Reading and Writing Exercises
Reading and Writing Exercises
Reading and Writing Exercises
Exercise-1
William Shakespeare was born in Stratford-upon-Avon, allegedly on April 23, 1564. Church
records from Holy Trinity Church indicate that he was baptized there on April 26, 1564.
Young William was born of John Shakespeare, a glover and leather merchant, and Marry
Arden, a landed local heiress. William, according to the church register, was the third of
eight children in the Shakespeare household —three of whom died in childhood. John
Shakespeare had a remarkable of success as a merchant, alderman, and high
bailiff of Stratford, during William's early childhood. His fortunes declined, however, in the
late 1570s. For all his and celebration, William Shakespeare remains
a figure with regards to personal history. There are just two primary sources
for information on the Bard: his works, and various legal and documents that
have survived from Elizabethan times. Naturally, there are many gaps in this body of
information, which tells us little about Shakespeare the man.
Exercise-2
chard Morris, of the school of accounting at the University of NSW, which requires an
entrance score in the top 5 per cent of students, says attendance has been a problem since
the late 1990s."Sometimes in the lectures we've only got about one third of
students attending," he said." It definitely is a problem. If you don't turn up
to class you're missing out on the whole of the experience: you don't think a
whole lot, you don't engage in debates with other students — or with your teachers." It is
not all , said Professor John Dearn, a Pro Vice-Chancellor at the University of
Canberra, who said the internet was the way students access and use
information. "It is strange that despite all the evidence as to their
ineffectiveness, lectures seem to persist in our universities."
Exercise-3
he horned desert viper's ability to hunt at night has always puzzled biologists. Though it lies
with it head buried in the sand, it can with great as soon as
prey appears. Now, Young and physicists Leo van Hemmen and Paul Friedel at the Technical
University of Munich in Germany have the computer of the
snake's auditory system to explain how the snake "hears" its prey without really having the
ears for it. Although the vipers have internal ears that can hear between 200
and 1000 hertz, it is not the sound of the mouse scurrying about that they are detecting.
"The snakes don't have external eardrums," says van Hemmen. "So unless the mouse wears
boots and starts stamping, the snake won't hear it."
Exercise-4
m Lab's digital mural at the entrance to Tokyo's Sky tree, one of the world's monster
skyscrapers, is 40 metres long and immensely detailed. But however this form
of digital art becomes — and it's a form subject to rampant inflation — Nook’s theories
about seeing are based on more modest and often pre-digital . An early
devotee of comic books and cartoons (no surprises there), then computer games, he
recognised when he started to look at Japanese art that all those forms had
something in common: something about the way they captured space. In his discipline of
physics, Inoko had been taught that photographic lenses, along the conventions
of western art, were the logical way of transforming three dimensions into two, conveying
the real world on to a flat surface. But Japanese traditions employed "a
different logic", as he said in an interview last year with j-collabo.org that is
"uniquely Japanese".
Exercise-5
Film is where art meets commerce. AS Orson Welles said: "A painter just needs a brush and
the writer just needs a pen, but the producer needs an army." And an army needs money. A
producer is just like an entrepreneur; we money to make films. First we need to
find an original idea or a book or a play and purchase the rights, then we need money to
develop that idea often a reasonably small sum. Besides to commission a writer for the
screenplay isn't something you would want to gamble your own money on, so you find a
partner. We are lucky here in the UK, we have Film 4, BBC Films and the UK
Film Council, all of are good places to develop an idea. Producing in Britain is
very different to producing in America or Europe because the economic
dynamic is different.
Exercise-6
Music is an important part of our lives. We connect and interact with it daily and use it as a
way of projecting our self-identities to the people around us. The music we enjoy - whether
it's country or classical rock n roll or rap – who we are. But where did music,
at its core, first come from? It's a puzzling question that may not have a definitive answer.
One researcher, however, has proposed that the key to understanding the
origin of music is nestled snugly in the loving bond between mother and child. In a lecture
at the University of Melbourne, Richard Parncutt, an Australian-born professor of systematic
musicology, endorsed the idea that music originally spawned from'motherese' - the playful
voices mothers when speaking to infants and toddlers. As the theory goes,
increased human brain sizes caused by evolutionary changes occurring between one and
2,000,000 years ago resulted in earlier births, more fragile infants and a
need for stronger relationships between mothers and their newborn babies. According to
Parncutt, who is based at the University of Graz in Austria,'motherese' arose as a way to
strengthen this maternal bond and to help an infant's survival.
Exercise-7
We live in a bizarre universe. One of the greatest mysteries in the whole of science is the
prospect that 75% of the universe is made up from a mysterious known as
'Dark Energy, which causes an acceleration of the cosmic expansion. Since a further 21% of
the Universe is made up from invisible 'Cold Dark Matter' that can only be
through its gravitational effects, the ordinary atomic matter making up the rest is apparently
only 4% of the total cosmic budget. These require a shift in our
perception as great as that made after Copernicus that the Earth moves
around the Sun. This lecture will start by reviewing the chequered history of Dark Energy,
not only since Einstein's proposal for a similar entity in 1917, but by tracing the concept
back to Newton's ideas. This lecture will the current evidence for Dark Energy
and future surveys in which UCL is heavily involved: the "Dark Energy Survey", the Hubble
Space Telescope and the proposed Euclid space mission.
Exercise-8
Omniscience may be a foible of men, but it is not so of books. Knowledge, as Johnson said,
is of two you may know a thing yourself, and you may know where to find it.
Now the amount which you may actually know yourself must, at its best, be limited, but
what you may know of the of information may, with proper training, become
almost boundless. And here comes the and use of reference books—the
working of one book in connection with another—and applying your own
to both. By this means we get as near to that omniscient volume which tells everything as
ever we shall get, and although the single volume or work which tells everything does not
exist, there is a vast number of reference books in existence, knowledge and proper use of
which is essential to every intelligent person. Necessary as I believe reference books to be,
they can easily be made to be to idleness, and too mechanical a use
should not be made of them.
Exercise-9
Capital has often been thought of narrowly as physical capital - the machines, tools, and
equipment used in the production of other goods, but our wealth and wellbeing
also on natural capital. If we forget this, we risk the services
that natural ecosystems provide, which support our economies and sustain our lives. These
services include purifying our water, our climate, reducing flood risk, and
pollinating our crops. The Natural Capital Project — a partnership among WWF, The Nature
Conservancy, University of Minnesota and Stanford University — works to provide decision-
makers with ways to assess the true value of the services that ecosystems
provide. An essential element of the Natural Capital Project is developing tools that help
decision-makers protect biodiversity and ecosystem services.
Exercise-10
Everybody needs fresh water. water people, animals and plants cannot live.
Although a few plants and animals can make do with saltwater, all humans need a constant
supply of fresh water if they are to stay and healthy. Of the total supply of water
on the Earth, only about 3 percent of it is fresh, and most of that is stored as ice and snow at
the poles, or is so under the surface of the Earth that we cannot get to it.
Despite so much of the water being out of reach, we still have a million cubic miles of it that
we use. That's about 4,300,000 cubic kilometres of freshwater to share out
between most of the plants, animals and people on the planet.
Exercise-11
Rudman looks at how poor understanding of maths has led historians to false conclusions
about the mathematical of early societies. Rudman's final observation-
that ancient Greece enjoys progress in the subject while failing to teach it
at school-leads to a punchline; mathematics could be better learnt after
we school.
Exercise-12
While it’s no wonder that dogs are as man’s best friends, little is known about
the origins of this friendship. It is presumed that dogs were one of the first animals to
be by humans. One notable effect of this long relationship with humans is
that unlike other canine species, dogs can on a carbohydrate-rich diet.
Historically, dogs have been helping us in many ways, but recently they are also assisting
people with disabilities and in therapy. Patients who were administered dog
therapy demonstrated decreased stress increased happiness, and energy
levels.
Exercise-13
It is important to the need for hard work as an essential part of studying law,
because far too many students are tempted to think that they can succeed by relying on
what they imagine to be their natural ability, without bothering to add the expenditure of
effort. To take an analogy some people prefer the more or less instant
which comes from watching television adaptation of a classic novel to the rather
Despite progress over the last two , still more than 35 per cent of the urban
population of the less developed regions was living in slums in 2005-2007. In the least
developed countries 71 per cent of the urban dwellers lived in slums. This proportion is very
high in sub-Saharan Africa , from 61 per cent in Western Africa to 71 per
cent in Middle Africa. It is also very high in Sudan, where 94 per cent of the urban dwellers
live in slums. In Asia this proportion is 33 per cent, close to the average of the less
developed , and 22 percentage points lower than in Africa. Twentyfive per
cent of the urban population of Western Asia lives in slums, a percentage significantly lower
than the world average. Lack of access to safe drinking water and adequate sanitation are
typical characteristics of urban slums. Access to safe water and adequate sanitation are
among the indicators used to monitor progress toward sustainability.
Globally, 134 million urban dwellers (4 per cent) lacked to an improved
water supply in 2008 and 806 million (24 per cent) lacked adequate sanitation services. Most
of these people lived in informal, overcrowded urban settlements in developing countries,
particularly in Africa and Asia.
Exercise-15
Dogs make great . Because both man and man's best friend use analogous
brain regions to process the voices. Researchers collected almost 200 sound samples,
including human and canine vocalizations, as well as noises and silence.
They played these clips to 22 people and 11 dogs while the subjects' brains
were functional MRI scans. Human brains tuned in most to vocal sounds.
Dog brains were most sensitive to environmental noises. But they still had a lot in common.
A brain area reacted to the vocalizations of their own species. That
area also responded to the voices of other species. Meanwhile, a different brain region
noted emotion in a voice, with a strong to cheery sounds like
and weaker reaction to unhappy noises. The study is in the journal Current Biology.
Exercise-16
The sleep cycle of four stages and lasts about 90 to 120 minutes. Dreams
can occur in any of the four stages of sleep. In 5 percent cases, dreams occur in the last
stage of sleep to as REM sleep stage. Often the sleep cycle repeats after an
hour and the process continues. That is how a person has several different dreams in one
night. Most people remember dreams that occur in the morning when they are about to
wake up. But, some persons can’t remember their dreams. The stages in the sleep cycle
are by the changes in the specific brain activity. In stage one, man is in
NREM when muscle relaxation, lowered body temperature and slowed heart rate is
observed. In the dreaming process, adrenaline is secreted, blood pressure increases and
heart beats become faster. People with a weak heart may die in sleep. Researchers have
shown that people who are deprived from REM, exhibit symptoms of and
anxiety. Deprivation of REM sleep causes over-senility, lack of concentration and memory
loss. So, dreaming helps tackle stress, the mind is recharged and the body is revitalized.
Dreaming transcends the mere unconscious aspects of social, emotional and personal
awareness.