Rama Kumaraswamy Thoopal; Illustration by Anup Singh
"Time to get dressed!" cries a harried Mama as she tries to pack the
bag, straighten the tie, pack lunch, tie shoelaces as at the same time
she pushes children dragging their heels towards the bus stop. Oh? Is it
already "Time for school?" later still its "time for dinner" or "time
for bed!" Old Father Time can be quite an interfering busybody and there
really is nothing we can do. Most of us spend a greater part of our
time and lives trying to beat exactly this - time!
Strangely enough the clock's needles seem to take forever to inch
forward during a dull lesson, while time really flies when we are having
a good time!
All of us are time conscious. We surround
ourselves with alarm clocks, cuckoo clocks, wristwatches, grandfather
clocks and peering at them to make sure we are sticking to our schedule.
But have you ever taken a moment to wonder why the needles on the face
of a clock move the way they do? Why do the hour and minute needles move
from left to right (in what is now called the 'clockwise direction')
and not vice-versa? No, it is not the whim of the inventor actually
there is a scientific explanation for this observation.
Throughout history, time has been measured by the movement of the Sun
(or, more accurately, the motion of the Earth relative to the Sun). The
earliest form of timekeeping dates as far back as 3500 B.C. This was the
shadow clock or the sundials - a vertical stick or obelisk (A tall,
four-sided shaft of stone, usually tapered and monolithic, that rises to
a point) that casts a shadow. An example of this clock can be seen at
Jantar Mantar in Delhi.
People had already realised that the
earth is round and that it revolves around the sun. So for ages people
measured time based on the position of the sun - it was noon when the
sun was highest in the sky.
The earliest clocks were invented
in China around 100 A.D. based on these earlier sundials, which were
simple devices that marked the movement of the sun with the movement of
the earth.
Mechanical clocks were invented in the Northern
Hemisphere in the 14th century and the inventors naturally wanted the
device to follow the sun's movement in the sky. In the Northern
Hemisphere the Sun appears to move in the sky from the left to the right
and so the hands of the clock were made to follow the Sun's motion,
moving from left to right or what is commonly known as clockwise. If you
are in the Northern Hemisphere and face the South, you can watch the
Sun rising on your left (the East) pass overhead and set in the West (at
your right).
As simple as that! Come to think of it, if the
mechanical clock had been invented in the Southern Hemisphere, the hand
on the dial of your watch would have been moving from right to left! Do
you know there are some Jewish and Arabic clocks that run
anti-clockwise? This makes perfect sense as Arabic and Hebrew readers
(Arabic and Hebrew characters are written right to left) but baffles
everyone else!
Monday, 21 January 2013
English Idioms & Idiomatic Expressions beginning with "I"
- I hereby give notice of my intention
- Hereby is used sometimes in formal, official declarations and statements to give greater force to the speaker' or the writer's affirmation. People will say it sometimes to emphasise their sincerity and correctness.
- I may be daft, but I'm not stupid
- I might do or say silly things occasionally, but in this instance I know what I am doing (Usually used when someone questions your application of common-sense).
- I should cocoa
- (UK) This idiom comes from 'I should think so', but is normally used sarcastically to mean the opposite.
- I'll be a monkey's uncle
- I'll be a monkey's uncle is used as an expression of surprise.
- I'll cross that road when I come to it
- I'll think about something just when it happens, not in advance.
- I'll eat my hat
- You can say this when you are absolutely sure that you are right to let the other person know that there is no chance of your being wrong.
- I've got a bone to pick with you
- If somebody says this, they mean that they have some complaint to make against the person they are addressing.
- I've got your number
- You have made a mistake and I am going to call you on it. You are in trouble (a threat). I have a disagreement with you. I understand your true nature.
- Icing on the cake
- This expression is used to refer to something good that happens on top of an already good thing or situation.
- Idle hands are the devil's handiwork
- When someone is not busy, or being productive, trouble is bound to follow.
- If at first you don't succeed try try again
- When you fail, try until you get it right!
- If I had a nickel for every time
- (USA) When someone uses this expression, they mean that the specific thing happens a lot. It is an abbreviation of the statement 'If I had a nickel for every time that happened, I would be rich'
- If it ain't broke, don't fix it
- Any attempt to improve on a system that already works is pointless and may even hurt it.
- If Mohammed won't come to the mountain, the mountain must come to Mohammed
- If something cannot or will not happen the easy way, then sometimes it must be done the hard way.
- If the cap fits, wear it
- This idiom means that if the description is correct, then it is describing the truth, often when someone is being criticised. ('If the shoe fits, wear it' is an alternative)
- If the shoe fits, wear it
- This is used to suggest that something that has been said might apply to a person.
- If wishes were horses, beggars would ride
- This means that wishing for something or wanting it is not the same as getting or having it.
- If worst comes to worst
- This isused to show the worst that could happen in a situation: If worst comes to worst and the hotels are full, we can sleep in the car.('If the worst comes to the worst' is also used.)
- If you are given lemons make lemonade
- Always try and make the best out of a bad situation. With some ingenuity you can make a bad situation useful.
- If you can't run with the big dogs, you'd better stay on the porch
- If you can't keep up with what others are doing, then it is best not to attempt it.
- If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen
- Originally a Harry S. Truman quote, this means that if you can't take the pressure, then you should remove yourself from the situation.
- If you fly with the crows, you get shot with the crows
- If you wish to be associated with a particular high risk and/or high profile situation and benefit from the rewards of that association, you have to accept the consequences if things go wrong - you cannot dissociate yourself.
- If you lie down with dogs, you will get up with fleas
- This means that if you become involved with bad company, there will be negative consequences.
- If you lie down with the Devil, you will wake up in hell
- This means that if you become involved with bad company, there will be negative consequences.
- If you will
- 'If you will' is used as a way of making a concession in a sentence: He wasn't a very honest person, a liar if you will. Here, it is used a way of accepting that the reader or listener might think of the person as a liar, but without commit the writer or speaker to that position fully.
- If you'll pardon my French
- (UK) This idiom is used as a way of apologising for swearing.
- Ill at ease
- If someone is ill at ease, they are worried or uncomfortable.
- Ill-gotten gains
- Ill-gotten gains are profits or benefits that are made either illegally or unfairly.
- In a cleft stick
- If you are in a cleft stick, you are in a difficult situation, caught between choices.
- In a coon's age
- A long time. Example: I haven't seen her in a coon's age.
- In a dog's age
- I you haven't done something in a dog's age, you haven't done it for a very long time.
- In a fix
- If you are in a fix, you are in trouble.
- In a flash
- If something happens in a flash, it happens very quickly indeed.
- In a fog
- If you're in a fog, you are confused, dazed or unaware.
- In a heartbeat
- If something happens very quickly or immediately, it happens in a heartbeat.
- In a jam
- If you are in a jam, you are in some trouble. If you get out of a jam, you avoid trouble.
- In a jiffy
- If something happens in a jiffy, it happens very quickly.
- In a nutshell
- This idiom is used to introduce a concise summary.
- In a pickle
- If you are in a pickle, you are in some trouble or a mess.
- In a rut
- In a settled or established pattern, habit or course of action, especially a boring one.
- In a tick
- (UK) If someone will do something in a tick, they'll do it very soon or very quickly.
- In a tight spot
- If you're in a tight spot, you're in a difficult situation.
- In all honesty
- If you say something in all honesty, you are telling the complete truth. It can be used as a way of introducing a negative opinion whilst trying to be polite; in all honesty, I have to say that I wasn't very impressed.
- In an instant
- If something happens in an instant, it happens very rapidly.
- In another's shoes
- It is difficult to know what another person's life is really like, so we don't know what it is like to be in someone's shoes.
- In apple-pie order
- If something is in apple-pie order, it is very neat and organised.
- In broad daylight
- If a crime or problem happens in broad daylight, it happens during the day and should have been seen and stopped.
- In cahoots
- If people are in cahoots, they are conspiring together.
- In cold blood
- If something is done in cold blood, it is done ruthlessly, without any emotion.
- In dire straits
- If you're in dire straits, you're in serious trouble or difficulties.
Saturday, 19 January 2013
Friday, 18 January 2013
Monday, 14 January 2013
good tidings
Then Allah sent Muhammad, may God Bless him and his Household, as a witness, a bearer of good tidings, and a warner. the best of the creation as a child, and the most chaste amongst them as a grown up, the purest of the pure in conduct, and the most generous of those who are approached for their generosity. |
(Sermon 105)
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Tuesday, 8 January 2013
Thursday, 3 January 2013
FAIRY TALE WORD SCRAMBLES
Unscramble the first four words in each set of scrambles. Then use
the circled letters to unscramble the final word. Some of the words may
unscramble into more than one word, but only one word is related to the
puzzle.
Answers: 1. poor,climb,taken,tower,prince 2. poor,names,visits,gold,promise 3. huff,sticks,blow,fifer,houses 4. candy,crumbs,oven,cottage,abandon
1. RAPUNZEL
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2. RUMPELSTILTSKIN
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3. THREE LITTLE PIGS
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4. HANSEL & GRETEL
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Answers: 1. poor,climb,taken,tower,prince 2. poor,names,visits,gold,promise 3. huff,sticks,blow,fifer,houses 4. candy,crumbs,oven,cottage,abandon
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