Math, asked by ak1v7070707, 1 year ago

what ruckus did toto create at lunch time one day​

Answers

Answered by Anushkasingh456
35

Answer:

One day, at lunch-time, a large dish of pullaostood in thecentre of the dining-table. We entered the room to find Toto stuffinghimself with rice. My grandmother screamed — and Toto threw aplate at her. One of my aunts rushed forward — and received a glassof water in the face. When Grandfather arrived, Toto picked up thedish of pullaoand made his exit through a window. We foundhim in the branches of the jackfruit tree, the dish still in hisarms. He remained there all afternoon, eating slowly through therice, determined on finishing every grain. And then, in order tospite Grandmother, who had screamed at him, he threw the dishdown from the tree, and chattered with delight when it broke intoa hundred pieces.Obviously Toto was not the sort of pet we could keep for long.Even Grandfather realised that. We were not well-to-do, and couldnot afford the frequent loss of dishes, clothes, curtains andwallpaper. So Grandfather found the tonga-driver, and sold Totoback to him — for only three rupees.  

                                                                              RUSKINBOND

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Answered by shrianshsundan948
4

One day, at lunch-time, a large dish of pullaostood in thecentre of the dining-table. We entered the room to find Toto stuffinghimself with rice. My grandmother screamed — and Toto threw aplate at her. One of my aunts rushed forward — and received a glassof water in the face. When Grandfather arrived, Toto picked up thedish of pullaoand made his exit through a window. We foundhim in the branches of the jackfruit tree, the dish still in hisarms. He remained there all afternoon, eating slowly through therice, determined on finishing every grain. And then, in order tospite Grandmother, who had screamed at him, he threw the dishdown from the tree, and chattered with delight when it broke intoa hundred pieces.Obviously Toto was not the sort of pet we could keep for long.Even Grandfather realised that. We were not well-to-do, and couldnot afford the frequent loss of dishes, clothes, curtains andwallpaper. So Grandfather found the tonga-driver, and sold Totoback to him — for only three rupees.  

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