English, asked by pranithande29, 3 months ago

Life Before and During Pandemic.
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Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

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→ I being an Intermediate student, I want to share my experience on the Covid-19 Lockdown and Unlock for student’s life. During this coronavirus time as being students, have advantages and disadvantages. I was initially happy about the virus because there was a lockdown all over India, there were no schools and colleges, had an ash life initially enjoying all the day with playing games, watching movies right from the morning to the night. At once, an instant of time, I thought there was no movie for me to watch. Waiting for unlocking situation to meet friends and relatives. Still, things are not settled to meet the friends and relatives

Slowly taking online class after some time in the lockdown period onwards. Initially Online classes feel better. Where there was a complete change in the situation of the class’s atmosphere. After a month came to know that there are lots of disadvantages and advantages to this type of education. Finally came to know that this virus is not a blessing to students but a foreshadow of the student’s further life to adjust the Online mode of education. The shift in education is totally different from all my education career. This type of online course seen in Software Engineers attending from home. Taking time to adjust in college courses.

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Answered by ajitchikun
0

Answer:

Life after the Covid-19 outbreak will never be the same. We are at the beginning of the end, waiting for a new beginning. Planet Earth will break its cooperation agreement with mankind unless we urgently revise our behaviour.

The forecasts appear one by one. Some of them are more optimistic, some not. But almost everyone agrees that, despite a decline of such unprecedented scale, humanity will still find the strength to recover.

Values will change, our lives and habits will change, and our homes will also change under that influence. With that in mind, here are seven predictions for the changes that might occur.

Houses, not apartments

High-rise buildings were designed to organise as many people as possible in one place. Health and hygiene were not a consideration. In times of pandemic, it is necessary to reduce contact with everything that is used in multi-storey buildings: elevators, elevator buttons, door handles, surfaces and, above all, neighbours.

After forced self-isolation on different floors above the ground, often without a balcony or terrace, we will all desperately want to have a house. It can be small, but with a courtyard and a terrace where you can have coffee in the morning.

Throughout time, the primary function of the house has been safety. Initially, it served as a hiding place from bad weather and predatory animals. Then, tall stone fortresses were built to prevent the enemy from getting in. Today, people need a house that can effectively provide social isolation.

More than an escape from routine and urban chaos, the house now offers a retreat from viruses and infections. Urbanisation takes a step back as we relocate to small villages and city suburbs.

Bunkers better than open-plan

Among survivalists – those constantly training to survive a coming apocalypse – there was already a trend for fortified buildings. But now we can expect that trend to become more widespread.

Looking at our real experience, films about the end of the world no longer seem to be so fantastic. The desire to prepare your home for natural or man-made hazards is no longer surprising. There will not only be a garage near the house, but also a hopper, or at least a fortified “minus” floor with a pantry for food and water.

We’ll also be saying goodbye to one of the main trends of recent years: open-plan spaces, with the entrance, living room, dining space and kitchen united. In the aftermath of the pandemic, the entrance area will be separated so that we can leave our shoes, clothing and belongings on the street, rather than carry dirt into the living quarters.

Satellite internet is currently an expensive and inconvenient service, accessible only to certain individuals and organisations, such as maritime transport, mining and construction companies, and military organisations. In the future, developments for civilian use will be accelerated, offering us very quick access to the internet.

Once upon a time, long, long ago, there was a land where people stood next to each other all the time. Sometimes they hugged each other, and sometimes they said excuse me, either because they burped or were trying to get past that person in the aisle of the movie theater.

Sometimes they would ride the bus, and a stinky person would sit next to them. They would just try to move their body as far away as they could while sitting next to that person on the bus. Other times they would just get up and hold the strap or the pole on the bus and just stand next to somebody else who didn’t smell quite as bad.

Every once in a while, either coming out of the grocery store or going into it, someone would ask if you would like their cart, and you would say sure and not think twice.

In this land, people visited each other at someone’s house or in a restaurant or bar. You sat right next to each other on the couch, at a table or on a stool. Sometimes there weren’t enough stools and you just crammed in all together next to the bar. Sometimes people forgot their manners and double dipped their chips in the salsa, but pretended like they hadn’t and no one got terribly sick when they did.

In this far away land, sometimes people had dirty hands. They really intended to wash them, but had totally forgotten. And then when they were in a meeting in their department, they hid their hands under the desk or curled their fingers so no one could see their nails.

In this land, people had their hair done, wore make up and combed their hair. They made sure when they went somewhere there wasn’t a ton of dog hair on their clothes and brushed it off with a lint brush before they left the house. Otherwise people would crinkle their nose at them and raise their brows in disapproval.

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