eng
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Ashish Prabhakar English Test 1

created Today, 05:12 by AshishJayant


1


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772 words
2 completed
00:00
In the world we live in today, the idea of connecting knowledge from one field to another has become one of the most important ways for people to understand how everything works, and how each part of life, whether in science, technology, business, education, health, or even simple day-to-day communication, relates to the rest of society, because the more we learn about the systems around us, the more we realize that the basic words we use, the concepts we follow, and the methods we choose are often the same, even if the subjects appear very different on the surface. In science, for example, people often talk about the need to observe, measure, compare, and analyze data, but these same ideas show up in business when individuals try to understand markets, in health when doctors evaluate patients, and in education when teachers try to understand how students learn best. The use of common words such as time, value, system, process, change, increase, share, and control shows that people rely on repeated patterns of thought, no matter what field they work in, and this is why the most frequent words in the English language appear so often across many areas of human experience. When someone in technology talks about building a new device or improving a digital platform, they use words like data, people, information, service, work, and support, and these same words appear in healthcare conversations when discussing how to improve patient care or hospital systems, and they also appear in education when teachers or researchers talk about using information to support learning. In every field, people focus on what they need to do, how they need to do it, why they must do it, and what kind of result they hope to get, and so the language becomes filled with words like need, use, make, provide, help, and understand, because these words represent the basic actions behind all human effort. Even in areas like art, culture, and communication, where creativity and expression matter most, the common words that appear again and again are words such as idea, story, world, people, form, part, and time, because these words capture the essence of how humans interpret their experiences. When people talk about economics, they naturally refer to resources, costs, markets, growth, value, and production, but when these discussions are simplified, the language returns to the same shared vocabulary of more, less, good, bad, work, change, need, and use, which shows that even complex fields rely on simple common expressions. In health and medicine, professionals talk about care, body, system, treatment, risk, research, and support, but they also use words like help, make, take, use, more, and time, because these words describe the essential actions needed to solve problems. In technology, where innovation and speed are essential, people talk about network, system, data, process, device, design, and development, but beneath these terms lies the same foundation of common English words that help them explain how something works or why something matters. The fact that these common words appear so frequently across different fields shows that language is not just a tool for communication but also a bridge that connects ideas, making it possible for people in one field to learn from the work of people in another. This is especially clear when people discuss broad themes such as growth, change, improvement, sustainability, innovation, and collaboration, because these themes require the use of universal vocabulary like people, world, time, work, use, need, help, and make. Whether someone is trying to explain a scientific experiment, a business strategy, a medical treatment, an educational method, or a technological invention, they naturally rely on these repeated words because they are the building blocks of thought, allowing complex ideas to be expressed in clear, simple terms. Even in daily life, when people talk to friends, coworkers, or family, the most common words they use such as think, feel, want, go, come, see, give, get, know, and tell are the same words professionals use when explaining ideas in academic or professional settings. This explains why the most repeated English words are not only common but essential, serving as the shared language of problem-solving, creativity, learning, and interaction across all areas of human life. As knowledge continues to grow and people continue to connect across cultures and fields, these repeated words will remain at the center of communication, allowing ideas to move, grow, and transform from one area of life to another, helping everyone understand the world more clearly, work more effectively, and collaborate more successfully, no matter what challenges they face or what goals they seek to achieve in the future.

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