English, asked by lakshmikameswari1512, 2 months ago

Direction (1-5): What, one wonders, is the lowest common denominator of Indian culture today? The
attractive Hema Malini? The songs of Vinidh Barati? The attractive Hema Malini? The sons of Vinidh
Barati?
Or the mouth-watering Masala Dosa? Delectable as these may be, each yield pride of place to that
false (?) symbol of a new era-the synthetic fibre. In less than twenty years the nylon sari and the
terylene shirt have swept the countryside, penetrated to the farthest corners of the land and
persuaded every common man, woman and child that the key to success in the present-day world lie
in artificial fibers: glass nylon, crepe nylon, tery mixes, polyesters and what have you. More than the
bicycles, the wristwatch or the transistor radio, synthetic clothes have come to represent the first
step away form the village square. The village lass treasures the flashy nylon sari in her trousseau
most delay; the village youth gets a great kick out of his cheap terrycot shirt and trousers, the nearest
he can approximate to the expensive synthetic sported by his wealthy citybred contemporaries. And
the Neo-rich craze for 'phoren' is nowhere more apparent than in the price that people will pay for
smuggled, stolen, begged borrowed second hand or thrown away synthetics. Alas, even the
uniformity of nylon.​

Answers

Answered by seemagupta93
0

Answer:

pouring oh zdiek eondndndkdmf fkck g

Similar questions
Math, 1 month ago