Word pairs are important for English preparation because many words sound similar but have different meanings, spellings, and usage. Regular practice helps learners avoid common mistakes in writing, comprehension, precis, translation, and objective English sections.

1. Accede, Concede, Exceed

Accede: Argue / succeed
Concede: Admit
Exceed: To be greater than

2. Accept, Except

Accept: To consent
Except: Exclude from

3. Abstain, Refrain

Abstain: Do without
Refrain: To hold back from doing something

4. All together, Altogether

All together: Together
Altogether: Without any doubt

5. Access, Accession, Excess

Access: Way to a place
Accession: Coming in office
Excess: More than expectation

6. Adapt, Adept, Adopt

Adapt: Make something suitable for new needs to become familiar
Adept: Expert
Adopt: To accept to take and use

7. Admission, Admittance

Admission: Being admitted; confession
Admittance: Being admitted to a place that is not public

8. Affect, Effect

Affect (V): Have an influence
Effect (N): Result / outcome

9. Admit, Acknowledge, Confess

Admit: More general
Acknowledge: Stonger than admit
Confess: To accept something wrong

10. Adverse, Averse

Adverse: Unfavourable
Averse: Opposed / disinclined

11. Abandon, Desert

Abandon: To leave completely and permanently.
Desert: To leave someone or something without intending to return.

12. Ability, Capability

Ability: The power or skill to do something.
Capability: The potential or capacity to achieve a task.

English Vocabulary Practice for Competitive Exams

This vocabulary section is designed to help learners understand the difference between similar sounding words, improve correct word usage, and strengthen English preparation for written and objective exams.

Similar Sounding Words

Similar sounding words can confuse learners because they may sound alike but carry completely different meanings. Studying them carefully improves accuracy in writing, speaking, and comprehension.

Homophones and Usage

Homophones are words with the same or similar pronunciation but different meanings or spellings. Understanding their definitions helps candidates use the right word in the right context.

Vocabulary Builder

A strong vocabulary helps students express ideas clearly, understand difficult passages, and perform better in English sections of CSS, PMS, and other competitive examinations.

Exam-Focused Learning

Word pair practice is useful for objective English, precis writing, comprehension, translation, grammar correction, and sentence usage questions commonly found in competitive exams.

Why Word Pairs Matter

Many English learners lose marks because they confuse words that sound similar. For example, two words may be close in pronunciation but different in spelling, grammar function, and meaning. Learning these pairs with definitions reduces confusion and improves language precision.

For CSS, PMS, and other exams, vocabulary is not limited to memorizing meanings. Candidates must also understand context, usage, and subtle differences between words. This page supports that goal by presenting word pairs in a clean, readable format with definitions for quick revision.

How to Use This Word Pairs List

Read each pair slowly and compare the definitions. Try to make your own sentence for every word so that the difference becomes clear. Revising a small number of word pairs daily is more effective than reading many words without understanding their usage.

Students should revisit difficult pairs before exams and practice them in writing. Consistent revision improves spelling, pronunciation awareness, sentence accuracy, and confidence in English language preparation.