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হোয়াটসঅ্যাপ গ্রুপ ফিল আপ থাকলে চ্যানেলে যুক্ত হোন- ক্লিক
শুরু হচ্ছে আমাদের ভোকাব ব্যাচ।
ডিটেইলস:
- পত্রিকা থেকে ডেইলি ভোকাব দেওয়া হবে (মাসে ২০ দিন +)
- ডেইলি ভোকাব থেকে এক্সাম নেওয়া হবে (মাসে ২০+ এক্সাম)
এছাড়া থাকছে-
- ফেনম PDF
- ক্যারিয়ার গাইডলাইনস
- অন্যান্য
প্রতিদিন পত্রিকা পড়তেই হবে জবের জন্যে, তবুও আমরা পড়ি না।
ইংলিশ ফ্রি হ্যান্ড রাইটিং আমাদের ভালো না জাস্ট পেপার না পড়ার জন্যে।
এছাড়া ম্যাক্সিমাম ভোকাব প্রিভিয়াস ইয়ার ও পেপার বেইজড হয়।
তাই পেপার নিয়ে আমাদের এই ব্যাচ।
কোর্স ফী খুবই কম।
মাসে মাত্র ৫০ টাকা!
ভর্তি প্রক্রিয়া: সব ধাপ পড়ে এরপর টাকা পাঠান-
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বিকাশ করুন, অবশ্যই রেফারেন্সে আপনার নাম লিখতে হবে। না হলে ভর্তি ক্যান্সেল।
বিকাশ: 01406097810 - যে নাম্বারে বিকাশ করেছেন সে নাম্বারে টাকা পাঠানোর স্ক্রিনশট দিন। টাকা পাঠানোর সময় অবশ্যই রেফারেন্স দিবেন।
- স্ক্রিনশট দেওয়ার ২৪ ঘন্টার মধ্যে আপনাকে প্রয়োজনীয় ফর্ম, গ্রুপ লিংক ও নির্দেশনা দেওয়া হবে।
ভোকাব ব্যাচের বিস্তারিত জানতে নিচের হোয়াটসঅ্যাপ গ্রুপে যুক্ত হোন:
https://chat.whatsapp.com/Lq5487z7EqUA68gEuLNoHh
আমাদের ফেইসবুক গ্রুপ:
1. Facebook Group 1
2. Facebook Group 2
📘 Advanced Vocabulary List (20 Words)
| Word (No.) | Part of Speech | Meaning | 4 Tough Synonyms | 4 Tough Antonyms | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. decimate | Verb | to destroy a large part of something | annihilate, devastate, ravage, obliterate | create, construct, build, preserve | The famine decimated the region's population. |
| 2. inundate | Verb | to flood or overwhelm with too much of something | deluge, submerge, overwhelm, swamp | drain, dehydrate, underwhelm, deplete | The office was inundated with thousands of complaints. |
| 3. stagnate | Verb | to stop flowing or developing; become inactive | languish, idle, deteriorate, vegetate | flow, develop, flourish, advance | Without investment, the economy will stagnate for years. |
| 4. scrutinise | Verb | to examine something very closely and carefully | inspect, audit, dissect, probe | ignore, overlook, skim, neglect | The committee will scrutinise every detail of the contract. |
| 5. repeal | Verb | to officially cancel a law or regulation | revoke, rescind, annul, nullify | enact, establish, enforce, ratify | The government voted to repeal the controversial tax law. |
| 6. ration | Verb | to limit the amount of something each person can have | allocate, restrict, apportion, mete | squander, waste, lavish, distribute freely | During the crisis, they had to ration water and food. |
| 7. weaponise | Verb | to use something as a weapon or make it capable of causing harm | militarise, exploit, arm, deploy | disarm, neutralise, pacify, de‑escalate | Hackers attempted to weaponise personal data for political attacks. |
| 8. foil | Verb | to prevent someone from succeeding or stop a plan | thwart, frustrate, obstruct, stymie | aid, assist, facilitate, promote | Security guards foiled the robbery attempt at the bank. |
| 9. derail | Verb | to cause something to fail or go off course | sabotage, disrupt, impede, subvert | facilitate, implement, advance, expedite | A single scandal could derail months of peace negotiations. |
| 10. enact | Verb | to make a law official or put a plan into action | legislate, ordain, pass, implement | repeal, abolish, cancel, invalidate | The parliament will enact stricter environmental regulations. |
| 11. fluctuate | Verb | to change frequently between different levels or amounts | oscillate, vacillate, waver, seesaw | stabilise, remain, steady, fix | Stock prices fluctuate wildly during economic uncertainty. |
| 12. escalate | Verb | to increase quickly in intensity, scope, or seriousness | intensify, accelerate, amplify, worsen | de‑escalate, diminish, reduce, subside | The border dispute could escalate into full‑scale war. |
| 13. intercept | Verb | to stop or catch something before it reaches its destination | block, seize, ambush, cut off | release, forward, dispatch, allow | The navy intercepted the smuggler's ship in open waters. |
| 14. dwindle | Verb | to become smaller, fewer, or weaker over time | diminish, shrink, wane, subside | increase, grow, flourish, expand | The village's population dwindled after the factory closed. |
| 15. default | Verb | to fail to pay money owed or fail to fulfil a duty | neglect, fail, renege, welsh | pay, honour, settle, fulfil | The company defaulted on its loan obligations last quarter. |
| 16. reschedule | Verb | to change the planned time of something to a later date | postpone, defer, delay, adjourn | expedite, advance, hasten, proceed | The meeting was rescheduled due to the minister's illness. |
| 17. delimit | Verb | to set or mark the boundaries or limits of something | demarcate, define, circumscribe, bound | blur, obscure, expand, confuse | The treaty delimited the border between the two nations. |
| 18. laud | Verb | to praise highly, especially in public | acclaim, extol, applaud, commend | criticise, condemn, censure, disparage | The teacher lauded the student for outstanding research. |
| 19. breach | Verb | to break through or violate a rule, agreement, or barrier | rupture, violate, infringe, contravene | respect, obey, comply, honour | The hacker breached the company's firewall and stole data. |
| 20. volatile | Adjective | likely to change suddenly and unpredictably, especially for the worse | capricious, erratic, mercurial, unstable | stable, constant, calm, predictable | The stock market became volatile after the political crisis. |

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