Searched for
GOBBLEDYGOOK ORIGIN
Word of the day - PoppycockPoppycock is a funny English word that means nonsense. Many people think it is British, but it actually started in America. The word came f...
Word of the day: GobbledygookThe word gobbledygook is back in focus after being used several times by The New York Times. It appeared in a review about pandemic life, w...
US economy may be heading to a place that must not be namedThis emphatically does not mean that there will be a recession - or that I or anyone else has the ability to predict one with precision. Bu...
Oxford kept COVID-19 vaccine trial volunteers in dark about dosing error, letter showsMuch is riding on the British-developed vaccine, which is being rolled out across the UK and has been touted as a low-cost weapon against t...
View: Here's how India can easily convert the coronavirus crisis into an opportunityFor optimists we must be. If we give up hope and fall into despair, we will never be able to make the Indian economy recover. We have to st...
To say Urjit Patel's rate cuts is a shift to soft shedding the RBI’s tough talk may be prematureMore than the MPC’s decision to reduce interest rates, the commentary accompanying it seems to have raised issues about credibility, if con...
India's best strategists: 15 dreamers who have translated their insight into realityFor some it's still work in progress, but that they are steadfast in their belief that this is the 'right' thing to do has propelled them o...