(VOCABULARY)
1. Rejoice (verb)
- Definition: feel or show great joy or delight.
- Synonyms: happiness, pleasure, joy, gladness
- Antonyms: moum, lament
- Usage: “we spent the evening rejoicing at our victory”
2. Confiscate (Verb) –
- Definition: take or seize (someone’s property) with authority.
- Synonyms: impound, seize, commandeer, requisition
- Antonyms: return
- Usage: “the guards confiscated his camera”
3. Transition (Noun) –
- Definition: the process or a period of changing from one state or condition to another.
- Synonyms: change, move, passage, transformation
- Antonyms: stagnation, idleness, remission
- Usage: “students in transition from one program me to another”
4. Saner (adjective) –
- Definition: ( of a person) of sound 1nind; not 1nad or mentally ill.
- Synonyms: of sound n1ind, right in the head, in one’s right mind
- Antonyms: foolish
- Usage: “hard work kept me sane”
(ONE WORD SUBSTITUTION)
5. One who finds nothing good in anything – Critic
6. The process of deciding the nature of disease by examination – Diagnosis
(MISSPELT WORDS)
7. (A) Eligible (B) Elegible (C) Eligeble (D) Eligibal
8. (A) Transffered (B) Transfferred (C) Transfered (D) Transferred
(IDIOMS AND PHRASES)
9. Worse for wear
- Meaning: If something’s worse for wear, it has been used for a long time and, consequently, isn’t in very good condition. A person who’s worse for wear is drunk or high on drugs and looking rough.
- Example: This television set is really worse for the wear; we’ll have to replace it.
10. You can’t take it ,with you
- Meaning: It 1neans to use up all you have before you die because it’s no use to you afterward.
- Example: Enjoy life, enjoy what you have and don’t worry about not having a lot, especially money. Because once you’re dead, ‘you can’t take it with you.’