S1: | I usually sleep quite well in the train, but this time I slept only a little. |
P : | Most people wanted it shut and I wanted it open. |
Q : | As usual, I got angry about the window. |
R : | The quarrel left me completely upset. |
S : | There were too many people too much huge luggage all around. |
S6: | It was shut all night, as usual |
S1: | The Bhagavadgita recognises the nature of man and the needs of man. |
P : | All these three aspects constitute the nature of man. |
Q : | It shows how the human being is rational one, an ethical one and a spiritual one. |
R : | More than all, it must be a spiritual experience. |
S : | Nothing can give him fulfilment unless it satisfies his reason, his ethical conscience. |
S6: | A man whom does not harmonise them, is not truly human. |
S1: | The dictionary is the best friend of you task. |
P : | That may not be possible always. |
Q : | It is wise to look it up immediately. |
R : | Then it must be firmly written on the memory and traced at the first opportunity. |
S : | Never allow a strange word to pass unchallenged. |
S6: | soon you will realize that this is an exciting task. |
S1: | Biological evolution has not fitted man to any specific environment. |
P : | It is by no means a biological evolution, but it is a cultural one. |
Q : | His imagination, his reason, his emotional subtlety and toughness, makes it possible for him not to accept the environment but to change. |
R : | And that series of inventions by which man from age by age has reshaped his environment is a different kind of evolution. |
S : | Among the multitude of animals which scamper, burrow swim around us he is in the only one who is not locked in to his environment. |
S6: | That brilliant sequence of cultural peaks can most appropriately be termed the ascent of man. |
S1: | And then Gandhi came. |
P : | Get off the backs of these peasants and workers, he told us, all you who live by their exploitation. |
Q : | He was like a powerful current of fresh air, like a beam of light, like a whirlwind that upset many things. |
R : | He spoke their language and constantly dre their attention to their appalling conditions. |
S : | He didn't descent from the top, he seemed to emerge from the masses of India. |
S6: | Political freedom took new shape and then acquired a new content. |
S1: | On vacation in Tangier, Morocco, my friend and I sat down at a street cafe. |
P : | At one point, he bent over with a big smile, showing me, a single gold tooth and a dingy fez. |
Q : | soon I felt the presence of someone standing alongside me. |
R : | But this one wouldn't budge. |
S : | We had been cautioned about beggars and were told to ignore them. |
S6: | Finally a man walked over to me and whispered, "Hey buddy this guy is your waiter and he wants your order" |
S1: | In 1934, William Golding published a small volume of poems. |
P : | During the World War II(1939-45) he joined the Royal Navy and was present at the sinking of the Bismarck. |
Q : | He returned to teaching in 1945 and gave it up in 1962, and is now a full time writer. |
R : | In 1939, he married and started teaching at Vishop Wordsworth school in Salisbury. |
S : | At first his novels were not accepted. |
S6: | But the Lord of the files which came out in 1954 was welcomed as "a most absorbing and instructive tale". |
S1: | The future beckons to us. |
P : | In fact we have hard work ahead. |
Q : | Where do we go and what shall be our endeavour? |
R : | We shall also have to fight and end poverty, ignorance and disease. |
S : | It will be to bring freedom and oppurtunity to the common man. |
S6: | There is no resting for any one of us till we redeem our pledge in full. |
S1: | Most of the universities in the country are now facing financial crisis. |
P : | Cost benefit yardstick thus should not be applied in the case of universities. |
Q : | The current state of affairs cannot be allowed to continue for long. |
R : | Universities cannot be equated with commercial enterprises. |
S : | Proper development of universities and colleges must be ensured. |
S6: | The Government should realise this before it is too late. |
S1: | While talking to a group, one should feel self-confident and courageous. |
P : | Nor is it a gift bestowed by providence on only a few. |
Q : | One should also learn how to think calmly and clearly. |
R : | It is like the ability to play golf. |
S : | It is not as difficult as most men imagine. |
S6: | Any man can develop his capacity if he has the desire to do so. |
S1: | A ceiling on urban property. |
P : | No mill-owner could own factories or mills or plants. |
Q : | And mass circulation papers |
R : | Would mean that |
S : | No press magnate could own printing presses. |
S6: | since their value would exceed the ceiling fixed by the government. |
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