Sunday 27 October 2013

Shortcut Technique to Remember Names for Current Affairs
Friends, people have been frequently asking us to share a technique to remember the names in lists. So here is a simple technique to remember names in a story / sentence format.

What this technique about?
Just try to make a short story with the given names. In most of the times the names resembles some objects, animals, name of your friends etc. So according to them you can make a story. Of course, it may sound stupid... but the more stupid the story is... the easier to remember it. Now let’s have a look at this technique with an example. All of us know that recently the winners list of Nobel Prizes for the year 2013 was declared. Let’s have a look at the winners list.


List of Nobel Prize Winners 2013
Chemistry
l Michael Levitt
l Martin Karplus
l Arieh Warshel
Physics
l Peter Higgs
l Francois Englert
l James Rothman
l Randy Schekman
l Thomas Suedhof
Peace
l The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW)
Literature
Economics
l Eugene Fama
l Lars Peter Hansen
l Robert Shiller
Now see. There are 13 names and 6 categories. Try to make up a sentence with them.


Michael started on Car to chemical war, while English Piggs injured physically, Thomas, Rat-Man, Snake-Man given medical treatment and peter, eugen and shiller supported economically. But the problem not resolved so opcw banned chemicals in war for world peace ..Aliens wrote a book about this war and got Nobel prize for that.


Now lets see. What this sentence helps us to remember...
Michael (Michael Levitt) started on Car (Martin KARplus) to chemical (for chemistry) War

(Arieh Warshel), with English Piggs (Englert and Peter Higgs) he injured physically, Thomas, Rat-Man, Snake-Man (Thomas Suedhof, Rothman and Schekman) given medical (for Medicine) treatment and peter, eugen and shiller supported economically (for economy). But the problem not resolved so opcw (Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons) banned chemicals in war for world peace .. Aliens (Alice Munro) wrote a book about this war and got Nobel prize for that.

Friday 25 October 2013

INDIAN HISTORY IMPORTANT QUESTIONS: (VICEROYS)


Q) Who introduced English education in India?
William Bentick
Q) Who introduced permanent settlement?
Cornwallis
Q) Who introduced Doctorine of Lapse?
Dalhousie
Q) Who introduced Railways?
Dalhousie
Q) Who introduced Ryotwari system?
Munro
Q) Who introduced Indian Civil Service?
A) Cornwallis
Q) Who introduced Arms Act?
A) Lytton
Q) Who introduced Post and Telegraph?
Dalhousie
Q) Who introduced Subsidiary Alliance
Wellesley
Q) Who  abolished Sati?
William Bentick
Q) Who introduced Vernacular Press Act?
Lytton
Q) Who introduced Local Self Govt?
Rippon
Q) Who was responsible for Bengal partition?
Lord Curzon
Q) Who introduced Rowlatt Act?
Lord Chelmsford
Q) Who was the viceroy at the time of transfer of capital to Delhi?
Lord Hardige II
Q) Who repealed Vernacular Press Act?
Lord Rippon
Q) Jalliayan wala Bagh tragedy occurred during time of ?
Lord Chelmsford
Q) Who introduced Indian council Act/Morley Minto reforms?
Lord Minto II
Q) Who revoked partition of Bengal?
Lord Hardige II
Q) Dyarchy of province was introduced during time of?
Lord Chelmsford
Q) During simon commission agitation who was viceroy?
Lord Irwin
Q) Who was viceroy during third round table?
Lord Wellington
Q) Who was viceroy during communal award?
Lord Wellington
Q) During visit of Cripps mission who was viceroy?
Lord Linlithgow
Q) Who was viceroy during INA trial?
Lord Wavell
Q) During first round table who was viceroy?
Lord Irwin
Q) During second round table who was viceroy?
Lord Wellington
Q) During Quit India movement who was viceroy?
Lord Linlithgow
Q) Who was viceroy when Indian Independence act was passed?
Lord Mountbatten
Q) During cabinet mission plan who was viceroy?
Lord Wavell


Thursday 10 October 2013

Some Common Used Idioms

Above board - Honest and open.
At arm’s length - To keep at a distance.
At the eleventh hour - At the last moment.
At sixes and sevens - In a disordered manner.
An apple of discord - A cause of quarrel.
At home – Comfortable.
Alpha and omega - The beginning and the end.
At sea - Confused and lost.
At one’s beck and call - At one’s service.
An acid test - A critical test.
Add fuel to the fire - To aggravate the situation.
At a snail’s pace - Very slowly.
To beat about the bush - Talk irrelevantly.
A bone of contention - A source of quarrel.
To burn one’s boats - Go back on a decision.
To burn candle at both ends - To waste lavishly.
To build castles in the air - Make imaginary schemes.
A bolt from the blue - Something unexpected.
By leaps and bounds – Rapidly.
A burning question - An important topic.
To bell the cat - To face the risk.
A big gun - An important person.
To blow one’s own - To praise one’s own trumpet achievement.
A bosom friend - A very close friend.
A brown study – Dreaming.
A close shave - Narrow escape.
To cut a sorry figure - To make a poor show.
Take one to task – Rebuke.
Turn a deaf ear - Disregard / ignore what one says.
By hook or by crook - By fair or foul means.
Gain ground - Become popular.
Pay off old scores - Take revenge.
Put a spoke in one’s wheel - To upset one’s plans.
Turn over a new leaf - Change for the better.
Make up one’s mind – Decide.
In the long run - Eventually; ultimately.
In the nick of time - Just at the last moment.
Through thick and thin - Under all conditions.
With a high hand – Oppressively.
Sitting on the fence - Hesitate between two decisions.
Bring to light – Disclose.
Burn one’s fingers - Get into trouble by interfering in other’s affairs.
Laugh one’s head off - Laugh heartily.
Chew the cud - Ponder over something.
Hard and fast rules - Strict rules.
Play second fiddle - Take an unimportant part.
Rank and file - Ordinary persons.
By fits and starts - In short periods, not regularly.
A wee bit - A little.
Out of the wood - Free from difficulties and dangers.
Under his thumb - Under his control.
At one’s wits end - In a state where one does not know what to do.
Between the devil and the - Between two dangers deep sea.
Burn the midnight oil - Work or study hard.
Call a spade a spade - Speak frankly and directly.
Come off with flying colours - Be highly successful.
Hoping against hope - Without hope.
Hit the nail on the head - Do or say the exact thing.
An axe to grind - A personal interest in the matter.
Spread like wild fire - Spread quickly.
The gift of the gab - Talent for speaking.
Throw out of gear - Disturb the work.
Tooth and nail - With all one’s power.
Take to one’s heels - Run away.
Die in harness - Die while in service.
Out of the way – Strange.
Read between the lines - Understand the hidden meaning.
In cold blood - Deliberately; without emotion.
Show a clean pair of heals - Run away.
A thorn in the flesh - A constant source of annoyance.
Smell a rat - Suspect something foul.
Nip in the bud - Destroy in the early stage.
Out of the question – Impossible.
Stick to one’s guns - Remain faithful to the cause.
A man of straw - A man of no substance.
Leave no stone unturned - Use all available means.
Harp on the same string - Dwell on the same subject.
Take a leaf out of one’s book - Imitate one.
Like a fish out of water - In a strange situation.
At one’s beck and call - Under his control.
Bury the hatchet - End the quarrel and make peace.
Feather one’s own nest - Make money unfairly.
Leave one in the lurch - Desert one in difficulties; leave one in a helpless condition.
To eat humble pie - To apologize humbly; to yield under humiliating circumstances.
To eat your words - To take back what you have said.
To make both ends meet - To live within one’s income.
In high spirits - Very happy.
Kill two birds with one stone - To achieve two results with one effort.
Let the cat out of the bag - Reveal a secret.
Put the cart before the horse - Put or do things in the wrong order.
A hard nut to crack - A difficult problem.
In hot water - In trouble.
Wash one’s dirty linen - Discuss unpleasant in public private matters before strangers.
On tenterhooks - In a state of suspense and anxiety.
To all names - To abuse.
To get rid of - Dispose of.
At daggers drawn - Bitterly hostile.
To play ducks and drakes - To act foolishly or inconsistently.
To take the bull by the horns - To tackle a problem in a bold and direct fashion.
Rain cats and dogs - Rain heavily.
To move heaven and earth - To make a supreme effort.
No avail - Without any result.
Bark up the wrong tree - Accuse or denounce the wrong person.
Keep one at bay - Keep one at a distance.
Make a clean breast of it - Confess – especially when a person has done a wrong thing.
Have a card up one’s sleeve - Have a secret plan in reserve.
Like a cat on hot bricks - Very nervous.
Cat and dog life - Life full of quarrels.
Cock and bull story - Made up story that one should not believe.
Cry for the moon - Ask for the impossible.
The pros and cons - The various aspects of a matter in detail.

Be in a tight corner - In a very difficult situation.

IMPORTANT DAYS OF HISTORY MUST REMEMBER.........

January 9--NRI Day
January 10--World Laugh
January 12--National Youth day
January 15--Army Day
January 25--national voters Day
January 26--India’s republic Day
January 30--Martyrs’ Day;
2nd Sunday of February--World marriage Day
February 14--Valentine Day
February 24--Central Excise Day
February 28--National Science Day
Second Monday March--Commonwealth Day
March 8--International Women’s Day;
March 15--World disabled Day;
March 18--ordnance Factories Day
March 21--World Forestry Day;
March 22--World Day for Water;
March 23 Worlds Meteorological Day;
March 24—World TB Day;
April 5--International Day for Mine awareness;
April 7--world Health Day;
April 17—world Hemophilia Day;
April 18—World Heritage Day;
April 21—Secretaries’ Day;
April 22—Earth Day;
April 23—World Book and Copyright Day;
May 1—Workers’ Day (International Labor Day);
May 3—Press Freedom Day and World Asthma Day;
May 2nd Sunday—Mother’s Day;
May 4—Coal Miners’ Day’
May 8—World Red Cross Day;
May 9—World thalassemia Day;
May 11—National Technology Day;
March 12—World Hypertension Day; International Nurses Day;
May 15—International Day of the Family;
May 17—World Telecommunication Day;
May 24—Commonwealth Day;
May 31—Anti-tobacco day;
June 4—International Day of Innocent Children Victims of Aggression;
June 5—World Environment day;
June 3rd Sunday—Father’s Day;
June 14—World Blood Donor Day;
June 26—International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking;
July 1—Doctor’s Day’;
July 6—World Zoo noses Day;
July 11—World Population Day;
August 1st Sunday—International Friendship Day;
August 6—Hiroshima Day;
August 8—World Senior Citizen’s Day;
August 9—Quit India Day and Nagasaki Day;
August 15—Indian Independence Day;
August 18—International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples;
August 19—Photography Day;
August 29—National Sports Day;
September 2—Coconut Day;
September 5—Teachers’ Day and Sanskrit Day;
September 8—World Literacy Day (UNESCO);
September 15—Engineers’ Day;
September 16—World Ozone Day;
September 21—Day for peace and Non-violence (UN);
September 22-rose Day (welfare of cancer patients);
September 25—Day of the Deaf;
September 27—World Tourism Day;
October 1—International Day for the Elderly;
October 3—World Habitat Day;
October 4—World Animal Welfare Day;
October 8—Indian Air Force Day;
October 9—World Post Office Day;
October 10—National Post Day;
October 2nd Thursday—World sight Day;
October 13—UN International Day for Natural Disaster Reduction;
October 14—World Standards Day;
October 15—World White cane Day (Guiding the blind);
October 16—World Food Day;
October 24—UN Day and World Development Information day;
October 30—World Thrift Day;
November 9—Legal Services Day;
November 14-Children’s Day and Diabetes Day;
November 17—National Epilepsy Day;
November 20—Africa industrialization Day;
November 29—International Day of Solidarity with Palestinian People;
December 1—World AIDS Day;
December 3—World Day of the Handicapped;
December 4—Indian Navy Day;
December 7—Indian Armed Forces Flag Day;
December 10—Human rights Day and International Children’s day of Broadcasting;
December 18—Minorities Rights Day;
December 23—Kisan Divas;