5 Words for Obstacles
From deadlocks to moral dilemmas — master the vocabulary of difficult situations
Some of the most common reading comprehension passages β in exams and in the real world β are about people, organisations, or societies that are stuck. Stuck in negotiations that won’t move. Stuck in situations that have no good exit. Caught between options that are both bad. Facing conditions that demand sympathy. The vocabulary of being stuck is rich, precise, and frequently tested, and the distinctions between these words matter enormously.
These five obstacle vocabulary words all describe difficulty or blockage, but each locates the problem differently. Choosing the right word tells the reader not just that something is wrong, but what kind of wrong β who is stuck, how they got there, what the structure of the difficulty is, and what response the author expects from us. These distinctions are precisely what vocabulary-in-context questions probe.
For CAT, GRE, and GMAT candidates, these five words appear constantly in passages about politics, ethics, business, and personal narrative. Understanding the structural difference between an impasse and a dilemma, or between a predicament and a plight, will sharpen both your reading accuracy and your ability to eliminate wrong answers on tone and inference questions.
π― What You’ll Learn in This Article
- Impasse β A deadlock between parties where no agreement or progress is possible
- Predicament β An unpleasant, difficult situation that is hard to escape from
- Quandary β A state of uncertainty about what to do; puzzlement over a course of action
- Dilemma β A forced choice between two options, both of which carry undesirable consequences
- Plight β A dangerous, difficult, or pitiable condition, often evoking sympathy
The Five Words: A Complete Guide
Master each word in depth β meaning, context, examples, and expert tips for exam success.
Impasse
A situation in which no progress is possible because disagreeing parties cannot reach agreement; a complete deadlock.
An impasse is a structural blockage between parties β it is not a personal dilemma or a pitiable condition, but a specific state of affairs in which two or more sides have reached a point where neither will or can move. Peace talks reach an impasse. Budget negotiations reach an impasse. Labour disputes reach an impasse. The word is almost always relational: there are parties involved, and the problem is between them. An impasse is not permanent by definition β it implies a blockage that may eventually be broken β but while it persists, forward movement is impossible.
“Three weeks of talks between the government and union representatives ended in impasse, with neither side willing to revise its position on working hours.”
π‘ Reader’s Insight: Impasse signals a relational deadlock β the problem is between parties, not within one person. When writers use it, the situation requires parties to move, compromise, or bring in a new actor to break the stalemate.
An impasse is a deadlock between parties. Our next word shifts from the relational to the personal β describing not a breakdown in negotiations but a difficult situation that one person or group finds themselves trapped in, with no clear way out.
Predicament
A difficult, unpleasant, or embarrassing situation from which it is hard to extricate oneself.
A predicament is a situation β not a choice, not a deadlock between parties, but a set of circumstances that has closed in around someone and left them with no comfortable exit. The predicament is the trap: the person is in it, and getting out requires either luck, skill, or assistance. The word can apply to individuals, organisations, or governments. It carries a mildly sympathetic quality β the person in a predicament is not necessarily at fault, though they are certainly in trouble.
“The government found itself in an awkward predicament: raising taxes would alienate voters, but without additional revenue the promised infrastructure programme could not proceed.”
π‘ Reader’s Insight: Predicament describes being trapped by circumstances. There is no good move available; the person is simply stuck. Writers use it when they want to convey that the situation itself β not a specific choice β is the problem.
A predicament is a situation that traps. Our next word moves into the mind β describing not a set of external circumstances but an internal state of uncertainty: the confusion of not knowing which path to take when the right choice is genuinely unclear.
Quandary
A state of uncertainty or perplexity about what to do in a difficult situation; genuine puzzlement over competing options.
A quandary is primarily a mental state β it describes the confusion and uncertainty of someone who genuinely does not know what to do. Where a dilemma presents two defined options that are both bad, a quandary is vaguer: the person is at a loss, not sure which way to turn or what the right course even is. The quandary may involve competing values, incomplete information, or simply the weight of a decision whose consequences are hard to foresee. It is often used with “in a quandary” β a construction that emphasises the person’s subjective experience of being stuck.
“Parents found themselves in a quandary: encourage their child’s expensive passion for music, or redirect that energy toward more academically reliable subjects?”
π‘ Reader’s Insight: Quandary is the word for mental bewilderment β the state of not knowing what to do. Writers use it when the obstacle is internal: not a blocked negotiation, not an external trap, but genuine uncertainty about how to proceed.
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A quandary describes uncertain bewilderment. Our next word sharpens that uncertainty into a specific structure: not vague confusion, but a forced choice between two options that are both, in different ways, unacceptable.
Dilemma
A situation in which a choice must be made between two options that are both undesirable or unfavourable.
A dilemma has a precise structure: two options, both bad. The classic dilemma is a forced choice where both paths lead somewhere undesirable, and the question is which is worse. In ethical philosophy, dilemmas are central β the trolley problem, Sophie’s choice, the prisoner’s dilemma are all structured around this unavoidable two-bad-options architecture. In everyday usage, the word is often weakened to mean simply “a difficult decision,” but in careful writing it retains its specific structure: two horns, and you are impaled on one of them either way.
“The doctor faced an ethical dilemma: withholding the information would protect the patient’s immediate wellbeing, but disclosing it was required both by law and by professional duty.”
π‘ Reader’s Insight: Dilemma signals a structural forced choice β both options carry costs, and the problem is deciding which cost is more bearable. When writers use it precisely, they’re telling you that there are exactly two paths and neither is good.
A dilemma frames a forced choice between two bad options. Our final word steps back from decisions and choices entirely, and describes a condition β a state of difficulty or danger that calls forth not analysis but compassion.
Plight
A dangerous, difficult, or otherwise unfortunate condition or situation; often used to evoke sympathy for those suffering it.
Plight stands apart from the other four words because it is primarily emotional in register. Where impasse, predicament, quandary, and dilemma are all analytical β describing types of blockage or difficulty that invite problem-solving β plight is sympathetic. It describes a condition that deserves our concern and compassion. The plight of refugees, the plight of small farmers, the plight of the homeless β in each case, the word invites the reader to feel for those in the situation. It is the word of advocacy and compassion, not of strategic analysis.
“The documentary brought global attention to the plight of coastal communities whose homes and livelihoods were being destroyed by rising sea levels.”
π‘ Reader’s Insight: Plight is the word of sympathy, not strategy. When writers use it, they’re not asking you to solve a problem β they’re asking you to feel the weight of someone’s difficult condition. The choice of plight over predicament or situation is itself an emotional and rhetorical move.
How These Words Work Together
These five words all describe being stuck or in difficulty, but each frames that difficulty in a fundamentally different way. Impasse is relational β a blockage between parties in a negotiation or dispute. Predicament is situational β external circumstances that have trapped someone with no clean exit. Quandary is mental β internal uncertainty and bewilderment about what to do. Dilemma is structural β a forced choice between two options that are both unfavourable. Plight is emotional β a condition of difficulty or danger that invites sympathy rather than analysis.
The precision of these five words matters because the obstacle vocabulary you choose determines how a reader thinks about the problem β and what kind of response it implies. A country described as facing an impasse needs negotiators. One caught in a predicament needs ingenuity or external help. A leader in a quandary needs clarity or good advice. A decision-maker facing a dilemma needs to weigh costs and accept that something must be sacrificed. And people described as suffering a plight need compassion, advocacy, and action β not analysis.
Why This Vocabulary Matters for Exam Prep
For exam preparation, vocabulary-in-context questions on this group are specifically designed to test whether you can identify the structural type of difficulty, not just the general idea of something being hard. The relational/situational/mental/structural/emotional distinction is the key.
Beyond exams, these words give you the vocabulary to think and write precisely about difficulty β to describe exactly what kind of stuck you mean, and to invite exactly the kind of response that is appropriate.
π Quick Reference: Obstacle Vocabulary
| Word | Core Meaning | Key Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Impasse | Deadlock between parties | Relational blockage; no agreement possible |
| Predicament | Trapped by circumstances | Situational trap; no clean exit available |
| Quandary | Uncertainty about what to do | Mental bewilderment; not knowing which path to take |
| Dilemma | Forced choice, both options bad | Two-option structure; both paths carry costs |
| Plight | Pitiable condition of difficulty | Emotional register; calls for sympathy and concern |