Sunday, June 6, 2021

Communicative English Unit 2 Task Answers, 1st Year, 2nd Semester, UG Arts and Science Degree, TANSCHE syllabus, Tamil Nadu State Council For Higher Education

 

      Communicative English

Unit - II

SPEAKING

Making Short Speeches

Activity 1: (Book Page No- 68)

 

Prepare a two-minute welcome address for the following formal events and present it.

1. Sports Day

Ans: Respected Chief Guest of this evening, Our Principal, Professors, Non-teaching staff members and students,

     I am very happy for giving this opportunity to welcome you on this wonderful day. This is the 25th Annual sports day of our college.

     I welcome our Chief Guest Dr. Sekar, the Director to inaugurate the events and take the salute at the march past. On behalf of our Principal, Professors, Non-teaching staff members and students I extend a warm welcome to you, sir.

     I present my best wishes to students participating in march past and other events that are soon to commence. Once again, I welcome everyone here today on behalf of our college. Thank you one and all.

 

2. Independence Day Celebrations

Ans: I take it as an honor to stand in front of you to welcome you all to the celebrations of the 72nd Independence Day.

     We celebrate this day every year to pay our tributes to our brave martyrs and our armed forces. This is a day of pride and joy for every citizen of the country.

     I extend this welcome to our Principal and all the staff members, students, NCC, NSS and Red cross who are participating in this function.

 

3. A workshop organised by your department

Ans: I am happy to welcome the Resource Person Dr. Ravi and Dr. Vijaya on the occasion of inauguration of one day national workshop on “Nature, Scripture and Literature.” The participants have come from different colleges. As Organizer of the workshop I welcome all to this workshop.

     Before we begin this workshop, I would like to express my heartfelt gratitude to all of you who were sincerely committed to this event to make it success.

  

4. Teacher’s day celebrations

Ans: Our respected Principal, loving Teachers and dear Students, warm greetings to everyone.

     It is my privilege to welcome Dr.Sathya who was come as Chief Guest to participate in the Teachers’ Day function. We have us our honourable Principal and other special invitees to grace this function. Finally, once again I welcome you all. Thank you

 

5. An intercollegiate competition

Ans: On behalf of our college, I Geetha from 1st year B.A English Literature, extend a very sincere, warm welcome to all of you present here for the inter-collegiate competition.

     Before we starting this competition, I would like to thank our guest Prof. Lakshmi, for taking her precious time and gracing the occasion with her presence.

     I want to thank our respected Principal for accepting to conduct this program. Our lovable Professor have supported us in many ways to conduct this competition. I am sure, have come well prepared for this competition.

     It is time to start the competition and I am happy to welcome our Principal to inaugurate the competition. Thank you, everyone.

 

6. A guest lecture in your department

Ans: As the Head of the Department of English, I welcome Dr. Sankar who has come over here to deliver a lecture on “Indian contemporary Writings.” I am sure the lecture will enlighten us and help us to analyze the trends available now.

     On this occasion I express my greetings to the Principal and the faculty members who have found time to be present here. Finally I welcome you one and all.

 

7. An award giving ceremony in an international event

Ans: It is a big pleasure to share this evening with all of you to celebrate an award giving ceremony. I welcome you all to this wonderful event.

     I express my sincere thanks to the committee for such great and excellent event. Owing to his painstaking work, I have the honour of congratulating the winner of the ‘Best Teacher of the Year award’. I am sure that every one of you will, in future, contribute to the common well being of the whole community.

     Conclusively, I want to thank all of you for attending this event.

 

Activity 2:

Prepare a two-minute speech to be given on the following informal occasions

1. The 25th Wedding Anniversary of a relation

Ans: I am glad that my parents celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary on this May 26th at Sri Marriage Hall, Vellore. They have had a pleasant and smooth sailing all these 25 years. It is really encouraging and interesting to see this made of each other couple who have achieved the distinction of living together happily during this long tenure. Be the part of this family, I am happy to welcome all the invitees who have gathered here to wish this couple.

 

2. To your juniors at a Farewell organised by them.

Ans: This is a pleasant and memorable occasion when senior and juniors mingle together. We thank our juniors for organizing this wonderful celebration for us. We enjoyed our college days. During this period, we learnt lot of things. I wish all the juniors to complete your degree and bar a fruitful career ahead. Thank you all.

 

3. At the retirement function of a friend.

Ans: Good evening to all. I am happy to be part of my friends’ retirement function. I am the most suitable to speak about her because both of us joined this office on the same day. She is quite popular with all of us because she has served with selfless devotion in this department. I am so much impressed by her record of service.

     At this time when we bid farewell to her, I pray to the almighty to bless with long life, good health and prosperity. Thank you.

  

READING AND WRITING

Writing Opinion Pieces

Read the following Op-Ed articles: (Book Page No- 72)

1. The Book in My Hand (by Ramachandra Guha).

https://www.thehindu.com/books/The-book-in-myhand/article16443755.ece

Ans: A weekly column on what well-known personalities are reading and planning to read. This week, it is historian and writer Ramachandra Guha and author Anish Sarkar.

 

Ramachandra Guha

     I am currently reading A Life Misspent, a thinly fictionalised memoir by the great poet Suryakant Tripathi ‘Nirala’, translated by Satti Khanna. The first few pages are terrific! The last book I read was Sarah Bakewell’s At the Existentialist Cafe, a riveting history of 20th century philosophy that focuses as much on individuals as on ideas. Once I am done with Nirala, I hope to turn to Nandini Sundar’s The Burning Forest. Professor Sundar is a brilliant and brave anthropologist, and her book draws on many years of research in the beautiful and war-torn region of Bastar.

 

     Ramachandra Guha is a historian and biographer based in Bengaluru. His latest book is ‘Democrats and Dissenters’.

 

Anish Sarkar

     There are two books currently by my bedside. Both are thrillers, translated into English from the original. The first is A Midsummer’s Equation by the Japanese author, Keigo Higashino (whose most famous work is The Devotion of Suspect X). The second is Operation Napoleon by Arnaldur Indridason, arguably Iceland’s most well-known crime fiction writer. Higashino’s book is a murder mystery; Indridason’s is a thriller set in World War II. In both books, the mood and pace build up gradually, but they are page-turners all the same. For a foreign reader, the imagery and cultural insights into Japan and Iceland are highly evocative and fascinating.

 

Anish Sarkar works for a consulting firm and is an author. He lives in Mumbai.

 

2. Coordinates of Safety.

 https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/opened/Coordinates-of-safety/article16643102.ece

 

Ans: Crimes against women rose during 2001-15 despite greater affluence and an improved sex ratio

If we go by the National Crime Records Bureau reports, incidence of serious crimes against women rose from 237 per day in 2001 to 313 per day in 2015. These crimes include rape, kidnapping and abduction, dowry deaths and cruelty by husbands and relatives. Minor girls, adolescent and old women are frequently victims of brutal rapes and murders. Of these crimes, 30 per cent were rapes (including intent to rape). Higher incidence of crimes during 2001-2015 coupled with low conviction rate of 21 per cent of cases reported suggests that women are more vulnerable to serious crimes.

 

Women’s vulnerability varies enormously across States. Incidence of serious crimes was as high as 75 per lakh women in Delhi in 2015 as against approximately 5 per lakh women in Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu.

 

There are huge gaps in incidence of crimes between the three worst and the three best States. The three worst States in 2001 — Delhi, Haryana and Assam — remained largely unchanged in 2015, with Assam replacing Haryana as the second worst State. The best performers, however, changed during this period. Nagaland, Meghalaya, and Sikkim displayed the lowest incidence of crimes in 2001 but the top two were replaced by Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu in 2015. However, across States, the overall concentration of serious crimes did not change significantly. For example, the three States (Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Maharashtra) that accounted for 37 per cent of the crimes in 2001 were responsible for a slightly lower share of 34 per cent in 2015.

 

Factors behind inter-State variations

 

Here we focus on two related questions: (i) Why have crimes against women risen between 2001 and 2015? What are the factors associated with huge inter-State variation in these crimes in 2015? As answers to these questions lie in the interplay of affluence of a State, religion, demographics including female/male ratio, employment opportunities for women, their literacy, rural/urban population ratio, quality of governance in the State and media exposure, we carried out a detailed analysis that allows us to assess their individual and joint contributions to variation of serious crimes over time and across States.

 

Our analysis reveals the following effects. A 1 per cent increase in State GDP (per capita) is associated with a 0.42 per cent reduction in the incidence of serious crimes. It follows that greater affluence is accompanied by a reduction in such crimes. If alcoholism and substance abuse are lower among men, or if these addictions are better treated in more affluent States, sexual or physical assaults on women are less likely.

 

Another factor is the sex imbalance measured as the number of females per 1,000 males. The sex ratio norm is 950. India’s ratio was below this (944 in 2015). A one per cent increase in the sex ratio lowers serious crimes against women by 8 per cent. Indeed, a skewed sex rationmore than undermines the affluence effect. So, if Delhi and Haryana continue to be the worst States despite being affluent (relative to, say, Andhra Pradesh), it is largely because of the abysmally low sex ratio in these two States. While the sex ratio increased in several States but remained low (Uttar Pradesh, Delhi, Haryana and Rajasthan), in others (Bihar, Maharashtra) it remained low and barely changed.

 

Other influential factors include female literacy and labour force participation. Female bargaining power depends on both their literacy and outside employment. However, the evidence also suggests a backlash in which male spouses — especially those who are unemployed — assert their superiority by retaliatory physical and sexual violence. Our analysis points to a favourable joint effect of female literacy and labour force participation, though the positive individual effects of female literacy and labour force participation are larger. If brutality in marriage becomes unbearable, exit options for women who are both literate and employed become more viable for them. Promoting both jointly is likely to be more effective in curbing domestic violence against women.

 

A somewhat surprising finding is that the higher the rural/urban population, the higher the incidence of serious crimes against women. A one per cent decline in the rural/urban population ratio is associated with a reduction of 0.4 per cent in the incidence of such crimes. Even though such crimes in urban areas have greater visibility in the media, the grim reality is that women in rural areas are more vulnerable. Despite likely under-reporting of such crimes, it is revealing that rural women more often seek remedial action against them. This, of course, doesn’t imply that they are more likely to succeed.

 

Although cultural norms and context take diverse forms — whether, for example, it is a matriarchal or patriarchal society — religion is one key dimension. Classifying the populations into Hindus and Muslims, we find that in both groups women are vulnerable to serious crimes but more so among the former. A one per cent increase in the share of the Hindus increases such crimes by 1.64 per cent — double the incidence among Muslims. That a greater frequency of wife-beating and dowry-related violence among Hindus — in extreme cases “bride burning” — still persists is worrying.

 

Exposure to media — captured through readership of newspapers in English and major Indian languages — has two effects: one is better reporting of crimes and perhaps, more importantly, a crime deterrence effect. It is difficult to separate the two and so the combined effect is that a one per cent increase in readership is associated with a 1.9 per cent reduction in such crimes. The Delhi gang rape case of 2012, for example, wouldn’t have sparked a national uproar and led to the speedy arrest of the perpetrators without sustained media activism.

 

Governance, a key determinant

Nobel laureate Amartya Sen has emphasised that rape and other serious crimes against women are closely intertwined with inefficient policing and judicial systems, and callousness of society. So the quality of governance in States is key to understanding the huge variation in incidence of serious crimes against women. In a recent but ambitious study this year led by economist Sudipto Mundle, 19 States have been ranked on the basis of a composite indicator of governance in 2001 and 2012. This indicator combines five criteria — infrastructure, social services, fiscal performance, justice, law and order, and quality of the legislature. Even if some State rankings are intriguing because of the failure to take into account rampant political corruption, it is significant that the best five and the worst five performers remained largely unchanged during 2001-2012. Subject to this caveat and the fact that 2015 is not covered, using this measure of governance, we find that the incidence of serious crimes against women declines with better governance.

 

In conclusion, if the crimes against women rose despite greater affluence and a slight increase in the sex ratio during 2001-15, the answer must lie in likely deterioration of governance and persistence of low sex ratios in certain States. Illustrative cases include Bihar, Delhi and Maharashtra.

 

Geetika Dang is an independent researcher; Vani S. Kulkarni is with the Department of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania. Raghav Gaiha, who is with the Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard School of Public Health & Global Development Institute, University of Manchester, also contributed to the article.

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