Science, asked by singhjitendra3797, 9 months ago

"Loss and gain are brothers twain." The appearance of proverbs in a story is usually important. Given the context of the story thus far, what is most likely the meaning of this proverb

Answers

Answered by aadhya1234
2

Answer:

Explanation:

brother are never same in the same way loss and gain never be same

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Answered by Tulsi4890
0

The meaning of this prover is that whatever we gain in life can also be lost.

  • The given question is from Tolstoy's work 'How Much Land Does a Man Need?'.
  • The story deals with the greedy nature of man and the obsession a person can have for materialistic things.
  • The protagonist of the story Pahom is a greedy peasant whose greed for acquiring land eventually kills me.
  • Tolstoy reminds his readers that the materialistic wealth that people gain through various means and tricks is also going to be lost at some point.
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