Saturday, July 07, 2012

PLOT SUMMARY - SHORT STORY

Plot summary

Old Major, the old boar on the Manor Farm, calls the animals on the farm for a meeting, where he compares the humans to parasites and teaches the animals a revolutionary song, "Beasts of England".
When Major dies three days later, two young pigs, Snowball and Napoleon, assume command and turn his dream into a philosophy. The animals revolt and drive the drunken and irresponsible Mr. Jones from the farm, renaming it "Animal Farm".
The Seven Commandments of Animalism are written on the wall of a barn. The most important is the seventh, "All animals are equal." All the animals work, but the workhorse, Boxer, does more than others and adopts the maxim — "I will work harder."
Snowball attempts to teach the animals reading and writing; food is plentiful; and the farm runs smoothly. The pigs elevate themselves to positions of leadership and set aside special food items ostensibly for their personal health. Napoleon takes the pups from the farm dogs and trains them privately. When Mr. Jones tries retaking the farm, the animals defeat him at what they call the "Battle of the Cowshed". Napoleon and Snowball struggle for leadership. When Snowball announces his idea for a windmill, Napoleon opposes it. Snowball makes a speech in favour of the windmill, whereupon Napoleon has his dogs chase Snowball away. In Snowball's absence, Napoleon declares himself leader and makes changes. Meetings will no longer be held and instead a committee of pigs will run the farm.
Using a young pig named Squealer as a mouthpiece, Napoleon announces that Snowball stole the idea for the windmill from him. The animals work harder with the promise of easier lives with the windmill. After a violent storm, the animals find the windmill annihilated. Napoleon and Squealer convince the animals that Snowball destroyed the windmill, although the scorn of the neighbouring farmers suggests the windmill's walls were too thin. Once Snowball becomes a scapegoat, Napoleon begins purging the farm, killing animals he accuses of consorting with Snowball. Meanwhile, Boxer takes up a second maxim: "Napoleon is always right."
Napoleon abuses his powers, making life harder for the animals; the pigs impose more control while reserving privileges for themselves. The pigs rewrite history, villainising Snowball and glorifying Napoleon. Squealer justifies every statement Napoleon makes, even the pigs' alteration of the Seven Commandments of Animalism. "No animal shall sleep in beds" is changed to "No animal shall sleep in beds with sheets" when the pigs are discovered to have been sleeping in the old farmhouse. "No animal shall drink alcohol" is changed to "No animal shall drink alcohol to excess" when the pigs discover the farmer's whisky. "Beasts of England" is banned as inappropriate, as according to Napoleon the dream of Animal Farm has been realised. It is replaced by an anthem glorifying Napoleon, who appears to be adopting the lifestyle of a man. The animals, though cold, starving, and overworked, remain convinced through psychological conditioning that they are better off than they were when ruled by Mr. Jones. Squealer abuses the animals' poor memories and invents numbers to show their improvement.
Mr. Frederick, one of the neighbouring farmers, swindles Napoleon by buying old wood with forged money, and then attacks the farm, using blasting powder to blow up the restored windmill. Though the animals win the battle, they do so at great cost, as many, including Boxer, are wounded. Boxer continues working harder and harder, until he collapses while working on the windmill. Napoleon sends for a van to take Boxer to the veterinarian, explaining that better care can be given there. Benjamin the donkey, who "could read as well as any pig",[5] notices that the van belongs to "Alfred Simmonds, Horse Slaughterer and Glue Boiler", and attempts to mount a rescue; but the animals' attempts are futile. Squealer reports that the van was purchased by the hospital and the writing from the previous owner had not been repainted. He recounts a tale of Boxer's death in the hands of the best medical care. Shortly after Boxer's death, it is revealed that the pigs have purchased more whisky.
Years pass, and the pigs learn to walk upright, carry whips, and wear clothes. The Seven Commandments are reduced to a single phrase: "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others." Napoleon holds a dinner party for the pigs and the humans of the area, who congratulate Napoleon on having the hardest-working animals in the country on the least feed. Napoleon announces an alliance with the humans, against the labouring classes of both "worlds". He abolishes practices and traditions related to the Revolution, and reverts the name of the farm to "Manor Farm".
The animals, overhearing the conversation, notice that the faces of the pigs have begun changing. During a poker match, an argument breaks out between Napoleon and Mr. Pilkington when they both play the Ace of Spades, and the animals realise that the faces of the pigs look like the faces of humans and no one can tell the difference between them.

Animalism

"Seven Commandments" redirects here. For the Noahide code, see Seven Laws of Noah.
The pigs Snowball, Napoleon, and Squealer adapt Old Major's ideas into an actual philosophy, which they formally name Animalism. Soon after, Napoleon and Squealer indulge in the vices of humans (drinking alcohol, sleeping in beds, trading). Squealer is employed to alter the Seven Commandments to account for his humanisation, which represents the Soviet government's tweaking of communist theory to make it more a reformation of capitalism than a replacement.
The Seven Commandments are laws that were supposed to keep order and ensure elementary Animalism within Animal Farm. The Seven Commandments were designed to unite the animals together against the humans and prevent animals from following the humans' evil habits. Since not all of the animals can remember them, they are boiled down into one basic statement: "Four legs good, two legs bad!" (with wings counting as legs for this purpose, Snowball arguing that wings count as legs as they are objects of propulsion rather than manipulation), which the sheep constantly repeat, distracting the crowd from the lies of the pigs. The original commandments were:
  1. Whatever goes upon two legs is an enemy.
  2. Whatever goes upon four legs, or has wings, is a friend.
  3. No animal shall wear clothes.
  4. No animal shall sleep in a bed.
  5. No animal shall drink alcohol.
  6. No animal shall kill any other animal.
  7. All animals are equal.
Later, Napoleon and his pigs are corrupted by the absolute power they hold over the farm. To maintain their popularity with the other animals, Squealer secretly paints additions to some commandments to benefit the pigs while keeping them free of accusations of breaking the laws (such as "No animal shall drink alcohol" having "to excess" appended to it and "No animal shall sleep in a bed" with "with sheets" added to it). The changed commandments are as follows, with the changes bolded:
  1. No animal shall sleep in a bed with sheets.
  2. No animal shall drink alcohol to excess.
  3. No animal shall kill any other animal without cause.
Eventually the laws are replaced with "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others", and "Four legs good, two legs better!" as the pigs become more human.

Characters

Pigs

An aged prize Middle White boar is the inspiration that fuels the Rebellion in the book. He is an allegory of Karl Marx and Lenin, the founders of communism, in that he draws up the principles of the revolution. His skull being put on revered public display also resembles Lenin, whose embalmed body was put on display.[6][7]
"A large, rather fierce-looking Berkshire boar, the only Berkshire on the farm, not much of a talker, but with a reputation for getting his own way",[8] An allegory of Joseph Stalin,[6] Napoleon is the main villain of Animal Farm. He begins to gradually build up his power, using the dogs Jessie and Bluebell, whom he he took from their parents as puppies and raised to be vicious dogs, as his secret police. After driving Snowball off the farm, Napoleon usurps full power, using false propaganda from Squealer and threats and intimidation from the dogs to keep the other animals in line. Among other things, he gradually changes the Commandments for his benefit. By the end of the book, Napoleon and his fellow pigs have learned to walk upright and started to behave similarly to the humans against whom they originally revolted.
In the first French version of Animal Farm, Napoleon is called César, the French form of Caesar,[3] although another translation has him as Napoléon.[9]
Napoleon's rival and original head of the farm after Jones' overthrow. He is mainly based on Leon Trotsky,[6] but also combines elements from Vladimir Lenin.[7] He wins over most animals and gains their trust by leading a very successful first harvest, but is driven out of the farm by Napoleon. Snowball genuinely works for the good of the farm and the animals and devises plans to help the animals achieve their vision of an egalitarian utopia, but Napoleon and his dogs chase him from the farm, and Napoleon spreads rumours to make him seem evil and corrupt and that he had secretly sabotaged the animals' efforts to improve the farm.
A small white fat porker who serves as Napoleon's right hand pig and minister of propaganda, holding a position similar to that of Molotov.[6] Squealer manipulates the language to excuse, justify, and extol all of Napoleon's actions. Squealer limits debate by complicating it and he confuses and disorients, making claims that the pigs need the extra luxury they are taking in order to function properly, for example. However, when questions persist, he usually uses the threat of the return of Mr Jones, the former owner of the farm, to justify the pigs' privileges. Squealer uses statistics to convince the animals that life is getting better and better. Most of the animals have only dim memories of life before the revolution; therefore, they are convinced. In the end, he is the first pig to walk on his hind legs.
Minimus
A poetic pig who writes the second and third national anthems of Animal Farm after the singing of "Beasts of England" is banned.
The Piglets
Hinted to be the children of Napoleon (albeit not truly noted in the novel) and are the first generation of animals actually subjugated to his idea of animal inequality.
The young pigs
Four pigs who complain about Napoleon's takeover of the farm but are quickly silenced and later executed.
Pinkeye
A minor pig who is mentioned only once; he is the pig that tastes Napoleon's food to make sure it is not poisoned, in response to rumours about an assassination attempt on Napoleon.

Humans

The former owner of the farm, Jones is a very heavy drinker and the animals revolt against him after he drinks so much that he does not feed or take care of them. The attempt by Jones and his farmhands to recapture the farm is foiled in the Battle of the Cowshed.
Frederick
The tough owner of Pinchfield, a well-kept neighbouring farm. He buys wood from the animals for forged money and later attacks them, destroying the windmill but being finally beaten in the resulting Battle of the Windmill. There are stories of him mistreating his own animals, such as throwing dogs into a furnace. Pinchfield is noted as being smaller than Pilkington's Foxwood farm but more efficiently run, and Frederick briefly enters into an "alliance" with Napoleon by offering to buy wood from him but then betrays the deal and mounts a bloody invasion of Animal Farm.
The easy-going but crafty owner of Foxwood, a neighbouring farm overgrown with weeds, as described in the book. At the end of the game, both Napoleon and Pilkington draw the Ace of Spades and then begin fighting loudly. Foxwood is described as being much larger than Pinchfield, but not as efficiently run.
Mr. Whymper
A man hired by Napoleon for the public relations of Animal Farm to human society. Whymper is used as a go-between to trade with human society for things the animals can't produce on their own: at first this is a legitimate need because the animals can't manufacture their own windmill components, but eventually Whymper is used to procure luxuries like alcohol for the pigs.

Equines

Boxer is a loyal, kind, dedicated, and respectable horse. He is physically the strongest animal on the farm, but impressionable (a major theme in the book), which leaves him stating "I will work harder" and "Napoleon is always right" despite the corruption.
Clover
Clover, a mare, is Boxer's companion, constantly caring for him; she also acts as a matriarch of sorts for the other horses and the other animals in general (such as the ducklings she shelters with her forelegs and hooves during Old Major's speech).
Mollie
Mollie is a self-centred, self-indulgent and vain young white mare whose sole enjoyments are wearing ribbons in her mane, eating sugar cubes, and being pampered and groomed by humans. She quickly leaves for another farm and is only once mentioned again.
Benjamin, a donkey, is one of the longest-lived animals. He has the worst temper, but is also one of the wisest animals on the farm, and is one of the few who can actually read. He is able to "read as well as any pig."[10] Benjamin is a very dedicated friend to Boxer, and does nothing to warn the other animals of the pigs' corruption, which he secretly realises is steadily unfolding. When asked if he was happier after the revolution than before it, Benjamin remarks, "Donkeys live a long time. None of you has ever seen a dead donkey." He is sceptical and pessimistic, his most-often-made statement being "Life will go on as it has always gone on – that is, badly."[10]

Other animals

Muriel
A wise old goat who is friends with all of the animals on the farm. She, like Benjamin and Snowball, is one of the few animals on the farm who can read (with some difficulty as she has to spell the words out first) and helps Clover discover that the Seven Commandments have been continually changed.
The Puppies
Offspring of Jessie and Bluebell, taken away from them by Napoleon at birth and reared by Napoleon to be his security force. These dogs are trained to be vicious, going so far as to rip many of the animals to shreds including the four young pigs, a sheep and various hens. They attempt to do the same to Boxer, who halts one of the puppies under his hoof. The puppy begs for mercy and through Napoleon's orders, Boxer sets the puppy free.
Moses the Raven
An old crow who occasionally visits the farm, regaling its denizens with tales of a wondrous place beyond the clouds called Sugarcandy Mountain, where he avers that all animals go when they die—but only if they work hard. He is interpreted as symbolising the Russian Orthodox Church, with Sugarcandy Mountain an allusion to Heaven for the animals.[11] He spends his time turning the animals' minds to thoughts of Sugarcandy Mountain (rather than their work) and yet does no work himself. He feels unequal in comparison to the other animals, so he leaves after the rebellion, for all animals were supposed to be equal. However, much later in the novel he returns to the farm and continues to proclaim the existence of Sugarcandy Mountain. The other animals are confused by the pigs' attitude towards Moses; they denounce his claims as nonsense, but allow him to remain on the farm. The pigs do this to keep any doubting animals in line with the hope of a happy afterlife, keeping their minds on Sugarcandy Mountain and not on possible uprisings. In the end, Moses is one of the few animals to remember The Rebellion, along with Clover, Benjamin, and the pigs.
The Sheep
They show limited understanding of the situations but nonetheless blindly support Napoleon's ideals. They are regularly shown repeating the phrase "four legs good, two legs bad". At the end of the novel, one of the Seven Commandments is changed after the pigs learn to walk on two legs and their shout changes to "four legs good, two legs better". They can be relied on by the pigs to shout down any dissent from the others.
The Hens
The hens are among the first to rebel against Napoleon: in response to their being forced to give more eggs, they destroy their eggs instead of handing them to the higher powers (the pigs), who want to sell them to humans. Napoleon then uses fear and starves them until the pigs get what they want.
The Cows
Their milk is stolen by the pigs, who learn to milk them, and is stirred into the pigs' mash every day while the other animals are not given any such luxuries.
The Cat
Never seen to carry out any work, the cat is absent for long periods, and is forgiven because her excuses are so convincing and she "purred so affectionately that is was impossible not to believe in her good intentions".[12] She has no interest in the politics of the farm, and the only time she is recorded as having participated in an election she was found to have actually "voted on both sides".[12]

Thursday, July 05, 2012

ATTITUDE - Short Story

What Matters - ATTITUDE

An old man lived alone in Minnesota . He wanted to spade his potato garden, but it was very hard work.
His only son, who would have helped him, was in prison.
The old man wrote a letter to his son and mentioned his situation: 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear Son,
I am feeling pretty bad because it looks like I won't be able to plant my potato garden this year. I hate to miss doing the garden, because your mother always loved planting time. I'm just getting too old to be digging up a garden plot.If you were here; all my troubles would be over.  
 
I know you would dig the plot, for me if you weren't in the prison.
Love,
Dad
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shortly ,the old man received this telegram:
-------------------------------------------    
"For Heaven's sake, Dad, don't dig up the garden !!That's where I buried the GUNS!!"
-------------------------------------------    
At 4 a.m.the next morning, a dozen FBI agents and local police officers showed up and dug up the entire garden without finding any guns. 
Confused, the old man wrote another note to his son telling him what happened and asked him what to do next.
----------------------------------
His son's reply was:
---------------------------------
"Go ahead and plant your potatoes, Dad it's the best I could do for you from here."  
 
NO MATTER WHERE YOU ARE IN THE WORLD, IF YOU HAVE DECIDED TO DO SOMETHING DEEP FROM YOUR HEART, YOU CAN DO IT -  IT IS THE THOUGHT THAT MATTERS &  NOT WHERE YOU ARE. 

ATTITUDE IS ALL THAT MATTERS




Saturday, June 16, 2012

SHORT STORY - GON-THI (Coconut Fruit)

How The Coconut Came To Myanmar
By Madhu Gurung
Myanmar (then called Burma) is known as the golden land of gold dome pagodas and swaying coconut trees. Coconut trees were originally called 'gon-bin' in Myanmar language, which translated in English means the mischief-maker's tree. Why it is known by this most unusual name, is because once centuries ago, a raft carrying three people landed on the Burmese coast. The people on board this raft were taken to the king. On questioning them the king learnt that they had been banished from their own kingdom because of the crimes they had committed.
 One man was a thief who stole from other people; the next was a witch who used to cast wicked spells and frightened the people. While the third was a mischief-maker, who did nothing right and only harmed everyone by telling tales and lies. The king on hearing their story ordered his minister to give a thousand pieces of silver to the thief and allowed him to settle in Burma. For the witch too, he gave the same orders. But for the mischief-maker, he ordered him to be executed at once.
To his astonished courtiers the king explained that the thief stole from others because he was poor and if he had enough to live on, he would make a good subject. The witch too cast spells because she was envious, poor and unhappy and if she had enough to live on, she too would make a good subject. But for the third, the king pointed out that "once a mischief-maker, always a mischief-maker".
So the mischief-maker was taken to the seashore and beheaded. The next day when the king's officer passed the place of the mischief maker's execution, he was surprised to see the head of the mischief-maker open its mouth and shout out aloud, "Tell your king to come and bow before me or else I will knock his head off."  The frightened officer ran to the king to report the most unusual happening. The king did not believe him and felt he was making fun of him. "My Lord if you do not believe me, send someone with me and he will confirm what I just saw."
So the king ordered another officer to accompany the first. When they reached the execution grounds the head lay silent. The second officer reported what he saw and in anger the King ordered the first officer to be executed for being a liar. The unfortunate officer was taken to the execution grounds and beheaded. On seeing this, the head of the mischief-maker laughed aloud saying, "Ha, ha! I can still make mischief even though I am dead." The officer went rushing back to the palace and reported to the king. The king was filled with grief and remorse.

The king realised that the mischief-maker's head would create further problems, so he ordered the head to be buried in a deep pit. The next day a strange tree grew where the head was buried, bearing the most unusual fruit, which resembled the mischief-maker's head. This was the coconut tree which the Burmese call the 'gon-bin' tree. Over the years, it became "on-bin". If you take the "gon-thi" (a coconut fruit) and shake it, you can hear a gurgling sound - for it's still the mischief-maker wanting to tittle tattle and play a prank on you.  

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Nasreddin's Visitors

Nasreddin's Visitors                    
                                                                    

One day a visitor came to Nasreddin's house. "I am your cousin from Konya," he said, "and I have brought you a duck to celebrate the visit." Nasreddin was delighted. He asked his wife to cook the duck, and served the visitor a fine dinner.

The next day another visitor arrived. "I am the friend of the man who brought you the duck," he said. Nasreddin invited him in and gave him a good meal. The next day another visitor arrived, and said he was the friend of the friend of the man who had brought the duck. Again Nasreddin invited him in for a meal. However, he was getting annoyed. Visitors seemed to be using his house as a restaurant.

Then another visitor came, and said he was the friend of the friend of the friend of the man who had brought the duck. Nasreddin invited him to eat dinner with him. His wife brought some soup to the table and the visitor tasted it. "What kind of soup is this?" asked the visitor. "It tastes just like warm water." "Ah!" said Nasreddin, "That is the soup of the soup of the soup of the duck."

Comprehension and Exercise
  1. How many visitors came to see Nasreddin?
    1.   2
    2.   3
    3.   4
  2. How many of the visitors brought a duck?
    1.   1
    2.   2
    3.   3
  3. Did Nasreddin know the first visitor?
    1.   Yes
    2.   No
  4. Why did Nasreddin get angry?
    1.   He did not like eating duck.
    2.   His cousin didn't bring him a duck.
    3.   The first visitor brought a duck, but the others didn't bring anything.
  5. How did Nasreddin solve the problem?
    1.   He served soup which tasted of nothing, so that no more visitors would want to come to his house.
    2.   He served excellent soup, so that everyone would want to eat at his house.
    3.   He opened a restaurant.

Short Story - Naseruddin and the Smell of Soup

Naseruddin and the Smell of Soup

One day, a poor man, who had only one piece of bread to eat, was walking past a restaurant. There was a large pot of soup on the table. The poor man held his bread over the soup, so the steam from the soup went into the bread, and gave it a good smell. Then he ate the bread.
The restaurant owner was very angry at this, and he asked the man for money, in exchange for the steam from the soup. The poor man had no money, so the restaurant owner took him to Naseruddin, who was a judge at that time. Naseruddin thought about the case for a little while.
Then he took some money from his pocket. He held the coins next to the restaurant owner's ear, and shook them, so that they made a jingling noise.
"What was that?" asked the restaurant owner.
"That was payment for you," answered Naseruddin.
"What do you mean? That was just the sound of coins!" protested the restaurant owner.
"The sound of the coins is payment for the smell of the soup," answered Naseruddin. "Now go back to your restaurant."
Comprehension & Exercise
  1. What food did the poor man have?
    1.   soup
    2.   bread
    3.   nothing
  2. What kind of food did he see in the restaurant?
    1.   bread
    2.   meat
    3.   soup
  3. Why did he hold the bread over the soup?
    1.   So the steam from the soup would go into the bread.
    2.   So he could warm his hand.
    3.   So the restaurant owner would get angry.
  4. Why did the restaurant owner take the poor man to Naseruddin?
    1.   Because Naseruddin was a judge.
    2.   So that Naseruddin could pay for the soup.
    3.   Because Naseruddin was the man's relative.
  5. What did Naseruddin do with the coins?
    1.   He gave them to the restaurant owner.
    2.   He made a noise with them.
    3.   He gave them to the poor man.
  6. What was the payment for the smell of the soup?
    1.   the sound of money
    2.   a few coins
    3.   there was no payment

VISIT TO RUSSIA - OCCASSION INDEPENDENCE DAY


INDEPENDENCE DAY – RUSSIA

A VISIT TO RUSSIA

Russia and India have always shared a great relationship. It began in the early years of our Independence, through our leaders and it has remained strong. I had always wished for an opportunity to visit Russia and it came quite late in my life. It was after I became a Member of Parliament, or perhaps much before that as an invitee to the Moscow Film Festival, during our summer months. I had heard of the enormous love and affection that the great Raj Kapoor had enjoyed in the then Soviet Union, stories of his films being loved by the Russians, in particular ‘Awaara’, but it was only when I reached there that I could personally gauge how real it was. The girls dressed up in Indian costumes, speaking fluent Hindi and giving credit to Indian Cinema for it. The huge patronage that Indian cinema received from the Russians can only be explained by the Russians themselves, and the mobbing that Indian stars were subjected to was just like, as though we were home. The hospitality and friendship was just incredible, and i shall always be grateful for the time spent there. Several visits followed thereafter and many other cities and important places were seen and admired. Even went to shoot an Indo-Russian co production ‘Ajooba’ with a mix of Russian and Indian artists, under the direction of Shashi Kapoor there as well. So Moscow and Tashkent and St Petersburg, earlier Leningrad, Kiev, now Kyev, Baku … so many centers were visited and admired. A fire temple I think in Baku perhaps, had Indian inscriptions of an ancient era, the workmanship of the carpet making industry so delicate and beautiful, a gift of that still adorning my home. The visits inside the Red Square and Lenin’s memory encased in almost real life structure, the Kremlin and the famous Imperial Fabergè eggs in the museum and the Cathedral, ornate and with such immense opulence. During the shooting of ‘Ajooba’, the historic Yalta, not knowing now whether it is in Ukraine or in Russia still, and the Crimean region, landing at Sevastopol and driving through some of the most picturesque natural climes, said to be extremely healthy in the air and water, and that little wonder of a hill that runs into the sea on the way to Yalta, which when you look carefully resembles a big bear stooping down to have a drink of water, the walks on the sea fronts in the cool evenings and getting accosted by the shop owners on the side, gesticulating with a coin and telling me of that moment in Sholay where the coin was the same on both sides …  And then … St Petersburg … ah .. what a city, fell in love with it immediately and became my most beautiful city in the World, with stiff competition from San Francisco in the US of A. But St Petersburg was astounding. By the Neva river, a city with almost an independent character of its own, built in a style that closely resembled any European city, and am told with some influence and contribution from Italian architects. The Hermitage Museum simply unbelievable, walked about it in stunned silence, consoling little Abhishek and Shweta who seemed not too interested at that early period of their lives – they were around 10 and 12 then. The streets the Palaces, the atmosphere, the ‘white nights’ and the celebration on the streets for the seven days it lasted, and the people – always smiling and willing to help and fun loving. The sacrifices made by them and their young men during the second World War and the memorial where they stopped the German Nazi troops from entering the city. Amazing. And some distance the Great Palace with the all gold stairway and fountains, and the mystery hidden fountain springs emerging unannounced in the garden, loved and played into by Abhishek. So much to write and express. And finally back to Moscow by overnight train, and the formal showing of two of my films in the main festival theatre – Agnipath and Hum .. and all the girls charging onto the stage after the screening of Hum and singing and dancing along with the song ‘Jumma Chumma’ … and in the end ..
the tearful send offs at the airport ! Always painful !!

Love and Happy Independence Day Russia !

Amitabh Bachchan

Sunday, June 10, 2012

PARAGRAPH - COUCH POTATO

Couch Potato

How did the word ‘couch potato’ come about ? Ok … no need to explain ! I know when I see one, and I see one in the reflection of the laptop screen in front of me. Ha ! My occupation for the last so many days. An event comes to an end and another starts. Sometimes both run at the same time with similar interest. Have still not been able to figure out the screen within a screen function on tv sets, else would have loved to activate it. Big tragedy ! Saw Rafael Nadal breeze through against his compatriot Ferrer and was keen to witness the Novak – Federer game. But something happened. Rain stopped play at Roland Garros and by the time the game started again, the channels were into the Euro Cup pre game introductions. Attempts to get back to Tennis were futile, so settled for the Poland – Greece opener for Euro Cup. kept trying to get back to the Tennis but the designated channel had nothing of it. After a sizable amount of time with the Poles and the Greeks, where it was felt the Greeks were getting a raw deal by the referee – red carding one of their players, somewhat harshly I felt, as did many on the twitter and reducing the Greeks to 10 players, I tried surfing again and .. wohhhh ! The tennis was back on Novak having won a set and leading into another set win against Federer ! Smashing stuff !! The longer I stayed on the tennis the more mistakes Novak was making, so switched back to the football, only to find that I had missed an equalizer by Greece against Poland who were a goal up while I was on my way to Roland Garros. Involve in the football, I found a gap to get back to tennis and discovered that it was the third set and Novak leading convincingly. What ?? Federer going down in straight sets ?!! Could never have imagined that a couple of years ago ! Shuttled back to football to see a penalty in favor of Greece, because their goal keeper had been sent off for obstruction. Goodness !! What a game ! I said ok here goes, Greece shall get poetic justice, but the penalty is missed – brilliantly stopped by the substitute goalie who just came in for the one red carded !! That done I rushed back to Garros, only to find ads., running on how the cocoa beans for Cadbury’s chocolates are chosen ! Missed the final moment of victory of Novak Djokovic from Serbia, over Roger Federer of Switzerland, a crowd favorite.

Amitabh Bachchan

Saturday, June 09, 2012

CONNECTING WORDS (Transition words)


TRANSITION WORDS

What are transitions and how are they used?

  • transitions are phrases or words used to connect one idea to the next
  • transitions are used by the author to help the reader progress from one significant idea to the next
  • transitions also show the relationship within a paragraph (or even within a sentence) between the main idea and the support the author gives for those ideas
  • different transitions do different things....


Transitions may be "Additive," "Adversative," "Causal," or "Sequential."

Additive
Transitions

  • Addition
  • Introduction
  • Reference
  • Similarity
  • Identification
  • Clarification 


Causal
Transitions

  • Cause/Reason
  • Effect/Result
  • Purpose
  • Consequence
 
 Sequential
Transitions

  • Numerical
  • Continuation
  • Conclusion
  • Digression
  • Resumption
  • Summation
 
Adversative
Transitions

  • Conflict
  • Emphasis
  • Concession
  • Dismissal
  • Replacement