English, asked by chiku9448, 1 year ago

write an article on no pain on gain​

Answers

Answered by itzunknown01
4

Answer:

The proverb, no pain no gain means no effort, no success. Parents make their children pursue education since childhood, aiming to lead a better life. With peerless parental love, they want their children to be educated people. They often tell us to work hard at our lessons. They beat or scold us if we do not study well because their life experience proves that “No pain, no gain.”

We cannot succeed in life without taking pains. To pass examination, students must attend classes regularly and learn their lessons daily. If we do not work hard, we will meet failure no merely in examinations but also in life. Similarly, a continuous training is necessary for soldiers to defend themselves and to defeat the enemies in the battlefield. Not an athlete will win over games without serious training. Likewise, a healthy person possesses his sound health by doing physical exercise, taking nutritious food, drinking clean water and living a healthy lifestyle.

Here I would like to say teachers take great pains in teaching so that their students can learn more lessons and pass the examination with high marks. All these examples tell us that there is no effortless success in life. There is nothing we can get easily and readily. To sum up, we cannot gain any success without pain or effort.

Answered by swati6975
3

Answer:

No pain, no gain and no pain, no game are two phrases that are often heard. However, one expression is a well-known proverb and the other is an eggcorn, which is a misheard phrase, saying, lyric or slogan that retains the original meaning. A proverb is a short, common saying or phrase that gives particular advice or shares a universal truth.We will examine the meaning of the correct term, where it came from and some examples of its use in sentences.

No pain, no gain is a proverb that means in order to make progress or to be successful, one must suffer. This suffering may be in a physical or mental sense. The phrase no pain, no gain was popularized in the 1980s by the American actress, Jane Fonda. Fonda initiated the aerobics workout craze with a series of videos, in which she proclaimed the ethic “No pain, no gain,” and “Feel the burn.” Interestingly, the sentiment has its roots hundreds of years earlier. Benjamin Franklin wrote in The Way to Wealth in 1758: “There are no gains without pains…” As far back as the second century, Rabbi Ben Hei Hei stated in The Ethics of the Fathers: “According to the pain is the gain.”

No pain, no game is an eggcorn of the expression no pain, no gain. It is more often heard in speech than seen in written language. Sometimes an eggcorn can become more popular than the original term, especially when the original term is obscure or hard to understand. In this case, no pain, no game is immediately recognized by most English speakers as incorrect.

Examples

“No pain, no gain in rugby,” he said referring to his crooked right arm

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