English, asked by Atharvajoshi, 1 year ago

ESSAY ON STICH IN TIME SAVES NINE

Answers

Answered by BrainlyPrincess
48
\bold{A \: stitch \: in \: time \: saves \: nine}



The proverb 'A stitch in time save nine' means that timrly action in any matter saves him from a lot of troubles, loss and waste. A person should do his duties in proper time. A person may suffer if he is lazy and leaves the work fot tomorrow.


When a small hole appears in a piece of cloth, it can be easily repaired with a single stitch. On the other hand, if it is not sewed in time, it will widen more and more and many stitches will be required to mend the cloth.


A neglect of this simple duty, at the start, will turn the cloth into a useless scrap. Similarly, all difficulties of this kind can be easily prevented by taking timely actions to move them.


Man has many duties to perform and his life on the earth is short. In the brief span of his life, he has not a minute to waste. He must therefore take time by the forelock. Once it has passed, it can never be recalled. Whatever a has to do he must do it immediately.


Duties of man deman his immediate attention. Indifference and idleness to do them in time is not a good habit. Performance of daily dutues brings success in the necessary work just in time and this will crown his life with success.

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Answered by vikram991
24
here is your answer OK

Let’s first understand the true meaning of this proverb:

So, we have, A stitch in time, saves nine : if you sort out a problem immediately it may save extra work later !

This proverbial expression was obviously meant as an incentive to the lazy. It's especially gratifying that 'a stitch in time saves nine' is an anagram for 'this is meant as incentive'. You use this proverb to say that it is better to spend a little time to deal with problems or act right now than wait. If you wait until late, things will get worse, and it will take much longer to deal with them.

OK I take example ....

When I was a kid, we had a mouse problem in my house. Well, we had a mouse, that I managed to chase into a hole in the baseboards. We stuffed it with steel wool, and decided we’d call an exterminator when we got around to it.

A week passed.

Funny thing about mice: they breed in no time at all.

Suddenly, what we thought was a mouse was now a nest of mice in our wall.

Now the whole house had to be fumigated; it cost about twice as much as it would have if we had taken care of it the previous week.

All that trouble and expense just because we couldn’t be bothered to make the call right away.

Now that I think about it, “exterminate a mouse immediately” is not a bad substitute for the proverb. But that’s what it means: solving a problem immediately saves it from becoming bigger later.
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