Question:

In the question below, a related phrase is followed by a group of words. Select the group of words that best expresses a relationship similar to the one expressed in the original phrase.
At one's wits end

Show Hint

For idioms with “wits,” think about mental capacity: “at one’s wits’ end” = no ideas left; “keep your wits about you” = stay alert.
Updated On: Aug 14, 2025
  • cannot say anything funny
  • not able to think logically
  • not able to work
  • clarity of thought
Hide Solution
collegedunia
Verified By Collegedunia

The Correct Option is B

Solution and Explanation

Step 1: Meaning of the idiom
“At one’s wits’ end” means being so worried, puzzled, or stressed that one cannot think of any solution or what to do next. \[ \Rightarrow \text{mental resources exhausted; reasoning stalls} \] Step 2: Match with the best paraphrase - (1) “cannot say anything funny” \(\Rightarrow\) unrelated to problem-solving or stress.
- (2) “not able to think logically” \(\Rightarrow\) exactly the state when one’s wits are exhausted.
- (3) “not able to work” \(\Rightarrow\) could be due to many causes; too broad.
- (4) “clarity of thought” \(\Rightarrow\) opposite in sense. \[ \boxed{\text{not able to think logically}} \]
Was this answer helpful?
0
0

Questions Asked in CLAT exam

View More Questions