vocabulary---synonyms-&-antonyms

Vocabulary - Synonyms & Antonyms

English Vocabulary Words: Vocabulary Builder with Meaning, Antonyms, Synonyms, how to improve English Vocabulary

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Build your English Vocabulary: Online English Vocabulary Test Questions with Answers on Vocabulary - Synonyms & Antonyms

Q341. > Though the Cold War has ended, selective tactics are still continuing > for ensuring the military and economic dominance of developed > countries. Choose the word which is MOST OPPOSITE in meaning of the word as used above **Dominance**

  1.  Aggression
  2.  Submission
  3.  Assertion
  4.  Ignorance
  5.  Lethargy

Solution : Submission
Q342. > Thus in the environment around India, > the number of missiles and nuclear powers are continuously increasing > and destructive weapons continue to pile up around us, in spite of > arms reduction treaties. Choose the word which is MOST OPPOSITE in meaning of the word as used above **Continuously**

  1.  Illegitimately
  2.  Unconditionally
  3.  Insensitively
  4.  Uninterrupted
  5.  Intermittently

Solution : Intermittently
Q343. > To teach is to create a space in which obedience to truth is > practiced. Space may sound like a vague, poetic metaphor until we > realize that it describes experiences of everyday life. We know what > it means to be in a green and open field; we know what it means to be > on a crowded rush hour bus. These experiences of physical space have > parallels in our relations with others. On our jobs, we know what it > is to be pressed and crowded, our working space diminished by the > urgency of deadlines and competitiveness of colleagues. But then there > are times when deadlines disappear and colleagues cooperate, when > everyone has space to move, invent and produce with energy and > enthusiasm. With family and friends, we know how it feels to have > unreasonable demands placed upon us, to be boxed in the expectations > of those nearest to us. But then there are times when we feel accepted > for who we are (or forgiven for who we are not), times when a spouse > or a child or a friend gives us the space both to be and to become. > > Similar experiences of crowding and space are found in education. To > sit in a class where the teacher stuffs our minds with information, > organizes it with finality, insists on having the answer while being > utterly uninterested in our views, and forces us into a grim > competition for grades-to sit in such a class is to experience a lack > of space for learning. But to study with a teacher who not only speaks > but also listens, who not only gives answers but asks questions and > welcomes our insights, who provides information and theories that do > not close doors but open new ones, who encourages students to help > each other learn-to study with such a teacher is to know the power of > a learning space. A learning space has three essential dimensions: > openness, boundaries and an air of hospitality. To create open > learning space is to remove the impediments to learning that we find > around and within us: we often create them ourselves to evade the > challenge of truth and transformation. One source of such impediments > is our fear of appearing ignorant to others or to ourselves. The > openness of a space is created by the firmness of its boundaries. A > learning space cannot extend indefinitely; if it did, it would not be > a structure for learning but an invitation for confusion and chaos. > When space boundaries are violated, the quality of space suffers. The > teacher who wants to create an open learning space must define and > defend its boundaries with care, because the pursuit of truth can > often be painful and discomforting, the learning space must be > hospitable. Hospitality means receiving each other, our struggles, our > new-born ideas with openness and care. It means creating an ethos in > which the community of truth can form and the pain of its > transformation be borne. A learning space needs to be hospitable not > to make learning painless, but to make painful things possible, things > without which no learning can occur-things like exposing ignorance, > testing tentative hypotheses, challenging false or partial > information, and mutual criticism of thought. > > The task of creating learning space with qualities of openness, > boundaries and hospitality can be approached at several levels. The > most basic level is the physical arrangement of the classroom. > Consider the traditional classroom setting with row upon row of chairs > facing the lectern where learning space is confined to the narrow > alley of attention between each student and teacher. In this space, > there is no community of truth, hospitality or room for students to > relate to the thoughts of each other. Contrast it with the chairs > placed in a circular arrangement, creating an open space within which > learners can interconnect. At another level, the teacher can create > conceptual space-with words, in two ways. One is through assigned > reading; the other is through lecturing. Assigned reading, not in the > form of speed reading several hundred pages, but contemplative reading > which opens, not fills, our learning space. A teacher can also create > a learning space by means of lectures. By providing critical > information and a framework of interpretation a lecturer can lay down > the boundaries within which learning occurs. We also create learning > space through the kind of speech we utter and the silence from which > true speech emanates. Speech is a precious gift and a vital tool, but > often our speaking is an evasion of truth, a way of buttressing our > self-serving reconstructions of reality. Silence must therefore be an > integral part of learning space. In silence, more than in arguments, > our mind-made world falls away and must also create emotional space in > the classroom, space that allow feeling to arise and be dealt with > because submerged feelings can undermine learning. In an emotionally > honest learning space, one created by a teacher who does not fear > dealing with feelings, the community of truth can flourish between us > and we can flourish in it According to the author, learning is a painful process because:

  1.  It exposes our ignorance.
  2.  Our views and hypotheses are challenged.
  3.  It involves criticizing the views of others.
  4.  Of all of the above reasons.
  5.  A teacher who is not afraid of confronting feelings.

Solution : It involves criticizing the views of others.
Q344. > With its endowment in terms of > jewelry designers, low costs and high productivity, India can emerge > as a major force in global jewelry exports by emphasizing on > customizing jewelry rather than relying on standard products. At the > same time, gems exports should not suffer by default. Choose the word which is MOST SIMILAR in meaning to the word as used above: **customizing**

  1.  Need-based
  2.  Supportive
  3.  Appropriate
  4.  Quality
  5.  Traditional

Solution : Need-based

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Q345. > Besides, the industry had made helped the > export drive. Besides, the industry had made efforts to capture new > markets, laid stress on quality of the product and became alive to > customer needs. However, in the case of jewelry exports, the actual > performance is behind the potential. Choose the word which is MOST SIMILAR in meaning to the word as used above: **alive**

  1.  Awake
  2.  Open
  3.  Conducive
  4.  Active
  5.  Brisk

Solution : Open
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