English, asked by diamondpragati, 8 months ago

write a composition of lockdown amist covid-19 which have have prepositions and adjective , list the kind of sentence in the composition. assertive, exclamatory, interrogative. and also corporate Antonyms and synonyms in the competition​

Answers

Answered by rajjbpathan
1

Answer:

Lockdown’ paints a picture of a security threat, of confining yourself from a deadly enemy or keeping the enemy confined. Rightly so. In this case, the enemy is invisible, and is stealthily infecting people and waging a war inside them.

Lockdown’ paints a picture of a security threat, of confining yourself from a deadly enemy or keeping the enemy confined. Rightly so. In this case, the enemy is invisible, and is stealthily infecting people and waging a war inside them.The word ‘Lock’ is derived from the Old English ‘loc’, meaning fastening; ‘down’ comes from the Middle English word, ‘doun’, according to the Macmillan Dictionary blog. It usually implies a confinement measure to protect from harm. By Tuesday afternoon, all of India was pretty much under lockdown, including 32 states and union territories. This means three out of four Indians are restricted to their homes. While the lockdown began on Sunday as a “Janata curfew” (people’s curfew), a voluntary move of citizens to practice social distancing on the request of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, now the lockdown is being enforced with police forces keeping a check on people’s movements in every neighbourhood and only essential services like groceries and pharmacies serving people.

plz mαrk αѕ вrαnlíѕt

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

In an unfortunate incident reported on April 21, a 12-year-old child died after walking over 100 kilometres from her workplace in Bhupalpally district of Telangana to her native village in Chattisgarh’s Bijapur district. She was 11 kilometres away from home. At any other point in time, this may seem an extreme episode or an anomaly. But not today, when there have been far too many disturbing images and reports of millions of migrants walking back to their homes after a nationwide lockdown came into force in March.

The mass exodus of migrants from our cities has raised concerns over an impending economic crisis: What will happen to industries that are dependent on them for labour? While this articulation can be leveraged to bring attention to the plight of migrant workers, who have thus far been rendered invisible in our cities, such an economic focus could eclipse the needs of vulnerable groups who are not ‘economically productive’. Children of migrant families are one such vulnerable group.

Similar questions