Answer:
402, Snehasadan,
Vijaykar Wadi,
Malad,
Mumbai- 400097
2nd March 2015
Dear Jhanvi,
I hope this letter finds you well. I write this letter to you to discuss a problem that you and I have often agonised about. Remember our bumpy rides to school in the school bus? Well the stretch between SV Road at Milan Junction and the Link Road, passing through Daulat and Rizvi Nagar, is still a nightmare for commuters. I recently read in the papers that this infamous stretch has 179 potholes! To top it up, the rains have turned many of them into small pools of dirty water, the biggest among them measuring 3 X 3 metres with a depth of 10 inches! Naturally, the
motorists struggle every day to commute on this road.
The authorities may take years to act upon this problem. So it is up to us to take the necessary precautions to avoid any fatalities. We need to instruct our bus driver to steer clear of the big potholes. Driving slowly will minimise the inconvenience caused to the passengers. The water filled potholes have to be avoided since it is difficult to gauge their depth. We can also opt for an alternate route even if it takes longer to get to school. I have decided to distribute these printed instructions to other motorists who use this road. I truly believe that the frequency of accidents can be brought down considerably if everyone adheres to these instructions. Write
back to me with your views on this subject.
Yours sincerely,
Anisha
Hope it helps
Please mark me as the brainliest
Thank you
They live in mountainous areas
If the underlined word is, eggs. The answer would be:
D. Direct Object
Answer: Readers might become more sympathetic to the effects of war.
"An Episode of War" by Stephen Crane tells the story of a lieutenant who is wounded during the war. However, its intention is to make the reader more sympathetic to the effects of war. The story shows that the lieutenant is respected and admired by everyone when healthy, but despised and pitied when he is wounded and cannot longer fight. The story highlights how people tend to glorify the war and ignore the negative effects it leaves on the people who fight in them.
In this case I believe they mean the same thing.