In the realm of language proficiency assessments, mastering one word substitution (OWS) is pivotal, especially when preparing for exams such as the SSC, including the prestigious SSC CGL. From the foundational stages, like Class 3, students begin encountering these exercises, where a single word stands in for more complex concepts. As learners progress, they compile a growing list of one word substitutions to enhance their command over English. Examples of these one word substitutes abound, with terms like ‘cynosure’ highlighting the focal point and ‘ephemeral’ encapsulating fleeting moments. These exercises are not only integral for exams but also for broader linguistic proficiency in everyday English one word substitution scenarios. Embracing these substitutes provides an easy yet effective way to navigate the intricacies of language, ensuring a solid foundation for success in language assessments.
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3201 | DIVISIBLE | that which can be divided. | At the same time, he wondered whether his own logic was faulty, since he based his arguments on geometry, whose infinitely divisible lines automatically reject atomism. | Whether hereditary units were divisible or indivisible did not particularly bother him; what concerned him was whether heredity was actionable or inactionable: whether human inheritance could be manipulated for human benefit. |
3202 | DRAWN | a game or batter in which neither party wins | Though two of Morgant’s warriors stood by it with drawn swords, Taran could not shake off the sense of fear and foreboding that hung like a dark mist about the cauldron. | But she had just drawn whatever came into her head without reason”and in her heart it didn’t give her near the same feeling that music did. |
3203 | GRAMMAR | art and science of languages showing how words combine to form sentences. | Lou went to Mass every Sunday, served as an altar boy, and attended BVM’s grammar school before moving on to Father Judge High School, which had three thousand students. | It was boring, and we knew that if we did not learn grammar instead of just phrases, we would never learn English. |
3204 | HONEY MOON | the first night of newly married couple. | With no time for a honeymoon trip, they went straight back to code breaking. | Well, we were on our honeymoon that day. |
3205 | IMITABLE | which can be imitated or copied. | The final addition to the regular group at the farm was Mr. Jelliman, an amiable white pensioner and old friend of the movement who became the farm foreman. | “Great has been the pleasure, I am sure. I never met with a disposition more truly amiable.” |
3206 | IMPROBABLE | that which is not likely to happen | She’d been on her own improbable journey, a victim from a very early age, and she’d learned to fight back” for herself, for others. | The idea that Holmes might be the cause of Julia’s discontent seemed more and more improbable. |
3207 | INDESCRIBABLE | that which cannot be described | When June came the grasses headed out and turned brown, and the hills turned a brown which was not brown but a gold and saffron and red”an indescribable color. | I was often asked by reporters how it felt to be free, and I did my best to describe the indescribable, and usually failed. |
3208 | JAIL | a place where prisoners are kept. | I bet he just got out of jail. | My father’s brother, Leroy, called Lee, was in jail, and my father was constantly getting letters from lawyers asking for money for Uncle Lee’s “case.” |
3209 | KANGAROO | an animal of australia with great leaping power. | He dropped his bicycle and we leaped for each other like kangaroos. | After he goes, I look up kangaroo on Wikipedia and find out that kangaroos don’t make a particular sound. |
3210 | KIDNAP | to carry away a person forcibly. | “Any unaccompanied child is likely to be kidnapped or killed.” | Sarah and Jack and the clover elves are just about to celebrate their victory over the troll army when an ogre kidnaps Jack and sweeps him off to the hobgoblin king’s castle. |
3211 | LOCUST | a kind of winged insect migrating in swarms and consuming vegetation. | Then sweeping out of the northwest like a swarm of locusts there came one day in early summer a horde of men. | The day of the locust was at hand, but from the ashes of humanity there arose no Phoenix. |
3212 | MASOCHISM | the tendency to derive sexual gratification from one’s own pain or humiliation | But he was not irrigating fields, milking cows, or otherwise performing feats of agricultural masochism which might warrant such early rising. | I don’t know who invented the template for the standard writing workshop, but whoever it was seems to have struck the perfect balance between sadism and masochism. |
3213 | MATINS | morning prayer in church | I crept back into bed and lay there, contemplating the terrible sorts of fates that seem possible only in the small hours, until matins rang. | In truth, I slept only an hour or so past matins; then several of Mr. Pope’s orphans invaded our room, begging for stories and horseback rides. |
3214 | MESOMORPH | a person whose build is powerful, compact and muscular. | Then the hardcore bands from Southern California came up, and it felt like the ectomorphs were overtaken by the mesomorphs, all these thick-neck, Henry Rollins jocks. | Essentially, I’m your garden-variety mesomorph who doesn’t eat to live but, rather, who lives to eat her feelings. |
3215 | MIGRATORY | that move from one place to another. | Bach year these people, like thousands of others, tallied raptors along the four migratory flyways in North America”the Atlantic, Mississippi, Central, and Pacific flyways. | The airship approached from the south, like some giant migratory bird. |
3216 | MOBOCRACY | rule by the mob | The executive was quoted in the China Daily state publication in 2019 as fearing “mobocracy”. | And then he moved to replace democracy with mobocracy, gathering a throng in Washington and inciting it to march to the Capitol and sack it. |
3217 | MUSE | a source of inspiration for an artist, goddess of learning and arts. | “He’s not a bad sort,” I mused after he left. | “Maybe,” he muses, “there are no tracks because Crystal’s a little pig and Alice is carrying her.” |
3218 | OPTIC | science of sight and light. | And what about all those other words ending in ics”economics, ethics, optics, politics, and so on? | Art had escaped, or partially escaped, from Aristotle, and it had done so under the guidance of geometry and optics. |
3219 | ORIENTAL | a person of asian, especially east asian, descent. | Ben emptied one box that held ashtrays from Japan, four statues of Buddha in various postures and degrees of corpulence, six oriental silk screens, and two camel seats from Morocco. | It was startling and I watched the surge and flutter of the birds as their colors flared for an instant like an unfurled oriental fan. |
3220 | OROGRAPHY | study of mountain | The close link with orography, already evoked in 1483 by Marin Sanudo with his “city situated on a most wonderful mountain’, is referred to as part of the distinctive character of the city. | The search after truth, whether it be in the fields of natural science, of geography, or its to-be-adopted sister orography, can never fail to be right and good and beneficial. |
3221 | PHOBIA | an extreme or irrational fear of something | Maybe Leonard’s daughter will develop a phobia of birds being locked up in cages. | I guess you could call it a phobia. |
3222 | PHONETICS, ACOUSTICS | the study and classification of speech sounds. | He gives amazing speeches, writes fantastic op-eds and now newspaper features, spearheads community warmth drives…and he dates a manipulative ditz. | Saturday: “Wonderful, what fantastic weather,” we all said in the morning. |
3223 | PROSTITUTE | woman who offers her body on hire. | ||
3224 | RAPE | to use a woman by force. | ||
3225 | REDTAPISM | too many official formalities. | Many whites are even actually unaware of their own racism, until they face some test, and then their racism emerges in one form or another. | “And racism is something you’ll definitely have to wrestle with. But you gotta take things a single step at a time.” |
3226 | REPUBLIC | a state in which supreme power is held by the people and their elected representatives, and which has an elected or nominated president rather than a monarch. | What made him most indignant was the word that the president of the republic himself planned to be present at the ceremonies in Macondo in order to decorate him with the Order of Merit. | Many of France’s neighbors worried that similar revolutions might spread to their countries and wanted the new French republic crushed. |
3227 | SCULPTURE | the art of making dolls. | Because, over the course of his life, he’d experienced countless ancient sculptures and learned to understand and interpret that first impression that crossed his mind. | Preschoolers climbed on the life-size sculpture of a circle of children playing ring-around-the-rosey. |
3228 | SOMNILOQUISM | talking in sleep | ||
3229 | SPENDTHRIFT, PRODIGAL | a person who spends his money recklessly. | A spendthrift trust would not only prevent your kids from blowing through any money left in the IRAs. | A spendthrift trust is not a do-it-yourself project. |
3230 | SYNONYMS | words which have the same meaning | For family delicacy, Dad coined two synonyms for going to the bathroom in the woods. | I need to know that ramify and bifurcate are synonyms, if they even are? |
3231 | TRIPOD | having three legs. | Spying the camera tripod, he walked over and examined it. | Then, with the Olympic bell tolling in the background, he turned, rose on his toes, and touched the torch to an enormous bronze cauldron on a tripod. |
3232 | TRUST | confidence reposed in a person by making them nominal owner, a firm belief in someone. | “Lord Hamlet, it seems you see all women as deceivers, be they beautiful or ugly. Perhaps the fault lies in the man who trusts only his sight and is a slave to his base desire!” | And so, reluctantly at first, she gave her trust to him. |
3233 | TWINS | two children born together. | She brought the plates out to them, and the steaming pasta was met with oohs from the twins. | If twins share eye color 100 percent of the time, then the concordance is 1. |
3234 | UNAVOIDABLE | incapable of being avoided. | To experience her body’s balance within the world, the sensation of her skin from the inside, touching her face and receiving the touch from both sides”it’s unavoidable and incredibly intense. | These irrational numbers were an unavoidable consequence of Greek mathematics. |
3235 | VESPER | evening prayer in a church | I see night women in doorways, monks chanting vespers, and here is the great boom of Big Ben, This is the BBC Overseas Service and here is the news. | In the back, behind where a priest would have stood to lead vespers, was strung a banner. |
3236 | WEATHER-COCK | a cock-shaped indicator on the building top to show the direction of air. | There was a gust of wind, then, so strong that it rattled the windows of the village, and whirled and spun the weathercocks until they could not tell north from west or south from east. | He looked down towards Admiral Boom’s house where the telescope weathercock swung. |
3237 | WIRELESS OR RADIO | method of sending messages without the help of wires. | Does the Victorian grassland earless lizard still exist? | Among its top concerns will be the spot-tailed earless lizard, which inhabits the drilling grounds of the Eagle Ford Shale and is on the Fish and Wildlife Service’s study list. |
3238 | DAIRY | a place where milk is converted into butter and cheese | A few, like Joe, were farm boys or lumberjacks or fishermen, the products of foggy coastal villages, damp dairy farms, and smoky lumber towns all over the state. | The blue whale has the largest heart, weighing more than a thousand pounds, the size of an average dairy cow. |
3239 | DOCK | a place where ships are prepared or built | The hunting club had kept the steps in decent repair, and used the jetty as a dock for their boats. | He instructed that he should leave lanterns burning upon the dock early in the morning, so that we might land there and pursue the bargain under cover of darkness. |
3240 | HOST, HOSTESS | one who entertains a guest | An ostentatious home thrown up in an assembly line fashion while you wait. | For the next fifteen minutes, I follow Mother and Missus Whitworth from one ostentatious room to the next. |
3241 | COURIER | a messenger sent in great haste | Ted Hall was aware he’d missed meetings with the Soviet courier assigned to pick up his final report. | Ten minutes later, the courier hurried in again with a second cable. |
3242 | ASTROLOGER | one who foretells events | I say “distressing” because if people believe astrologers and astrology, it’s frightening to consider whom or what else they’ll believe. | According to the astrologer for the Post, “a compromise will help ease tension”; useful, perhaps, but somewhat vague. |
3243 | REPORTER | one who reports news or conducts interviews for the newspaper or broadcasting media or press | Later that summer, when a far greater explosion would rock Durham, another reporter for the alternative Anvil, Elizabeth Tornquist, would put her finger squarely on this problem of white ignorance. | Although, this reporter has not quite figured out the strategy of members of the same household bidding against each other. |
3244 | NOVELIST | one who writes novels | I learned how a popular novelist like Dickens, writing for a middle-class audience, makes his readers aware of their ability to effect social reform. | Most important, Tawantinsuyu “managed to eradicate hunger,” the Peruvian novelist Mario Vargas Llosa noted. |
3245 | WRITER | one who writes books | I didn’t tell him that I was a writer. | “I’m a joke as far as Buz is concerned. He thinks people are strange if they even read books. Besides,” I added bitterly, “what would a writer be doing working out of a slave market?” |
3246 | AGRICULTURE | the art of tilling the soil | China had developed intensive agriculture based on millets in the north and rice in the south, and with domestic pigs, chickens, and water buffalo. | They had no intensive agriculture, and only questionably any agriculture at all. |
3247 | CATALOG | a list of books in a library | Her grandparents didn’t have a mirror, but she was absolutely positive the skirt made her look like a girl in a Sears catalog, if they ever had a Japanese girl in the catalog. | Now Brian sat, looking out the window with the roar thundering through his ears, and tried to catalog what had led up to his taking this flight. |
3248 | COMEDY | a humorous play with a happy ending | Since everyone accepted them, and more particularly since they accepted themselves, I knew that their laughter was real and that their lives were cheerful comedies, interrupted only by costume changes and freshening of make-up. | Sure, he liked military history, weapons, and biplanes, but he also loved old films, especially romantic comedies from the 1940s and ’50s. |
3249 | BARBARIAN | an uncivilized person | You must admit your glorious King Degravaunt rode out of the west with his barbarian hordes bent on slaughter, and drove us out of the homes we’d lived in for centuries. | “There are no longer barbarians to overthrow civilization.” |
3250 | BETROTHED | engaged to be married | As Joffrey’s betrothed, Sansa had the seat of honor on the queen’s right hand. | “Have a care how you address my betrothed.” |
3251 | BIENNIAL | an event which happens once in two years | Once the first two crates were completed, I carried them down to the art museum for consideration in their upcoming juried biennial. | A meeting of images, actions and words, the work is part of Performa, the citywide biennial straddling worlds of performance and visual art. |
3252 | BIGAMY | the practice of having two wives or husbands at a time | He often told her that he was going to tell a policeman and have Sissy arrested for bigamy. | “So, you see, dear one,” she said sweetly, “it was her mama’s fault the law went looking for my father on the charge of bigamy.” |
3253 | BOUQUET | a collection of flowers | When a young man buys a five-dollar bouquet, is it for his sweetheart, a sick friend, his mother? | The flowers had been laid evenly to cover the mound of new-turned damp earth, and already the wind had frayed the blossoms and flung the smaller bouquets out into the path. |
3254 | BREVITY | briefness; shortness of time | The terms could seem impolite to an outsider, but they reflected Farmer’s sense of humor, his quick mind, and his prejudice for brevity. | “Why? I wrote them a letter on why I was the answer to sliced bread,” is how Flom explains it, with characteristic brevity. |
3255 | CACOGRAPHIST | a person who is bad in spellings | Nine dancers, three musicians, two martial-arts experts and a calligraphist, all from Europe and Asia, unite on stage to conjure up a fascinating world that verges between science fiction and present-day life. | Kobo Daishi is the most famous of all Japanese Buddhist teachers; famous alike as a saint, as an artist, and as a calligraphist. |
3256 | CACOLOGY | bad choice of words or poor pronunciation | In addition to comparing digital technology to food, there is another compelling analogy. | We laughed at Ms. G’s analogy, and did not take her seriously. |
3257 | CALLIGRAPHY | the art of beautiful handwriting | There is mechanical drawing and calligraphy, and each student spends four hours a week on freehand drawing. | Then Tillie promised calligraphy lessons to the person who took the pen and ink, and Bella promised fabric painting lessons to the person who took the tuxedo T-shirt. |
3258 | CANNIBAL | one who feeds on human flesh | In Sunday school Rex Minton said we better not go to the Congo on account of the cannibal natives would boil us in a pot and eat us up. | Grandpa Tom’s story about the water cannibals was true. |
3259 | CARTOGRAPHER | one who draws maps | When I was older, I wanted to be a cartographer, then a topographer. | First cartographers, then mathematicians, then anatomists, and then astronomers began to play the game, which was inherently competitive and immediately gave rise to priority disputes and, more slowly, to eponymic naming. |
3260 | CATHOLICITY | broad outlook, free from prejudice | In fact, a hyenas catholicity of taste is so indiscriminate it nearly forces admiration. | But while that genre catholicity has always been part of Mr. Brooks’s arsenal, he’s too savvy to ignore the country base. |
3261 | CAVALRY | (in the past) soldiers who fought on horses back | Which means they have no cavalry, no eyes. | He put on the stolen cavalry hat and blinked upward into the black sky. |
3262 | CHOREOGRAPHER | one who teaches dancing | Each plant and animal plays its part and Joel Salatin is the choreographer. | To this end she recruited Italian dancers, choreographers and a band of violinists, playing on the very instruments she had ordered for her son from Cremona. |
3263 | CLOAKROOM | a place for luggage at the railway station | But Lola’s health was on my mind as I gave my bag in at the cloakroom, and exchanged cheery good mornings with the porters. | At least he’s an improvement on the previous one, who smelled like a church cloakroom in the rain; like your mouth when the dentist starts picking at your teeth; like a nostril. |
3264 | COAGULATE | change from a liquid into a solid or semi-solid state by chemical reaction | The next morning, there is coagulated blood under the skin on her breast. | There was blood everywhere, coagulating to a deep red crust. |
3265 | COBBLER | one who mends shoes | It was in the spring, a very chilly spring, that Aunt Jimmy died of peach cobbler. | Ma said to me, “But at least you got to test my cobbler for me, honey. My blood sugar’s probably sky-high already.” |
3266 | COLOSSUS | a person who is extremely important or large in size | Traditional histories like to equate Beethoven, the colossus of music in the early 1800s, with his contemporary Napoleon Bonaparte, revolutionary-turned-Emperor and serial military adventurer. | The colossus of Wagner is an inescapable reality of late-nineteenth- century music, indeed of recent Western civilisation. |
3267 | COMBUSTIBLE | that which can catch fire and burn easily | I read somewhere that it has combustible oil in it that the Indians used to start fires. | It was neither horse-drawn nor powered by a combustible engine. |
3268 | COMEDIAN | one who plays funny parts in plays or films | He got a great hand before the manager threw us out, and Fay said everyone thought I was a wonderful comedian and everyone liked my moron act. | Pegleg Bates, the one-legged tap dancer, was appearing, along with a band and a comedian. |
3269 | COMPILER | a person who brings out new books | She tracked the regulars on their daily transits through the park, assembling notes and speculations like the compilers of her almanacs. | I have steadily become a compiler of lives. |
3270 | CONSCRIPT | a person who is compelled by law to serve in the armed forces | This was not the Belgian Army, official conscripted protectors of white people, but a group of young men who held secret meetings in the woods behind our house. | “I told him you are my brother. He said he will make sure nobody comes here to conscript you.” |
3271 | CONTEMPORARIES | belonging to or living at the same time | Learning sequences in music: A contemporary music learning theory. | His contemporaries are divided on the question, and his own notes are contradictory. |
3272 | CONTRABAND | smuggled goods | The officer takes a cursory peek inside my lunch bag”the contraband check. | She soon learned, however, that the contrabands resented her being able to draw rations, as though she were an officer or a soldier. |
3273 | CONTRETEMPS | a minor dispute or disagreement | “Yes, huh, yes there was a small, a little contretemps at the tree.” | The rebels had annoyed them with fire from the Roxbury lines; some contretemps had begun amidst the warehouses of the Neck; and, no ground won or lost, two had died. |
3274 | CONTROVERSIAL | that which causes debate or argument | Johnson gently pushed McNamara out of the Pentagon, giving him the prestigious but less controversial job of president of the World Bank. | “Let’s maybe stick to the less controversial stuff. And the candy is for the kids only. No teenagers.” |
3275 | CONVENTION | a formal assembly or conference of people of the same business to discuss practices | Unseen, from two stories up, with the benefit of unambiguous sunlight, she had privileged access across the years to adult behavior, to rites and conventions she knew nothing about, as yet. | At their convention later in June, the Democrats nominated Winfield Scott Hancock as their candidate. |
3276 | COUP D’ETAT | the sudden overthrow of a government, especially by force | The struggle to oust Grigorovich was as prolonged and desperate as any politburo coup d’etat. | One major hurdle is the old laws, many of which date back to the 1980 military coup d’etat. |
3277 | CRUSADE | a religious war | The Andrews case became the basis for a legal and medical crusade. | That night, lying in bed, Roy felt a stronger connection to Mullet Fingers, and a better understanding of the boy’s private crusade against the pancake house. |
3278 | CULPRIT | a person who is responsible for a problem or a crime | If anyone or anything set foot in our chicken house”if it had feet, that is”we would catch the culprit red-handed. | I watched as he was taken to the hospital and watched as the culprits were arrested. |
3279 | CYNOSURE | centre of attraction | They were white people all, with faces turned to the cynosure of race. | Indeed, the English and most of their ways were the cynosure of American eyes. |
3280 | DENOUEMENT | the last part of a play, book etc. where all the complications of the plot are solved | The scene is a denouement, ugly and raw. | His chess innocence gone, he could now see the denouement perhaps twenty or more moves ahead. |
3281 | DETERGENT | a cleaning agent, especially a synthetic substance | It infuriated Brave Orchid that her sister held up each dish between thumb and forefinger, squirted detergent on the back and front, and ran water without plugging up the drain. | They couldn’t manage to wash a coffee mug, yet they’d been more than willing to criticize the detergent manufacturer. |
3282 | DETRACTOR | a person who tries to make something less good by criticizing it | If Levy Pants was to succeed, the first step would be imposing a heavy hand upon its detractors. | The detractors asserted that the movie was an example of Western propaganda that sought to erase the fact that Cleopatra was an African woman. |
3283 | DOCUMENTARY | a film that gives facts about something | The character of Bobby is not in the film, but he is seen in documentary footage. | She’d wanted to go to a local showing of the documentary Bridegroom instead. |
3284 | EAVESDROPPER | a person who listens to someone’s private conversation without them knowing: | It wouldn’t have been so bad if I could have understood what they were saying, but even my finely tuned eavesdropper’s ears couldn’t quite make out what was being said. | However, that left me as an eavesdropper”apparently he did not realize the sound could be heard in the kitchen”and, not wanting to feel sneaky, I thought I should let him know. |
3285 | EGALITARIAN | the belief that all people are equally important and should have the same rights and opportunities in life | Again, the Chathams and the atolls had the simplest, most egalitarian societies. | How could these hierarchical, acquisitive, market-oriented, monotheistic, ethnocentric newcomers have absorbed ideas and customs from the egalitarian, reciprocal, noncapitalistic, pantheistic, ethnocentric natives? |
3286 | ERR | make a mistake, do wrong | The Duke, then, erred in this election, and it was the cause of his ultimate ruin. | The odds would be with me, for I would be appealing to men bound by common ideals to judge with pity and understanding one of their brothers who erred and fell in struggle. |
3287 | ESPIONAGE | the act of spying | Washington found Church guilty of “criminal correspondence with the enemy” but did not go so far as to convict him of espionage. | No wonder that a modern spymaster called espionage a “wilderness of mirrors…an ever-fluid landscape where fact and illusion merge.” |
3288 | EXERTION | making an effort; trying very hard to do something | He laughs and howls until tears run down his face and his lips tremble from exertion. | Dill, red in the face from his exertions, sat down and filled the Amen Corner. |
3289 | FARCE | a light-hearted humorous play with silly action | Siobhan was sure everyone could see the farce this exhibition had become. | We presented The Blockade of Boston, Major-General Burgoyne’s farce upon rebel hypocrisy, as one of the most celebrated events of our hivernal concert series. |
3290 | FAVOURITISM | the practice of giving favoured treatment to certain people | Of course, officially, guardians weren’t supposed to show favouritism, but there were little displays of affection all the time within certain parameters; and most of what Ruth suggested fell easily within them. | “I was possibly harder on her than anyone else as I didn’t want anyone to think that I had hired her out of favouritism.” |
3291 | FEBRILE | having or showing the symptoms of a fever | Late at night, when crowds of rowdy proles roamed the streets, the town had a curiously febrile air. | She had no illusions: old plans, if one could ever remember them, the plans that time had overtaken, tended to have a febrile and overoptimistic grip on events. |
3292 | FIANCE | a man who is engaged to be married | This specimen carries her parasol on her left, toward the gate and her fiance, though the sun inflames her right. | My fiance is thrilled that we’re moving to Kinshasa, and once he’s here I’m sure my mom will come around. |
3293 | FIANCEE | a woman who is engaged to be married | Stuart made it clear the first time he showed up on my porch his fiancee was a bad subject. | His fiancee was out there now, sitting on the visitor’s chair. |
3294 | FICTION | the literature of unreal stories | “Well, if you change your mind and get a hankerin’ for a little make-believe, the computer catalog for the fiction section is right over there.” | To relax, he read science fiction and studied Einstein’s theory of relativity. |
3295 | FOREMAN | a skilled worker in charge of other workmen | At the camp, Mama and Papa were told that the foreman had left for the day. | For the first two days after the injury, Shin’s foreman filled in on the factory floor. |
3296 | FOURTH ESTATE | influential newspapers and journalists | Rumour-mongers are the original fourth estate, journalists who inform society about and thus protect it from cheats and freeloaders. | Not a painting of journalists ““ the fourth estate in this painting is the working class. |
3297 | FRANCOPHILE | an admirer of the french people, language, manners or way of life | We were there for my father”a Francophile and a committed cyclist”who had died, and for whom the Tour was a convergence of things truly adored, a type of high summit. | Lebovitz tells stories that are integral to his moves in the kitchen ” a choreography that is compelling for Francophiles, inspired cooks and armchair sociologists. |
3298 | FRANCOPHOBE | one who dislikes the french and france | He was variously labeled a dangerous “Francophobe,” a federalist “fanatic,” and a political activist masquerading as a comedian. | |
3299 | FUDDY-DUDDY | a person who is very old-fashioned and does not approve of modern ideas | I am not talking in a fuddy-duddy way about this. | By giving the Beatles an MBE and inviting them to No 10 he made stuffier Tories like Ted Heath look fuddy-duddy and himself in touch with the zeitgeist. |
3300 | FUMIGATE | purify (an area) with the fumes of certain chemicals | Vacated lockers were scrubbed, mattresses fumigated, brass coat hooks, doorknobs and keyholes were buffed. | Despite the colonel’s disdainful attitude, the cells were soon painted and fumigated and we were supplied with fresh blankets and sanitary pails. |
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1. What is One Word Substitution?
One Word Substitution involves using a single word to replace a longer phrase or expression, condensing complex ideas into concise terms for effective communication.
2. Where can I find resources like PDFs for One Word Substitution?
PDFs compiling extensive lists of One Word Substitutions from A to Z are available online, offering examples and meanings, aiding in language proficiency and vocabulary building.
3. Are there One Word Substitution exercises available in languages other than English?
Yes, One Word Substitution exercises are available in various languages, including Hindi and Gujarati, catering to learners from different linguistic backgrounds.
4. Could you provide some One Word Substitution examples?
Certainly! Here are a few examples:
- Euphemism: A polite word used to replace a harsh one.
- Altruistic: Showing selfless concern for others.
- Omnipotent: Having unlimited power.
- Quintessential: Representing the most perfect example.
- Nostalgia: A sentimental longing for the past.
5. How can I find the meaning of One Word Substitutions in Gujarati?
Online platforms or dictionaries may provide translations or meanings of One Word Substitutions in Gujarati for reference.
6. Do you have a PDF with One Word Substitutions from A to Z?
There are PDF resources available that compile extensive lists of One Word Substitutions alphabetically, aiding in comprehensive vocabulary development and language proficiency.
7. Are there MCQs or questions related to One Word Substitutions?
Yes, Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs) focusing on One Word Substitutions are often part of language proficiency tests or educational assessments.
8. How can I practice One Word Substitution questions?
You can find practice questions online or in study materials designed specifically for language proficiency exams, aiding in better understanding and application of One Word Substitutions.
9. What’s the importance of understanding One Word Substitutions?
Mastery over One Word Substitutions enhances language proficiency, aiding in clearer and more concise communication while broadening vocabulary.
10. Where can I find the meaning of specific One Word Substitutions?
Online dictionaries, language learning platforms, or specific reference books often provide meanings and usage examples for various One Word Substitutions.
11. Can you provide some common One Word Substitution Examples?
Certainly! Here are a few examples:
- Altruistic: Showing selfless concern for others.
- Euphemism: A polite word used in place of a harsh one.
- Omnipotent: Having unlimited power.
- Nostalgia: Sentimental longing for the past.
- Verbose: Using more words than necessary.
12. Where can I find One Word Substitution Examples with Answers?
Online resources, study guides, or practice test materials often offer One Word Substitution examples with accompanying answers for self-assessment and learning.
13. Is there a PDF available with One Word Substitution Examples?
Yes, PDFs containing lists of One Word Substitution Examples are accessible online, providing a comprehensive resource for expanding vocabulary and language proficiency.
14. Are there Easy One Word Substitution Examples for beginners?
Absolutely! Examples like ‘Homebody’ for a person who prefers staying at home or ‘Novice’ for a beginner are simple yet effective examples suitable for beginners.
15. Are there One Word Substitution Examples available in Hindi?
Yes, resources providing One Word Substitution Examples in Hindi are available to aid Hindi-speaking learners in enhancing their vocabulary and language skills.
16. Can you offer One Word Substitution Examples suitable for Class 7 students?
Certainly! Examples like ‘Abundant’ for plentiful or ‘Bizarre’ for strange can be helpful and engaging for Class 7 students, aiding in their language development.
17. Do you have a list of 50 One Word Substitution Examples?
Here are 10 examples:
- Apathy: Lack of interest or concern.
- Dexterity: Skill in performing tasks.
- Dormant: Inactive or sleeping.
- Enigma: Something mysterious or puzzling.
- Facade: The front view of a building.
- Gregarious: Fond of company or sociable.
- Insolent: Rude or disrespectful.
- Jubilant: Feeling or expressing great happiness.
- Maverick: A non-conformist or independent-minded person.
- Nefarious: Wicked or criminal in nature.
18. Is there a compilation of 100 One Word Substitution Examples available?
While providing 100 examples here might be exhaustive, numerous resources online compile extensive lists of One Word Substitution Examples to aid in learning and language proficiency.
19. Can you offer 20 One Word Substitution Examples?
Absolutely! Here are a few more examples:
- Quintessential: Representing the most perfect example.
- Ravenous: Extremely hungry or famished.
- Surreptitious: Secretive or stealthy.
- Ubiquitous: Present everywhere or widespread.
- Voracious: Having a huge appetite.
20. Could you provide One Word Substitution Examples with meanings?
Certainly! Here are a few:
- Epitome: A perfect example or embodiment.
- Indolent: Lazy or idle.
- Labyrinth: A complex maze or network of paths.
- Myriad: Countless or a large number.
- Panacea: A solution or remedy for all problems.