Science, asked by SwadhaMourya, 1 month ago

write an intresting discriptive paragraph on" my unique bookshelf "
answer according to class 6
english grammar ​

Answers

Answered by loveablemuffin13
1

Answer:

I remove books from my shelves. I grab multiple spines between my thumb and fingers, slide out the volumes and pile them on my desk, on the floor — soon my room is like a messy cave of paper and multicolored covers and spines. The wall behind my desk is bland, covered in empty cubes, spacious and clean. I am reminded of a time, not so long ago, when my entire book collection did not even fit on the six shelves of a Billy bookcase.

As I take the books out of their bookcases, crack open a few to see if the words inside still have the same ring, and admire the beauty of some covers, I start to understand that there are some books I do no want anymore. There is a vital difference between books you do not need and books you no longer want to have. I would willingly keep a book I hated if it had a nice cover (and I do, like Kazuo Ishiguro’s Nocturnes, a silly collection of short stories with a stunning, elegant cover). The books I am ready to give away are books I don’t care about: they are ugly, I have had them for too long, I have never read them and never will — they simply become a waste of space.

Take How to Read Novels Like a Professor, a paperback I bought a couple of years ago, in an attempt to uncover some of literature’s secrets before entering University. I drop the book with the other giveaways. A few days later I pick it up again and this passage catches my attention: “Books lead to books, ideas to ideas. You can wear out a hundred hammocks and never reach the end. And that’s the good news.” I certainly agree with that. No English major would be supposed to be caught dead with such a preposterously titled book in their library, and maybe that’s the reason why I wanted to give it away in the first place. I decide to keep it in my collection after all — for now.

In the end I’ve put aside two dozen books in the giveaway pile. By no means am I kidding myself that I’m actually getting rid of a large chunk of my library. I admire people who are able to rid themselves of books they love, give books away selflessly so that others can enjoy them. I know I could never do such a thing.

Explanation:

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Answered by areeshaa
1

Answer:

                                      1.

My book shelf is a huge wooden cupboard near the window sill. It contains a lot of book fro fictions and fantasies  to biographies of famous people. On rainy days I sit beside the window sill with a huge mug of coffee in my hand and a book. I love the smell of books as I flip softly through the pages reading stories of dragons, gypsies, queens and kings, fairy tales and treasure isles,and distant shores.

I'm immersed into the world of pirates with purple pants, sailing ships and cannibals crouching around the pot stirring away at something hot. Oh and not to forget Harry potter and Voldemort, Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet and The great Gatsby.

Nevertheless these stories make me get into a world of imagination and creativity so even if it is a bit old fashioned I will continue reading books this way.

                                       2.

Behind my desk, in my bedroom, there is a large bookcase divided into 25 cubes. On the wall facing my desk there are three bookshelves. Instead of a table, there is also a shelf at my bedside. Beside my desk is an additional bookcase, the Billy model from IKEA, with six shelves. All this shelf space amounts to about 56 feet.

I have turned my attention to my bookshelves and not what stand on them because I am reorganizing my personal library. I need to know how much space I have for my books, in order to accommodate the existing space for a logical, efficacious, and personalized classification system for the books I own, which currently amount to just short of 500 volumes. My endeavor, of course, is not a very great one. I do have a considerable number of books, but by no means is my collection large or unwieldy. I’m only 12, and as such my library is not a lifetime’s library — it is only the nucleus of a true library, with burgeoning interests, mistakes, discoveries, a few treasures, and several shortcomings.

I am in love with my unique book shelf. i would also suggest you to make a unique book shelf in your house because books are very good things and also books are our friends.

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