Preparing for competitive exams involves dedication and students need to be consistent with putting forward their best efforts to score well. Most of the time, candidates assume it is not important to hone their vocabulary skills and miss out on scoring well in exams which gives importance to the English language skills.
Here’s a way to improve your vocabulary and communication skills. Check out the words for the day and a small quiz to push yourself to improve your word power and language skills.
Harried (Adjective)
Meaning: feeling strained as a result of having demands persistently made on one; harassed
Example: The North was harried and the ancient church at Ripon burnt
Hegemony (Noun)
Meaning: Leadership or dominance, especially by one state or social group over others
Example: Under this strategy they are going to bring the whole world under their hegemony
Also Read: Vocabulary Made Easy series: Improve your word skills to score well in exams
Hermetic (Adjective)
Meaning: (of a seal or closure) complete and airtight / relating to an ancient occult tradition encompassing alchemy, astrology, and theosophy
Example: Of these the Asclepius has some interest as a Latin version of a Hermetic treatise
Heyday (Noun)
Meaning: the period of a person’s or thing’s greatest success, popularity, activity, or vigour
Example: Each track sounds like it comes from Motown Records in its ’70s heyday
Put your thinking cap on and try to answer the following questions to understand how much you have grasped.
- The paper has lost millions of readers since its _______________ in 1964. Which of the following words fits best in the sentence? (Heyday, Hermetic)
- Siena, Spender believes, is one of the most _________ societies you will find anywhere. Which of the following words fits best in the sentence? (Hermetic, Hegemony)
- Can you think of some antonyms for the word Hegemony?
- Can you think of some synonyms for the word Harried?
Also Read: Vocabulary Made Easy series: Aim for the best by honing your word skills
Watch out for this space for your weekly update on improving word power.
(Definitions and examples are from Oxford Languages)