too many cooks spoil the broth please please please write a story on this proverb it's very very very compulsory please write
Answers
Many hands spoil the fun
Ram was a boy. He lived in Kolkata . He had a lot of naughty friends who used to always fight. They all studied in the same school.
One day, their geography teacher gave them a project. They had to make a model of the universe with balls. Ram told his friends to help him. They prepared a beautiful model with many planets. They took it to their school.
When they were placing it on the display table, a wire came loose. Ram said that he would fix it. He started to fix it. His naughty friends started fiddling with the wire too. Suddenly, the whole model came loose. Planets started rolling on the floor.
Their teacher rebuked them and told them to clean up. Truly, too many cooks spoiled the broth.
Answer:
The answer:
Explanation:
This famous proverb literally means that when many cooks are engaged to prepare the broth they will spoil it instead of making it delicious as every cook will cook it according to his own taste and talent. Similarly, consuming or carrying anything too much beyond certain limit will affect bad consequences instead the good result.
When the broth is to be prepared, one is to appoint appropriate number of cooks required according to the quantity and quality of the broth needed. In the similar manner when one loads things of even light weight one must be keenly careful on the quantity to be loaded, not to exceed the capable limit. Similarly when a project is started it should be carried out under the guidance of one main brain. If many persons do the same project they will all use their own ideas and disturb the project. Their ideas may lead to failure. Then nobody bears the responsibility for failure blaming others. It is meaningless and difficult to blame for the damage done to the project. It is not the case of the bigger projects alone but it is widely seen in domestic affairs. When a decision is to be taken or an affair is to be solved, everyone suggest his own idea. If one takes the advice of many brains he will surely spoil his game.
The well-known Tamil poet and sage Thiruvalluvar has said a statement to illustrate this proverb. The feather of the peacock is of lightweight. Yet, if the light weighing feathers are loaded beyond the limit on a cart, the pivot of the cart will get broken. Similarly a student should study his subjects one by one and day by day. If he tries to study all the subjects at the same time he will get confused and so he cannot excel in the examination.
So, when the adequacy is exceeded then everything will get collapsed and thereby spoilt.