Vocabulary is an important part of English that helps you deal with all sorts of questions in the objective as well as descriptive papers of various exams. You can learn new words daily from our Daily Word List. Learn the words and make your own sentences based on the given word list. Here are a few words from an article published in The Economist.
IN MOST countries a government that allowed $4.5bn to go missing from a state development agency would struggle towing re-election. If some $681m had appeared in the prime ministerтАЩs personal account around the same time, which he breezily explained away as a gift from an unnamed admirer, the task would be all the harder. An apparent cover-up, involving the dismissal of officials investigating or merely complaining about the scandal, might be the last straw for voters. But in Malaysian elections, alas, voters do not count for much. Under any reasonable electoral system, the coalition running Malaysia would not be in office in the first place. The Barisan Nasional, as it is known, barely squeaked back into power at the most recent election, in 2013. It lost the popular vote, earning only 47% to the oppositionтАЩs 51%. But thanks to the shamelessly biased drawing of the constituencies, that was enough to secure it 60% of the 222 seats in parliament.
This ill-deserved victory, however, occurred before news broke of the looting of 1MDB, a development agency whose board of advisers was chaired by the prime minister, Najib Razak. AmericaтАЩs Justice Department has accused him and his Step son, among others, of siphoning money out of 1MDBthrough an elaborate series of fraudulent transactions. Much of the money went on luxuries, it says, including paintings by Picasso and Monet, a private jet, diamond necklaces, a penthouse in Manhattan and a gambling spree in Las Vegas. In February Indonesia seized a $250m yacht that the Americans say was bought with Malaysian taxpayersтАЩ money. Authorities in Switzerland and Singapore have also been investigating. Mr. Najib denies any wrongdoingтАФand of course he has loyal supporters. But his administration has not tried very hard to clear things up. Only one person has been charged in connection with the missing billions: an opposition politician who leaked details of the official investigation after the government had refused to make it public. All this is unlikely to have improved Mr NajeebтАЩs standing with voters. Yet an election must be held by August. Faced with the risk of losing power, the government is rigging the system even more brazenly. Parliament will soon vote on new constituency boundaries. The proposed map almost guarantees Mr. Najib another term, despite his appalling record.
How to rig an election
One trick is gerrymandering, drawing constituency boundaries so that lots of opposition voters are packed into a few seats, while ruling-party supporters form a narrow majority in larger number. Lots of this goes on in Malaysia, as elsewhere: the new boundaries put two opposition bastions in the state of Perak into the same seat. Gerrymandering is made even easier by another electoral abuse called malapportionment. This involves creating districts of uneven populations, so that those which support the opposition are much bigger than those that back the government. That means, in effect, that it takes many more votes to elect an opposition MP than it does a government one. The practice is so unfair that it is illegal in most countries, including Malaysia, where the constitution says that electoral districts must be тАЬapproximately equalтАЭ in size. Nonetheless, the constituencies in the maps proposed by the government-appointed election commission range in size from 18,000 voters to 146,000 (see Asia section). The Barisan Nasional controls all the15 smallest districts; 14 of the15 biggest ones are in the hands of the opposition. The average Barisan seat has 30,000 fewer voters than the average opposition one. And this is the election commissionтАЩs second go at the mapsтАФthe first lot were even more lopsided. Unfortunately, the electoral boundaries are not the only way in which the system is stacked against the opposition. The media are supine. The police and the courts seem more interested
in allegations of minor offences by opposition figures than they are in the blatant bilking of the taxpayer over 1MDBand the open violation of the constitution at the election commission. The latest budget seems intended to buy the loyalty of civil servants, by promising a special bonus to be disbursed just after the likely date of the election. But these biases, as bad as they are, are not the same as fiddling constituencies. As long as the electoral system is fair, Malaysians will be able to judge the government and vote accordingly. But a rigged system will rob their votes of meaning. That is the point, of course. Mr Najib may be venal, but he is not stupid. He fears that most voters would not return him to office if given a choice, so he is taking their choice away.
1.Squeak: / тАШskwi╦Рk/ : рдЪреАрдЦрд╝
Noun: a short, high-pitched sound or cry
Synonyms: creak, screech, squeal, cheep, grate, peep, shrill, yelp
Antonyms: be quiet
2. Siphon: /╦Иs╩М╔кf(╔Щ)n/ : рдмреЗрдЗрдорд╛рдиреА рд╕реЗ рдирд┐рдХрд╛рд▓рдирд╛
Verb: draw off or transfer over a period of time, especially illegally or unfairly.
Synonyms: convey, funnel, carry, route, traject
Antonyms: hold, keep
3. Fraudulent: /╦Иfr╔Ф╦Рdj╩Кl(╔Щ)nt/ : рдзреЛрдЦрд╛рдзрдбрд╝реА
Adjective: obtained, done by, or involving deception, especially criminal deception.
Synonyms: counterfeit, crooked, deceitful, fake dishonest, forged, crafty
Antonyms: frank, genuine, honest, true, sincere, trustworthy, authentic
4. Rigging:/ ╦Иr╔к╔б╔к┼Л/ : рдЬрд╣рд╛рдЬ рдХреА рд░рд╕реНрд╕рд┐рдпреЛрдВ рдХреА рдкреНрд░рдгрд╛рд▓реА
Noun: the system of ropes or chains employed to support a ship’s masts ( standing rigging ) and to control or set the yards and sails
Synonyms: apparatus, equipment
5. Brazenly:/ ╦Иbre╔кz(╔Щ)nli/ : рдврд┐рдард╛рдИ рд╕реЗ
Synonyms: blatantly, candidly, flagrantly, willingly, artlessly
Antonyms: incompletely, shamefully, secretly
6. Bastion:/ тАШbast╔к╔Щn/ : рдПрдХ рджреАрд╡рд╛рд░ рдХреЗ рдХрд┐рдирд╛рд░реЗ рдкрд░ рдПрдХ рдХреЛрдг рдкрд░ рдирд┐рд░реНрдорд┐рдд рдПрдХ рдХрд┐рд▓реЗ рдХрд╛ рдПрдХ рдкреНрд░реЛрдЬреЗрдХреНрдЯрд┐рдВрдЧ рднрд╛рдЧ,
Noun: a projecting part of a fortification built at an angle to the line of a wall, so as to allow defensive fire in several directions
Synonyms: bulwark, fortress, mainstay, fortification, stronghold
Antonyms: weakness, weak spot
7. Lopsided:/ тАШl╔Тp╦Иs╩М╔кd╔кd/ : рдПрдХрддрд░рдлрд╛
Adjective: with one side lower or smaller than the other.
Synonyms: unbalanced, unequal, awry, squint, warped
Antonyms: even, level, balanced
8. Supine: / тАШs(j)u╦Рp╩М╔кn/ : рд▓рд╛рдкрд░рд╡рд╛рд╣
Adjective: failing to act or protest as a result of moral weakness or indolence
Synonyms: weak, enervated, spineless
Antonyms: strong, assertive
9. Blatant: / ╦Иble╔кt(╔Щ)nt/: рдКрдзрдореА, рдмреЗрд╢рд░реНрдореА рд╕реЗ
Adjective: (of bad behaviour) done openly and unashamedly.
Synonyms: flagrant, glaring, obvious, manifest, palpable, evident
Antonyms: inconspicuous, subtle
10. Fiddle: / тАШf╔кd(╔Щ)l/ : рд╣реЗрд░рд╛-рдлреЗрд░реА рдХрд░рдирд╛
Noun: an act of defrauding, cheating, or falsifying.
Verb: falsify (figures, data, or records), typically in order to gain money.
Synonyms: fraud, swindle, fix, wangle, ruse, wile
Antonym: leave alone, work
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