For years, Indian competitive exams—especially the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) Civil Services Examination—have leaned almost entirely on rote memorization. This paper takes a hard look at a different linguistic method: learning through morphological parsing and etymological deduction. The central question here is: What really happens when students move from passively memorizing lists to actively breaking down word structure? The research explores how understanding a word’s origins builds tough, lasting “cognitive maps” in the learner’s memory. Concrete teaching tools like Prefix-Root-Suffix matrices and deduction from contextual clues show a clear drop in mental strain during high-pressure situations. The discussion also doesn’t shy away from the limits of this method, like issues of words drifting in meaning or not being totally transparent. At the end, the paper puts forward an independent synthesis: true mastery of administrative language comes from weaving together the rigorous logic of etymology with real-world awareness of word pairings and context, creating a powerful vocabulary toolkit for future public administrators.
Divya Gautam (Wed,) studied this question.