☆Answer this ....Urgent☆
Q. 1. You have got an opportunity to interview a world famous music composer /musician. Prepare a questionnaire of ten questions.
Q. 2. Write a paragraph on your own view or counter view on the following topic. 'Old people are a burden to society'.
Answers
glad to help you
1]
- What first got you into music?
- Who inspired you to make music?
- How would you describe the music that you typically create?
- What is your creative process like?
- Who would you most like to collaborate with?
- If you could go open a show for any artist who would it be?
2]
At present old persons are avoided by the younger generation only for the reason of them not being updated with the current updates in the society.
But at the same time we always forget to think that the developed society in which we live is created only by the support of those old generation people.
Without their help and sacrifice we would not be in a position to grow up to this level.
We always think that we know everything and the old people doesn't know anything.. but that is not at all true. There are lots and lots of things to learn from them which,we are not at all aware of.
I hope its useful
Answer:
hope it's helpful to you
Explanation:
Here’s how to answer the 16 most common interview questions:
Q.1
1)Tell me about yourself.2)How would you describe yourself?3)What makes you unique?4)Why do you want to work here?5)What interests you about this role?6)What motivates you?7)What are you passionate about?8)Why are you leaving your current job?9)What are your greatest strengths?10)What are your greatest weaknesses?
Q.2
Burden is today often applied to elderly people in two senses, for the fiscal load of income support and health and social care costs, and for notions and scales of care-giving effort and stress. It does not however convey straightforward meanings for its understanding is affected by two millenia of metaphorical and rhetorical usage. The use of burden tends to simplify relationships, whether between age-groups of a population or between a carer and an elderly person, and it communicates senses of a nuisance and an excessive charge. Portentous implications are invoked from biblical senses and derogatory overtones are strengthened by association, earlier this century, with racial stereotyping. An etymological survey reveals many sources of the word's versatility and rhetorical power. Important extensions of usage towards the two contemporary gerontological applications are then studied. A bibliometric examination of the surge in the word's social science use since the early 1980s is undertaken, and the paper concludes with a discussion of current usage as evidence of current attitudes towards, and constructions of, old age on the part of politicians and policy analysts.