THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - August 6, 2018 - Topic 2
Brexit troubles
Desperate times call for desperate measures.
British Prime Minister Theresa May last week flew to France to meet French
President Emmanuel Macron at his holiday home, to lobby for her Cabinet’s
version of Brexit that emerged from a retreat at Chequers, her own country
retreat, a few weeks ago. The proposal scraped through in the House of Commons.
And having just about won the support of her own Tory party MPs, Ms. May and
her Cabinet colleagues are now taking the show on the road, hoping to sell the
plan to individual European leaders. It won’t be easy.
Last week, Michel
Barnier, the European Union’s chief negotiator, suggested in a newspaper
article a softening of the EU’s position on the Irish “backstop” — a temporary customs
arrangement to avoid a hard border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern
Ireland, until a permanent solution is found. Both the EU and the U.K. are
against a hard border between Ireland and Northern Ireland, key to the Good
Friday Agreement that has ensured peace on the island since 1998. However,
beyond offering vague language on “regulatory alignment”, it is unclear how
Britain proposes to achieve this while exiting the EU Customs Union and Single
Market. The EU had proposed that Northern Ireland remain in a common regulatory
area with the Republic of Ireland and the EU. This was rejected by London. Mr.
Barnier wrote that the EU would be willing to “improve the text” of its
proposal on the Irish border question.
However, his article poured cold water on another
core element of the Chequers plan: a post-Brexit free trade area between
Britain and the EU for goods alone, leaving trade in services for a separate
agreement. The U.K. and the EU would collect tariffs on goods on each other’s
behalf where needed. Mr. Barnier pointed out that goods and services are often
inextricably linked, and that the U.K. cannot expect to have free movement of
goods without free movement of services, people and capital — the ‘four
freedoms’ of being part of the European Single Market — nor, as an external
party, expect to be allowed to collect customs duties on the EU’s behalf. The
timing of Mr. Barnier’s comments, just as Ms. May was trying to win support on
the continent, will throw a spanner in the works for her. Mr. Macron is one of
Ms. May’s toughest Brexit customers, and is unlikely to present a divergent
view from Brussels. France has a lot to gain from parts of the financial sector
leaving the U.K. after Brexit. A Brexit deal must ideally be in place before a
European summit in October; otherwise Britain is at risk of crashing out of the
EU in March 2019.
Vocabulary
Desperate: feeling,
showing, or involving a hopeless sense that a situation is so bad as to be
impossible to deal with.
Example: A
desperate sadness enveloped Ruth
Synonyms: despairing, hopeless, anguished, distressed, wretched, desolate, forlorn
Retreat: an
act of moving back or withdrawing.
Example: A
speedy retreat
Synonyms: withdrawal, pulling
back
Against: in
or into physical contact with something, typically so as to be supported by or
collide with it.
Example: She
stood with her back against the door
Synonyms: touching, in
contact with, up against, on, adjacent to
Vague: uncertain,
indefinite, or unclear character or meaning.
Example: Many
patients suffer vague symptoms
Synonyms: indistinct, indefinite, indeterminate, unclear, ill-defined, hazy
Pour: flow
rapidly in a steady stream.
Example: Water
poured off the roof
Synonyms: stream, flow, run, gush, course, jet, spurt, surge, spill
Continent: able
to control movements of the bowels and bladder.
Example: We
compared the risk of urinary incontinence in the daughters of incontinent women
with that in the daughters of continent women.
Divergent: tending
to be different or develop in different directions.
Example: Divergent
interpretations
Synonyms: differing, varying, different, dissimilar, unalike, disparate, contrasting
Ensure: make
certain that something shall occur or be the case.
Example: The
client must ensure that accurate records be kept
Synonyms: make
sure, make certain, see to
it, check, confirm, establish, verify
Inextricable: impossible
to disentangle or separate.
Example: The
past and the present are inextricable
Synonyms: inseparable, indivisible, entangled, tangled, mixed
up