bottom of the pewter" (Sam the Sudden, also from that vintage year of 1925).
For months before his death, I had procrastinated over a letter to Wodehouse. It was a collegian's fan letter, made special by being written on the letterhead (complete with curly-tailed pig) of the Wodehouse Society of St Stephen's College, Delhi University. Ours was then the only Wodehouse Society in the world, and I was its president, a distinction I prized over all others in an active and eclectic extra-curricular life. The Wodehouse Society ran mimicry and comic speech contests and organized the annual Lord Ickenham Memorial Practical Joke Week, the bane of all at college who took themselves too seriously. The society's underground rag, Spice, edited by a wildly original classmate who was to go on to become a counselor to the prime minister of India, was by far the most popular newspaper on campus; even its misprints were deliberate and deliberately funny.
1.Suave: (adjective) : सुशील
Meaning: (especially of a man) charming, confident, and elegant.
Synonyms: affable, urbane, courteous, ingratiating, polite, obliging
Antonyms: impolite, uncivil, unfriendly, unmannerly, unrefined, unsophisticated
2.Disdain: (noun) : तिरस्कार
Meaning: the feeling that someone or something is unworthy of one's consideration or respect.
(verb) consider to be unworthy of one's consideration.
Synonyms: aversion, derision, contempt, ridicule, hauteur, despisal
Antonyms: admiration, affection, flattery, humility
3.Luminary: (noun) : अपूर्व बुद्धि का मनुष्य
Meaning: a person who inspires or influences others, especially one prominent in a particular sphere.
Synonyms: dignitary, personage, eminence, notable, celebrity
4.Pterodactyl: (noun) : टेरोडक्टाइल
Meaning: a pterosaur of the late Jurassic period, with a long slender head and neck and a very short tail.
5.Dismay: (noun) : बेचैनी
Meaning: concern and distress caused by something unexpected.
Synonyms: anxiety, consternation, dread, fright, agitation, chagrin
Antonyms: assurance, composure, contentment, delight, tranquility
6.Oeuvre: (noun) : कृति
Meaning: the body of work of a painter, composer, or author.
Synonyms: output, work
7.Immortal: (adjective) : अमर
Meaning: living forever; never dying or decaying.
Synonyms: enduring, eternal, everlasting, timeless, perennial, abiding, ceaseless
Antonyms: ceasing, terminable, transient, interrupted, ephemeral
8.Procrastinate: (verb) : विलम्बन
Meaning: delay or postpone action; put off doing something.
Synonyms: dawdle, adjourn, dally, lag, linger, protract, stall, tarry, temporize
Antonyms: expedite, finish, forge, hasten, persist, hurry
9.Eclectic: (adjective) : जिसके विचार संकीर्ण न हों
Meaning: deriving ideas, style, or taste from a broad and diverse range of sources.
Synonyms: diverse, varied, assorted, multifarious, diversified, mingled
Antonyms: narrow, unvaried, particular, specific, incomprehensive
10.Rag: (noun) : गुदड़ा
Meaning: a piece of old cloth, especially one torn from a larger piece, used typically for cleaning things
Synonyms: banter, frazzle, harass, remnant, jive, patch


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