Hindi, asked by ishika383889, 3 months ago



Q-1 [1] નીચેના વિકલ્પોમાંથી સાચો વિકલ્પ પસંદ કરી જવાબ આપો.

1, તંત્રીને સંક્ષિપ્ત સમાચારની નોંધ મોકલતી વખતે શું મોકલવું જરૂરી છે?
(a) વિનંતી પત્ર
(b) સંબોધન
(c) પત્રનો ઉદેસંગ
(d) શુભ સંદેશ

2. કવિએ માતાને કોના પ્રેમની પૂતળી કહી છે?
(a) પતિના
(b) વિશ્વના
(c) પ્રભુના
(d) પિતાના

3. ગાંધીજીએ કયો વિષય કેવળ બુધ્ધિનો સીધો ને સરળ પ્રયોગ લાગ્યો?
(a) ગણિત
(b) ભૂમિત
(c) સંસ્કૃત
(d) ફારસી

4. સુરત શહેર કઇ નદીના કિનારે આવેલું છે?
(a) મહી
(b) વિશ્વામિત્રી
(c) નર્મદા
(d) તાપી

5. ‘સમાચાર’ શબ્દ મૂળ કઇ ભાષાનો છે?
(a) ગુજરાતી
(b) હિન્દી
(c) મરાઠી
(d) સંસ્કૃત

6. ‘મીઠો' સંજ્ઞાના પ્રકાર જણાવો.
(a) વ્યક્તિ વાચક
(b) ભાવવાચક
(c) જાતિવાચક
(d) ચોરવાડના

7. વીર+ઇશ્વર નું સંધિ જોડો.
(a) વીરેશ્વર
(b) વિરેશ્વર
(c) વીરશ્વર
(d) વિશ્વરે

8. ક્યાંના ખારવા ખલાસી જગમશહૂર છે?
(a) જલાલપોરના
(b) ભીમપોરના
(c) પોરવાડના
(d) ચોરવાડના

9. ભારતમાં થર્મોપોલી તરીકે કયું સ્થળ જાણીતું છે?
(a) કતારગામ
(b) બારડોલી
(c) હરિપુરા
(d) વરાછા

10. કવિએ માતાને કોના પ્રેમની પૂતળી કહી છે?
(a) પતિના
(b) વિશ્વના
(c) પ્રભુના
(d) પિતાના

Answers

Answered by prajwalchaudhari
0

Answer:

વિશ્વના,બારડોલી,પિતાના

Answered by hasumatebensuthar
0

Answer:

Roshni Bairwa remembers running all the way from her home in Tonk’s Mahmoodnagar

Dhani village to the room where the ‘bal samooh’ (children’s group) met. “My

grandparents are getting me married, you have to do something,” the then 12-year-old

told the 20 or so children sitting there.

The children, all aged between eight and 16, trooped up to Roshni’s house and urged

her grandparents to stop the impending wedding. Others, including village elders and

teachers, joined in. The wedding was stopped. She had discovered a way out of the

quagmire with the help of a local NGO and the village children.

When she was in class XII, the pressure to get married returned. This time her uncle

found a match for her. When she resisted, she was taunted and beaten. People would

point to her as the girl who brought shame to her family and asked their children not to

speak to her. “I was 16 years old and alone in the world. I walked to school with my eyes

fixed to the ground. I would think sometimes, what have I done that is so terrible for

everyone to hate me so much?

I would cry myself to sleep,” recalls Roshni, who lost her father when she was two and

had been abandoned by her mother shortly after. But even in those dark moments,

Roshni didn’t give up, moving out of the village to Peeplu tehsil in Rajasthan where she

rented a room and attended college.

With education and independence came a sense of confidence. “I kept in touch with the

children in the village. Every time there was child marriage, they would call me and I

would go to stop it. I realised I had already been thrown out of the village, the worst had

already happened, what else could the villagers do? So I went and fought with everyone

who was getting their child married,” she says with a laugh. So far she has stopped over a

dozen marriages.

Even without the support of the law, young girls have been crusading against the practice.

Earlier this month, 19-year-old Sushila Bishnoi from Barmer succeeded in getting her

marriage annulled, submitting photographs, and congratulatory messages from her

husband’s Facebook account to the court. The court accepted these as evidence that the

union took place when both the bride and groom were 12 years old and declared the

marriage invalid.

Seema Bairwal (name changed) was 15 when she was married to a man a few years

older. Later when she started attending ‘bal samooh’ meetings with NGO Shiv Shiksha

Samiti and Save the Children, it dawned on her that she had a choice. “I learnt that my life

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