google.com, pub-9220471781781135, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 Learn to speak English: August 2018

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

English Grammar Non Finite Verbs


A non-finite verb is any of several verb forms that are not finite verbs; they cannot perform action as the root of an independent clause. Most non-finite verbs found in English are infinitives, participles and gerunds (They sometimes are called “verbals”, but that term has traditionally applied only to participles and gerunds).

Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Noun Clause



This animation teaches the learner to define, identify a noun clause in given sentences. It also teaches the learner how to use noun clause as subject of a verb, as object of a verb, as object of a participle, as object of an infinitive, as object of a preposition, as complement of a verb of incomplete predication, as adjective complement, in apposition to a noun or pronoun. And the leaner can also learn to identify noun clause as subject of a verb, as object of a verb, as object of a participle, as object of an infinitive, as object of a preposition, as a complement of a verb of incomplete predication, as an adjective complement, in apposition to a noun or pronoun in given sentences.

From: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cslLNfoESGw

Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Glossary Gandhi


Adivasi: original inhabitants, indigenous people
Ahimsa:  nonviolence
Anna:  one sixteenth of Indian rupee
Ashram:  spiritual community
Bania:  third highest class in Hindu social hierarchy, Gandhi’s caste.
Bapu:  father
Bhajan:  devotional song or hymn
Bhangi Bustee: weeper colony
Baisakhi : A festival marking the beginning of a solar year.
Bhoodan:  Gift of land, associated with Vinoba’s Bhoodan movement
Bustee: colony
Brahmacharya: celibacy
Charkha: spinning-wheel
Chipko: to cling or hug,
Crore: a sum of 10,000,000
Dalits: the oppressed, ‖ formerly called the untouchables, ‖ or harijans‖ as Gandhi called them, scheduled castes, under the Indian constitution.
Darshan: to see, to pay homage
Dharma: duty, ethics, moral law
Dharana: sit-ins, a sit-down strike.
Diwan: prime-minister
Dhoti: cloth covering waist down to ankles
Durbar: royal court
Hartal: cessation of all economic activities
Harijans: children of God, a term Gandhi used for the untouchables
Jain: follower of Jainism, a sixth century BCE religion in India
Katha: story
Khadi: home-spun cloth, made famous by Gandhi
Khudai Khidmatgars: Servants of God, the nonviolent soldiers of Islam
Lathi: stave, steel-clubbed stick
Mahatma: the great soul, the title Tagore gave to Gandhi
Mandir: sacred space, a temple
Mantra: sacred formula
Metta: amity, friendship
Moksha: salvation, final goal in Hinduism
Mullah: religious leader in Islamic traditions
nai taleem: new education, holistic model aimed at the development of mind, body and spirit.
Panchayat: village council, a form of local self government in the villages
Pandal: a temporary or permanent structure made for an event
Patidars: land-owning farmers
Pranami: a syncretistic sect of Hinduism that venerates the Quran
Prarthana: prayer
Poorna swaraj: complete freedom, freedom for all
Pugri: turban
Raj: British rule in India, literal meaning is rule.
Ryot: tenant-farmer
Sabha: organization
Samadhi: memorial
Sarvodaya: welfare of all, awakening of all
Satyagraha: insistence on truth, firmness in a true cause
Satyagrahi: one who observes satyagraha
Shanti sena: peace brigade
Shramadana: gift of service or physical labour
Sthitha-prajana: the one who maintains equanimity
Swaraj: self-rule, self-government, freedom
Swadeshi: pertaining to one’s own country
Tilak: auspicious mark or symbol of devotion marked on forehead
Tinkathia: an exploitative system in which fifteen percent of the land rented by ryot had to be planted with indigo for the landlord
Vaishnava: Belonging to the sect which worships Vishnu, a Hindu God

Summary of Gitanjali by Rabindranath Tagore

"Gitanjali" is a collection of poems written by Rabindranath Tagore, the renowned Bengali poet, philosopher, and Nobel laureate. O...