Vocabulary
Mount
English and Urdu gloss, synonyms and antonyms, and example usage from our editorial sentence cache where available.
English meaning
climb up (stairs, a hill, or other rising surface).
Example sentences (from Dawn)
Sentences are selected from stored editorial text where your search word appears. If none appear yet, run the admin sentence generator for fuller coverage.
- It will be up to the General Assembly to mount pressure on the big powers to allow the Council to function.
- At stake is whether Pakistan can mount a coherent disaster-relief strategy.
- Nonetheless, the bigger challenge lies ahead if fiscal pressures mount due to reconstruction spending and potential slowdown in revenues.
- For Pakistan, where economic uncertainty and suppression continue to mount, the report holds a sobering message: proponents of human rights and free speech deserve safety for truth to survive.
- And the world, for all its condemnations and moral outrage, has been unable to mount real pressure on the US to change course.
Synonyms
go up, ascend, climb, climb up, scale, clamber up, make one’s way up,
Curator example
“he mounted the steps”
More vocabulary to explore
About this vocabulary section.
These entries support close reading of Dawn editorials and opinion pieces: short definitions,
Urdu equivalents where we have them, word relations, and—when generated—real lines from the editorial archive
so you can see tone and usage.
Common questions
- Do I need to sign up to use this vocabulary page?
- No. Word pages are open to everyone. You can read meanings in English and Urdu, synonyms and antonyms, and example sentences without creating an account.
- Where do the example sentences come from?
- When available, example sentences are drawn from cached matches in our Dawn editorial corpus so you can see how a word is used in real newsroom-style prose.
- How is this different from a dictionary?
- This section is curated for students preparing for competitive exams and editorial reading. Entries are compact, often include Urdu glosses, and are paired with in-context lines from editorials when we have them.