Sunday 24 June, 2007

Accomplishing a deed?

Wordsmith / FRANK KRISHNER

Students in Patna are thrilled that a Bihari student is the All India topper of the CBSE Boards. The local newspapers put the news of his accomplishment on the first page. This brings us to some words that are so close to each other in meaning that they are often misused.

An accomplishment is something that has been accomplished, done or completed. It isn’t just anything. It must be something that took knowledge and, usually, hard work. When you have solved a hard arithmetic problem or made it to your school football team, you can be proud of your accomplishment.

An achievement is the accomplishment of something unusually dangerous or difficult. Courage and effort are needed to achieve, and an achievement is always admirable. Ken Noguchi led a team of Japanese and Nepali climbers and returned with 500 kilograms of tins, old tents, food and medicine left over decades by other climbers. He estimates he has collected some 9,000 kilograms of rubbish from Mount Everest during his five trips to the peak. Now that’s an achievement!

An attainment is the accomplishment of a goal or an objective through hard work and a plan of action. An attainment is the successful completion of an unusually challenging task. Ken Noguchi will use the rubbish from Everest to influence mountaineers against turning Everest into a garbage dump. This is his real goal. When mountaineers will stop littering Mount Everest, it will be Noguchi’s attainment!

A deed is whatever is done. You might call any kind or helpful or useful act that someone does a good deed.

A feat and an exploit are accomplishments. A feat requires more courage and strength than a deed. Learning a new skill is a feat. Bungee jumping off the Howrah bridge is a feat of skill and daring. An exploit is an accomplishment that requires even greater daring and heroism than a feat. Have you read any books about the exploits of Shivaji, Sher Shah Suri, or Prithviraj Chauhan?

Learn-a-word

Boring /Bored

Something that is boring is not interesting in any way and makes you feel tired: a boring job in an office.I thought the party was really boring. A boring person never says or does anything that is interesting. Don’t confuse ‘boring’ with bored. If you feel bored, you are not interested in something, or have nothing interesting to do. Be careful not to say ‘I am boring’ when you mean ‘I am bored’.

wordscore: unscramble these words [they all have something in common]

XEERPT ACKCR FUELNT DRAOIT

[Last week’s solution: Pretty, Lovely, Beautiful, Stunning]

Visit http://fragbows2.blogspot.com/ for interesting snippets

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