Why did the narrator's new home appeal to bodh Raj?
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1. Read the following paragraph carefully. According to the format provided below, write down your answers in the format of Note Making (given below). 10 mks<br /><br /><br /><br />A promotional poster for John Wick 2 shows the widower assassin in an expensive-looking black suit, holding a Glock, while being measured by a man in shirtsleeves, presumably his tailor. Wick is of course played by Keanu Reeves, who appears to have barely aged since his days as Point Break’s Johnny Utah a quarter century ago. His hair is jet black, long and parted dead-center, the way it is in all of his best roles. His beard is slightly more grown in, and his gaze a bit more focused, but otherwise he remains Hollywood’s best blank slate. Keanu’s unique ability to seem detached from his job as an actor—the same quality that makes some critics groan because they mistake the actor for the characters he plays—has made him a divisive figure. <br /><br /><br /><br />The year was 1991. Keanu’s three films—My Own Private Idaho, Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey, and Point Break—couldn’t be more different from each other in aesthetic or ambition, and they are all very, very good. Keanu is very, very good in all of them. In her New York Times review of Point Break, Janet Maslin said Keanu “displays considerable discipline and range.” That assessment holds up today, fifty some-odd films later. Deadpan and all, Keanu’s versatility and distant acting style are part of what make him so great to watch, and why some of his roles just ooze the kind of effortless cool that people associate with golden-age Hollywood types. It helps that we know almost nothing about his personal life. He's famously tight-lipped when it comes to family and relationships, and his mixed background (born in Beirut, raised in Toronto, of British, Portuguese, Hawaiian, and Chinese ancestry) makes generalizing about him impossible. He’s the mutt in the dog park that makes all the purebreds seem fussy and lame.<br /><br />Keanu's ability to eliminate the boundary that separates himself from the character is part of what makes him interesting to watch. It’s also why he makes some people so uncomfortable. But I'd argue that's a decision he's made deliberately. Who hasn't read a great novel and mistaken the protagonist for the author? It takes skill. But it’s also what his detached swagger—his ineffable cool—is all about. He’s this ageless, unknowable, abstract sort of guy. He goes away for four months to learn Kung Fu. He's been in a bunch of motorcycle accidents. He plays bass in a band and sometimes rides the subway. –GQ Style <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />1.1 Title - <br /><br />1.a)<br /><br /> b)<br /><br />2.a)<br /><br /> b)<br /><br /> c)<br /><br />3.<br /><br />4.<br /><br /><br /><br />2. Using the Notes as guidelines, write down a Presci of the above text. Make sure that your Presci is 1/3rd the length of the original paragraph. Do not exceed the word limit. <br /><br />10 mks <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
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the narrator felt the new place comfortable but it seemed rather empty, big, and far from the city and his friends seldom came to visit him and so he felt very lonely.
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