English, asked by gurmeharsahni72, 10 months ago

diary entry on regular day ( lockdown)​

Answers

Answered by Shanaya1220
1

Dear Diary,

Dear Diary,These past days were traumatic. Italy is in a total Lockdown because of the Coronavirus, so I’m forced to stay at home, against my will, until the 3rd of May. I miss going out with my friends, to parties or visiting my grandma and spending time with her. However, I’m going to do what I need to do if I want the Coronavirus out of here. 

Talking about school, my school decided to do video lessons for a month or so, until this all blows over, anyway. My day in quarantine starts at 7:45 when I wake up and prepare myself for the first lesson at 0815. When the first two lessons are done, at 1005, I have a ten minute break. Then the other two lessons begin and then finish at 1205 and have a lunch break of 30 minutes. Then we have the last two hours and we finish school at 1425, a total of 6 hours a day.

Talking about school, my school decided to do video lessons for a month or so, until this all blows over, anyway. My day in quarantine starts at 7:45 when I wake up and prepare myself for the first lesson at 0815. When the first two lessons are done, at 1005, I have a ten minute break. Then the other two lessons begin and then finish at 1205 and have a lunch break of 30 minutes. Then we have the last two hours and we finish school at 1425, a total of 6 hours a day. 

Talking about school, my school decided to do video lessons for a month or so, until this all blows over, anyway. My day in quarantine starts at 7:45 when I wake up and prepare myself for the first lesson at 0815. When the first two lessons are done, at 1005, I have a ten minute break. Then the other two lessons begin and then finish at 1205 and have a lunch break of 30 minutes. Then we have the last two hours and we finish school at 1425, a total of 6 hours a day. So, my day in quarantine is not that interesting, but I am getting through it.

Talking about school, my school decided to do video lessons for a month or so, until this all blows over, anyway. My day in quarantine starts at 7:45 when I wake up and prepare myself for the first lesson at 0815. When the first two lessons are done, at 1005, I have a ten minute break. Then the other two lessons begin and then finish at 1205 and have a lunch break of 30 minutes. Then we have the last two hours and we finish school at 1425, a total of 6 hours a day. So, my day in quarantine is not that interesting, but I am getting through it. 

Talking about school, my school decided to do video lessons for a month or so, until this all blows over, anyway. My day in quarantine starts at 7:45 when I wake up and prepare myself for the first lesson at 0815. When the first two lessons are done, at 1005, I have a ten minute break. Then the other two lessons begin and then finish at 1205 and have a lunch break of 30 minutes. Then we have the last two hours and we finish school at 1425, a total of 6 hours a day. So, my day in quarantine is not that interesting, but I am getting through it. Bye and see you soon. 

Talking about school, my school decided to do video lessons for a month or so, until this all blows over, anyway. My day in quarantine starts at 7:45 when I wake up and prepare myself for the first lesson at 0815. When the first two lessons are done, at 1005, I have a ten minute break. Then the other two lessons begin and then finish at 1205 and have a lunch break of 30 minutes. Then we have the last two hours and we finish school at 1425, a total of 6 hours a day. So, my day in quarantine is not that interesting, but I am getting through it. Bye and see you soon. Edoardo Bozza

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Answered by Darkpit
3
Dear Diary,
Do you know what!!?

The Prime Minister’s call to light lamps, torches, candles or cell phone flashlights inside homes on Sunday night found support among the middle classes in Indian cities. Doing all this rubbish!!, He is behaving like COVID is a human!!!? Focused solely on urban India, the media coverage though didn’t offer much of a sense for how people in villages responded to the Prime Minister’s call. In any case, the invitation to join in a symbolic show of resolve to overcome the coronavirus threat needed to have been accompanied by a candid discussion of the steps the government was planning to take to manage the new health threat.

The details of the country’s poor infrastructural preparedness are familiar: the doctors and other health care workers don’t have sufficient protective equipment to work with, a fact that has made many private hospitals turn away people with even a normal flu; the number of tests being done to identify patients with the coronavirus is highly inadequate; the quarantine space within existing hospitals is severely limited.

It would have also been good to see the Prime Minister share the measures that the government was putting in place to help the lakhs of poor migrants fleeing the cities for their native places and to help the lakhs of poor farmers incurring heavy losses due to the shutting of market and transport facilities.
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