Distant black hole is caught in the act of annihilating a star

More than halfway across the known universe, astronomers have observed an act of tremendous violence as a black hole rips apart a star that got too close to this celestial savage. But this was not your typical case of a hungry black hole.

It was one of just four instances—and the first one since 2011—of a black hole being seen tearing apart a passing star in a phenomenon known as a tidal disruption event before ejecting brilliant jets of high-energy particles into space in opposite directions. And it was the most distant and brilliant such occurrence ever observed.

 

In research that were published in the journals Nature and Nature Astronomy on Wednesday, astronomers described the event. A supermassive black hole estimated to be hundreds of millions of times as large as our sun and located about 8.5 billion light-years from Earth looks to be the culprit. 5.9 trillion miles is the distance that light travels in a year, or a light year (9.5 trillion km).

Igor Andreoni, principal author of one of the studies and an astronomer at the University of Maryland and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, stated, “We think that the star was similar to our sun, probably more massive but of a common kind.

Through the Zwicky Transient Facility astronomical survey, the event was discovered in February using a camera mounted on a telescope at the Palomar Observatory in California. The Very Large Telescope of the European Southern Observatory in Chile was used to determine the distance.

According to University of Minnesota astronomer and study co-author Michael Coughlin, when a star dangerously approaches a black hole, it is violently torn apart by the black hole’s gravitational tidal forces. “This is similar to how the moon pulls tides on Earth, but with greater strength,” he said. (Watch the tidal disruption incident animation.)

The star’s fragments are then gathered into a rapidly spinning disc revolving around the black hole. Eventually, what is left of the dying star in the disc is absorbed by the black hole. When the tidal disruption event happens, large jets of material are occasionally blasted in opposing directions in extremely unusual circumstances, which we estimated to be 100 times more uncommon, Coughlin continued.

According to Andreoni and Coughlin, the black hole was probably rotating quickly, which may have contributed to how the two potent jets were propelled into space at nearly the speed of light.

Dheeraj Pasham, an astronomer at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the study’s lead author, said the team was able to monitor the occurrence just one week after the black hole began engulfing the dying star.

Even while tidal disruption events are found by researchers roughly twice a month, jet-producing ones are incredibly uncommon. Doppler boosting, which is a phenomenon equivalent to amplifying the sound of a passing police siren, is an effect that causes one of the jets emerging from this black hole to appear to be directed toward Earth, making it appear brighter than if it were moving in another direction.

Much like the Milky Way and most galaxies, the supermassive black hole is thought to be located at the centre of a galaxy. However, the tidal disruption event was so intense that it blocked out the stars of the galaxy. The source shone brighter than 1,000 trillion suns at its brightest, according to Pasham.

The Callosto Protocol Review – A Satisfyingly Tense Newcomer

The Callisto Protocol is a new game that is similar to Dead Space, which has long been a favourite of mine. It comes from the same creative team that created Dead Space, along with other excellent spiritual successors like The Evil Within, Bayonetta, and even Lost Odyssey.

After completing The Callisto Protocol, it became evident that the Dead Space DNA had been preserved but had undergone a complete mutation, much like the new Biophage menace.

You assume the character of Jacob Lee in the Callisto Protocol, a pilot of a freight transporter who works for the United Jupiter Company. His most recent task is straightforward but lucrative: transport a dangerous stuff between the moons of Jupiter, Europa and Callisto.

A terrorist organisation ambushes his ship, which causes it to crash and imprison him in a facility on Callisto. Naturally, Jacob realises he must go after being busted out of his cell after an outbreak of an unidentified illness while he is incarcerated.

Ironically, the story that follows is merely unexpected in that there are almost no surprises. Without a question, The Callisto Protocol wears its influences on its sleeve, yet it seems like a tremendous missed chance to manipulate and challenge players’ preconceptions regarding how the game develops.

Instead, The Callisto Protocol offers a science fiction tale that blatantly plagiarises the works that served as its inspiration (imagine Alien crossed with Dead Space), lacking the creative flare to properly identify it as its own.

The Callisto Protocol, however, does feel more realistic than Dead Space, thus anyone who found the enormous space-traveling bio-recombinant necromorphs repulsive would take comfort in the straightforwardness of The Callisto Protocol.

 

The game thus plays similarly to Dead Space, as you might imagine. Jacob makes his way through Callisto’s facilities in an effort to flee in this primarily linear, narrative-driven thriller.

However, The Callisto Protocol does a few things that you wouldn’t see in a Dead Space game in an effort to carve out its own niche, despite the fact that it is obviously influenced by Dead Space. It accomplishes this in a number of ways, including by handling combat and encounter design and delivering a more realistic story.

Combat in the Callisto Protocol is more about heavy hitting than dismemberment. You’ll interact with your adversaries more directly if you place more of an emphasis on melee. Due to the increased emphasis on melee combat, you are also given a tonne of manoeuvres to avoid and deflect the attacks of approaching adversaries.

This is accomplished by blocking an enemy’s attack by holding the stick back or to the left or right of the enemy. Even though the game claims that timing is not necessary, there have been instances where a good dodge resulted in me still getting damage. It’s a cool mechanism in use, and it feels great when you use it properly, but it could have been more reliable.

This fits in quite oddly with the fact that, despite the fighting having a lot of weight and being incredibly rewarding, things start to unravel when you’re under attack from multiple enemies.

There aren’t many ways to fight many foes at once, and Jacob can only block one strike at a time. A powerful melee attack can damage numerous adversaries, but it is impractical in the middle of a pile-on since it takes so long to wind up.

I’ll say it if you’re not interpreting the message well enough. Playing The Callisto Protocol is difficult. It’s tough in the majority of cases since you have to use your resources wisely when fighting your foes.

It can be difficult to the point of frustration in some circumstances, albeit this is a minority of my experience. Players will undoubtedly become frustrated by the battle system breaking down when dealing with multiple enemies and strikes that can instantly kill someone.

As a huge lover of horror games, I’m used to (and possibly even welcome) obstacles of this nature, but for some players, it will be more aggravating than enjoyable. Callisto can be a difficult game, but accessibility options like auto-dodge and lock-on targeting will undoubtedly ease some of these issues.

You have a limited arsenal of weapons at your disposal, including different versions of the standard pistol, shotgun, and assault rifle. You can easily complete the game with the gun you’re given at the beginning, thus none of the weapons really serve a purpose. Having such basic equipment feels like a squandered opportunity.

Nevertheless, the game’s gameplay does an excellent job of requiring you to switch between using weapons, melee, and your telekinetic ability (called GRP). I didn’t rely on one over the other at any point during the game. When you pummelled an opponent in melee, you draw attention to a place on the target that will take more damage if you shoot at it right away.

It’s an easy system that never becomes stale. The Callisto Protocol is built on a very robust fighting system that includes the ability to grasp and hurl enemies onto traps like spikes, fans, or revolving blades with your GRP.

Newly-discovered dinosaur species gives clues about T.rex evolution

If you mention the word “dinosaur” to someone, the Tyrannosaurus Rex is likely to be the first thing that comes to mind. But despite our long-standing fascination with the dinosaur species, scientists still know very little about its evolutionary history. But a new fossil unearthed in the United States could give scientists significant information about the ancient predator’s ancestry.

Researchers revealed the discovery of a new species, Daspletosaurus wilsoni, in a paper that was published in the journal Paleontology and Evolutionary science. It displays many of the traits present in more basic tyrannosaurs from older rocks, notably a pronounced set of horns surrounding the eye.

Newly-discovered-dinosaur-species-gives-clues-about-T-rex-evolution

It also has many of the characteristics of later members of the genus, such as the T. rex, such as a tall eye socket and enlarged air spaces in the skull. The scientists propose that this makes D.wilsoni a missing link between older and younger tyrannosaurus species.

What The New Fossil Reveals About The Evolution Of Dinosaurs

There are numerous closely related species that are representative of numerous dinosaur families that lived in North America during the Late Cretaceous period. They were once believed to have coexisted, offering proof of branching evolution. But as of late, new evidence from the discovery of fresh specimens suggests that many of these species may have lived at various times.

This appears to be related to the “anagenesis” process of evolution, in which one member of a species directly evolves into a descendent species, establishing an orderly “ladder” of evolutionary history.

This new study on D.wilsoni suggests that tyrannosaurs should be added to a growing list of dinosaurs for which anagenesis, or linear evolution, has been proposed. Anagenesis is contrasted with “cladogenesis,” when new species “branch out” into multiple species that are closely related and consequently, are similar to each other. These several species are “cousins” in cladogenesis as opposed to ancestors or descendants.

Discovery of D.wilsoni (Sisyphus fossil) (Sisyphus fossil)

According to the Dickinson Museum Center, the dinosaur was discovered by museum crew member Jack Wilson in 2017. Wilson noticed a flat bone fragment sticking out of a cliff’s base. The centre portion of a tyrannosaur’s nostril was represented by this bone. To get to the bones, the researchers had to dig through more than eight metres of rock.

Due to the seemingly never-ending task of removing rock and soil before retrieving the fossil, the fossil was given the nickname “Sisyphus” after a figure from Greek mythology. Daspletosaurus wilsoni, the species’ scientific name, derives from Wilson and means “Wilson’s frightful reptile.”

How The EU Can Help Save Indigenous Lives And The Amazon

We frequently see red flames glowing brilliantly into the night in the rainforest where I currently reside. When we awaken, there are still smoke clouds rising from the raging forest fires. We constantly live in fear of land speculators assaulting us and killing us, igniting yet another fire, or worse.

I’m an Indigenous Brazilian from the Juma and Uru-eu-wau-wau tribes. My two communities have been in the rainforest for many years, passing down traditions and wisdom that have allowed us to coexist with nature. I was taught that even while we rely on the forest, we don’t own it and that it’s our responsibility to keep it safe.

We see life in the jungle. However, companies view the forest, our home, as a source of wealth. They steal our land unlawfully and devastate it to raise cattle and soy for animal feed, much of which is shipped to Europe, where consumers are unaware that these products are made on Indigenous grounds.

How-The-EU-Can-Help-Save-Indigenous-Lives-And-The-Amazon

European consumption is a factor in the aggression against Indigenous people as well as the degradation of our forests, from the beef burgers consumed in restaurants to the milk added to popular coffee concoctions.

Around the world, the threat to rainforests and the Indigenous cultures living in them is the same. In rainforests, among other things, deforestation, mining, and oil extraction destroy the environment and take lives.

More violence against Indigenous people is occurring, much of which is not reported in the press, as a result of the rising demand for goods that are sold on European markets. Ari, my uncle, lost his life defending our property. Even though his murder is still unsolved, we keep telling his narrative. Although they have all received threats, the members in my community who speak out against deforestation have remained unafraid.

We now have hope for a different future in which our rights will not be violated in favour of ruthless commercial interests and economic expansion thanks to the recent election of Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva as Brazil’s next president. where my family, friends, and I do not have to defend our home against intruders or endure intimidation and daily threats of death.

But keep in mind that Jair Bolsonaro, the incumbent who publicly displayed his opposition to Indigenous rights and environmental protection, very narrowly defeated Lula. We still don’t feel secure in our neighbourhood because of this, and we anticipate that conservative forces will resist any progressive environmental policies that Lula tries to enact.

Our future is in jeopardy and depends on many factors, not simply what the new Brazilian administration does. Policymakers in Brussels are currently drafting the final draught of a measure to address deforestation caused by the EU as I write this.

This is a fantastic chance to stand up for Indigenous people, defend them, and save the forests and other lands—like savannahs—that serve as both our homes and the foundation of our subsistence. The result of these negotiations will be felt immediately around the world and set a standard for other nations to follow.

At this crucial time, EU member states can demonstrate their support for us. They should negotiate a regulation that forbids the importation into the European market of goods associated with violence and the eviction of Indigenous populations. To achieve this, it will be necessary to implement strict enforcement measures that include effective checks and controls for imported goods.

Existing international human rights norms must be built upon by this law because they are crucial to our fight for justice and the preservation of our lands. The environment as well as our house would be protected by this law.

Although Lula’s administration has some power, the Amazon rainforest’s condition is expected to worsen without intervention from the EU and other significant markets for Brazilian goods. The violence against Indigenous people will keep increasing, and we will continue to witness the red fires burning at night. For me, my neighbourhood, and the entire world, this will be disastrous.

Politicians in Europe are being urged to support us and work to rescue the lives of Indigenous people. Join us in this battle to defend the world’s savannahs and forests.

The Sequence Of Tenses : Definition & Types with Examples in Telugu

అధ్యాయము 15

The Sequence Of Tenses

95. ఒక వాక్యములో రెండు మూడు verb tenses ఉండును. ఆ tenses ను దేని తర్వాత దేనిని ఉంచాలి అనే విషయం ఈ chapter చెబుతుంది. Subordinate clause లోనున్న tense (కాలగమనము) main clause లోనున్న tense ను follow ఆవుతుంది. ఈ రెంటి యొక్క సంబంధము ఎలా ఉండాలో Sequence of Tense అను సిద్ధాంతము చెబుతుంది. Sequence of Tenses అనగా ఒక వాక్యములో verb పదముల యొక్క tenses ఏ వరుసక్రమంలో ఉండాలో చెప్పునట్టి సిద్ధాంతము అని అర్ధము. ఈ సిద్ధాంతము ముఖ్యముగా Subordinate clause లోని verb పదము యొక్క tense, ప్రధాన clause (principal clause) యొక్క verb పదము యొక్క tense ఏ విధంగా, ఏ సిద్ధాంతము ప్రకారము follow కావాలో చెబుతుంది. ఈ వరుస క్రమము తప్పితే, వాక్యము యొక్క భావము పూర్తిగా తప్పిపోతుంది.

96. Main clause
(Past Tense) subordinate clause 5 verb పదము కూడా సాధారణంగా Past Tense లో ఉంటుంది.
He hinted that he wanted money.
She replied that she felt better.
1 found out that he was guilty.
He saw that the clock had stopped.
He replied that he would come.
I never thought that I should see him again.
I took care that he should not hear me.
They climbed higher so that they might get a better view.
I worked hard so that I might succeed.
ఈ rule కు రెండు మినహాయింపులు (exceptions) ఈ విధంగా ఉన్నవి :-

The Sequence Of Tenses Definition And Types with Examples in Telugu

Read and Learn more Synthesis of Sentences

(a) Subordinate clause అందరికీ తెలిసిన విషయాన్ని (నగ్న సత్యము) వివరించు సందర్భములో main clauses (past tense), Subordinate clause present tense
ఉంటుంది.
Newton discovered that the force of gravitation makes apples fall.
Galileo maintained that the earth moves round the sun.
Euclid proved that the three angles of a triangle are equal to two right angles.
He said that honesty is always the best policy.

(b) Subordinate clause, than
600, main clause past tense
Subordinate clause దాని అవసరాన్నిబట్టి (సందర్భమును బట్టి) ఏ tense లోనైనా ఉండవచ్చను.
He liked you better than he likes me.
He helped him more than he helps his own children.
I then saw him oftener than I see him now.
He valued his friendship more than he values mine.

97. అవసరాన్నిబట్టి (భావసౌలభ్యమును బట్టి), principal clause present tense లోగాని Future Tense లోగాని ఉన్నప్పటికీ, Subordinate clause తనకు అనుకూలమై Tense భావమును చూపవచ్చును.
He thinks that she is there. He thinks that she was there.
He thinks that she will be there. He will think that she is there. He will think that she was there.
He will think that she will be there. 1030U32 3HT
Principal clause వర్తమాన కాలములో గాని (Present) భవిష్యత్కాలములో గాని (Future) ఉన్నది. అనుకుందాము. Subordinate clause ఒక purpose ను (ఉద్దేశ్యమును) తెలియచేయునది అని అనుకుందాము. ఇట్టి పరిస్థితిలో Subordinate clause తప్పనిసరిగా Present tense లో ఉంటుంది.
I eat so that I may live.
I shall nurse him so that he may live.

అభ్యాసము 101
ఈ క్రింది వాక్యములలో Verb యొక్క correct tense ఉపయోగించండి :-
1. I waited for my friend until he_ ____ (To come.)
2 So long as the rain_________ I stayed at home. (To continue)
3. I did not know it until you.__________(To speak.)
4. He speaks as one who_________ (To know.)
5. He ran as quickly as he_______ (Can or could ?)
6. He went where he_____find work. (Can or could ?)
7. Wherever there is coal you________find iron. (Will or would ?)
8. He behaves as one ___________expect him to do. (May or might?)
9. He ran away because he ____________afraid. (To be)
10. He fled where his pursuers ____________not follow. (Can or could?)
11. As he____________ not there, I spoke to his brother. (To be.)
12. The notice was published in order that all_____________ know the facts.(May or might ?)
13. He was so tired that he ______________scarcely stand. (Can or could ?)
14. You make such a noise that I ___________not work. (Can or could ?)
15. He finished first though he___________ late. (To begin.)
16. His health has improved since he_______________ India. (To leave.)
17. As soon as he the news he _____________wrote to me. (To hear.)
18. After the shower_______________ over, the sun shone out again. (To be.)
19. Whenever we we _____________________talk of old times. (To meet.)
20. Answer the first question before you_____________ further. (To proceed.)
21. Just as he__________ the room the clock struck. (To enter.)
22. Now that we______ safe we stopped to take breath. (To feel.)
23. Wherever he____________ the people gathered to listen. (To preach.)
24. He speaks as though he____________ very angry. (To be.)
25. He ran because he_____________ in a hurry. (To be.)
26. I do it because I______________ to. (To choose.)
27. He advanced as far as he______________. (To dare.)
28. He lost more than he _____________________afford. (Can or could ?)
29. He eats as much as he___________________ . (Can or could ?)
30. He rode as swiftly as he______________ . (Can or could?)
31. He locked the papers up so that they__________________ be safe. (May or might ?)
32. He walked as though he_____________ slightly lame. (To be.)
33. He stayed at home because he____________ feeling ill. (To be.)
34. I forgive you since you________________. (To repent)
35. He labours hard so that he______________ become rich. (May or might ?)
36. We shall wait here until you_______________ . (To come.)
37. He rested his horse, for it_________________. (To limp.)
38. You may sit wherever you _________________. (To like.)
39. He went to Kolkata that he________________ find work. (May or might ?)
40. I would die before I___________________. (To lie).
41. They come to see us as often as they________________. (Can or could ?)
42. I studied hard in order that I ______________succeed. (May or might ?)
43. He_____ so hard that he is certain to succeed. (To work.)
44. She told me that she __________come. (Will or would ?)
45. He would succeed if he_________ . (To try.)
46. i asked him what I __________do. (Can or could ?)
47. He came oftener than we_____________ . (To expect)
48. I would not attempt it if you ____________me. (To ask.)
49. He walked so fast than I_________ not overtake him. (Can or could?)

అభ్యాసము 102
ఈ క్రింది ఖాళీలలో తగిన Auxiliary Verb ను ఉపయోగించండి. Auxiliary Verbs అనగా సహాయక Sce. a Verb 350 number 50 tense 55. in, are; will, would; may, might మొదలైనవి. Tense sequence ని జాగ్రత్తగా పాటించాలి.

1. He died so that he_________ save the flag.
2. They erected signposts in order that the road______ be known.
3. We eat so that we_______ live.
4. Even if he paid me to do so, I _____not live in his house.
5. You_________ go only if you have permission.
6. On the understanding that you return soon, you__________ go out.
7. A bridge was built in order that the dangerous ferry ___________be avoided.
8. He begs from door to door so that he _________keep body and soul together.
9. He was so tired that he__________scarcely stand.
10. He went to England in order that he _________become a barrister.
11. You make such a noise that I____ not work.
12. He asked again whether supper________ be ready soon.
13. In order that he iearn the language quickly, he ________engaged a teacher.
14. He said that he__________ doit.
15. The thieves stole whatever they ___________find in the house.
16. He begged that we _____________pardon him.
17. I wished that I __________come earlier.
18. He said that he__________ try again.
19. He worked hard so that he________ win the prize.
20. We ran so that we__________ arrive in time.
21. He said that he_____________ give an early reply.

 అభ్యాసము 103
ఈ క్రింది Complex వాక్యములలో అనుకూలముగానున్న Verbs ను ఉపయోగించండి.

1. They sold the house because it_________ old.
2 He solemnly assured them that they___ quite mistaken.
3. I come home when it ______to rain.
4. The soldiers advanced when the bugle_______
5. I asked him what his name___________
6 He had a cow that____ enormous quantities of milk.
7. When the sun set he_____home.
8. He told them that they___wrong.
9. I heard that there_________a disturbance in the city.
10. Could you doubt that there_____a God?

Essay : Definition & Types with Examples in Telugu

Essay

An essay may be defined as an exercise in written composition expressing one’s feelings and thoughts on a given subject in a familiar informal and pleasing way. Addison’s essays are good models for students. What is said of the paragraph is substantially true of the essay which is after all a glorified kind of expansion.

1. Characteristics

N.B. What is said of the paragraph is substantially true of the essay which is after all a glorified kind of expansion.
1. Unity: (a) Of subject (One theme), (b) Of Treatment (i,e. as many paragraphs as there are ideas, besides the intro- duction and the conclusion.
2. Coherence: The first paragraph must give the purport of the whole essay; the body of the essay is to develop the theme by an ordered arrangement of the various ideas in as many paragraphs, so as to secure unity. The last paragraph is to be a sort of summing up the several ideas dealt with in the course of the essay.
3. Length: About 50 lines.
4. Style: Clear, simple, literary and dignified.
5. Language: Simple, direct, free and natural. The secret of clear writing is clear thinking. Write as you talk to a friend on the theme of the essay.
6. The personal view point: Give your opinions, otherwise the essay would be colorless: it is this feature that raises the essay to the level of art and literature.
7. Balance: The space devoted to the development of any idea should be proportionate to the importance of that idea in relation to the other ideas in the essay.
8. A good Beginning: It should arrest the reader’s attention and tell him what to expect.
9. A good Conclusion: It is to be effective and satisfying.

Note: A good essayist is more known by what he omits than what he selects.

Essay Definition And Types With Examples In Telugu

Read and Learn more English Grammar Topics

Good Beginnings

1. Making the first paragraph strike the key-note of the essay.
2. Laying down a Preposition: (e.g. “A man’s first care should be to avoid the reproaches of his own heart; his next is to escape the censures of the world”). (Vide ‘Sir Roger at the Assizes by Addison).
3. A Quotation: An essay on ‘Reading Books’ may begin with a quotation from Carlyle.” All Books are properly the record of the history of past men”

Best Endings

1. Echoing from another stand- point or suggesting in another light the core of the first paragraph.
2. Making the last paragraph richly suggestive of the whole essay; (e.g. “This therefore is the praise of Shakespeare that his drama is the mirror of life, etc.,” Johnson).
3. The use of a quotation: (e.g. Addison ends his essay “Pleasures of Imagination,” with a quotation from Bacon: “Entertain studies that fill the mind with splendid and illustrious objects as histories, fables and contemplations of nature.”)
4. A postscript (an after thought) as in the case of the Essay on “Sleep” by Leigh Hunt:
Sleep is most graceful in an infant; soundest, in one who has been tired in the open air; completest, to the seaman after a hard voyage; most welcome, to the mind haunted with an idea; most touching to look at, in the parent that has wept; lightest in the playful child; proudest, in the bride adored.

B. Classification Of Essays

1. Descriptive; 2. Narrative; (a) Incidents or Accidents; (b) Historical; (c) Biographical; 3.Reflective; 4. Imaginative. III. HOW TO SET ABOUT AN ESSAY
1. Classification.
2. Scope (What exactly the subject is and what it is not). 3. Collection of Material: (Note down points, facts, ideas and illustrations, as and when they strike you without troubling yourself at this stage about their order or suitability).
4. Selection; (From what you have jotted down, select the points most suitable for your essay and cross out those which are either irrelevant or mere repetitions).
5. Making an Outline: If you go through the material collected, having definitely the subject in your mind, you should be able to write down the Main heads (say 3 to 6) under which the material can be grouped. This will ensure the unity of the essay (i,e. treatment).
6. Fill in the outline with details marked (a), (b), (c) etc. from the material collected under the various Main heads.
7. Think out a suitably effective beginning as well as a refreshingly suggestive conclusion even before you begin the essay; you will them have planned your essay. This will ensure (a) Orderliness and system (b) balance, and (c) security against repetition and digression.
8. Put in flesh and blood in the skeleton of your essay. Note: Avoid the pronouns ‘T’ and ‘You.’

A. HISTORICAL EVENT

The Battle of Plassey
Outline: (a) Introduction, (b) Causes, (c) Circumstances leading to the battle (a) Nawab evading the terms of the treaty (b) Conspriracy of the nobles (c) Clive joining the plot. (d) Battle, (a) Clive marching with an army towards Plassey, (b). Jaffar’s faithlessness to his master, (c) The Nawab’s defeat. (e) Conclusion.

The battle of Plassey though an insignificant, event in itself, formed the turning point in the history of India and led to the foundation of the British Empire.

There were two causes for the battle of Plassey. On the death of his grandfather, Ali Vardhikhan, young and impetu- ous Surajud-Doulah became the Nawab of Bengal in 1756. Soon aferwards, he made enemies of the English on the one hand and alienated the nobility of his state by his cruel ways on the other.

By his unprovoked attack on Calcutta, he invited, so to speak, the armies of the English to march against him under the command of Robert Clive. After his defeat, he was forced to grant cretain concessions to the English. But the Nawab began intriguing with the French, with a view to evading the terms of the treaty.

Now the thoroughly dissatisfied nobles plotted to de- pose the Nawab and put Mir Jaffar, one of his generals, on the gadi. Naturally, Jaffar, headed the conspiracy and got Clive to join the plot.

Aminchand, a banker, threatened to divulge the plot to the Nawab when Clive pacified him by using a forged document for the payment of twenty lakhs of rupees as hush money. Now the Nawab was taken to task by Clive for evading the terms of the the treaty and intriguing with the French.

Receiving no reply, Clive marched with a well-trained army and attacked the Forces of the Nawab at Plassey, a village ninety miles from Calcutta. The Nawab’s army under the com- mand of a trusted and experienced general, Mir Mardan in- flicted heavy casualties on the English.

But on his death, con- fusion spread among the numerous but disorganised troops of the Moghul army, and the panic-stricken Surajud-Doulah fled.

Fortune once again smiled on Clive. Mir Jaffar who was to have come to the Nawab’s help, stood aloof with a huge army under his command. Thus he was responsible for the utter defeat of the Nawab.

The victory was full of momentous consequences. This made the English the virtual rulers of Bengal. Eventually they conquered the whole of India in the course of a century. But there is a silver line in the cloud.

The Balkanised India has sice become unified and integrated under British rule, to emerge as the second biggest successful Democracy in the world.

2. Any Place Of Interest You Have Visited The Taj Mahal

Skeleton: (a) Introduction (b) The greatest tomb, (c) Description: (a) Magnitude (men, material, money and time), (b) Avenues, (c) Decoration (mosaic, pattern), (d) Indo-Persian style of architecture, (e) The Mecca of the world tourists, (d) Glory: (a) in the light of the setting sun, (b) in full moonlight (e) Conclusion.

There are examples though rare of human love tran- scending earthly limitations. They let us into the divinity of what is worldly; one such is the Taj.

It is regarded as one of the wonders of the world. It was built by the great Moghul Emperor, Shah Jahan over the grave of him beloved wife, Mumtaz. It is the finest and costliest tomb ever built on earth. The Taj is as sublime as the emperor’s love for his consort.

It is said, about 20,000 men were employed in the con- struction; it was begun in 1632 and took nearly twenty two years to complete the edifice. It cost nearly thirty lakhs of rupees in those days.

It has been built of white marble and is indeed a marvellous feat of structural engineering. The ap- proaches to the building are majectic avenues, smooth green lawns with water beds bordered on either side by flower plants of rare and different varieties.

All round, there are fountains playing in shady spots. At the centre is the mausoleum which contains the remains of the emperor, Shah Jahan and Mumtaz. The decorations on the marble walls are of the rich mosaic pattern. The Indo-Persian style of architercture of Akbar’s days was adopted in the construction of the monument.

Its main structure is characterised by elegance and grandeur rather than strength and massiveness. It is a tribute to the exquisite and unrivalled workmanship and genius of ancient Indian builders.

The artistic splendour of the whole scene testifies to the supernatural love and affection of the emperor for his beloved. The four entrances to the Taj together, have the whole Khoran inscribed on them. Verily, it is the Mecca of the world tourists and a harmonious blend of Hindu and Moslem cul- tures.

As we approach it, we are overpowered by its vastness and solemnity. The mighty and majestic dome on the main structure and the minarets, are bathed by the golden rays of the setting sun.

Gleaming in the evening sun, the silent and placid waters of the Jumna gliding past the Tomb, seem to add a dimension to its grandeur. The transparent splendour of the Taj seen in a fullmoon night is a sight for gods.

The soft and pleasant moonlight playing on the milk white marble amidst the all pervading solemn silence, symbolises the luxury of magnificence invested on it; and this reveals the resplendent glory to the Moghul court.

The Taj remains an unforgettable feast for life for the visitor’s eye, making him “wonder if earth has anything to show more fair,” and we cannot help recollecting in tranquility, Wordsworth’s experience embodied in his immortal lines: “I gazed, and gazed, but little thought What wealth the show to me had brought.” In short the Taj is happily described as tears crystallized, a poem in marble.

3. Hobbies

Analysis: (a) Introduction (b) Signification (different kinds), (c) Distinguished from Profession. (d) Distinguished from Recreation. (e) Distinguished from Entertainment or Amusement. (f) The creative element (a passion for inven- tion.) (g) Rewarding means of self-expression (h) Conclusion.

It is not everbody that has a hobby. It is a thing pursued for its own sake in all stages of life during one’s leisure. It is a rewarding means of self expression and helps make life fuller and richer.

Hobby is something that one does or a subject that one studies as an occupation for one’s leisure; hence it is a favourite engagement. There are different kinds of hobbies: painting, fishing, photography, carpentry, gardening and collection of stamps, rare flowers, old-books and curios.

Some are costly such as hunting and yachting, while some are within the reach of all. One can engage oneself in a hobby all through lite and thereby keep young in spirits and halthy even in old age.

What is hobby for one may be profession for another. A student having photography for his hobby cannot be happy unless he goes on an excursion and takes photographs of rare pieces of scenery. The idea of making money does not figure at all in the picture.

But the studio proprietor practices photography as a profession in as much as he makes living by it. True, hobbies like collecting stamps, making fancy articles, rabbit rearing, bee-keeping may turn out to be paying propositions, but that is accidental.

A hobby is to be distinguished from a recreation though both refresh mind and body. Among recreations mention may be made of participation in games and sports, swimming and boating.

But there is a radical difference in the intellectual approach: men have to seek after leisure to indulge in a recreation for relief from fatigue, while leisure induces them to the pursuit of a hobby, which makes them feel refreshed and better fir for work; this is because they feel a sense of gratification of an inner urge.

If recreation replenishes depleted energy, hobby renews life and vigor and that makes all the difference relief is the aim of a recreation, while it is a accidental in the pursuit of a hobby.

An entertainment (or amusement) can never be called a hobby, though both make one cheerful and happy by keeping the mind engaged in a pleasant way. Entertainments include going to a theatre, cinema, circus and concerts.

But there is a fundamental difference in the emotional approach. For pleasure, an amusement is indulged in, while out of pleasure, a hobby is pursued, and that makes all the difference. A hobby therefore gives a high sense of gratification that recreation or entertainment can ill afford.

Some of the discoveries and inventions are traceable to hobbies. Hobby in whose pursuit one is engrossed, forms the fulfilment of a passion for inventing things which are surely more beneficial to the world the pursuits which seem to profit man because of their direct utility.

A hobby thus affords him the reward of self-expression. In the early stages of student’s life, nothing reveals his personality so much as his hobby. This furnishes the clue in a way to the parent and the teacher for determining his career wherein his natural bent of mind finds complete expression.

Thus it is that a hobby innocent in character, pursued out of pleasure, induced by leisure and indulged in because of an inner urge for self-expression- affords intellectual and emotional gratification, revitalization of the faculties of body and mind-and contributes to the full development of one’s personality, which is the summon bonus (the be-all and end-all) of liberal education, the goal of a university.

4. Exhibitions

Outline: (a) Introduction (b) Idea of an exhibition (a) Three dimensional historical representation of evolution. (b) Museum (c) Different kinds (c) History (a) Beginning, Growth (b) Organization (d) Spirit :- (a) University (b) Re- search laboratory (e) Uses — (a) Means of advertising goods (b) Scope for starting and improving national industries. (c) Special advantages to small manufacturers and cottage industries. (f) Necessity for them (Mobile exhibitions). (g) Conclusion.

An Exhibition adds to the improvement and prosperity of nations. It is at once a Museum, a University and a Research laboratory. It is, so to speak, a three dimensional historical record of the progressive stages of achievement in a particular field.

For instance, Railway Exhibition includes the various models (pro- duced in several countries) of engines and carriages which illustrate their evolution from the time of James Watt to the present day. So an exhibition is a panorama of the continuity of progress made in the Railway.

It is in this sense that the exhi- bition is a Museum. An exhibition is an organised public show of the achievements, in Art-Science, Agriculture, Horticulture or Industry. The scope of the Industrial exhibition is wider and of greater utility and therefore commoner than other exhibi- tions.

The age of industrial exhibition began in England in 1851. Other great exhibitions followed, such as the Paris Inter- national exhibition in 1855, the Pan American Exhibition in New York in 1901.

There is a regular committee for selecting the site, getting stalls erected for the exhibits, inviting various exhibitors. Admission is by tickets. There is also a committee of Judges to award prizes and certificates of merit for the exhibits. A well organised International Exhibition, forms a milestone in the history of human advancement and contributes to world peace and happiness.

Most people attend an exhibition for diversion because novelty and variety characterize it. They wish to enjoy them- selves spending a few hours seeing the various exhibits.

But this brings their knowledge up to date in that subject, without their being conscious of it. The idea of utility if totally absent. Hence an exhibition may be justly called a University imparting Liberal education.

A visitor with an inventive and mechanical turn of mind has the best opportunity of studying the latest models and improving upon them. Thus in a certain sense an exhibition proves a laboratory and helps raise the standard of production in general.

An exhibition is the best means of advertising the goods of the participating countries or manufacturers. At each stall an expert is posted to explain the special advantages which a particular model has over others.

Nor is this all, sometimes the process of preparing a product, or the principle of working a machine is demonstrated, and specimens are freely distributed along with relative illustrated pamhlets. Prizes awarded to the best exhibits serve as an impetus to manufacturers to further improve their workmanship.

Thus the industrialist and the consumers are benefited alike. Especially countries backward in cretain industries prosper by adoping the improvements made by other nations in those industries. A country may not have an industry though rich in the concerned raw materials.

Such a country may with advantage participate particularly in Industrial exhibitions, start new industries, improve and ex- pand those that are already there. The development of the industrial potential of a country adds to its wealth and contrib- utes to the happiness of the people by raising the standard of life.

Small manufacturers and cottage industries are specially benefited by exhibitions, for they do not have the means to advertise their goods, so that most people may not know what different kinds of articles are produced and where thay are available.

The result is: industries not having a market for their goods, languish and die as a matter of course. Every nation should endeavour to popularise and par- ticipate in exhibitions, if it is to hold its own against the daily growing competition among the nations of the world.

Hence the Exhibition Trains and Exhibition Ships specially chartered for the purpose. The latest knowledge and improvements are thereby carried to the doors of the people.

Exhibitions, encyclopaedic in range, international in out look and culture, and global in dimension bring together in one place the integrated intellectual achievements of the differ- ent nations of an age.

They thus help increase the prosperity and happiness of mankind, create and improve good under- standing between the various people and pave the way for es- tablishing world peace.

5. Biography Of A Great Man

Life of Potti Sreeramulu Out line; (a) Introduction (b) Early life (birth, parentage, education) including his stay at Sabarmati Ashram (c) Village uplift, propagation of the gospel of the Charka (d) Harijan uplift (e) Pracharak of G.M.F. (f) Trials for Andhra province. (g) Fast to death. (h) Conclusion.

By self-immolation through fasting for fifty eight days, unmindful of the outcome Potti Sreeramulu dedicated his life to the formation of the Andhra Province. One wonders if earth has any sacrifice half so sublime as his to show.

The world ha so far, produced only two others who may be ranked next to him. One is Mekswine, an Irishman, who fasted to death for the freedom of his country, and the other is Janthendradas of the Pubjab who died fasting in jail under British rule.

Potti Sreeramulu was born on 16-1-1901 in Madras in a Banya family. While serving in the G.I.P. Railway, he lost his wife. So he resigned his job in 1927 and joined Gandhi’s Sabarmati Ashram to dedicate his life to the service of the country.

Astonished at his exemplary life, Gandhi remarked that if he had ten such disciples, he would win Swaraj for India in a year. Next for four years, he worked for village uplift and for one’ year he preached the gospel of the Charka with missionary zeal, going from door to door in the Nellore district.

Now he took to Harijan uplift and surpassed Gandhi in his service. By fasting on four occasions, he made Harijan temple-entry an accomplished fact and came to be called “Second Gandhi”.

Even after Independence, the laws realsting to Harijan temple-entry and untouchability remained a dead letter. He therefore fasted for their enforcement before the chief minis- ter’s office with the result he was put in jail for one month.

On coming out, he fasted for 28days at Wardha for self-purifica- tion. Moved by this, President Rajendraprasad got a directive issued to the States to observe the Harijan day.

He found that corruption infected the Congress at all levels. With a view to keeping away from politics, he worked as a Pracharak for collecting Gandhi Memorial Fund, on a monthly salary of Rs. 50/- though he was appointed on Rs. 150/- He found no response in the matter of contributions to the fund in Andhra and diagnosed the cause to be frustration following their failure to get a province for themselves. The main hurdle was the settlement of the question of Madras.

He naturally appealed to Prakasam and Ranga to fast for the formation of the Andhra Province to no purpose. So he issued a statement that he would fast to death for the forma- tion of the Andhra State, the question of Madras being settled amicably to all the minorities concerned.

The historic fast unto death began on 19-10-1952 at the residence of Maharshi Sambamurty. At the commencement he took an assurance from the Maharshi and the doctors attending upon him, that no food should be given to him by mouth or otherwise even in his unconscious state.

Even Sambamurty who had approved of his fast told him that he was entering the state from which recovery was an impossibility, meaning that he should give up the fast, when Sreeramulu signified hi surprise and smiled

Nehru’s telegram asking him to give up the fast was deservedly commented upon by Sambamurty in his remark: “Nehru wants to make us fools”.

His soul departed on the 58th day of the fast. The Centre’s decision to form the Andhra State excluding the disputed areas was received while the funeral procession was on the way.

Next morning the selfless leader, Tenneti Viswantham rightly resigned his Assembly membership. If the other Andhra Assembly members had followed in his footsteps and started agitation throughout the Andhra area, the modest dream of Sreeramulu would have been realised and his sacrifice purposeful.

Sad to say, the present truncated state of Andhra was carved without Madras being declared at least a Chief Com- missioner’s province as envisaged in the Centrally sponsored Dhar Committee report.

Potti Sreeramulu went to jail five times, fasted on five occasions and proved a truer follower of Gandhian cult than Gandhi himself in respect of the propagation of the gospel of the Charka, his service for the uplift of the Harijans and rural India, self-denial as a pracharak; finally he proved a better martyr than Christ or Gandhi, in that he dedicated his life for a noble cause by self-immolation.

If it was given to Gandhi to demonstrate the potentiali- ties of fasting, it fell to Amarajeevi Sreeramulu to purge it of its impurities and imperfections such as threat, demand, bargain and undignified compromise.

Thus the unassuming Karmayogi has given to the world the most sublime concept of martyrdom (Prayopavesam) by fasting unto death for a great cause with a smile on the lips and with no thought for the result, and he has deservedly been canonised a saint.

6. Sweet Are The Uses Of Adversity

Outline: 1) Introduction, (a) What Adversity means and implies, (b) Uses: a) Stoicism, (b)Optimisn, (c) True values of life (iv) Contrast between prospersity and adversity: a)Virtues of (temperance X fortitude); b) Reveals (vice X virtue) (c) Involves worries and dangers Xgives hope and consolation (d) Brings friends X tries friends, (e) A worldly belssing X revela- tion of God’s favour, f) Forgetful of God X mindful of God (g) Moral and spritual effect of adversity:- a) Makes martyrs, b) Renders miracles possible by elevating man to godhead.

The statement ‘Sweet are the uses of adversity’ is paradoxicl. One naturally avoids adversity if possible. Pandavas were no exception to this, and their life in exile bears ample testimony to it. But it shall presently be shown that the statement is an unqualified truth.

Adversity is a condition of suffering or a state of destitution often implying previous prosperity. The good things that belong to prosperity such as: wealth, comfort, power and position are to be wished; but the good things that belong to adversity are to be admired.

The uses of adversity are sweet and multifarious. It brings out the best in man. First, it makes one a stoic, develop- ing the virtues of patience, endurance, discipline, sacrifice and reconciliation to one’s lot in life. It never disheartens a man; on the other hand it moulds and strengthens one’s character.

Secondly, those who have been trained in the school of adversity are by far superior to those brought up in the lap luxury. They make the best of thing of as they come, look only on their bright side and become real optimists. To the senior Duke in the forest of Arden, the biting winds serve but to make him thus smile in the face of adversity:

“This is no flattery: these are consellors, That feeling persuade me what I am, Sweet are the uses of adversity.” The Duke could thus translate the stubbornness of for- tune into so quiet and so sweet a style.

Thirdly, only one who has experienced adversity has the affectionate understanding and sharing of the troubles of others. He thereby develops the virtues of sympathy and compassion and comes to have a sense of the true values of life, which go to make it complete and perfect.

The Duke reached a state wherin he could harmonise the finite in him with the infinite, when pain itself becomes à valauable asset and sorrows become transmuted into joys.

It often happens that a man in prosperity wastes his wealth in riotous living. Hence the virtue of prosperity is temperance, while the virtue of adversity is fortitude which is the more heroical of the two. Virtue in adversity is like precious spices most fragrant when they come to be crushed or in- censed.

Prosperity best brings to light vice, and adversity does best reveal impending evil, and disgust at being deprived, which poison the pleasures of prosperity. Adversity is not without radiant hopes of good, and the consolation of suffering for an ideal or conviction- which not only relieve the sadness of the unfortunate, but make them emerge better through purifi- cation.

If prosperity brings friends, adveristy tries them as nothing else does; and this is no where better exemplified than in the case of Timon of Athens who had been frequently visited by his friends in his affluence, but was deserted by them in his difficulties.

If prosperity is a worldly blessing, adversity is a greater benediction that carries with it the clearer revelation God’s favour. So adversity is an instrument in the hands of God for the moral and spiritual elevation of man.

A perfect and upright man, Job, the gretest of all the menof the cast, in the course of a single day, had his seven children killed in house collapse, and all his of the possessions either stolen or burnt up. Upon that he worshipped and said:

“Blessed be the name of God”.

Thus he stood God’s test of adversity by his unswerving retitude and unwavering confidence in God. As a result, he won God’s favour and was amply rewarded in the long run: he got back not only his children, but twice the possessions he had lost-a veritable miracle.

The coming back to life of the son of Bhadrachala Ramadas is another example in point in prosperity, one absorbed in material concerns and world by enjoyment is apt to forget God and lead a life of vice.

On the other hand adversity keeps him ever mindful of the Lord and enables him to lead a god-fearing and righteous life, against the most trying circumstances. This is what is meant by Job, when the he said to his comforters:

“Happy is the man whom God correcteth: therefore despise not thou, the chastening of the Almighty” “Doth the wild ass bray when he hath grass? Or loweth the ox over his fodder” ?

The same is the spirit undrelying Kunthi’s last request to Lord Krishna, for the visitation of affliction.

Sometimes adveristy makes martyrs. Martin Luther set himself against the potentates of Europe and had the gratification that he was sacrificing his life for a great and noble cause In the tragic hero, King Lear we behold a transition from maledictions to martyrdom.

In the immortal King Harischandra, we are instructed how unshakable faith in truthfulness, triumphing over the worst privations and afflictions, approaches to the nature of gods_ a miracle wrought by adver- sity, as the sovereign good and consummation of human nature. Thus it is that sweet are the uses of adversity which : “Finds tongues in trees, books, in the running brooks, Sermons in stones and good in everything.’

7. Libraries

To day no one needs say in despair, “Oh Friend! I know not which way I must turn for knowledge.” Libraries embody the accumulated wisdom of all peoples of all ages. Thus they become nurseries of moral and intellectual training especially to talented persons who cannot afford University Education.

There was a time when book-reading was the monopoly of the rich, and the luxury of the leisure classes. Before printing came into vogue, especially in the Medieval times the position of libraries was confined to religious orders or convents.

Books were witten by hand, mostly by the clergy, hence they were a rare and costly commodity. With the invention of printing press in the 15th century the institution of Libraries became possible for the first time. In the early stages, only kings and very rich people could own libraries. A library has come to mean a roon or building containing a collection of books or the books themselves.

There are different kinds of libraries: a circulation library is one that lends to subscibers books which may be studied at home and returned. From a lending library books may be taken out with or without payment. A free library is one that may be used by the public without payment.

Public libraries owed their existence to private charity either in the shape of books or money. Later on they were maintained by membership, subscription, supplemented by private endow- ments or donations. Now a public librarry is a non-profit one,

maintained in whole or in part by local taxation, refundable deposits being insisted upon from the members for the safety of books. Under a democracy every individual must realise his responsibilities as a citizen and exercise his rights.

Above all, the sacredness of the vote should be understood. Otherwise, elections and democracy become a mockery. For this end illit- eracy and ignorance must be wiped out on a nation wide scale, and this can be achieved by the opening of public libraries atall levels-which is therefore the condition precedent for the suc- cessful functioning of Demoracy.

Public library is one of the necessaries of life. Once Adult Education is taken up, thirst for knowledge can only be satis- fied by a net-work of public libraries. Libraries create a genuine interest in literature. Secondly, a good many do not have the means to buy books.

Though not badly of, some may not be able to buy all the books that interest or benefit them. Again it is not possible to own costly and reference books like the Encyclopaedia Britannica or Webster’s International Diction- ary which can be had generally only in public libraries.

More often than not, to a library is attached a reading room which is the best plac for quiet study. It develops the reading habit and fellow-ship among the visitors, differing in social rank, culture and age.

The library is the meeting place for the student, scholar, historian and scientist and thus it proves at once to be a school, a university and a research institute.

A library must include a section meant for children, the hope of the present and leaders of the future generation. Their association with the library in their impressionable period de- velops the reading habit and a sense of civic responsibility.

In the present set-up of the Panchayat Raj, public librar- ies have been opened at all levels- the Village Panchayat, the Zilla Parishad and the State.

Mobile libraries are provided with the help of vans for the good of people living in hamlets. The result is adult education becomes a realised fact. The need for libraries in the rural areas cannot be over emphasized.

At pre- sent 60% of the primary school students leave schools before reaching the standard of permanent literacy, with the result they lapse into illiteracy, if there were not a library in each village. Libraries are a measure of the cultural standard of nation.

As in most countries, libraries are to be attached to educational institutions. The village school is the focal point of primary education. Hence it should have a library attached to it.

Notable examples of National libraries are the British Mu- seum Library in London, the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris and Congress Library in New York.

Libraries (with the manuscripts of the clergy of the middle ages as their nuclei), once the monopoly of kings, next the luxury of the rich, have become popular after the invention of printing.

Today free libraries prove at once to be educational institutions and research laboratories. Again through a net work of free libraries opened at village level and mobile libraries, knowledge is brought to the doors of the people living in hamlets, so that they largely help make adult educa- tion a reality and contribute to the making of a nation of ideal citizens with a broad and national outlook.

8. Newspapers

The Newspaper is both a sign and a boon of civilization. It started giving only news from various places and became a force in national affairs in the 17th century and has developed into a power in shaping the destiny of nations and influencing world affairs.

The world’s first printing press invented by a German, Johannes Gutenberg in the 15 century, started the develop- ment of mass communication. The newspaper as such took its birth in Venice in the middle of the 16th century and in England, the 17th century.

In India ” The Bengal Gazette” was the first to come into being late in the 19th century after the advent of the British. The cheap news-paper for the masses developed with the installation of steam printing press early in the 19th century, soon after the coming into use of the paper- making and the linotype machines.

A newspaper is a daily or weekly which contains news- local, inland and foreign – advetisements, matters of current interest and the Editorial. As the spelling suggests the ‘NEWS’ paper gives information received from the four corners of the earth; North, East, West and South.

To get news expeditiously every newspaper will have correspondents all over the world. The news covers almost all topics of human interest so that it has an appeal to all sorts of people: young and old, high and low, lawyers, doctors, politicians, businessmen, sportsmen, students, Cine-goers, literary men, educationists and research scholars: to mention a few.

They have, for leisure hours, entertainment and recrea- tional value which consists in the news relating to sports, the screen, the theatre and the fine arts. They furnish us also with a running contemporary history which can be had nowhere else. Thus newspapers embody the continuity of many-sided progress in the country.

The more a nation is educated, the greater (is) the de- mand for newspapers; for all the educated are eager to know what is going on all the world over.

So the total circulation and the number of dailies and weeklies in a country form an index of its civilization and progress. In some of the mvanced countries there are two if not three issues a da Among the various items of the newspaper, advertising is its back-bone in as much as the income from it, all but suffices to maintain it.

This brings together the employer and the workman, the manufacturer and the market, the producer and the consumer. The Editorial is the soul of the newspaper.

It is through this the editor influences public opinion on the one hand, helps the Government to formulate sound policies on the other. He gives the correct lead to the country and shapes its destiny. This is what is meant by the proverb: “The Pen is mightier than the Sword’.

Again the newspaper acts as an effective medium for representing the grievances of the people to the Government, to get them redressed. Nor will it be less critical of the people when they make unjust demands.

There by it holds the balance even between liberty of the individual and the authority of the state and makes democracy a success. Having a share indirectly in the Government, the newspaper has come to be jocularly called the ‘fourth estate’.

Especially in an emergency or crisis, it is the press that can do signal service by helping the country to tide over it. Articles contributed by experts on various subjects such as book reviews, reader’s views and letters to the Editor- are informative, educative and illuminating.

The newspaper brings to our doors the ideas of great thinkers, the discoveries and inventions of masterminds which keep us abreast of times. What is more, they make possible the continuation of the research already made anywhere in the world.

As an example in point, it may be mentioned that the invention of the Radio by Marconi, an Italian, is the result of his reading casually (while at a way-side inn) in a magazine an article by Hertz, a German scientist.

The achievements of an age thus become consolidated and integrated through news- papers. This illustrates the truth that great inventions do not spring fully developed from the brain of one man, but on the contrary represent the researches of many men of genius generally of diferent climes and times.

There are separae magazines, each devoted to a definite purpose, such as Health, Sports, Philosophy, Science, Econom- ics, Social reform, Politics, Culture films and Medicine.

Trade and commerce, the arteries of a nation’s wealth are best fed and nourished by newspapers which give wide and effective publicity to the placs of production of various ar- ticles to facilitate purchasing on the one hand- and to the markets where those goods best sell, on the other.

Newspapers sometimes prove as evil by representing and distorting facts, aggravating communal tension and racial hatred and creating needless panic among the people and dis- affection between the government and the people.

They also demoralise people through indecent advertisements and ob- jectionable writings. Unless it be to check such unhealthy ten- dencies, newspapers should not be subjected to restrictive laws, which defeat the very purpose of the press; otherwise the freedom of the individual and democracy become a mockery.

Thus it is that newspapers, an indispensable factor in public and social life, furnish us from all parts of the world, news on a variety of topics, which helps synthesize the fruits of man’s discoveries and reasearch, and make possible inven- tions.

They enable the undeveloped and less developed coun- tries to catch up with the advanced ones. They pave the way for the formation of the World Government which establishes world peace by eliminating wars, poverty, illiteracy, hunger and disease. Hence the newspapers of a nation are at once the symbol and the expression of its progress, civilization and culture.

9. Rivers

On earth, life is made not only possible and sustainable, but rich and happy by rivers; they have tricked their way into the life and thought of man. The lessons of life we learn from rivers are so many and so varied that we may find books in running brooks.

The rivers get their water from the rains on hills (like the Godavari), snow on mountaintops (like the Ganges), underground springs (like the Jhelum) big lakes (like the Nile) and another river (like the Padma).

The place where a river takes its birth is called its source. The rivers flow into a bay, a river, a sea or a ocean. The place where a river empties (itself) is called its mouth. Before joining the sea, the river branches and forms what is called the delta.

The whole length of the river lying between the source and the mouth is called its course, which changes according to the nature of the ground through which it flows.

Man has lived on the banks of rivers, for they have served him in a thousand and one ways. They not only supply drinking water to all creatures but make life sustainable.

They provide man directly with food in the form of fish. When the river reaches the plain, it flows slowly and irrigates land and helps produce all kinds of crops which form the staple food of mankind. The rich Gangetic plain is an example in point.

The whole irrigation system is based on rivers. In flood, the river carries silt from the mountain sides and renders land alluvial by its deposits.

What is more, in its couse it is joined by tributaries which augment its waters and widen the range of its usefulness by serving it as its arteries. For instance the Godavari together with its four tributaries serves the five states of Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Madhya Pradesh.

On the plains the river becomes navigable and forms an easy and cheap means of commerce, communication, travel and transport. The net-work of canals forming its nervous system help resolve especially the bottle necks in the transport of goods by railway and solve the problem challenging the poten- tial of present transport system.

Some river waters having hot water springs and minerals dissolved in them, have medicinal effect. Man built all his early civilization around rivers, and hence, centres of culture and places of pilgrimage lie generally on river banks. Varanasi, Allahabad, Bhadrachalam, Srisailam, and Tiruvayur may be cited as illustrations.

By constructing river projects, agricultural production and power potential can be immensely stepped up. To-day only negligible portion of river waters particularly in Andhra Pradesh is utilised, most being allowed to run to waste into the sea.

By constructing dams like the Pochampad, the colossal wastage could be stopped and thereby some millions of acres brought under cultivation. Execution of Hydro-Electric proj ects (like the one at Machkund and the other Srisailam in Andhra and Saraswathi in Karnataka) increase the power po- tential in which Andhra Pradesh is tragically deficient, with the result it remains today the most industrially backward state, though it is endowed by nature with all the necessary facilities.

Again the negative aspect of the service of dams is no less important. They avert incalculable damage caused peri- odically to life, property and crops, when they are in spate.

In flood many people die, hundreds of heads of cattle perish and serveral thousands of people are rendered homeless; commu- nications dislocated and traffic disrupted. Famine and epi- demics follow in its wake adding to the misery of the victims of flood.

The Mettur dam is among the largest multi-purpose dams in the world. It generates hydro-electric power. The reservoir, which serving as an effective check against the floods in the Kaveri, ensures regular supply of water to the vast irri- gation system in Tanjore delta.

The hydro-electric power must be fully exploted where the coal reserves are limited as in the peninsular region of India. If rivers are harnessed to capacity, they enable the coun- try to be self-suffient in respect of food and add to the nation’s wealth and help raise the standard of life and countribute to the happiness of the people.

Some rivers have significant assocations of their own, Egypt is called the gift of the Nile. The mother Ganges is sacred to the Hindus, symbolizing the civilization and spiritual heri- tage of India.

The river Jordon flows through the life and times of Jesus. The Rhine runs through European history, red with French and German blood.

The river is not merely a physical phenomenon to be turned to use. It purifies the heart and touches the soul of the person with the spiritual vision. It serves man in many ways by giving up self, prepared even for extinction; thus it teaches man to realise his soul through a series of renunciations.

In it, man feels the manifestation of the spirit of God to a pro- nounced degree and thereby achieves knowledge of the high- est order-the realisation of the infinite. Thus it is that one finds books in running brooks by acquiring knowledge, material, moral and spiritual.

A stroll by the river-side makes one recreated, refreshed and exhilarated, as it becomes alive with boats and pulsates with liveliness while passing by cities and towns.

She flows wild througth forests, roars through mountain gorges, crashes into a waterfall and finally glides over plains calmly but majestically; before she merges herself in her Lord, the Ocean, in peace and triumph, revealing the way our soul, after many trials and tribulations realises its ultimate object of perfect repose and eternal bliss in Brahma.

It embodies the spirit of selfless service (to the living in God’s creation) unparalleled in nature; a wealth of sublime beauty (rich enough for a poet like Wordsworth or Keats) to be inspired to share it with others in a poem and glorious enough for an artist like Raphael to immortalize on the canvas a mine of wisdon (vast enough for a moralist like the senior Duke to draw lessons from); and the universal spirit (divine enough for a high priest of nature like Wordsworth to sermonize).

Adverbs : Definition & Types with Examples in Telugu

Adverbs (క్రియా విశేషణములు)

1. ఒక verb యొక్క గాని adjective యొక్క గాని, మరియొక adverb యొక్క గాని అర్ధమును విస్తరించు లేక మార్చునట్టి (modify) మాటలు Adverbs అనబడును అని ఇదివరలో నేర్చియున్నాము.
2. Adverbs sometimes modify sentences and phrases as: Unfortunately he was not at home. The child was nearly under the wheels of the carriage.

‘Aman is truly happy only when he is in sound health’ J only adverb when Conjunction modify చేయునని కొందరి అభిప్రాయము. కానీ అది, దాని తరువాత వచ్చు ‘when he is in sound health’ e adverbial clause modify చేయుననుట సమంజసము. మరియు ‘He arrived long before the time’ అను వాక్యములో long e adverb, before e preposition modify 30 కొందరి అభిప్రాయము. కాని అది, దాని తరువాత వచ్చు “before the time” అను adverbial phrase ను modify చేయుననుట సమంజసము.

Adverbs Definition And Types with Examples in Telugu

Read and Learn more Parts Of Speech

Adverbs are four kinds:

(1) Simple,
(2) Interrogative,
(3) Conjunctive and,
(4) Relative.

Simple adverbs : ఇవి యే మాటలకు చేర్చబడునో వాని యర్థము విస్తరించుట లేక మార్చుట మాత్రము చేయును. ఉదా : He reads well. He runs very fast.
(2) Interrogative Adverbs: When, Where, Why, How అను Adverbs ను ప్రశ్నలు వేయుట యందుపయోగించునపుడు Interrogative
adverbs అందురు. ఉదా : When did he come? Where is he? Why did you go away? How did you escape?
(3) Conjunctive Adverbs : వాక్యములనుగాని, మాటలనుగాని కలుపుట మాత్రమే, conjunction, యొక్క పని, కాని అపుడపుడు adverbs, conjunction పనియు adverb పనియు కూడ చేయును. అపుడవి Con- junctive adverbs అనబడును.
‘I shall speak to him when he comes (=అతడు వచ్చినపుడు నేను అతనితో మాట్లాడుదును) అను వాక్యములో When రెండు వాక్యములను కలపుచు కేవలము conjunction గా నుపయోగింపబడినది.
‘I do not know when he comes (=అతడు ఎపుడు వచ్చునో నాకు తెలియదు) అను వాక్యములో When రెండు వాక్యములను కలుపుటయేగాక, దాని తరువాత నున్న comes అను క్రియను modify చేయుచున్నది. కాబట్టి ఇచట conjunction పనియు, adverb పనికూడా When చేయుచున్నది. కనుక When ఇక్కడ Conjunctive adverb అందురు.

Conjunctions – He fired the gun after I (had) loaded it. He started before I arrived. I take a walk wherever it is convenient for me.

Conjunctive adverb: Wherever you go, I will go. The magistrate enquired when he came and whither he was going. I do not know how to solve this problem.
Relative adverbs: ఇవి ఐదు .

(1) where (2) why (3) how, (4) when, (5) while

Where ఈ క్రింది రెండు వాక్యములను కలిపి ఒకే వాక్యముగా వ్రాయుము. 1. I know an open place 2. We can play on it.

రెండవ వాక్యములోని pronoun it మొదటి వాక్యంలోని noun place కి చెందును. అనగా రెండు వాక్యములు కూడ ఒకే స్థలమును గురించి చెప్పుచున్నవి. కావున వాటిలోని భావములను కలిపి ఒక వాక్యముగా ఇట్లు వ్రాయవచ్చును.

I know an open place where we can play. aes Where అను మాట adverb వలె can play అను verb ను modify చేయుటయేగాక, దాని వెనుకనున్న place అను noun కు చెందుచు రెండు వాక్యములను కలుపుచున్నది. కావున where ఇచ్చట Relative adverb అనబడుచున్నది.

Note: 1. Where we can play-Adj. Cl. qualifying the noun place.

Note: 2. Where – Relative adverb having for its antece- dent, place and modifying verb, can play.

      Why
1. He failed.                                                                                                                I know the reason
2. I know the reason.                                                                                                  why he failed.

    How
1. You did the sum.                                                                                                    I cannot understand the way
2. I cannot understand the way.                                                                                 how you did the sum.
   When
1. He will come here.                                                                                                  I do not know the time
2. I do not know the time.                                                                                          when he will come here.
    While

1. In his speech the pauses were short and few.                                                        In his speech the pauses while he was
2. He was thinking of the right word during those pauses.                                        thinking of the right word were short and few.

Note: 1. Relative adverbs introduce restrictive adjective clauses.

Note: 2. Relative pronoun 58 Relative adverbs s అపుడపుడు లోపించును. ఉదా:

(1) On the day (when) I was born, Kakinada was bombed.
(2) The reason (why) I do this is to make matters clear.
(3) I cannot understand the way (how) you did the su
(4) Grammar is man’s attempt to explain the way (how) he used words.

Note: 3. I will return to my house hence I came out. I know the place whither he is going.

In the above two sentences, hence and whither are now antiquated, being replaced by their equivalent from which and to which.
The same may be said of the Relative adverbs formed by the compounds of where, such; as: whereat, whereby, wherein, wherefrom; whereupon etc. These are gradually getting replaced by which preceded by the prepositions which enter into the composition of these words. Whereat at which; whereby by which; – wherein = in which; etc.
e.g. You may take my life, when you do take the means hereby I live.

Simple adverbs

విధములుగా భావింపబడినవి:
అవి తెలియజేయు అర్థములను బట్టి అరు

(a) ‘Gopal was then very rich’; ‘Rama wants to see him now’ అను వాక్యములలో then, now అను మాటలు ఆయాపనులు జరుగు కాలములను చెప్పుచున్నవి. కాబట్టి యిట్టి మాటలు Adverbs of time అనబడును. now, then when, ago before, after, to-day, to- morrow, yesterday, soon, ever, always. They show when a thing happens and answer to the questions ‘when’?
(b) “The boy sat here’; ‘He stood there for an hour’. వాక్యములలోని here, there, అను మాటలు ఆయాపనులు జరిగిన స్థలములను చెప్పుచున్నవి. కాబట్టి యిట్టి మాటలు Adverbs of place అనబడును.
here, there, where, near, below, hither, thither, down, within, without, inside.
They show where a thing happens and answer to the question ‘where’?
(c) ‘I have told you twice’. ‘He often comes late’ e వాక్యములలో twice, often అను మాటలు ఆయా పనులు ఎన్ని సార్లు చేయబడునో చెప్పుచున్నవి కాబట్టి యిట్టి మాటలు Adverbs of number అనబడును.
à once, thrice, again, seldom, sometimes, firstly, secondly, frequently.
They show how often a thing happens and answer to the question ‘How often?
(d) “The boy ran fast’; The girl spoke loudly’ వాక్యములలో fast, loudly అను మాటలు ఆయా పనులు జరిగిన రీతిని చెప్పుచున్నవి. కాబట్టి యిట్టి మాటలు Ad, erbs of manner or quality
అనబడును.
boldly, late, highly, slowly, loudly, fast, easily, bravely, well, ill, quickly, badly, so.
They show how a thing happens and answer to the question ‘How?
(e) ‘He grew terribly angry’; The teacher was very displeased’s terribly, very e adverbs, angry, displeased అను ‘pure Adjective’ యొక్క పరిమితిని చెప్పుచున్నవి. కాబట్టి యిట్టి మాటలు Adverbs of degree or quantity అనబడును.
overy, quite, nearly, almost, greatly, fully, com- pletely, scarcely, partly, enough, much, little, hardly, too.
They show how much or to what extent or in what degree a quantity exists, and answer to the question ‘How much?’
“The teacher was very displeased with you. This sen- tence is wrong. For very a pure adverb of degree cannot modify the verbal force in the participle, displeased. So the correct form of the sentence is “The teacher was much (or very much) displeased with you”.
(f) (a) Adverbs of Affirmation: yes, by all means, certainly, surely.
(b) Adverbs of Negation: no, not, nay, not at all

Adverbial Accusative

The only words whose accusative can be used adverbi- ally are nouns, denoting, (1). Time, (2) Place, (3) Distance, (4) Weight, (5) Measure, (6) Manner, (7) Value, (8) Degree, (9) Direction, (10) Space, (11) Attendant circumstances.
1. (a) They sat an hour in the council (= for an hour): how long.
(a) Last june I went to Madras: when.
(b) He blew his pipe three times: how often.
2. He went home (=to his house): whither.
3. He walked ten miles (=for ten miles): how far.
4. The bus weighs four tons: how much.
5. The river is a mile broad here: how much.
6. He came full speed (=at full speed)
7. (a) This chair costs four rupees.
(b) The watch is worth sixty rupees.
8. (a) The wound was skin deep.
(b) I am ten years your senior (= I am your senior by ten years): how much.
9. The windows of the tower face both ways (= in both ways).
10. It is the same all the world over.
11. (a) He died a ruined man.
(b) He lived and died a Christian.
N.B.: The following notes are for advanced pupils.
Note: 1. A Noun so used is called an adverbial accusative.
Note: 2. In most cases, as shown above, the Adverbial accusative may be replaced by a noun-equivalent with a prepo- sition.
Note: 3. An important difference between adverbial accusatives and object accusatives is that the latter may become the subject of a passive construction (i.e. ‘He killed a tiger’ becomes ‘A tiger was killed by him’) but the adverbial accusa- tive cannot become the subject of a passive construction (i.e. “They sat an hour in the council’ cannot, be turned into ‘An hour was sat by them in the council’)
An accusative governed by a preposition may some- times be turned into the subject of a passive construction, the preposition being retained as an adverb immediately after the verb, as a general rule: ‘Everybody laughed at him ‘becomes’ He was laughed at by everybody’.
Note: 4. (a) The accusative is used with transitive verbs; as:
(1) I struck him dead.
(2) He washed his hands clean.
(b) The accusative is also used with intransitive verbs followed by a predicate adjective or adverb as:
(1) To cry oneself hoarse.
(2) To laugh a man down.
(3) A lover’s eye will gaze an eagle blind.
(c) In ‘To look things in the face’. To look a gift horse in the mouth,’ it is best to regard the italicised words as accusa- tives.
N.B.: That may be used as an adverbial accusative; as: I remember the day that he came .

Ex. 35 D
Name the class to which each Adverb in the following belongs:
(1) The school will open to-morrow.
(2) He comes last in the list.
(3) He was badly hurt.
(4) My brother is now at Madras.
(5) How did he escape from the jail?
(6) The rope was long enough.
(7) Your father seldom goes out for a walk.
(8) The girl sat inside.
(9) He stood there for sometime.
(10) The explanation is quite clear.
(11) Why were you so late?
(12) This is half boiled rice.
(13) I am very glad to hear the news.
(14) He would always sleep in the class.
(15) As you say so, I shall go.
(16) I may be away, but I cannot tell yet.
(17) I left school three years sice.
(18) I have not any money.
(19) You have given me too much.
(20) Perhaps it will rain.
(21) Sometimes you are careless.

Ex. 35 E (1)
Point out which of the italicised words are Conjunctions, which are Conjunctive Adverbs and which are Relative Ad- verbs:
(1) You will not succeed unless you work hard.
(2) I remember the house where I was born.
(3) I explained why I was absent.
(4) Since you say so. I must believe it.
(5) The train started while we were talking.
(6) Go quickly whence you came.
(7) This is the reason why I failed.
(8) May I know when you can finish this work?
(9) I shall go whether you come or not.
(10) Whither thou goest, I will go.
(11) when you are called, you must come in at once.
(12) I waited till the train arrived.
(13) Where there is a will there is a way.
(14) I take a walk whenever it is fine.
(15) Let him be arrested whenever he may be found.
(16) Do you know the time when the Madras mail arrives? (
17) This is not the way how you should behave.
(18) I do not know how I can please you.
(19) I asked him when he would return.
(20) The book was found where it had been left.

Ans: Conjunctions 1, 4, 5, 9, 11, 12, 14, 20. Conjunctive adverbs: 3, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15, 18, 19. Relative adverbs: 2,7,16, 17.

Ex. 35 (E) 2
Fill up the blanks with Adverb ending in ly:
(1) He is improving.
(2) The books is-spoiled.
(3) 1 explained the sum to the boys.
(4) I told him-that he should not talk so.
(5) I am-in need of money.
(6) The sun is-going down.
(7) The boys followed the teacher
(8) He is-forty years old.
(9) The boy has escaped death.
(10) He-pocketed the insult.
(11) The man was-sent to the hospital.
(12) Narayana is related to me.
(13) He was-treated by the doctor.
(14) The soldier fought very-
(15) My grandfather is ill, so start
(16) His failure is due to his negligence.
(17) There are any rains in our parts.
(18) He was dealt with.

Ans: (4) sternly, (5) badly, (7) closely, (8) nearly, (9) narrowly, (10) coolly, (11) immediately, (12) closely, (13) care- fully, (15) immediately, (17) scarcely (or hardly), (18) severely.

Ex. 35F
Point out the adverbial accusatives in:
(1) Bind him hand and foot.
(2) That hat is a great deal too big for me.
(3) Our friend died .ast night.
(4) Have it your own way.
(4) Months ago he told me that very thing.
(6) The shot went to out to sea miles beyond the target.
(7) The Mayor sent East West, North.
(8) They could not move a step.
(9) It happened years ago.
(10) They waited the whole night long.
(11) He weighs hundred and fifty pounds.
(12) The train came full speed.
(13) This house costs twelve thousand rupees.
(14) He died a puritan.
(15) He smote them ‘hip and thigh’.
(16) You are two years my junior.

Ans: (1) hand and foot (2) deal (4) way (5) month (6) miles (10) night (11) pounds (14) puritan.

Comparison Of Adverbs

Many adverbs are compared like Adjectives 1.ly తో అంతమగు Adverbs సాధారణముగా more and most అను మాటలు వాని ముందుచుటచేత compare చేయబడును. Ex: loudly, more loudly, most loudly.
N.B. : Early అను మాటకు మాత్రం చివర ని క్రింద మార్చి er Find est చేర్చుటచేత compare చేయబడును.
Ex: early, earlier, earliest.
2. తక్కినవిerest చివర చేర్చుటచేత compare చేయబడును.
Ex: soon, sooner, soonest; hard, harder, hardest.
3. A few adverbs are compared irregularly:

ComparativePositiveSuperlative
ill, badlyworseworst
Well, goodbetterbest
Muchmoremost
Littlelessleast
Farfartherfarthest
Near, nighnearernext
Late laterlatest, last

Adverbial Phrases

రెండు లేక అంతకంటే ఎక్కువ మాటలు చేరి Adverb యొక్క అర్థము కలిగియున్న యెడల అవి Adverbial phrase * అనబడును.
Ex: at last, by and by, now and then.

Position of the Adverb

1. క్రియలను modify చేయునపుడు Adverb సాధారణముగా Intransitive verbs dog, Transitive verbs aus, Object తర్వాత వచ్చును.
Ex: He lived well. He did his work patiently.
For the definition of Phrase; see under ‘Phrases’ N.B.: For adverbs of frequency, see ‘Anomalous verbs’ 2. సహాయ క్రియలున్నపుడు Adverbs సాధారణముగా సహాయక్రియల (Auxiliary verbs) కును ప్రధాన క్రియల (Principal verbs) కును మధ్య వచ్చును.
Ex: 1. Your son will soon return.
2. He has readily consented.
Note: Some common words such as loud, hard, fast, long, high, wide, much, little etc., are either Adjectives or Adverbs

Adjective                                                                   Adverb

1. He spoke in a loud voice.                                    Don’t talk so loud.
2. This is a hard sum.                                              He works hard.
3. The street is wide.                                              Keep the door wide open.
4. This is a fast horse.                                             He runs fast.

Only : వాక్యములో ఈ మాటకు గల స్థానమును బట్టి వాక్యము యొక్క అర్థము మారును.
1. ‘Only he promised to see me’, means ‘he alone and none else promised to see me’.
2. ‘He only promised to see me’, means ‘he only prom ised but did not fulfil the promise
3. ‘He promised only to see me’, means ‘he promised to do nothing more than to see me’.
4. ‘He promised to see only me’, means he promised to see only me and none else.
In the same way the adverbs merely, solely, chiefly require special attenction.
Note 1. The adverbs enough, since and ago always come after the words they modify; as:- He is kind enough to see me. I saw him long since. This took place a month ago
Note 2. Notice the difference between the meaning of: It was a happy thing that
(a) 1. Happily he did not die he did not die.
2. He did not die happily – He did not die a happy
(b) 1. I found the road easy- death.
I found the road not difficult to walk on.
2. I found the road easily- I found the road without difficulty.
Ex. 35 G
(a) Give the meaning of the sentence: ‘He lives for their sake’ – by placing only in different places.
(b) Correct the position of the Adverbs in:
(1) He explained clearly his words.
(2) I have read often that book.
(3) He struck severely the ox with his whip.
(4) He soon will return home.
(5) The stick is enough long.
(6) He went out seldom before sunrise.
(7) He exactly stood in front of me.
(8) The master taught very well the boy.
(9) I wanted never to see him.
(10) He patiently did his work till sunset

Formation Of Advebs

Adverbs are formed from:
1. Adjectives by adding-ly (a corruption of like): as quick, quickly; foolish, foolishly.
Note: 1. When the adjective ends in y preceded by a consonant, change y and i and add ly: as: happy, happily. 2. When the adjective ends in le, simply change into y; as single, singly; double, doubly.
3. When the adjective already ends in ly, we often make use of a phrase; as Godly, in a godly manner.
II. Nouns : (a) by placing a before them; as sleep, asleep; way, away. (b) by placing a preposition before them; as: to-day. III. Adverbs are formed combining two or more different words; as: (a) along, below (b) within, beneath (c) thereby, henceforth, (d) meantime, midway, (e) forthwith, however without.
Form adverbs from:
Ex. 35 H
(1)glad (2) ample (3) playful (4) here (5) up (6) luck (7) angry (8) one (9) please (10) worthy (11) home (12) hunger (13) down (14) fault (15) foot (16) mean (17) broad (18) deed (19) shore (20) hence (21) side (22) sure (23) times (24) sides (25) way (26) hard (27) long (28) there (29) late (30) need.
Adverb-equivalents
1. A phrase formed with a preposition; as: He hunts in the wood.
2. A noun without a preposition (Accusative to time, distances etc.) as:
(a) He may live many years.
(b) He walked ten miles.
3. A noun or pronoun in the Dative case; as:
(a) I bought my son a cycle. (b) It will last you a year.
4. An Adverbial phrase; as: They walked side by side.
5. An Adverbial clause (in a Complex sentence); as: When you come, I shall tell you.
6. Gerundial infinitive; as:
(a) (a) He came to see me. (b) He is quick to hear.
(b) (a) He wept to hear the news, (b) He was seen to fall. (c) You seem to be ill.
7. An Absolute phrase; as:
(a) The sun having set, we all went home.
(b) To tell you the truth, I was not there,
(c) They were thunderstruck – so to speak on hearing the news.
7. (a) An Adjective; as: He went away sad (-he was sad, when he went away).
Note: Sad describes the state of the agent.
(b) The moons shines bright (=The moon shines, and the effect of the shining is brightness)
Note: Bright describes the effect of the action.
(c) The green trees whispered low and mild (=the kind of whisper was low and mild).
Note: Low and mild describes the manner of doing the action; this occurs only in; as; They praised him soft and low.
9. A participle as: He went away disappointed.

Syntax And Other Rules : Definition & Types with Examples in Telugu

Syntax And Other Rules

1. ఏకవచనములో నుండు ప్రతి Common noun ముందు, article తప్పక ఉపయోగించవలెను. ఉ:- ‘I saw boy’ అనకూడదు. ‘I saw a boy’ అనవలెను.
2. మనుష్యుల యొక్కయు, పట్టణముల యొక్కయు, దేశముల యొక్కయు, ఖండముల యొక్కయు పేర్లయందు article వుంచకూడదు. ఉ:- the Rama, the Bombay, the India Rama, Bombay, India అని చెప్పవలెను.
3. కర్త ఏకవచనములో ఏపురుషలో వుంటే, క్రియ కూడ ఆవచనములో ఆ పురుషలో వుండవలెను. ఉ:- ‘They is’ అనుట తప్పు. ‘They are’ అని చెప్పవలెను. lis అనుట తప్పు ‘Iam’ అని  చెప్పవలెను.
4. Simple present tense లో, third person sigular కి.S అను అక్షరము తప్పక చేర్చ వలెను. ఉ:- He go ‘The boy sit’ అనుట ‘He goes’ “The boy sits’ అని చెప్పవలెను.
5. Have అను (Auxiliary) verb తరువాత ఎప్పుడును క్రియ యొక్క Past participle రూపము తప్ప మరియే రూపమును ఉపయోగించకూడదు. ఉ:- ‘He has go’ లేక ‘He has went’ అనుట తప్పు ‘He has gone’ అని చెప్పవలెను.
6. Present participle Past participles Finite verbs **వలె వుపయోగించకూడదు.
ఉ:- going అనుట తప్పు : ‘I am going’ ‘I was going’ అని చెప్పవలెను. ‘He gone’ అనుట తప్పు : ‘He has gone ‘He went’ అని చెప్పవలెను.
7. 1) Each boy gets a different prize.
2) Every good boy_was rewarded..
Rules of sentence construction..
That form of a verb without which we cannot mak a sentence at all, is a finite verb. If there is only one verb word in a sentence, it is a finite; if there are two or more verb-words in a sentence, the first one alone is a finite and the others are not.

Syntax And Other Rules Definition And Types With Examples In Telugu

Read and Learn more English Grammar Topics

Note:- Two nouns qualified by each or every though connected by and, require a singular verb.
1. Every Printer and every Publisher is required to submit the monthly return for the paper consumed by him.
2. Every Nation and every government is engaged in an economic war.
3. You may do the sum by either * method. There are trees on either side of the road. Either pen serves the purpose.
4. Neither ** answer is correct.
-పై వాక్యములలో each, eory, either, neither -అను adjectiveచే qualify చేయబడు boy, method, side, pen, answer అను నామవాచకములు ఏ పచనములో నున్నవి ? ఏకవచనములో నున్నవి. ఈ నామవాచకములు కర్తలుగా గల gets, was, rewarded, service, is అను క్రియలు ఏ వచనములో సున్నవి ? ఏకవచనములో నున్నవి.
-కాబట్టి each, every, either, neither చే qualify చేయబడు నామవాచకములును, ఈ నామవాచకములు కర్తలుగా గల క్రియలును ఏక వచనమనులో నుండవలెను.
8.1) Each of the boys gets a different prize.
2) (a) Either of the methods is good.
(b) Either of them has permission to go.
3) Neither of the answers is correct.
పై వాక్యములలో each, either, neither అను pronouns కర్తలుగా నున్నవి. వీని క్రియలు gets, is, has ఏ పచనములో నున్నవి ? ఏకవచనములో నున్నవి.
కాబట్టి each, either, neither అను pronouns గా ఉపయోగింపబడి కర్తలుగా నున్నపుడు వాని క్రియలు ఏకవచనములో నుండవలెను మరియు ఈ pronouns కు బదులుగా వచ్చు సర్వనామములు గూడ ఏకవచనములో మండవలెను. ఉ:-
Either – One of two things or each of two things (i.e. both) Not the one nor the other two things.
Each of th boys has brought his slate, Neither of them has a cap on his head.
Note: Distributive adjectives every pronounగా ఉపయోగించపబడదు.
9. ఒక వాక్యములో as well as లేక with రెండు కర్తలను కలుపునపుడు ”క్రియ’ మొదటి కర్తను అనుసరించియుండును, ఉ:- The king with his ministers was present. Silver as well as cotton has fallen in price.
10. Two or more singular nouns or pronouns joined by and require a plural verb, as :-
Gold and silver are precious metals. He and I were playing.
Note: If the nouns (a) suggest one idea to the mind or (b) refer to the same person or thing, the verb is singular: as :-
(a) Time and tide waits for no man. Bread and butter is his only food.
(b) The novelist and poet is dead.
The novelist and the poet are dead. (Here the repetition of the article the,. indicates two different persons).
11. Two or more singular subjects connected by or or nor take a singular verb, as :-
Either the father or the son has told a lie. Neither praise nor blame seems to affect him. Neither food nor shelter is to be found there.
Note:- But when one of the subjects joined by or or nor is plural, the verb must be plural and the plural subject must be placed nearest the verb as :-
Neither the king nor his ministers want war. Either Rama or his sons are to sign his letter.
12. When two subjects joined by or or nor are of different persons, the verb agrees with the nearer, as :-
Either he or I am mistaken. Neither you nor he is mistaken.
Note:- But it is better to avoid the above construction by writing as follows:
1. (a) He is mistaken, or else I am.
(b) You are not mistaken, nor is he.
2. (a) He is not to blame, nor am I.
(b) You are to pay the fine or else he is.
13. When a plural noun denotes some specific quantity or amount considered as a whole, the verb is generally singu- lar, as :-
Eighty thousand is a large sum.
Ten miles is a long distance.
14. A collective noun takes a singular verb. When the collection is thought of as one whole, (or thought as to make a unit a plural verb, when the individuals of the collection are thought of, as:-
The committee has submitted it report.
The committee are divided on one major point.
15. The rule of attraction. When the verb is so placed in the sentence as to be attached into the number and person of a noun or pronoun which is not the subject. (or have decided). e.g. (1) Each of (boys) as are willing to pay their own fares.
Note – The subject ‘each’ as 3rd person singular but the verb (are or have) is attracted to the number and person of the noun or pronoun immediately preceding as also the possessive adjective relating to each.
Ex. 40
(a) Correct the mistakes in:-
Rule 1: 1. I saw book on table. 2. Good boy minds his lesson. 3. I met lion in forest. 4. Tiger is beast of prey. 5. Mango is good fruit. 6. I saw man riding on horse. 7. Lion is wild animal. 8. Did you come in carriage. 9. There is boat under bridge. 10. Sun rises in east and sets in west. 11. Tree has fallen upon horse. 12. I saw boy in boat on river. 13. Carpenter made bench.

Rule 2: 1. The India is a very big country. 2. The Gopal went to see the Rama. 3. Last year I went to the Calcutta. 4. Last year I went to see the Bombay. 5. I live in the Kakinada. 6. The China is a fertile country. 7. The Europe is a civilised continent. 8. The Rama is a good boy.

Rule 3:- 1. You was in school yesterday. 2. The boy do not read his lesson. 3. I is a good boy. 4. Don’t he run fast? 5. He write very fast. 6. Your brother have not come. 7. On the table was two big books. 8. There is five fruits in the box. 9. The horse run fast. 10. The colour of apples are nice. 11. The number of soldiers were very great. 12. A bundle of sticks were brought. 13. A basket of flowers were sent to the king. 14. A good number of pupils has attended the private class.

Rule 4: 1. He walk slowly. 2. The cow eat grass. 3. The boy sit on the bench. 4. The moon rise in the east. 5. The boy not read well. 6. The pen do not write well. 7. The girl have no book. 8. The mother do not like the boy. 9. The horse draw the cart. 10. Do the cow eat grass?

Rule 5: 1. He has spoke to the teacher. 2. I have wrote the letter. 3. The girl have broke their slates. 4. The peon has took his pay. 5. Gopal has stole my book. 6. The peon has bring the letter. 7. He has went to Madras. 8. The axe had fell into the river. 9. He had began the work.

Rule 6: 1. He drunk the wine and fallen asleep. 2. The peon rung the bell. 3. He done the work well. 4. They going to school. 5. He run to the shop and began to buy many things. 6. The boys playing at school. 7. The men driving the sheep home. 8. The father taken the boy to school. 9. We writing a letter. 10. You telling lies.

Rule 7,8: 1. Each of the boys have taken their books. 2. Every man have brought their boxes. 3. Each of the soldiers were rewarded. 4. Every one of the letters were written by Gopal. 5. Let each boys use their own slates. 6. There are no lamps at either ends. 7. Either of the roads lead to the station. 8. Neither accusations are true. 9. Neither of them are a party to it. 10. India expects every man to do their duty. 11. Put lamps at either ends. 12. On either sides of the mountain are flower gardens. 13. Every employer and every employee are expected to work for the good of the concern. 14. Each man and women are to contribute to the war fund liberally.

Rule 9: 1. Sanskrit as well as Persian were taught there. 2. He with his children were among the first to arrive. 3. The house with its contents were insured. 4. My friends as well as I was deceived.

(b) Correct the mistakes in:-
1. Here comes the men.
2. The leaves of the tree is falling.
3. How do your new coat please you?
4. I was went to Madras a month ago.
5. You going to the college.
6. You was there yesterday.
7. He eating his food.
8. He din’t come home to-day.
9. The Scissors is sharp.
10. He used to wear a silk trousers.
11. His collection of birds are about the best.
12. We has attended the meeting.
13. Rama have no money.
14. The boy has return from Waltair.
15. The picture and the slate belongs to me.
16. Man’s happiness or misery depend upon himself.
17. The London is the biggst city in the world.
18. Not one of these five boys were present there.
19. Each of the boys wererewarded.20. Neither of the answers are right.
21. Post constables at either ends of the road.
22. I saw tiger jumping on cow.
23. A dog is the faithful animal.
24. Every one of the rules have to be obeyed.
25. The dog bite the thief.
26. The teacher expects every student to do their home work.
27. The ship with its crew were lost.
28. His father as well as his wife were dead.

Ans: 1. come 2. does 4. I went 5. are going 6. were 9. are 10. a pair of silk trousers. 11. is 12. have attended 13. has 14. has returned 16. depends 19. was rewarded 20. is 21. at their end. 23. The dog is a faithful animal. 26. to do his home work. 27. was lost 28. was dead.
(c) In each of the following sentences supply a Verb in agreement with the subject:-

1. To take pay and then not to do work-dishonest.
2. The cost of all essential goods- risen.
3. The jury-divided in their opinions.
4. The accountant and the cashier absconded.
5. The jury-unanimous in his verdict.
6. The good and useful citizen- passed away.
7. The famous juggler and the buffoon- laid up with fever.
8. The ebb and flow of the tide explained by Newton.
9. There – present Sri Ramaro, Sri Krishna and Sri Subbarao.
10. Hundred paise- euqal to one rupee.
11. Neither my friend nor I-to blame.
12. Either the clerk or the manager -done this mischief.
13. Neither the director of the Institute nor the research students – to take the credit for the invention.
14. My friend and benefactor – come.
15. Either Rama or you – guilty.
16. We are to answer for it, or else he-
17. Every boy and every girl-given a certificate of merit.
18. He is not to attend the meeting, nor-you.
19. Neither the captain nor the crew – saved. 20. No nook or corner – left unsearched.

Ans: 1. is 2. has 3. are 4. have 5. is 6. has 8. was 10. is 11. am 12. has 13. are 14. is (or has) 15. are 16. is 17. is 18. are 19. were 20. is.

Conjunctions : Definition & Types with Examples in Telugu

Conjunctions

Conjunctions:
a) మాటలను కలుపును. ఉదా :- Rama and Gopal are close friends. Two and two make four.
b) Phrase లను కలుపును. ఉదా :- Neither the love of money nor desire for power has influenced him.
c) Clause లను కలుపును. ఉదా :- Whether this is finished first or that is finished first does not matter.
d) వాక్యములను కలుపును. ఉదా :- He is great, but he is not good.

1. A went to Pittapur and my brother went to Rajah- mundry I went to Pittapur’ clause ‘my brother went to Rajahmundry’s clause and eo conjunction చే ఒక పెద్ద వాక్యముగా కలుపబడినవి. వీనిలో ప్రతి clause రెండవదానియొక్క సహాయము లేకయే పూర్తియైన అర్ధమిచ్చు చున్నది. కావున ఈ clause లు స్వతంత్రములు, మరియు సమాన సాయా ‘equal rank’ గలవి. అందుచే ఇట్టి clause* Co-ordinate clauses అనబడును. ఇచట and అను conjunction రెండు Co-ordinate clause ఆను కలుపుచున్నది. ఇట్లు Co-ordinate clause 5 Conjunctions Coordinative Conjunctions
అనబడును.
ఉదా : And, but, both, or, not, else, still, yet, for, therefore, so, hence, wherefore, consequently, then, also, too, only, etc.
‘I’ went to Pittapur’ అను వాక్యమున ఒకకర్త ఒక క్రియ గలవు. ఇట్టి వాక్యము simple sentence అనబడును. ఇట్టిది ఒక పెద్ద వాక్యములో భాగముగా నుండిన, దానిని Clause అందురు.
A Clause is a group of words forming part of a sentence and having a subject and a predicate of its own. Co-ordinate = of equal rank.

Conjunctio Definition And Types with Examples in Telugu

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Note: The clause beginning with for is always a Principal clause: for, for introduces a new sentence in proof of or in explanation of (or in accounting for) a statement already made. Sometimes it comes after a full stop in this sense; it even introduces a new paragraph as –
1) Something certainly fell in, for I heard a sound (proof)
2) He will die some day, for all men are mortal (explanation). 3) I am happy, for I passed the examination (accounts for).
B. I cannot attend school, because I am not well వాక్యములో I cannotattend school అను clause నకు నేను బడికి వెళ్ళలేను అని అర్థము కనుక అది రెండవ clause యొక్క సహాయము లేకయే పూర్తియయిన అర్థము నిచ్చుచున్నది. అట్టి దానిని Principal clause * లేక Main clause అందురు. “because I am not well’ eo clauses జబ్బుగా మండుటచేత అని అర్ధము గనుక ఈ clause దానంతటది పూర్తియైన అర్థము నిచ్చుటలేదు. అర్థపూర్తికై నేను బడికి వెళ్ళలేదు’ అను Principal clause యొక్క సహాయము సాపేక్షించుచున్నది. అనగా ఈ clause Principal clause మీద ఆధారపడియున్నది. కాబట్టి because I am not well అను clause స్వతంత్రమైనది కాదు. ఇట్టి clause ను Subordinate clause** అందురు. Je because o conjunction, subordinate clause principal clause తో కలుపుచున్నది. ఇట్టి conjunctions Subordinate conjunctions అనబడును.
As, it, because, lest, since, that, though, although, unless, whether, till, until, before, after, when, while etc.
Note 1. Because introduced either a) physical cause or b) a moral cause or c) a motive acting on the mind; as:
A clause which makes complete sense by itself is called a Principal (Main) Clause, and therefore the principal clause is of the nature of a simple sentence.
A Subordinate Clause is a group of words equivalent to a single part of speech and having a subject and a predicate of its own.
a) 1. The crops failed, because the season was dry.
2. He cannot walk fast because he is a little lame.
b) 1. We admire and love him because he is noble and good
2) I endured his censure, because it was just.
c) 1. He reads, because he has felt himself hungry for knowledge.
2. He writes because, he has read himself full.

Note 2. a) Since literally means something that is past and hence settled, so that the consequence depending on it is expressed in the principal clause; as :-
1) Since you desire it, I will look into the matter.
2) Since we must do it, let us start.
b) It also declares a certain circumstance to have occured and gives that as a reason for the affirmation in the principal clause; as :-
Since he has lost his father, he must give up his college education.

Note 3. As assigns the reason by indicating a sort of similarity between the situations contained in the principal and subordinate clause; it introduces a subordinate clause describing the state of the case in accordance with which action of the principal clause follows as :-
1) As you are not ready, we must go without you.
2) As you know German, I need not translate.
3) As Caesar was abitious, Brutus slew him.
C. Some Conjunctions are used in pairs and are called Correlative Conjunctions; as:- either-or, neither-nor, though-yet, both – and, so-as, as – as etc.

Note-As far as, as though, in as much as, so that, in order that – Phrase Conjunctions.
N.B. That అనే conjunction తరచు లోపించును. ఉ
1. He says he is not well = He says (that) he is not well.
2. I thought he would win = I thought (that) he would win. Either or; mark
a) an unavoidable choice or
b) an exclusive division, between only two alternatives.
e.g.- a) Either come in or go home.
e.g.-b) Either this man sinned or his parents.
Or: marks 1) an alternative between different a) things or b) states or c) action
e.g. a) Wolves or bears are never seen in that part of the country.
b) Sick or well he should not be here.
c) To eat or go hungry is all the same to him.
2. Choice between alternative.
e.g. (a) Will you have tea or coffee?
a) thing (b) states or (c) courses
(b) To be or not to be: that is the question.
(c) Decide to study medicine or law. 3. Approximation: In five or six days.
4. Doubt: Monday or Tuesday.
5. Greater exactness of phrasing or meaning :-
e.g. These essays or rather rough sketches.
6. Otherwise: You must work hard or you will fail.
7. Succession by turns: One or the other will watch over him all night.
8. Synonym: Lessen or abate.
Ex. 39
Fill in the blanks with Conjunctions:-
1. Rama passed-Gopal failed. 2. Rama- Gopal went to school. 3. He is old I. 4. He will not- old-I. 5. He is older-I. 6. He will not succeed–he works hard. 7. I cannot leave school my work is done. 8. You must come in time- –you will be punished. 9. He failed–he worked hard. 10. He will not pass he works hard. 11. He is very poor— he is very lazy. 12. Here is Rama- there is his brother. 13. He told me — he had lost his book. 14. You will be late–you are not quick. 15. You will be late–you are quick. 16. Tell me you broke the slate. 17. The doctor feared his patient would die. 18. You can come to-morrow it is a holiday. 19. Wait–I arrive. 20. Either you I must write the letter— it must be sent with- in one hour. 21. You need not leave your bed — the sun rises. 22. You must get up– the sun rises. 23. The man must do his best-he may not always succeed. 24. Take care–you should fail. 25. You are much more idle — you used to be. 26. He will succeed he tries hard. 27. I feel so tired — I am not able to speak. 28. I can write as fast — anybody. 29. I cannot write so well he. 30. It is long-I met you. 31. You need not come you are very weak.

Ans: 3. as…as 4. so…as 5. than 6. unless 8. or 13. tha! 14. if 16. if 18. as 19. until 20. or, for 23. otherwise 14. lest 27. that 30. since 31. because.

Letter Writing : Definition & Types with Examples in Telugu

Letter-Writing

Form of the Letter
Letter-writing is an art and should be cultivated as such. Letters మూడు విధములు :- (a) Private letters (b) Official letters (c) Business letters.
ప్రతి letter కు 6 భాగములుండును :
(1) Address of the writer. (2) Place and date of writing. (3) Form of address or Salutation (4) Body of the letter. (5) The Subscription. (6) Address of the person to whom it is sent or Superscription.
1. Adress of the writer :- ఉత్తరము వ్రాయువారి విలాసము (adress) అనగా, అతడు కాపురముండు ఇంటి నెంబరు, వీథి పేరు, ఊరి పేరు మొదలగునవి. ఇవి ఎప్పుడును కాగితము యొక్క అంచునకు దిగువగా కుడిమూలను వ్రాయవలెను. ఇంటి నెంబరు తరువాతను, వీధిపేరు తర్వాతను, ఊరి పేరు తర్వాతను comma లు ఉంచవలెను.
2. Date of writing :- ఉత్తరము వ్రాసిన తేదీ ఇది ఎప్పుడును Adress క్రింద కొంచెము కుడిచేతి వైపునకు జరిపి వ్రాయవలెను. నెల తర్వాత comma యును. సంవత్సరము తర్వాత full stop ను ఉంచవలెను.
3. Salutation :- ఇది యెప్పుడును కాగితము యొక్క ఎడమ ప్రక్కను కొంచెము క్రిందుగా margin వద్ద నుంచి ఆరంభించి వ్రాయవలెను. దీని చివర ఎల్లప్పుడు comma ఉంచవలెను. ఈ Salutation ఉత్తరము వ్రాయువారికి అందుకొనువారికి గల సంబంధమును బట్టి మారుచుండును.
(a) తల్లిదండ్రులకు, పినతండ్రి, మేనమామ మొదలగు వారికి Dear Father, Dear Mother, Dear Uncle ఈ విధముగా వ్రాయవలెను.
(b) అన్నలకు, అక్కలకు, పినతండ్రి, పెదతండ్రి బిడ్డలకు Dear Brot- her, Dear Sister, My dear Brother, My dear Sister అని వ్రాయవలెను.
(c) కుమారులకు, తమ్ములకు, చెల్లెండ్రకు, ప్రాణస్నేహితులకు వ్రాయు -నపుడు పేరుపయోగించుట యుక్తము. ఎట్లన :-
Dear Rama, My dear John, Dear Mary, Dear Sita.
(d) సామన్య స్నేహితులకు కూడ పేరు సుదహరించుట ఉచితము కాని ‘Mr’ అనిగాని ‘Sri’ అనిగాని చేర్చవలెను;
ఉదా : Dear Mr.Gopal or Dear Sri Gopal..
(e) Teachers కును, పై అధికారులకును పరిచయస్థులకును Dear Sir వ్రాయవలెను.
(g) Company లకు, Firm లకు వ్రాయునపుడు, Dear Sirs లేక Gentlemen అని వ్రాయువలెను.

Letter Writing Definition And Types with Examples in Telugu

Read and Learn more Written Composition

4. The body of the letter :- Form of Adress క్రిందుగాను, Margin కి కొంచెము దూరముగాను ఆరంభించవలెను. ఇందు ఉత్తరము యొక్క సంగతులుండును. చివరి వాక్యము ముగించిన యెడల చివర fullstop ను,
ముగించని యెడల comma యును ఉంచవలెను.
5. The Subscription :- అనగా ఉత్తరము యొక్క చివర భాగము లేక సంతకము మొదలైనవి. Body లో ‘అఖరి పంక్తికి క్రిందుగాను కొంచెము కుడి వైపునకు “I am” “I remain’ లేక ‘Believe me to be’ అవి వ్రాయ వలెను.
N. B. :- Body of the letter మఱియు Subscription ఒకే పేజీలో నుండవలెను. Body of the letter పూర్తిగా ఒక పేజీలోను, Subscription తర్వాత పేజీలోను ఉండకూడదు. కాని Body of the letter లోని చివర కొంత భాగమైనను తర్వాత పేజీలో నుండిన, దాని క్రింద Subscription వ్రాయవచ్చును.
దీని క్రింద తల్లిదండ్రులకు ‘Your loving son’, ‘Yours affection- ate son’ అనియు Uncle కు “Your loving nephew’ అనియు వ్రాయు వలెను..అన్నదమ్ములకు, అక్కచెల్లిండ్రకు ‘Your affectionate brother’, ‘Your loving bother’ లేక ‘ Your loving sister’ అని వ్రాయువలెను.
Teachers 5 ‘Your most obedient student’ or ‘Yours most obediently’-అని వ్రాయవలెను.
స్నేహితులకు ‘Yours very sincerely’ అని, ప్రాణస్నేహితులకు ‘Yours ever’, ‘Yours always’, ‘Lovingly yours’ or ‘Ever Yours’ అని వ్రాయవలెను.
కొద్దిపాటి పరిచయమున్నవారికి (acquaintances) ‘Yours truly’ ‘Yours sincerely’ అని వ్రాయవలెను. పరాయివారికి (strangers), ‘Yours faithfully, or ‘Yours truly’ అని వ్రాయవలెను. కంపెనీలకు కూడా ఇలాగే
Note: Subscription లోవచ్చు ‘I am’ లేక ‘I remain’ తర్వాతను, ‘Yours truly’, ‘Your most obedient pupil’, etc: o commas ఉంచవలెను. సంతకము చివర fullstop ఉంచకూడదు.
6. Superscription : పై విలాసము: ఇది పేజీకి ఎడమవైపున సంతకమునకు కొంచెము క్రిందుగా వ్రాయవలెను.
ఉద్యోగము మొదలగునవి లేనపుడు కూడ పేరును Esq., చేర్చుదురు ఉదా:- J. Narayana Esq., ఆ పేరునకు క్రింద ఇంటి నెంబరు, వీధి పేరు, ఊరి పేరు వ్రాయవలెను. ఆఖరి పంక్తిలో District మారిన, ఆ District పేరును, Province మారిన ఆ Province పేరును, విదేశములకు వెళ్ళవలసిన ఉత్తరములపై ఆ దేశము పేరు గూడ వ్రాయవలెను. University titles Esq., కి తర్వాత
రావలెను. లేదు.
ఉదా:- R. V. Ratnam Esq., M.A., L.T., కంపెనీలకు Messrs. అని వ్రాయవలెను. ఉదా:- Messrs. Gopal & Co. Enovelope మీద Official ఉత్తరములలో తప్ప to వ్రాయనవసరము
N.B.:- ఈ క్రింది దోషములు లేకుండ జాగ్రత్త వహించవలెను.
1. A note of exclamation or a full stop after salutation.
2. An apostrophe in yours in the subscription.
3. A participle phrase at the end without “I remain” or “I am” in the subscription.
4. Yours followed by a noun or your followed by an adverb; as; ‘your lovingly’ or ‘yours loving son’ or ‘your obediently pupil’
5. A concluding participle phrase followed by such imperative sentences as ‘Believe me’; as:-
‘Hoping to hear from you soon’, ‘Believe me to be’.
Note:- Here the participle hoping refers to the person writing the letter. So the correct form is ‘hoping to hear from you soon’, ‘I remain’: but if we say hoping…. soon, ‘Believe me to be’, hoping refers to ‘you’ (the subject of believe) which is absurd.

1. Your post card is duly to hand and I am glad of the same.
2. Your post card duly to hand, or yours to hand or yours of 8th instant to hand.
3. I received your post card, or I am duly in receipt of your post card or I have your letter.
4. Glad to tell you that I have passed my examination. 5. Accept my most heartfelt congratulations on your success in the examination.
6. Exceedingly sorry to tell you that I have not passed the examination.
7. Exccedingly happy to inform you that my brother is blessed with a son.
8. I have not heard from you for a long time.
9. It is long since I heard from you.
10. No letter from you for a long time.
11. You have not been pleased to reply to my last letter. 12. I wrote to you a few days back, but no reply has been received.

To friendsTo parents or relation:
1. With kind regards, I remain,1. With much love,I remain,
2. With best wishes,I remain,2. Hoping to be in your midst soon, I remain,
3. Hoping to hear from you soon, I remain,3. Trusting this will find you all in sound health,I remain,
4. Awaiting an early reply,I remain,4. Hoping to see you all shortly,I remain,
5. Kindly remember me to your father and believe me to be,Affectionately yours,5. Hoping to have the plea- sure of meeting you all shortly,I remain,

Specimens of letters
To a Teacher
Dear sir,
Kakinada-1,
2nd March, ’92..
I request you to grant me leave for to-day, as I am suffering from dysentery, (or as I have fever).
I remain,
Your obedient pupil
XXX

Dear Madam,
Adoni,
3rd March, ’92.
My mother is taken ill rather suddenly. She wants me to remain at home, as there is no one else to attend on her. I therefore request that you may be pleased to grant me leave for to-day.
I remain,
Yours most obediently,
XXX
Vizag-2,
3rd March, ’92.

Dear Sir,
Kindly grant me leave for a week, as I have to go to Kakinada, to attend my brother’s marriage which comes off on the 5th of this month.
Dear Sir,
I remain,
Yours very obediently,
XXX
Guntur,
5th March, ’92.
I had an attack of chicken-pox last Monday, and I have not been keeping well since. May I request you to excuse my absence this week also.
I am, Yours obediently,
XXX

Sir,
Nellore, 6th March, ’92.
I have been laid up with fever since yesterday. I have not been able to attend school. Please grant me two days leave of absence for the 7th and the 8th instant.
I am, Yours very obediently,

To Father
XXX
Kakinada-1,
Dear Father,
12th March, ’92.
I am glad to tell you I did wel! in the final examination. I did quite well in English and Mathematics. The Science paper was a little stiff. I do not expect more that 35% marks in it. However, I think I can get through this year.
Please give my love to mother, and all at home.

Dear Father,
Your loving son,
XXX
Rajahmundry-2, 5th March, ’92.
I have not heard from you for a long time. I am at a loss to know the reason. I received the M.O. sent by you. But the amount is not sufficient to meet all the expenses. I wish to buy some story books and read them in the holidays. Further I am badly in need of a good Dictionary. The hotel-keeper is press- ing me for advance. So, please send me fifty rupees more. I shall come there soon after the examination is over.

With love to mother,
I remain, Your loving son,
XXXX

To father describing the celebration of the School Day.
My dear Father,
Rajah’s High School Hostel, Tuni, 22nd March, 1992.
I am sorry I could not reply to you earlier, as I had been busy decorating our school building with flags and festoons against the Annual School Day which fell on 20th March. I remember my Headmaster having sent you an invitation.
All the pupils especially the prize winners, were earg- erly looking forward to that day. The function was to begin at 4-30p.m. Ten minutes earlier, arrived the District Collector, the president of the evening function. The Scouts and the N.C.C. cadets presented the guard of honour to him, who was led by our Headmaster to the dais specially illuminated by arches of coloured bulbs.
After he was formally proposed Chairman and gar- landed with applause, he made a few introductory remarks. The Headmaster read the Annual Report of the School. This was followed by a few speeches by eminent men invited for the
purpose.
Then the prize distribution began. I got a thrill out of shaking hands with the dignitary while receiving my prize for proficiency in English, especially in the presence of about a thousand people including parents, citizens and all the pupils of the school; of course I keenly felt your absence.
In his concluding speech, the President congratulated the staff and the students for the good results produced at the

S.S.C. Public examination last year and made a few observa- tions on the necessity of compulsory military training being in- troduced in High schools.
After a vote of thanks from the Headmaster, the pleasant function came to a close with the staging of a playlet “Donga- tanam” by the pupils.
Hoping to be amidst you all in a short time.
I am,
Yours affectionately,
Address:
Sri. S. Rama Rao, B.A.,
Tahsildar, Rajahmundry,
PIN: 533101.
To Uncle thanking him for the birth-day present.
No.18, Prakasam Street,
My dear Uncle,
Ramaraopeta,
Kakinada-4,
18th March, 1992.
I had your kind letter yesterday evening. I can hardly say how pleased I was to get it. As for the wrist-watch which was delivered to me this morning (the very morning of my birth- day) I am overjoyed at it.
I have never yet had a watch and have always eagerly looked forward to having one. In fact, I wanted a watch more than anything else. When I read your letter, I knew that at last I was realising the dream of my life. It shows not only the time but the days of the week. I put it on at once. Whenever I look at my watch, I shall think very gratefully of you.
I am, Yours ever gratefully,

Address:
Sri.S. Srinivasa Rao, B.A.,B.L.,
Sub-judge,
VISAKHAPATNAM-2.
A note to a friend
My dear Mohan,
Friday morning,
My father is going to take me for a row on the river this evening and wishes me to ask some of my friends to join us. Will you come? I shall be glad if you do. I think we shall make a party of nine or ten. It promises to be a delightful evening and I hope we shall have a jolly party. I shall look for you at five. Please write a line to say that you are coming.
Dear Rama,
I am, Very truly yours,
Reply, declining
Friday noon,
Many thanks for your kind note. But I am sorry to say I cannot join you this evening. The fact is I must attend on my mother who is feverish.
Wishing you a pleasant evening,
I remain,
Yours ever,
Reply, accepting
Friday noon,
Dear Rama,

It is really very kind of you to think of me in connection with the row on the river. I am delighted to accept your invitation.
Dear Sir,
Yours ever,
Invitation for Dinner
14th April, ’92.
Will you give us the pleasure of your company at dinner to be given at my residence on Thursday, the 18th instant at 8- 30 p.m. in connection with my sister’s marriage?
I am,
Yours very Sincerely,
Write a letter to a friend telling him about your future plans
after you leave school.
Kakinada-1,
10th March, ’92.
Dear Krishna,
Thank you very much for your letter asking me what I mean to do when I leave school. I am glad to hear that you are getting on gloriously well with your new job there.
I appeared for the S.S.C. Public Examination this April and hope to pass getting creditable marks. My future career de- pends a good deal upon my father’s views.
I know he cannot afford to give me College Education and I have a bias for Technical Course. So I wish to try for a seat in the Polytechnic or I.T.I. in the Civil Engineering Course. I am sure of getting a job soon after I finish the course; for the Andhra Government has many Engineering Projects on hand.

Please remember me to your revered mother. Hoping this will find you in the best of health.
I am, Yours sincerely,
XXXXXX
Address:
Sri K. Krishnarao,
Sanitary Inspector,
Tuni, E.G.Dt.
Given below is what your friend wrote to you. Write a complete letter replying to it.
I came to know that you saw a circus at Hyderabad. How is it? What did you like? Are you coming to my place for my brother’s marriage? You will like the village with its fields and hills. Please reply.
Reply
22-247, Saidabad Colony,
Hyderabad, 23-4-’92.
My dear Venugopal,
I have your letter dated 20-4-’92. I wonder how you could know that I saw a circus here. It is a fact that on 10-4-’92 my sister and I witnessed “The Grand Orient Circus” which was vey entertaining. A lion riding on an elephant, a person passing through ten rings of flames one after another without being hurt, a girl lifting a heay load with her teeth-are some of the most striking feats.
Yes, I have duly received your inviation for your brother’s marriage at Annavaram. I would like to attend the function, and avail myself of the opportunity of enjoying in your com- pany the beautiful scenery – the fields and the hills of the place as suggested by you

Hoping to meet you soon,
I am, Yours sincerely, Prasad.
Address:
Sri. J. Venugopal, Annavaram,
(via) Tuni,
East Godavari District.
2. Given below is what your friend wrote to you. Write a complete letter replying to it in about 100 words.
I like Andhra Pradesh. I want to see some important places in your state. Which of them do you want me to see? Why? I will come whenever you want me to.
Reply
14/406, Bondavari Street,
My dear Jayanth,
Visakhapatnam – 1,
PIN-530001,
15th March, ’92.
Yours of the 10th instant to hand, i am very happy to know of your desire to see our State, Andhra Pradesh.
In my opinion, the following places are worth seeing: 1. Srikurmam, Simhachalam, Annavaram, Bhadracha- lam, Antarvedi, Mangalagiri, Srisailam, Kalahasti and Tiru- pati, (all amous for sacred temples).
2. Visakhapatnam and Kakinada (seaport cities).
3. Vijayawada (a Railway junction and business centre). and Nagarjuna Sagar Project.
4. Hyderabad (our capital city)Please take a month’s leave and meet me in the first week of April. My brother’s car will be at our disposal and both of us shall have a holiday trip.
Hoping to have the pleasure of meeting you soon,
Adress:
Shri. R.K. Jayanth,
Nil Block/10-B,
Malviyanagar,
NEW DELHI.
PIN: 110017.
I am, Yours sincerely,
V. Rama Rao.
3. Given below is what your friend wrote to you. Write an answer in about 100 words.
What on earth has been happening to you? I haven’t heard from you for months – not since last I wrote in January. In fact, I hope that your silence doesn’t mean that you have been ill.
What are you doing these days? I suppose that, like us, you are studying and revising for the examinations.
I expect you will be leaving school at the end of the term. What are you going to do? School work never was your strong point-especially English and Mathematics. It’s a pity you can’t play football for a living. (Incidentally) have you been winning all your matches again?

Reply
8-201, Patel Road, Anantapur, 17-4-’92.
Dear Gopal,
Thank you for your letter. I coud not write to you all these days, for I haven’t got your address. The letter, you say you wrote in January, was not received by me.
I am working hard for the examination and I am sure of securing a pass in the first class. In the next academic year, I shall study Intermediate. How is it you have such a poor opinion of my progress at school?
Our school football team won as usual at the State level. I was awarded a special silver medal.
Please drop a line about your studies and other activities.
Yours sincerely,
Address:
Venu.
Sree V. Gopinatha Rao,
11-3-930, Mallepalli,
Hyderabad -1.
PIN: 500 001.
A letter to a pen-friend in England telling him about life in an
Indian village.
Kakinada (India)
28-1-’92.

Dear Mr. John,
Many thanks for your letter dated 22-1-92, giving a vivid picture of English village life. In this letter I would like to give you an account of the life in a typical Indian village.
Real India is rural India. India contains about 600,000 villages. The population of a village being round about 5 or 6 thousand. A good majority of the 480 millions of our people live in villages.
Every village is a self-contained unit. Depending on the size of its population, a village has its own artisans like the carpenter, the blacksmith, the goldsmith, the washerman, the potter. It has its own grocery. Modern villages have a High School, a Co-operative Society, a Co-operative Credit Bank, a rural Health Centre and a Branch Post Office. Most of the villages have a temple, generally, by the side of the bund of a tank or the bank of a canal. As a result, more need not go ordinarily to town or city.
Government revenue is collected by the village offiers. People are engaged in their agricultural work as a matter of course. They live a contented life. Their wants are simple. They are not bothered by the din and bustle of a town life.
I am glad to inform you that we have recently celebrated our “Republic Day” with enthusiasm throughout the country.
P.S
To
Yours sincerely,
S. Kameswara Rao.
Please address your reply as follows:
Shri. S. Kameswara Rao,
3, Prakasam Street,
Kakinada, Andhra Pradesh,
PIN: 533 004. INDIA.
G. F. John Esq.,
2, Elan Tree Road, East end,
London. W. C. 2.
To a Firm
6-4-66, Jawahar Street, Kakinada, PIN: 533 001, 12th March, ’92.

To
The India Book House,
Book Sellers,
3-4-423, Narayanaguda,
Hyderabad,
PIN: 500 029.
Gentlemen,
Please send me by V.P.P. one copy each of: Flowering Trees by Dr. M. S. Randhawa. Domestic Animals by Shri Harbans Singh.
Common Birds by Dr. Salim Ali and Mrs. Laeeq Futehally. I have to-day sent you by M.O. Rs. 25/-(rupees twenty- five) as advance.
Yours faithfully,
A.Venkata Rao.
Write a letter to your District Health Officer to take urgent
steps against the spread of cholera in your locality.
From
To
Sir,
Landholder,
Sri P. Rama Rac
Injaram, Kakinada Taluk.
The District Health Officer,
East Godavari District,
Kakinada.
I write this to inform you that cholera has broken out in my village, Injaram, in Kakinada Taluq. Of the six cases, one proved fatal last week.
I trust the village officers have already reported this to you. But so far no steps have been taken by way of inoculation or disinfecting the tank which is the only source of drinking water. The few cases of infection had better be segregated as early as possible.
I, therefore, request you to take measures urgently to prevent the spread of the epidemic in the locality.
Injaram,
Yours faithfully,
XXXXXXX.
10th March, 1992.
From
Sri Lolla Sreeramulu,
Application for a post
11-1-8, Prakasam Street, Ramaraopeta,
KAKINADA -4.

To
Sir,
The Chairman,
Municipal Council,
Kakinada.
Being given to understand that a teacher’s post has fallen vacant in one of the Upper Primary Schools of the Municipality, I offer myself as a candidate.
I passed the S.S.L.C. and the T.S.L.C. Examinations. I have already put in three years of service as a teacher. Copies of testimonials have been enclosed herein.
I am confident that I can give you full satisfaction in the discharge of my duties as a teacher. I therefore request that you may be pleased to favour me with the post.
Kakinada, 10-3-’92.
Yours faithfully,
Lolla Sreeramulu.

How to begin Applications for Appointments.
1. Having come to (know) understand that there is a vacancy in your, I offer myself as a candidate for the place.
2. Having heard that you are in need of a (Typist, clerk, stenographer, etc.,)
3. Having been informed that there will be a vacancy shortly in your establishment for a post.
4. Having seen an advertisement in ‘The Express’ dated that a trained teacher is wanted, I write to apply for the
5. With reference to an advertisment that appeared in “the Andhra Prabha” dated for a clerk, I offer myself for the post.
6. In reply to your advertisement in “The Hindu ” of date –I offer my services as a copyist.
To
Application for Certificates
The Headmaster,
Municipal High School,
Gandhinagaram,
Kakinada – 4.

Sir,
I studied Class X (section A, No. 15) in your High School during 1890-91 and passed the S.S.C. Examination.
I now request you to order the issue of my:
1) S.S.C. Certificate
2) Transfer Certificate and
3) Conduct Certificate.
Thanking you,
Kakinada,
1-3-’87.
I am,
Your obedient pupil,
A. Sarala.

From
Application for Admission Form
Kumari V. Sugunamani,
C/o. Sri V.Bhaskara Reddy,
Karapa, (Kakinada Taluk, East Godavari Dt.)
To
The Principal,
A.S. Government College for Women,
Jagannaikpur,
Kakinada – 2. PIN: 533 002.
Madam,
I request you to order the issue of a form of Application for Admission into the Junior Intermediate Class of your college.
I enclose herein (1) a chalan for Rs. 1/-paid into the State Bank, Kakinada and (2) a stamped envelope with my address.

Yours faithfully,
V.Sugunamani,

Karapa,
10-3-’87.
Enclosures -2.