hey guys can anybody tell me:-
I hv to write a story and the starting line is my grandmother feeds the bird on the roof of my house daily...……
now u hv join the story which must be start from this line...….
according to class 9th
answer plzz its urgent and take ur points
Answers
you can write the story grandmother feeds the bird on the roof your starting like this
once upon a time my grandmother said that when we have no food to eat then we search the food to eat and go outside with rupees just like this birds search the food for eating and go every where because of this in morning i give bread peaces to the birds
i hope it is helpful for you for urgent
Explanation:
Retired care worker Penny Freeman, 69, said she could not leave her house without fear of attack from the birds, which she said swooped and vomited on her.
The gulls set up camp in her back garden to protect a nest in the chimney - and 'flapped and pecked' at Ms Freeman every time she went outside.
Ms Freeman said she and 67-year-old brother Jim were stuck inside her home in Bridlington, East Yorkshire, for four days.
She said: 'It was terrifying, absolutely terrifying. I felt like a prisoner.
'I couldn’t get to my washing, I couldn’t even leave the house from the back door because the gulls wood swoop at me, squawk, flap their wings and try to scare me away.
'It was pandemonium - really frightening. The noise was appalling. The father bird would sit on the shed which is about three feet away from the house and flap its wings.
'They also warn off predators with vomit, so when we tried to go outside, they would vomit on us. It was really vile.'
Ms Freeman told how gulls first became attracted to her property around eight months ago when she started feeding some birds in her garden.
From then on, one of the gulls became increasingly aggressive, pecking at her windows with such force that she thought the glass would break.
The birds set up home on her roof and made a nest in her chimney.
Then at the end of last month, a fledgling fell from the roof into their garden- and since then the birds have not left its side.
She and her brother Jim, who ran a convenience store before he retired, said they have been waiting with baited breath for the little chick to learn to fly so its parents would leave.
'Every time it flapped its wings we thought, "this is it, we’re free",' Ms Freeman said. 'But eventually after about four days it did fly off and its parents followed too.