Chemistry, asked by singh2237, 5 hours ago

80 grams in 100 mL solvent at 25°C saturated or unsaturated

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Answered by kalpanaawasthi117
0

Answer:

Nicholls after taking charge of English Seminary in 1835 replaced the Persian class attached to the

seminary with vernacular classes of Hindi and Urdu. Nicholls’s idea behind the introduction of

vernacular classes in English Seminary was that,

If attention to the vernacular dialects be encouraged it may be excepted that at some future period those

who are studying English will translate a portion of learning they acquire into the native language thus

enriching them and exciting a desire amongst their countrymen for an acquaintance with a language

which contains so much to enlarge the minds and to enlighten the views of those who study it.5

The same model of attaching vernacular classes to the English seminaries was followed in schools,

stationed at Allahabad, Gazipur, Azimgarh, Gorakpur, Farruckabad in North-Western Provinces

(United Provinces); Jabalpur and Sagar in Central Province.6

The school at the British station in Sagar, headed by Rao Krishna Rao (son of the hereditary Diwan of

the principality of Sagar) had three independent departments of Persian, Marathi and Hindi, previous

to the establishment of English seminary at the school in the year 1835. The Sagar School was

governed by LCPI which in principle was directly subordinate to GCPI at Calcutta. Though in 1830’s

and 1840’s before the establishment of railroads, telegraphs this station school at Sagar enjoyed an

indirect autonomy and as the head of the school was practically independent in his activities. Joseph

Stevens Blackmister of Boston, possibly a missionary who met Rao Krishna Rao at Calcutta, in his

letter dispatched from Boston, described the task undertaken by his friend Rao Krishna Rao of

imparting European scientific education among the native masses at such a distant station in terms of

a combat, ‘where the contest is with an old and deep rooted prejudice sanctified in the eyes of men by

antiquity’.7

The English seminary at the Sagar School was without any teacher and getting teachers acquainted to

teach English to the pupils in this distant station school was difficult since European teachers

preferred urban centres. To make English classes functional Rao Krishna Rao, managed to take on

board one English master Mr. Derozio who accompanied him from Calcutta to teacher the rudiments

of English literature at Sagar School. After few days of residence at the Sagar station, Mr. Derozio

decided to move back to Calcutta, as he could not find a safe footing at the Sagar Station.8 His

departure resulted in the appointment of an incompetent master Ram Chunder to teach English

language and rudiments of European scientific knowledge to the students of the school. In 1837 the

number of pupil in English seminary was 28, while the Hindi department of the school had 122 pupils

divided into six classes. The studies of the most advanced pupils in Hindi department consisted of

Subha Bilas, geography, arithmetic and astronomy. The school was suffering from the lack of books;

hence some of the first books in Hindi were compiled by the initiative of Rao Krishna Rao. The list of

Hindi books prepared at the schools was as follows: -

Hindi Books at Sagar School Copies

The Hindee Primer 400 copies

Mr. Rowe’s Hindustani Spelling Book third edition

first printed in 1833

300 copies

Fables in Hindustanee for the use of schools. Second

edition

100 copies

Betal Pachessa 20 copies

Pearson’s Geography and Astronomy 30 copies

Treatise on the Globe 50 copies

Arithmetic 50 copies

5 Nicholls to Sutherland, WBSA 11th January 1834 to 23rd December 1837 Vol. 9 part 2. Sl.no 13/2. 277.

LCPI at Benares was repeatedly making this observation that there were very few Hindustani pupils in the

College who can write their own language with anything like orthographic or syntactical correctness.

6 Benares College established in 1797 soon emerged as the centripetal institution for the North Western

Answered by achouras
0

Answer:

36g of NaCl(s) will dissolve in 100 mL of water at 25°C. This solution will be a saturated aqueous solution of sodium chloride, but there will be no visible solid NaCl in the vessel

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