Foreign Words & Phrases
Over the years English language has accumulated a lot of foreign words & phrases from other languages. Such words/phrases are often a subject of questions in competitive exams.
List of Foreign Words & Phrases for Competitive Exams
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ab initio
Latinfrom the beginning
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ad hoc
Latinmade or done for a particular purpose (literally ‘to this’)
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ad infinitum
Latinendlessly; forever (literally ‘to infinity’)
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ad nauseam
Latinto a tiresomely excessive degree (literally ‘to sickness’)
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a posteriori
Latinbased on reasoning from known facts or past events rather than on assumptions or predictions (literally ‘from what comes after’)
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bête noire
Frencha person or thing one particularly dislikes (literally ‘black beast’)
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bona fide
Latingenuine; real (literally ‘with good faith’)
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bon voyage
FrenchAn enjoyable journey, especially abroad (literally ‘good journey’)
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carpe diem
Latinmake the most of the present time (literally ‘seize the day!’)
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coup de grâce
Frencha blow by which a mortally wounded person or thing is mercifully killed (literally ‘stroke of grace’)
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coup de main
Frencha sudden surprise attack (literally ‘stroke of hand’)
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coup d’état
Frencha sudden violent seizure of power (literally ‘blow of state’)
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de facto
Latinin fact, whether by right or not
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déjà vu
Frenchthe sense of having experienced the present situation before (literally ‘already seen’)
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de jure
Latinrightful; by right (literally ‘of law’)
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en masse
Frenchall together (literally ‘in a mass’)
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esprit de corps
Frencha feeling of pride and loyalty uniting the members of a group (literally ‘spirit of body’)
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ex gratia
Latin(of payment) given as a favour rather than because of any legal obligation (literally ‘from favour’)
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ex officio
Latinby virtue of one’s position or status (literally ‘out of duty’)
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faux pas
Frenchan embarrassing blunder or indiscretion (literally ‘false step’)
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femme fatale
Frencha seductive woman (literally ‘disastrous woman’)
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force majeure
Frenchsuperior strength
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haute couture
Frenchthe designing and making of clothes by leading fashion houses (literally ‘high dressmaking’)
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in absentia
Latinwhile not present (literally ‘in absence’)
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in toto
Latinas a whole
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ipso facto
Latinby that very fact or act
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magnum opus
Latinthe most important work of an artist, writer, etc. (literally ‘great work’)
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modus operandi
Latina way of doing something (literally ‘way of operating’)
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modus vivendi
Latinan arrangement that allows conflicting parties to coexist peacefully (literally ‘way of living’)
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par excellence
Frenchbetter or more than all others of the same kind (literally ‘by excellence’)
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per se
Latinby or in itself or themselves
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persona non grata
Latina person who is not welcome somewhere
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prima facie
Latinaccepted as so until proved otherwise (literally ‘at first face’)
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pro rata
Latinproportional; proportionally (literally ‘according to the rate’)
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quid pro quo
Latina favour or advantage given in return for something (literally ‘something for something’)
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sine die
Latin(of proceedings) adjourned indefinitely (literally ‘without a day’)
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sine qua non
Latina thing that is absolutely essential (literally ‘without which not’)
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sub judice
Latinbeing considered by a court of law and therefore not to be publicly discussed elsewhere (literally ‘under a judge’)
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tête-à-tête
Frencha private conversation, usually between two people
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vis-à-vis
Frenchin relation to; as compared with (literally ‘face-to-face’)
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vox populi
Latinpublic opinion (literally ‘the voice of the people’)