Funny GRE word of the Day: Gait
Gait (n)
Mnemonic:
Gaitonde is a brand of italian shoe.
Meaning:
A particular way or manner of moving on foot
A person who ran with a clumsy, hobbling gait.
The project went forward at a steady gait.
Gait (Antonym)
a) sroll
b) stagnant
c) nonchalant
d) waif
e) pace
Popularity: 11% [?]Share This
Popularity: 11% [?]
The article starts below...
Written by GRE Word of The Day Team on April 8th, 2008 with
10 comments.
Read more articles on GRE Word of The Day and actual gre word and Antonyms and Demand a GRE word Story.
Gait (n)

Mnemonic:
Gaitonde is a brand of italian shoe.

Meaning:
A particular way or manner of moving on foot

A person who ran with a clumsy, hobbling gait.

The project went forward at a steady gait.
Gait (Antonym)
a) sroll
b) stagnant
c) nonchalant
d) waif
e) pace
Popularity: 11% [?]
Share This
Written by GRE Word of The Day Team on April 8th, 2008 with
10 comments.
Read more articles on GRE Word of The Day and actual gre word and Antonyms and Demand a GRE word Story.
Add to:
Digg
/
Del.icio.us
/
Furl
/
Spurl
/
BlinkList
/
Reddit
Memorise 3500 GRE words@Picture and Funny Story, Score 1500+
Key Features::
- Memorise New GRE Wordlist @Memory Clips classes
- Speed Reading Softwares and Techniques for Cracking GRE Reading Comprehension
- Techniques to bust Anxiety, Stress and Phobias during Real GRE exam
- Every week real Mock GRE Test based on real GRE Pattern
- Option to take Live Online Tutoring
- Our students are from NIT Kurukshetra, DCE New Delhi, IIT Roorki, AIIMS, JNTU, IIT Delhi, Hindu College, NIT Rourkela, TCS, Wipro, Infogain, STMicroelectronics, NIT Allahabad, NIT Calicut, IIT Kharagpur, IIM Kolkatta, BRCM, CET Bahal, IILM, BITS Pilani
10 comments
Read the comments left by other users below, or:
Leave your comment...
If you want to leave your comment on this article, simply fill out the next form:
You can use these XHTML tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong> .
#1. June 27th, 2007, at 8:15 AM.
I think I can pick stagnant from the options available as I can’t find another convincing antonym for it