How does the writer describe the mango tree and the village doctor?
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The mango trees of Hosahalli are extremely sour. ... Just a single bite of the fruit is enough to take the sourness straight into the brahmarandhra.
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How does the writer describe the mango tree and the village doctor?
- Hosahalli's mangoes are quite tart. The fruit's sourness can be directly absorbed into the brahmarandhra with just one bite.
- His buddies supported him and he did not lose. Varun bravely climbed a tree a week later. Then they would all climb mango trees and share mangoes while perched on the tree. The moral of the story is to always have faith in oneself.
- The topics range from misconceptions across cultures to love, death, and local politics. In one tale, a young offender falls in love, but the relationship is ended when he is caught. In another, a young girl investigates her ancestry to find out about her father who isn't there.
- Mangoes are sometimes referred to as the "king of fruits" because of their high nutritional worth. The fruit, which has been grown on Indian land since the Ramayana and Mahabharta eras, is roughly the same in the ancient book. With its mango-feciant flavour, it is extremely high in vitamin C.
- Different portions of the plant are used as a dentrifrice, antiseptic, astringent, diaphoretic, stomachic, vermifuge, tonic, laxative, and diuretic, as well as to treat piles, leucorrhoea, piles, asthma, bronchitis, cough, hypertension, and sleeplessness.
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