THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - July 18, 2018 - Topic 2
The sporting wilderness is a cruel, unforgiving
place. Not even the greatest of champions avoid its desolate landscape; only a
few find their way out of it. Ever since Novak Djokovic won his 12th Major
at Roland Garros in 2016 —
becoming only the second man, after Rod Laver in 1969, to hold all four Grand
Slam titles at once — he has wandered the wastelands that strugglers frequent.
The mask of invincibility he had worn for the best part of two years cracked.
Indeed, when he bowed out of the French Open this June, he appeared broken,
damaged.
He said he wasn’t sure if he would play on grass. And yet, a little
over a month later, he was back on the most famous court in tennis, bending to
extract some of its hallowed turf so he could chew it — a victory celebration
that had all but slipped from collective memory. In many ways, the performance
against Kevin Anderson in the Wimbledon final was vintage Djokovic: ruthless, complete, untouchable. Granted, the 6’8” South
African looked a shadow of the player that had returned from the dead to
dethrone Roger Federer and had drawn on every last reserve to outlast John
Isner. But even Anderson at his fittest and finest would have struggled against
the Serb in this mood, on that stage.
So, just what is behind Djokovic’s renaissance?
It helps that the 31-year-old is healthy again. He was forced to retire from
last year’s Wimbledon quarterfinal against Tomas Berdych because of an elbow
injury. He underwent surgery this January, but was back sooner than advised —
this, Djokovic admitted, contributed significantly to his slump. At this year’s
Championships, he looked match-tough at last, close to his elastic best. His
game has always suited grass — or modern-day grass, at any rate. Wimbledon’s
courts no longer play like “ice slathered with Vaseline”, as Andre Agassi
famously said, but they still favour fleet-footed movement and a flatter
stroke, pared of top-spin. These two attributes — added to a secure serve, a
considerable improvement on the abbreviated eyesore his elbow injury had forced
him into — made Djokovic a contender. But it wasn’t until his epic semifinal
against Rafael Nadal that he and the rest of the tennis world truly knew he was
back from the beyond. It was his ‘dark night of the soul’ — an inner torment he
had to master, for the consequences of failure might have been too heavy to
bear. This he did, relaxing into the moment and entering a zone only a select
few have access to. And like Federer and Nadal have over the last year and a
half, Djokovic showed that the elite can never be written off. Reports of the
deaths of their careers are often greatly exaggerated.
Vocabulary
Wilderness: an
uncultivated, uninhabited, and inhospitable region.
Example: Ahead
is a barren land of lochans and beautifully-ridged mountains rising steeply
from an uninhabited wilderness .
Synonyms: wilds, wastes, bush, bush
country, bushland, inhospitable region, desert
Desolate: deserted
of people and in a state of bleak and dismal emptiness.
Example: A
desolate moor
Synonyms: bleak, stark, bare, dismal, grim, wild, inhospitable, deserted, uninhabited
Wandered: walk
or move in a leisurely, casual, or aimless way.
Example: He
wandered aimlessly through the narrow streets
Synonyms: stroll, amble, saunter, walk, dawdle, potter, ramble, meander, roam
Appear: come
into sight; become visible or noticeable, typically without visible agent or
apparent cause.
Example: Smoke
appeared on the horizon
Synonyms: become
visible, come into view, come into sight, materialize, pop
up
Extract: a
short passage taken from a piece of writing, music, or film.
Example: An
extract from a historical film
Synonyms: excerpt, passage, citation, quotation, analects
Ruthless: having
or showing no pity or compassion for others.
Example: A
ruthless manipulator
Synonyms: merciless, pitiless, cruel, heartless, hard-hearted, cold-hearted
Dethrone: remove
a ruler, especially a monarch from power.
Example: When
the emperor was dethroned , Diem replaced him.
Contribute: give
something, especially money in order to help achieve or provide something.
Example: He
contributed more than $500,000 to the center
Synonyms: give, donate, put
up, subscribe, hand out, grant, bestow, present
Flatter: smooth
and even
Example: A
flat wall
Synonyms: level, horizontal, smooth, even, uniform, regular, plane
Epic: relating
to, or characteristic of an epic or epics.
Example: England's
national epic poem Beowulf
Synonyms: heroic, long, grand, monumental, Homeric, Miltonian
Torment: severe
physical or mental suffering.
Example: Their
deaths have left both families in torment
Synonyms: agony, suffering, torture, pain, anguish, misery, distress, affliction
Exaggerate: represent
something as being larger, greater, better, or worse than it really is.
Example: They
were apt to exaggerate any aches and pains
Synonyms: overstate, overemphasize, overestimate, magnify, amplify, aggrandize
