English, asked by indu14319, 7 months ago

write a article on the topic:Life during the age of social distancing​

Answers

Answered by 2000059anshika
1

Explanation:

It is so boring, so boring, I can’t tell you!” says Veena Iyer, repeating the two words so that there is no smidgen of doubt over how she feels about having to miss her twice-a-week dance classes. For Iyer and her friends, the afternoon classes at The Rising Groove Dance Academy in Mumbai’s Lal Baug meant a chance to meet friends, exercise and, of course, dance with gusto. “We used to look forward to it a lot. Otherwise, who will go out in the hot sun!” she exclaims.

For two weeks now, though, Iyer has been despondent as the classes have been cancelled. But she does not quibble over the reasoning. “They are doing it for our safety as we are more prone to it at our age,” she muses, referring to Covid-19, the current pandemic caused by the novel coronavirus that is sweeping the world. After all, Iyer and her dance-class batchmates are all over 60 (Iyer herself is 70), putting them squarely in the bracket of the age group most at risk from the virus.

In putting away their dancing shoes, the group of 10 enthusiastic women who would otherwise never skip a class join the rest of the country in a collective bid to stall the relentless march of Covid-19.

Social media is giving us an outlet to articulate a unified experience. In this context, the virus has, ironically, really brought home the adage that there is more that unites than divides us,” adds Khursheed. “It has underlined that in a way that nothing else has underlined it as far as global experiences go.”

i hope it help...

Answered by arpitozha
1

Explanation:

Working from home was never so good. Five tips from a pro for social distancers and the social distanced on not just how to survive self-quarantine but thrive in it.

I’ve been described – well, accused of– being a professional homebody, preferring to work from home, rather than working from a place where there are urinals instead of just a commode, and more elbows in the vicinity than I would care for.

It turns out that because of my experience, I have become somewhat of an expert, dare I say a guru, on working from home. My penchant for not stepping out of my comfort rekha even after work is done and dusted has also, perhaps inadvertently, put me  ..

For starters, it isn’t deleterious if you can make hay regardless of whether the sun is shining or not. And two, ‘deleterious’ means ‘anything that causes harm or damage’ -- something that, in these times of coronavirus, you should jolly well have looked up in the dictionary (if you didn’t know its meaning) since you now have oodles of spare time.

Well, of course, you’ll have a distinct advantage if, like Count Dracula, you don’t like stepping outdoors – except, unlike misunderstood l ..

hope this helps you

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