S1: | Duryodhana was a wicked prince. |
P : | one day Bhima made Duryodhana fall from a tree from which Duryodhana was stealing fruits. |
Q : | He did not like that Pandavas should be loved and respected by the people of Hastinapur |
R : | Duryodhana specially hated Bhima. |
S : | Among the Pandavas, Bhima was extraordinary strong and powerful |
S6: | This enraged Duryodhana so much that he began to think of removing Bhima from his way. |
S1: | Jawaharlal Nehru was the greatest plan-enthusiast. |
P : | Under Nehru's advice, the pre-Independent congress set up National Planning Commission in 1938. |
Q : | But he forgot that what could be achieved by force under the communist dictatorship of Russia was not possible under the democratic set up of India. |
R : | He took the idea from Russia where Five year plans transformed a very backward country into a top power of the world. |
S : | No free government can call for compulsory sacrifice and suffering from the whole people. |
S6: | Nehru himself became the chairman of the commission. |
S1: | Growing up means not only getting larger, but also using our sense and our brain is to become more aware of things around us. |
P : | Not only does he have a memory but he is able to think and reason. |
Q : | In this, man differs from all other animals. |
R : | Before we spray our roadside plants or turn sewage in to our rivers, we should pause to think what the results of our action are likely to do. |
S : | This is to say, he is able to plan what he is is going to do in the light of his experience before he does it. |
S6: | In other words, we must develop and use our ability to reason, because the destruction or the preservation of the places in which we live depend on us. |
S1: | But how does a new word get into the dictionary? |
P : | When a new dictionary is being edited, a lexicographer collects all the alphabetically arranged citation slips for a particular word. |
Q : | The dictionary makers notice it and make a note of it on a citation slip. |
R : | The moment new word is coined, it usually enter the spoken language. |
S : | The word then passes from the realm of hearing to the realm of writing. |
S6: | He sorts them according to their grammatical function, and carefully writes a definition. |
S1: | This weather-vane often tops a church spire, tower or high building. |
P : | They are only wind-vanes. |
Q : | Neither alone can tell us what the weather will be. |
R : | They are designed to point to direction from which the wind is coming. |
S : | Just as the barometer only tells us the pressure of air, the weather-vane tells us the direction of wind. |
S6: | The weather-vane can, however give us some indication of other. |
S1: | Throughout history man has used energy from the sun. |
P : | Today, when we burn wood or use electric current we are drawing an energy. |
Q : | However we now have a new supply of energy. |
R : | All our ordinary life depends on sun. |
S : | This has come from the sun. |
S6: | This energy comes from inside atoms. |
S1: | Jawaharlal Nehru was born in Allahabad on 14 Nov 1889. |
P : | Nehru meet Mahatma Gandhi in February 1920. |
Q : | In 1905 he was sent to London to study at a school called Haroow. |
R : | He became the first Prime Minister of Independent India on 15 August 1947. |
S : | He married Kamla Kaul in 1915. |
S6: | He died on 27 May 1964. |
S1: | It was a dark moonless night. |
P : | He turned over the pages, reading passages here and there. |
Q : | He heard them on the floor. |
R : | The poet took down his books of poems from his shelves. |
S : | Some of them contained his earliest writings which he had almost forgotten. |
S6: | They all seemed to him to be poor and ordinary mere childish words. |
S1: | I had halted on the road. |
P : | As soon as I saw the elephant I knew I should not shoot him. |
Q : | It is a serious matter to shoot a working elephant. |
R : | I knew that his 'must' was already passing off. |
S : | The elephant was standing 8 yards from the road. |
S6: | I decided to watch him for a while and then go home. |
S1: | There is only one monkey we can thoroughly recommend as an indoor pet. |
P : | They quickly die from colds and coughs after the first winter fogs. |
Q : | It is beautiful and intelligent Capuchin monkey. |
R : | The lively little Capuchins, however, may be left for years in an English house without the least danger to their health. |
S : | The Marmosets, it is true, are more beautiful than a Capuchins and just as pleasing, but they are too delicate for the English climate |
S6: | Finally let me say that no other monkey has a better temper or winning ways. |
S1: | A man can be physically confined within stone walls. |
P : | But his mind and spirit will still be free. |
Q : | Thus his freedom of action may be restricted. |
R : | His hopes and aspiration still remain with him. |
S : | Hence, he will be free spiritually if not physically. |
S6: | No tyranny can intimidate a lover of liberty. |
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