Top 100 Most Repeated One Word Substitutions in SSC Exams
Are you working hard day and night to clear SSC exams like CGL, CHSL, MTS, or CPO? We know that for many students, especially those from Hindi-medium or rural backgrounds, the English section feels like a huge mountain. You might look at long English sentences and feel that learning their meanings is totally impossible. The Staff Selection Commission (SSC) does not want you to be an English professor. They just want to check your basic smartness. Because of this, they repeat the exact same vocabulary questions year after year! If you just memorize the top repeated “One Word Substitutions” from previous year papers, you can easily secure full marks in seconds. In this blog, we have explained this topic in the simplest way and provided the top exam-level questions that you can practice right now.
Let us understand this without using any heavy grammar rules.
In Hindi grammar, you must have read “Anek shabdon ke liye ek shabd”. One Word Substitution is exactly the same thing in English. It means replacing a long, boring sentence with just one single word that has the exact same meaning.
For example:
What to study for SSC Exams? You do not need to read heavy dictionary books to pass this section. Just focus on simple “Root Words.” The SSC board mostly asks words related to “Phobia” (types of fear), “Cide” (killing or murder), and “Ology” (study of something). If you focus purely on the Previous Year Questions (PYQs), this will become your highest-scoring topic.
Now you know what to study. But just reading theory is not enough. Grab a pen and try solving these top-repeated One Word Substitution questions below to check your actual exam preparation level right now.
Q1. A person who does not believe in the existence of God.
(A) Theist
(B) Atheist
(C) Mystic
(D) Priest
Answer: (B) Atheist
Explanation: A ‘Theist’ believes in God, while an ‘Atheist’ (Nastik) does not believe in God at all.
Q2. A person who loves and collects books.
(A) Bibliophile
(B) Scholar
(C) Reader
(D) Teacher
Answer: (A) Bibliophile
Explanation: ‘Biblio’ means books and ‘Phile’ means love. So, a Bibliophile is a person who loves books.
Q3. The life history of a person written by himself.
(A) History
(B) Biography
(C) Autobiography
(D) Novel
Answer: (C) Autobiography
Explanation: A Biography is written by another person, while an Autobiography is written by the person himself or herself.
Q4. A place where birds are kept.
(A) Aquarium
(B) Aviary
(C) Zoo
(D) Apiary
Answer: (B) Aviary
Explanation: An Aviary is a place where birds are kept. An Apiary is a place where bees are kept.
Q5. A person who knows everything.
(A) Intelligent
(B) Omnipresent
(C) Omniscient
(D) Omnipotent
Answer: (C) Omniscient
Explanation: ‘Omni’ means all and ‘Scient’ relates to knowledge. So, Omniscient means all-knowing.
Q6. A government formed by the people, of the people, and for the people.
(A) Autocracy
(B) Monarchy
(C) Democracy
(D) Dictatorship
Answer: (C) Democracy
Explanation: ‘Demo’ means people and ‘Cracy’ means rule. Democracy means rule by the people.
Q7. An extreme fear of water.
(A) Claustrophobia
(B) Hydrophobia
(C) Pyrophobia
(D) Acrophobia
Answer: (B) Hydrophobia
Explanation: ‘Hydro’ means water and ‘Phobia’ means fear. So, Hydrophobia means fear of water.
Q8. A person who cannot read or write.
(A) Illiterate
(B) Ignorant
(C) Poor
(D) Blind
Answer: (A) Illiterate
Explanation: A person who cannot read or write is called Illiterate (Anpadh).
Q9. Something that can be easily broken.
(A) Strong
(B) Flexible
(C) Fragile
(D) Soft
Answer: (C) Fragile
Explanation: Fragile objects break very easily, such as glass items.
Q10. A person who always looks at the bright side of things.
(A) Pessimist
(B) Optimist
(C) Hero
(D) Brave
Answer: (B) Optimist
Explanation: An Optimist is a person who thinks positively and expects good results. A Pessimist always expects bad outcomes.
You do not need to mug up the entire English dictionary to clear this exam. Just use your brain smartly. Here are 5 easy tricks to master this topic quickly:
Join our exclusive Telegram group for expert guidance, personalized tips, and real-time solutions to boost your SSC exam prep. [Click here to join now!]
No, not at all! SSC asks very basic 10th-level English sentences. If you understand simple English stories, you can easily guess the right word.
You can comfortably expect 2 direct questions strictly on this topic in almost every shift of the SSC exams.
Absolutely not. Reading heavy newspapers is good for banking exams. For SSC, simply reading a previous year vocabulary book (like Blackbook or Lucent) is more than enough.
Yes, SSC exams have negative marking for every wrong answer. If all 4 options look totally alien to you, do not guess blindly.
Making your own notes is the best habit. Write down the hard words that you forget again and again on a single piece of paper, and look at it every night before sleeping.
Preparing for LIC HFL Junior Assistant 2026? Download this 100-question Computer Skill PDF and secure…
What are the ideal study hours to clear RBI Grade B 2026? Know realistic study…
Check the complete LIC HFL 2026 preparation strategy with section-wise study plan, mock test guidance,…
Preparing for SSC Stenographer? Practice top repeated Geography questions here. Get free PDFs and learn…
Learn the top reasoning puzzles for RBI Grade B 2026 including repeated seating arrangement and…
How to prepare reasoning for SSC Stenographer 2026? Learn to score 50/50 in 30 minutes…