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  • 3 answers

Payal Sharma 5 years ago

Chapter would you like

Swayam Bangera 5 years, 1 month ago

Yes

Riddhima Somnath 5 years, 1 month ago

Yes
  • 1 answers

Ashok Sahoo 5 years, 1 month ago

F
  • 0 answers
  • 2 answers

Himanahu Mahto 5 years, 1 month ago

Challenge me

Himanahu Mahto 5 years, 1 month ago

Bot boys bot
  • 1 answers

Gaurav Seth 5 years, 1 month ago

<main> <article>

l. What sort of life did Dogs live a long time ago?
Ans: Dogs were once their own masters. They moved out freely like wolves.

 

Extra Questions :

2. Why did the Dog decide to lose his freedom?
Ans: The dog found his life boring and unsafe. He had to look for his food alone. He felt tired. He was also afraid of stronger animals.

4. What major decision did that Dog take?
Ans: That dog decided to become the servant of one who was stronger than anyone on earth. He set out to find such a master.

5. Why did the Dog say goodbye to the Wolf?
Ans: The Dog noticed that the Wolf was afraid of the Bear. So he left the weak master and joined the Bear.

 6. Who was the Bear afraid of?
Ans: The Bear too was frightened when he got the smell of a Lion. He fled swiftly into the deep forest.

7. What was the Dog’s experience with the Lion?
Ans: The Lion was definitely stronger than any other beast in the forest. The Dog felt happy and secure with his new master. But the Lion also showed signs of fear of seeing the man. So he decided to take up service with a man.

</article> </main>
  • 1 answers

Gaurav Seth 5 years, 1 month ago

It was Christmas eve and was closing time for shops.  An old-clock shop owner, Ray was still working on a clock. Two men, one in his twenties and one in his fifties entered Ray’s shop. Ray gave them a notepad and a pencil telling them that he was deaf and dumb through his sign language. Ray noticed that the man had a gun in his pocket. He thought that he had come to his shop to rob him. Understanding their  dire need of money, Ray told the old man that he exchanged good sum of money with people against their watches or wall clocks. He did this for goodwill and not in want of earning interest or security against the things.

That old man showed his old wrist watch to Ray and Ray in return offered him a fifty dollar note. Both of them knew in their hearts that the watch was not of that high a price.But this made the man happy as he got money without hurting Ray and Ray also escaped from being hurt. Before leaving, the old man wrote to Ray that he would be back soon to get his watch.

The story concluded peacefully, giving a sweet and simple message of  “Peace on earth and goodwill towards all”.

  • 1 answers

Aayush Ghodke 5 years, 1 month ago

?????? i dont know
  • 2 answers

Tiyasha Mandal 5 years, 1 month ago

Content is a page where the chapters, chapter no ,pg no., Etc are given....

Sakshi Balaji Battalwad 4 years, 11 months ago

Content is a list of all the chapter in the books with the chapter number chapter name and page Numbers of the particular lesson or poem
  • 1 answers

Yogita Ingle 5 years, 1 month ago

He helped the forester but instead of getting reward the forester gifted him to the king. The king was a noble man. When he asked the elephant the elephant replied that if his mother being a blind, could not eat any thing how could he eat. ... But the white elephant didn't hear his mother and went to help the man.

  • 2 answers

Rishi Sudhakar Sudhakar 5 years, 1 month ago

Ghsjjsje brydhmmszj ksh is a great evening r madhava I am Rishi Prasad health wealth is a beautiful day mam IAM Rishi Sudhakar present mam I finished my password if you have done by a great evening mam please send the money is a great weekend too to the link to the home page you mam I finished my home work is a great evening r reader r or bow and I am a great day ahead to the home page no 31 present invention the home work you do for you and the class room no mam I finished my home work aadi has to be a great evening r reader r or Adobe you mam IAM Rishi Sudhakar roll no 31 present mam please find the attached file is scanned image in PDF format you mam IAM Rishi Sudhakar roll no 31 present invention the home work aadi has to be a great evening r reader r or Adobe r reader r or Adobe r reader r or Adobe r reader r of Adobe r or Adobe you mam I am Rishi Prasad health I I am Rishi Prasad health I I am Rishi Sudhakar roll 31 present in the link below and I am Rishi Prasad health I I am Rishi Sudhakar roll 31 present in the world is a beautiful day here today I am a beautiful photos of Adobe systems I am a beautiful photos of Adobe systems I Pvt limited is a beautiful day here no 31 Rishi Sudhakar present mam I am

Naisha Sachdeva 5 years, 1 month ago

Landed, Landed
  • 2 answers

Kids Fancy Dresses Hamirpur 5 years, 1 month ago

Thank u veerry much

Yogita Ingle 5 years, 1 month ago

Taro run in the direction of the stream because earlier he had never heard or seen a rushing stream in the forest also he was thirsty.

  • 3 answers

Amana Arshad 5 years, 1 month ago

The snake was trying to attack the baby , to protect the baby the mongoose killed the snake

Sonu Rawat 5 years, 1 month ago

No

Yogita Ingle 5 years, 1 month ago

A mongoose kills a snake by dodging each time the snake strikes. They continually make a nuisance of themselves, until, after a while, when the snake gets tired, it quickly dives in for the kill.

  • 2 answers

Kids Fancy Dresses Hamirpur 5 years, 1 month ago

If u mean taro So the answer is That taro always obeyed his parents

Kids Fancy Dresses Hamirpur 5 years, 1 month ago

Do u mean taro ??
  • 1 answers

Gaurav Seth 5 years, 1 month ago

Beauty can be defined as a quality in someone or something that makes it attractive and interesting in our eyes. The famous English saying goes, “Beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder.”

 

Beauty is a quality that makes us feel a sense of pleasure and appreciation.

As it solely depends on how ‘WE’ see beauty, there can never be an external standard of beauty.

Often when we standardize the norms of beauty, we create unhealthy comparison, competition and jealousy among people.

Beauty is not at all about outward appearance, but deeper human qualities, like kindness, compassion and so on.

Nature teaches us that beauty is hidden in everything, including hard rocks and wild weeds.

Beauty inspires creativity and art in human beings.

Beauty is present in every human. We just need to look deeper for it.

Poet John Keats had once written, “A Thing of Beauty is a Joy Forever.” It tells us that when we are able to see beauty in something or someone, we also feel positive feelings such as joy, happiness and gratefulness.

  • 1 answers

Akshara Chelawat 5 years, 1 month ago

Peace is a concept of societal friendship and harmony in the absence of hostility and violence. In a social sense, peace is commonly used to mean a lack of conflict (such as war) and freedom from fear of violence between individuals or groups. Throughout history leaders have used peacemaking and diplomacy to establish a certain type of behavioral restraint that has resulted in the establishment of regional peace or economic growth through various forms of agreements or peace treaties. Such behavioral restraint has often resulted in the reduction of conflicts, greater economic interactivity, and consequently substantial prosperity. "Psychological peace" (such as a peaceful thinking and emotions) is perhaps less well defined yet often a necessary precursor to establishing "behavioral peace." Peaceful behavior sometimes results from a "peaceful inner disposition." Some have expressed the belief that peace can be initiated with a certain quality of inner tranquility that does not depend upon the uncertainties of daily life for its existence.[1] The acquisition of such a "peaceful internal disposition" for oneself and others can contribute to resolving of otherwise seemingly irreconcilable competing interests
  • 2 answers

Akshara Chelawat 5 years, 1 month ago

SUMMARY: "HAPPY ENDINGS" “Happy Endings” is a short story by Canadian writer Margaret Atwood. After the story’s trio of opening lines, the narrative is divided into five sections, labeled A-F. The story’s opening lines are: “John and Mary meet. What happens next? If you want a happy ending, try A” (43). The story then moves into Section A, in which John and Mary “fall in love and get married…have jobs they find “stimulating and challenging…buy a house…have two children…who turn out well…retire…[and] die” (43). Atwood concludes this section with the sentence, “This is the end of the story” (43). Section B—which theoretically could be skipped to straight from the story’s opening three lines—also feature characters named John and Mary, though it is left somewhat ambiguous as to whether or not these two characters are the same John and Mary found in Section A. Mary falls in love with John, but John only uses Mary for ***. When Mary finds out from friends that John is seeing another woman, Madge, Mary commits suicide, though leaves a suicide note for John and hopes he will find her and save her life. Mary dies, and John marries Madge. Atwood concludes this section by stating “everything continues as in [Section] A” (44). In Section C, we are again introduced to two characters named John and Mary, and, much like Section B, it’s worth noting that a reader could skip from the opening lines of the story straight to Section C, and have Section C be read largely independently of Sections A and B. Here, John, who is older, falls in love with Mary, who is twenty-two. Mary meets John at work but is in love with James, “who has a motorcycle and a fabulous record collection” (44). James isn’t in love with Mary. John has two children and is married to Madge. One day, James shows up to Mary’s apartment with marijuana, after which John shows up, finds the two lovers in bed together, and kills them, before killing himself. Madge, now John’s widow, “marries an understanding man named Fred,” though only “after a suitable period of mourning” (44). Atwood concludes the section by saying that “everything continues as in A, but under different names” (44). Section D focuses on Fred and Madge, who would seem to be the same Fred and Madge mentioned in Section C. The two get along well and own a house but a “one day a giant tidal wave approaches” (44). Real estate values decrease, thousands die, but Fred and Madge survive. Again, Atwood concludes this section by saying that everything “continue[s] as in [Section] A” (45). Section E, which is only four sentences, offers that Fred has a bad heart and dies, after which Madge “devotes herself to charity work until the end of [Section] A” (45). This section concludes with: “If you like, it can be ‘Madge,’ ‘cancer,’ ‘guilty and confused,’ and ‘bird watching’ (45). Section F, the story’s last section, begins with Atwood again directly addressing the reader, and offering perhaps the story’s most metafictional content to this point. Atwood then asserts that all endings are the same and that “the only authentic ending is the one provided here: John and Mary die. John and Mary die. John and Mary die” (45). Atwood closes the story by saying plots, and plot, “are just one thing after another, a what and a what and a what. Now try How and Why.” (45). The citations in this guide refer to the story as it appears in the anthology, The Story and Its Writer,

Gaurav Seth 5 years, 1 month ago

Summary of Happy Endings by  Sylvia Spencer​

Happy Endings by Sylvia Spencer is an inspirational and motivational poem.

In the first stanza the poet asks is there always a happy ending to every song or story? The poet then explains some people are happy, while others weep; and there are people who finish in glory.

In the second stanza the poet reiterates there may not be a happy ending to every day. We may be sad or it might be raining and the sky might be grey due to which we might miss the sunshine of the clear sky.

In the third stanza the poet wisely suggests to us that happy endings may not happen by chance, but we can make happy endings by the quality of our work and positive attitude.  

In the last stanza the poet advises us to be ourselves, however small we may be. We should always smile when things get out of tune. We should try to make a happy ending out of everything. When we do this life will be like a continuous honeymoon.  

  • 4 answers

Kids Fancy Dresses Hamirpur 5 years, 1 month ago

Man, girl, dog, boy, Lady, Butterfly, child, words, road, Woman

Naisha Sachdeva 5 years, 1 month ago

Man, girl, dog, boy, Lady, Butterfly, child, words, road, Woman

Visalatchi S 5 years, 1 month ago

1.man 2. 3.girl 4.women 5.girl 6.daughter 7.boy 8.question 9.

Jesmina Rahman 5 years, 1 month ago

1.man 2. 3.girl 4.women 5.girl 6.daughter 7.boy 8.question 9.
  • 1 answers

Shristy Singh 5 years, 1 month ago

The things are:- 1) cement 2) brick 3) sand 4) wood 5) red sand
  • 1 answers

Gaurav Seth 5 years, 1 month ago

Yard: A measuring unit (1 yard equals to 3 ft. or 36 inches), garden or corridors outside the house

In this stanza, the poet is explaining the ingredients or material used to make a house.The poet says that bricks,stone and wood are used to make a house. It also has window glass and corridors or open space in front and back of the house for gardening. Tiles of the floor,fine paints,roof,elevations of the roof and many doors that give it a perfect look of a house. Thus, a house is a completely non-living thing.

Unselfish: without any selfish interest, selfless

the poet has explained the nature of a home and what makes a house- a home.It is the family members- brothers-sisters, mothers- fathers who together make a home. Their acts without any selfish interest, their concern for each other, their wish to work for each others’ happiness and well- being.Their wish to show love and care towards each other is what makes a house - a home.

  • 1 answers

Kavitha Ramakrishna 5 years, 1 month ago

fleet
  • 1 answers

Kavitha Ramakrishna 5 years, 1 month ago

fleet
  • 1 answers

Kavitha Ramakrishna 5 years, 1 month ago

flock
  • 3 answers

Rohith Br 5 years, 1 month ago

A flock of sheep

Hitakshi Vanjani 5 years, 1 month ago

Flock

Kavitha Ramakrishna 5 years, 1 month ago

fleet
  • 1 answers

Gaurav Seth 5 years, 1 month ago

Patrick found the homework very boring. He preferred to play hockey and basketball. He was advised by the teacher to do his homework to learn better. He often realised that he hadn’t learned many things still did not change his attitude.

One day, he saw that his cat was playing with an elf. It was a tiny man, wearing a little wool shirt and short trousers. He shouted to be saved from the cat. It promised to grant Patrick a wish if he saves its life Patrick found someone to do his homework.

He felt lucky. He asked for his help till the end of the semester. Although the elf felt disgusted by the demand initially, yet it decided to help Patrick in his homework.

As elf didn’t know all the subjects he asked for help. Patrick had to read words with meanings for elf. In solving the problem of mathematics, it took help of Patrick himself. History was troublesome for elf.

Thus it involved Patrick all the time while doing his homework. Patrick was reading day and night unknowingly and in helping elf. He actually learned lots of things.

On last day of the school, the elf left secretly through the back door. It did not want to stay longer as the work was tiresome for it.

At the end of the semester, Patrick surprised everyone by scoring A grade. Actually it was achieved only through his own hard work. His teachers, parents, and friends wondered for the positive changes in his personality.

He became the inspiration for others. He did all his chores by himself. He was liked and appreciated by everyone. While helping the elf Patrick had learned to work hard and finally, the success was his not that of the elf.

  • 1 answers

Yogita Ingle 5 years, 1 month ago

Stucco: fine paint used for wall surface. Chimneys: smokestack, a pipe which takes smoke or combustion gases up from the fire. In this stanza, the poet is explaining the ingredients or material used to make a house. The poet says that bricks,stone and wood are used to make a house.

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Gaurav Seth 5 years, 1 month ago

Swami's father told him to go to school despite the headache. He scolded him for not asking his permission to skip school earlier. He said that Swami had to blame himself for the headache as he had loafed about a lot on Sunday. Swami replied that he could not go late to school, but father was insistent. His mother, on the other hand, was easily convinced that Swami was not well and even travelling by rickshaw would further increase his headache.

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