Watch How the IAF Airlifted a Pregnant Woman & Her Child from a Flooded Chennai Area…

Rescue operations to take people stranded in different parts of the city to safer zones, are going strong in Chennai. Over a hundred people have been rescued by teams of Army, Indian Air Force (IAF), and National Disaster Response Force (NDRF).

Due to the floods caused by heavy rains in the city, some areas have been completely submerged, with water rising up to the second storey of many buildings.

IAF_F

Photo Credits: Twitter, Twitter

Those who have been transferred to safe places by IAF include 50 students who were stranded at SRM University, and a pregnant woman who was airlifted on December 3 from one of the worst affected areas in the city.

“We sent about 120 rescued people to Delhi carried by a C-130J (Super Hercules) this morning and another 20 have been sent to Arakonnam, from where they will fly out in different aircraft,” a senior IAF official informed The Hindu.

Air Force officials are working on evacuating those who are stranded and they are also delivering food supplied to those who are unable to move out of their homes and do not have access to food. A senior IAF official said they expect to rescue about 1,200 people in next few days.

This video shows pregnant woman being airlifted along with her child.

Source…..Tanaya Singh …www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

Chennai’s Story Needs to be heard…

No one imagined that this could happen to Chennai. We were just a happy little town content with our Kollywood and Coffee, but humanity has won over once again, says Pavithra Selvam.

The rains have finally stopped. Relief work is ongoing and Chennai is collectively pooling in its resources to keep its head above the water. Today Chennai-ites are wading through sewage water and broken roads to reach out to strangers in the hope that someone else would do the same to their loved ones. In a matter of few weeks we’ve literally seen our city crumble and drown in front of our eyes. Tamil Sangam literature is rife with references of floods washing away the mythical lands of ‘Kumari Kaandam’ — it somehow feels like history is repeating itself.

I write this not as a victim, but as a witness to a catastrophe of unprecedented magnitude. I write this to tell our story. I write this so that our voices can be heard. I write this from a position of privilege that I feel guilty for possessing — but I write anyway because I can and I must. We need all the help that we can get and to get that we need our story to be heard.

I live near the Mylapore Kapaleeshwarar temple, the oldest part of Chennai. It is among the very few areas in Chennai to not have water-logging. I have electricity, internet and patchy phone connectivity. My dad hasn’t come home from office in two days. My husband, his parents and his mentally ill grandmother have been stranded in their second floor flat for the last four days. They have neither electricity nor telephone connectivity. They are strictly rationing their food supplies to last at least a few more days.

They are not alone. They are trapped with along with hundreds of other people inside their buildings and streets.

Both my husband’s family and my father aren’t seeking to be rescued. The water levels are four feet deep. Ground and first floor residents have moved to their neighbours’ homes in the second floor. They share their food and space and offer support to each other. They don’t seek to be rescued because the situation isn’t as bad as it is in other places. This is the story of millions of others who are stranded but aren’t seeking to be rescued.

The rescue operations that you hear of in the news are only emergencies. These rescue squads rescue people from places where water is neck-deep and belongings and homes have already been fully submerged. Rescuing people like my dad or husband would be a drain on Chennai’s resources right now. They are safe in their second floor spaces.

On Tuesday night, civilian rescuers started independent rescue operations by crowd-sourcing catamarans, life rafts, motorboats and SUVs. We knew people would die if we waited for the government or army to respond — even if they really wanted to respond, there was not much they could actually do — the city was very quickly sinking. Chennai had to take things into its own hands. The hashtags #chennairainshelp backed by Twitter India’s support started to trend. Since most people didn’t have electricity or internet, it was all word-of-mouth — there was no time to verify information.

Actor Siddharth and RJ Balaji went out on the streets with a group of volunteers rescuing people as they heard about it. Rescue operations continued all night. People started opening up their homes and offering shelter. Random strangers on Twitter recharged mobile phones of strangers just by hearsay. A crowdsourced resource sheet was born —www.chennairains.org. It is still being updated by volunteers who’ve hardly slept in 48 hours. Digital volunteers who had electricity and internet tweeted and posted information for people who were on their way home or stranded. Yesterday Sam Paul, Chennai’s Toni & Guy guy, and Shihan Hussain, Chennai’s favourite karate master, along with hundreds of other volunteers were out on the submerged streets until late in the night conducting search-and-rescue missions, putting their own lives at risk.

Many people were rescued, but so many more weren’t.

Was Tamil Nadu ready for this? Absolutely not.

Did help arrive quick enough? No it didn’t.

While the politics of this incident is an important issue that needs addressing, this is the wrong time to do it. The lack of coverage and appalling apathy from the so-called national news channels is disgraceful. Yesterday Rajdeep Sardesai made a video (external link) about the lack of coverage of the Chennai floods by the national news channels. ‘It takes a 180 people dead in Tamil Nadu for us to wake up,’ he said. I made a casual post on Facebook expressing my displeasure at an NDTV headline that alluded to the Chennai floods as a man-made disaster. The post (external link) went viral and received almost 500 likes and 225 shares in a matter of hours. Chennaiites and south-Indians in general are angry with the poor quality of coverage attributed to our region, especially during a national disaster.

There is a lot of talk about poor town planning, marshland encroachment and land reclamation. Let’s not make this politics — this is not the time to play this game. We need solutions right now and quick. We have a situation of dire crises unfolding in Chennai. We have hundreds of thousands of climate refugees taking shelter in schools, malls, theatres, marriage halls and religious establishments. There are tens of thousands more who need to be rescued. These people need food, clothes, sanitation facilities and medicines. There is flooding all over the city — the water isn’t just rain water, it is rain water mixed with sewage. We are at the brink of a disease breakout.

No one imagined that this could happen to Chennai. We were just a happy little town content with our Kollywood and Coffee.

But humanity has won over once again. Caste, creed, religion and social background have become immaterial. Who said we are an intolerant society? Look at Chennai, the collective good is the only thing that matters here on our streets.

Aid is pouring in from our neighbouring states. Strangers from Bangalore are making dangerous road trips with much needed supplies to be on the ground. This is who we are — we stand united in all our diversity — we are Indians. Our governments may fail us but we lift each other up and help each other as our brethren. Yes, we are a disaster zone. But we are going to get back on our feet and wade through the deluge.

Chennai will emerge stronger and wiser, no doubt. But the more important thing for the people reading this is to take charge and tell your governments to clean up their game — because it could be your city next.

Image: People wait for relief material and food packets at the roof of a building in flood-hit Chennai on Thursday. Photograph: PTI Photo.

Pavithra Selvam is a communications specialist born and raised in Chennai. Though she often lives in foreign lands, Chennai is her true love.

Source…..Pavithra Selvam in http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

 

 

Message for the Day… “Love knows no fear, it promotes truth, it finds peace, it builds faith, and it promotes concord…”

Sathya Sai Baba

The individual ‘I’ believes it is limited; but that is an illusion. It is the same Universal Spirit, imagining itself to be limited. This awareness can come to you either through a flash of intellectual analysis or a flash of Universal Love. The awareness is an act of identification which requires Love. Love is God; Love is the means and end. That is why there are no atheists for there is no being without love of some kind or other. And love of any kind, of any measure, is but a spark of Divinity. Love knows no fear, it promotes truth, it finds peace, it builds faith, and it promotes concord. To develop love, the easiest, highest and the most fruitful sacrifice is that of the ego. Crucify it and be free. Dedicate it to God, and be rich and happy beyond all your imagination.

” போதும் மழையே.. பொறுத்தருள்வாய்…!!!

காஞ்சிபுரம் மாவட்டம் நீஞ்சல் மடுவில் ஏற்பட்ட வெள்ளப் பெருக்கினால் செங்கல்பட்டு மகாலட்சுமி நகர் பகுதியில் முற்றிலும் மூழ்கிப்போன குடியிருப்புகள். | படங்கள்: காஞ்சி கோ.கார்த்திக்

செங்கல்பட்டு நீஞ்சல் மடுவில் ஏற்பட்ட வெள்ளப் பெருக்கினால் மகாலட்சுமி நகர் பகுதியில் முதல்மாடியை நெருங்கி வரும் வெள்ளநீர்.

காஞ்சிபுரம் மாவட்டம் மதுராந்தகம் அடுத்த தச்சூர்-தேவாதூர் கிராமத்தில் விவசாய நிலங்களை மூழ்கடித்த வெள்ளம்.

கொளவாய் ஏரியின் வெள்ளப் பெருக்கால் செங்கல்பட்டு ஜேசிகே நகர் குடியிருப்புப் பகுதிகளை தண்ணீர் சூழ்ந்துள்ளது.

 

மதுராந்தகம் அடுத்த அருங்குனம் கிராமத்தில் தண்ணீரில் முழ்கியுள்ள நாற்றங்கால்.

பேசின் பாலம் அருகே தண்டவாளத்தில் மழைநீர் தேங்கியுள்ள நிலையில், மெதுவாக இயக்கப்பட்ட எக்ஸ்பிரஸ் ரயில். | படம்: ச.கார்த்திகேயன்

சென்னையின் நுழைவு வாயிலாக கருதப்படும் சைதாபேட்டை பாலத்தின் தடுப்பைத் தாண்டி குடியிருப்புகளை மூழ்கடித்து பாய்கிறது அடையாறு வெள்ளம்

மோசமான பாதிப்பை சந்தித்துள்ள கோட்டூர்புரத்தின் பிரதான சாலையை ஆக்கிரமித்து காட்டாற்று வெள்ளம் போல செல்லும் மழைநீர்

அசோக் பில்லரின் நான்கு திசைகளிலும் நீர் சூழ்ந்ததால் அசோக்நகர், கே.கே நகர் உள்ளிட்ட பகுதிகள் முற்றிலும் பாதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.

தி.நகர் தெற்கு போக் சாலையில் வெள்ளத்தில் சிக்கியவர் தெர்மாகூல் மீது டிஷ் ஆண்டானா பலகையை வைத்து அதன்மீது அமர்ந்தபடி பாதுகாப்பாக வெள்ளத்தை கடந்து வருகிறார் | படங்கள்: க. ஸ்ரீபரத்

சென்னை அருகே சிங்கபெருமாள் கோயில் விஞ்சூர் ஏரியில் உடைப்பு ஏற்பட்டதால் தேசிய நெடுஞ்சாலையில் ஏற்பட்டுள்ள வெள்ளப்பெருக்கில் நீந்தி செல்லும் பேருந்து | படம்: காஞ்சி கோ.கார்த்திக்

ஆவடி ரயில் நிலையத்தில் தண்டவாளத்தில் தேங்கியுள்ள மழை நீர். இதனால் ரயில் சேவை முற்றிலும் பாதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

கூவம் ஆற்றில் கரை புரண்டு ஓடும் வெள்ளம்

அண்ணாசாலை மின்வாரிய அலுவலகத்துக்குள் வெள்ள நீர் புகுந்ததால் அண்ணாசாலையின் முக்கிய பகுதிகள் இருளில் மூழ்கின. மின்வாரிய அலுவலகத்துக்குள் புகுந்த நீரை வெளியேற்ற முடியாமல் தவிக்கும் மின்துறை ஊழியர்கள்.

பூந்தமல்லி நெடுஞ்சாலையையும் எழும்பூரையும் இணைக்கும் கெங்குசாமி நாயுடு சுரங்கப்பாதையில் நீச்சல் குளம்போல நீர் தேங்கியிருக்கிறது.

சென்னை அருகே செங்குன்றம் பகுதியில் ரெட்டேரி முழுக் கொள்ளளவை எட்டியுள்ளது. ஏரியை ஒட்டிய பகுதிகளில் உள்ள குடியிருப்புகளில் தண்ணீர் புகுந்துள்ளது.

செம்பரம்பாக்கம் ஏரியின் உபரிநீர் அதிகளவில் திறக்கப்பட்டதால் அடையாற்றை ஒட்டியுள்ள தாழ்வான பகுதிகள் நீரில் மூழ்கின. வீட்டுக்குள் தண்ணீர் புகுந்ததால் கட்டிடத்தின் மேற்கூரையில் ஏறி உதவியை எதிர்பார்த்து காத்திருக்கும் மக்கள்.

அனகாபுத்தூர் தரைப்பாலம் மூழ்கியுள்ள நிலையில் அருகிலுள்ள குடியிருப்புகளின் மேற்கூரையில் தஞ்சமடைந்த மக்கள்.

அடையாற்றின் மத்தியில் உள்ள மரத்தில் சிலர் சிக்கியிருப்பதாக பொதுமக்கள் கூறியதால், தேடும் பணியில் ஈடுபட்ட பேரிடர் மீட்புக் குழுவினர்.

அனகாபுத்தூர் பகுதியில் வெள்ளத்தில் சிக்கியுள்ள மக்களுக்கு உணவுப் பொட்டலங்களை அனுப்பி உதவும் தன்னார்வ இளைஞர்கள்.

மதுரவாயல்-தாம்பரம் பை-பாஸ் சாலையில் தண்ணீரில் மிதக்கும் வாகனங்கள். அப்பகுதியில் போக்குவரத்து முற்றிலும் துண்டிக்கப்பட்டது. | படங்கள்: ம.பிரபு

Source….’தி இந்து’ புகைப்பட நிருபர்கள்… http://www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

This Video of People Forming a Human Chain to Save a Drowning Man Shows the Spirit of Chennai…

The nonstop rains since Monday night in Chennai have flooded several roads in many parts of the city, creating havoc everywhere. In such devastating conditions, residents are showing boundless strength and courage, and are leaving no stone unturned when it comes to helping those who are stranded in a crisis.

Chennaites displayed immense selflessness once again this Tuesday, when many of them got together to save a drowning man on a flooded road. The entire incident was recorded from inside a car and shared by Raghavan Chakravarthi, who was driving towards Tambaram when flood waters suddenly hit a road near Padappai. It shows how a bike rider lost his balance and got trapped in a gush of water that could have washed him away.

But bystanders did not think twice before abandoning their vehicles and running towards him in knee-deep water to form a human chain and pull him to safety.

Featured Image Credit: Twitter

Source…. Tanaya Singh in http://www.the betterindia.com and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

” I Love you My Darling daughter….”

This beautiful story is a real eye-opener, one that really touched my heart,  making me aware of the many times, I hate to admit, that I took my own mother for granted when she needed me most. The letter offers a heart-wrenching perspective for when ‘the day’ arrives, detailing the many patient moments that this mother had with her child when she was younger- the repeated stories, the forgotten details, the minor inconveniences. She uses these experiences to help her beloved daughter overlook all the difficulties that her mother now faces in old age, asking her to cherish the time they have together.
Read her beautiful story below and share it with someone you love – we all need a little perspective like this every now and again.  

My Dear Girl

The day you see I’m getting old, I ask you to please be patient, but most of all, try to understand what I’m going through.
If when we talk, I repeat the same thing a thousand times, don’t interrupt to say: ‘You said the same thing a minute ago’… just listen please. Try to remember the times when you were little and I would read the same story night after night until you would fall asleep.
When I don’t want to take a bath, don’t be mad and don’t embarrass me. Remember when I had to run after you making excuses and trying to get you to take a shower when you were just a girl?

mother daughter

When you see how ignorant I am when it comes to new technology, give me the time to learn and don’t look at me that way… remember honey, I patiently taught you how to do many things like eating appropriately, getting dressed, combing your hair and dealing with life’s issues every day.
The day you see me getting old, I ask you to please be patient, but most of all, try to understand what I’m going through.
If I occasionally lose track of what we’re talking about, give me the time to remember, and if I can’t, don’t be nervous, impatient or arrogant. Just know in your heart, the most important thing for me is to be with you.

And when my old, tired legs don’t let me move as quickly as before, give me your hand the same way I offered mine to you when you first walked.
When those days come, don’t feel sad… just be with me, and understand me while I get to the end of my life with love. I’ll cherish and thank you for the gift of time and joy we shared.
With a big smile and the huge love I’ve always had for you, I just want to say…

I Love You My Darling Daughter

SOURCE……………www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

” These are the 51 words and phrases we commonly misuse….”

WE’RE all guilty of misusing words and using certain phrases in the wrong context.

Now a linguistics expert from Harvard, Steven Pinker, has written a book designed to help us all out.

In The Sense of Style, Pinker breaks down the 51 most common words and phrases people stuff up, and explains how we should be using them.

Here is the full list, as republished in The Telegraph UK:

1. Adverse means detrimental and does not mean averse or disinclined.

Correct use: “There were adverse effects.” / “I’m not averse to doing that.”

2. Appraise means to ascertain the value of and does not mean to apprise or to inform.

Correct use: “I appraised the jewels.” / “I apprised him of the situation.”

3. As far as means the same as but cannot be used the same way as as for.

Correct use: “As far as the money is concerned …” / “As for the money …”

4. Begs the question means assumes what it should be proving and does not mean raises the question.

5. Bemused means bewildered and does not mean amused.

Correct: “The unnecessarily complex plot left me bemused.” / “The silly comedy amused me.”

6. Cliché is a noun and is not an adjective.

Correct use: “Shakespeare used a lot of clichés.” / “The plot was so clichéd.”

7. Credible means believable and does not mean credulous or gullible.

Correct use: “His sales pitch was not credible.” / “The con man took advantage of credulous people.”

8. Criteria is the plural, not the singular of criterion.

Correct: “These are important criteria.”

9. Data is a plural count noun not a mass noun. Note: “Data is rarely used as a plural today, just as candelabra and agenda long ago ceased to be plurals,” Pinker writes. “But I still like it.”

Correct use: “This datum supports the theory, but many of the other data refute it.”

10. Depreciate means to decrease in value and does not mean to deprecate or to disparage. Correct use: “My car has depreciated a lot over the years.” / “She deprecated his efforts.”

11. Dichotomy means two mutually exclusive alternatives and does not mean difference or discrepancy.

Correct use: “There is a dichotomy between even and odd numbers.” / “There is a discrepancy between what we see and what is really there.”

12. Disinterested means unbiased and does not mean uninterested.

Correct use: “The dispute should be resolved by a disinterested judge.” / “Why are you so uninterested in my story?”

13. Enervate means to sap or to weaken and does not mean to energise.

Correct use: “That was an enervating rush hour commute.” / “That was an energising cappuccino.”

14. Enormity means extreme evil and does not mean enormousness. [Note: It is acceptable to use it to mean a deplorable enormousness.]

15. Flaunt means to show off and does not mean to flout.

Correct use: “She flaunted her abs.” / “She flouted the rules.”

16. Flounder means to flop around ineffectually and does not mean to founder or to sink to the bottom.

17. Fortuitous means coincidental or unplanned and does not mean fortunate.

Correct use: “Running into my old friend was fortuitous.” / “It was fortunate that I had a good amount of savings after losing my job.”

18. Fulsome means unctuous, excessively or insincerely complimentary and does not mean full or copious.

Correct use: “She didn’t believe his fulsome love letter.” / “The bass guitar had a full sound.”

19. Homogeneous is pronounced as homo-genius and “homogenous” is not a word but a corruption of homogenised.

Correct use: “The population was not homogeneous; it was a melting pot.”

20. Hone means to sharpen and does not mean to home in on or to converge upon.

Correct use: “She honed her writing skills.” / “We’re homing in on a solution.”

21. Hotbutton means an emotional, divisive controversy and does not mean a hot topic.

Correct use: “She tried to stay away from the hot button of abortion.” / “Drones are a hot topic in the tech world.”

22. Hung means suspended and does not mean suspended from the neck until dead.

Correct use: “I hung the picture on my wall.” / “The prisoner was hanged.”

23. Intern (verb) means to detain or to imprison and does not mean to inter or to bury.

 

Correct use: “The rebels were interned in the military jail.” / “The king was interred with his jewels.”

24. Ironic means uncannily incongruent and does not mean inconvenient or unfortunate.

Correct use: “It was ironic that I forgot my textbook on human memory.” / “It was unfortunate that I forgot my textbook the night before the quiz.”

25. Irregardless is not a word but a portmanteau of regardless and irrespective. [Note: Pinker acknowledges that certain schools of thought regard “irregardless” as simply non-standard, but he insists it should not even be granted that.]

26. Literally means in actual fact and does not mean figuratively.

Correct use: “I didn’t mean for you to literally run over here.” / “I’d rather die than listen to another one of his lectures — figuratively speaking, of course!”

27. Luxuriant means abundant or florid and does not mean luxurious.

Correct use: “The poet has a luxuriant imagination.” / “The car’s fine leather seats were luxurious.”

28. Meretricious means tawdry or offensively insincere and does not mean meritorious.

Correct use: “We rolled our eyes at the meretricious speech.” / “The city applauded the meritorious mayor.”

29. Mitigate means to alleviate and does not mean to militate or to provide reasons for.

Correct use: “The spray should mitigate the bug problem.” / “Their inconceivable differences will militate against the treaty.”

30. New Age means spiritualistic, holistic and does not mean modern, futuristic.

Correct use: “He is a fan of New Age mindfulness techniques.” / “That TV screen is made from a high-end modern glass.”

31. Noisome means smelly and does not mean noisy.

Correct use: “I covered my nose when I walked past the noisome dump.” / “I covered my ears when I heard the noisy motorcycle speed by.”

32. Nonplussed means stunned, bewildered and does not mean bored, unimpressed.

Correct use: “The market crash left the experts nonplussed.” / “His market pitch left the investors unimpressed.”

33. Opportunism means seizing or exploiting opportunities and does not mean creating or promoting opportunities.

Correct use: “His opportunism brought him to the head of the company.” / “The party ran on promoting economic opportunities for the middle class.”

34. Parameter means a variable and does not mean a boundary condition, a limit.

Correct use: “The forecast is based on parameters like inflation and interest rates.” / “We need to work within budgetary limits.”

35. Phenomena is a plural count noun, not a mass noun.

Correct use: “The phenomenon was intriguing, but it was only one of many phenomena gathered by the telescope.”

36. Politically correct means dogmatically left-liberal and does not mean fashionable, trendy. [Note: Pinker considers its contemporary roots as a pejorative term by American and British conservatives, not its more casual use as meaning inoffensive.]

37. Practicable means easily put into practice and does not mean practical.

Correct use: “His French was practicable in his job, which required frequent trips to Paris.” / “Learning French before taking the job was a practical decision.”

38. Proscribe means to condemn, to forbid and does not mean to prescribe, to recommend, to direct.

Correct use: “The policy proscribed employees from drinking at work.” / “The doctor prescribed an antibiotic.”

39. Protagonist means active character and does not mean proponent.

Correct use: “Vito Corleone was the protagonist in The Godfather.” / “He is a proponent of solar energy.”

40. Refute means to prove to be false and does not mean to allege to be false, to try to refute. [Note: That is, it must be used only in factual cases.]

Correct use: “His work refuted the theory that the Earth was flat.”

41. Reticent means shy, restrained and does not mean reluctant.

Correct use: “He was too reticent to ask her out.” / “When rain threatens, fans are reluctant to buy tickets to the ball game.”

42. Shrunk, sprung, stunk, and sunk are used in the past participle, not the past tense.

Correct use: “I’ve shrunk my shirt.” / “I shrank my shirt.”

43. Simplistic means naively or overly simple and does not mean simple or pleasingly simple.

Correct use: “His simplistic answer suggested he wasn’t familiar with the material.” / “She liked the chair’s simple look.”

44. Staunch means loyal, sturdy and does not mean to stanch a flow.

Correct use: “Her staunch supporters defended her in the press.” / “The nurse was able to stanch the bleeding.”

45. Tortuous means twisting and does not mean torturous.

Correct use: “The road through the forest was tortuous.” / “Watching their terrible acting for two hours was a torturous experience.”

46. Unexceptionable means not worthy of objection and does not mean unexceptional, ordinary.

Correct use: “No one protested her getting the prize, because she was an unexceptionable choice.” / “They protested her getting the prize, because she was an unexceptional choice.”

47. Untenable means indefensible or unsustainable and does not mean painful or unbearable.

Correct use: “Now that all the facts have been revealed, that theory is untenable.” / “Her death brought him unbearable sadness.”

48. Urban legend means an intriguing and widely circulated but false story and does not mean someone who is legendary in a city.

Correct use: “Alligators in the sewers is an urban legend.” / “Al Capone was a legendary gangster in Chicago.”

49. Verbal means in linguistic form and does not mean oral, spoken.

Correct use: “Visual memories last longer than verbal ones.”

50. An effect means an influence. While to effect means to put into effect, to affect means either to influence or to fake.

Correct use: “They had a big effect on my style.” / “The law effected changes at the school.” / “They affected my style.” / “He affected an air of sophistication to impress her parents.”

51. To lie (intransitive: lies, lay, has lain) means to recline; to lay (transitive: lays, laid, has laid) means to set down; to lie (intransitive: lies, lied, has lied) means to fib.

Correct use: “He lies on the couch all day.” / “He lays a book upon the table.” / “He lies about what he does.”

Source…………www. news.com.au

natarajan

Nature’s Sand Artist: Sand Bubbler Crab !!!

In sandy beaches of certain tropical regions in the Indo-Pacific live a tiny crab, about a centimeter across, called the “sand bubbler crab” of the genera Scopimera and Dotilla in the family Dotillidae. These tiny crustaceans have spherical bodies with long and flat pinchers, hairy legs, and eyes on short stalks which can fold away into grooves when the crabs scurries into its burrow. With a body color same as sand, the crabs are easy to miss. What’s unmissable however are the intricate patterns they make on the beach when they search for food. Like tiny galaxies, these patterns are composed of hundreds of tiny sand balls —sometimes thousands, depending on how many fellows were snacking.

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Photo credit: Marco Wo/Flickr

The sand bubbler crab eats the thin coating of edible organic particles on sand grains. When the tide goes out, the crab emerge from their burrows and start sifting through the sand, picking up the sand grains with their downward pointing pincers and bringing it to their mouth to scrap the microscopic food. After they have scrapped the sand grains clean, they roll them into little balls and toss them behind. By doing this they avoid sifting the same sand twice. The crabs work radially from the entrance to their burrow, scrapping out a tiny paths with little balls of sifted sand piled up on either side.

The crabs come out of their burrows as soon as the tide recedes. You can almost tell how long the tide has been out by the patterns of their sand balls. The more intricate the pattern of sand balls, the longer the tide has been out.

The sand bubbler crab is widespread across the Indo-Pacific region, where they occur abundantly on sandy beaches in the tropics and sub-tropics.

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Photo credit: Gavin White/Flickr

 

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Photo credit: Gavin White/Flickr

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Photo credit: Gord McKenna/Flickr

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Photo credit: Pimthida/Flickr

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Photo credit: Paola Farrera/Flickr

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Photo credit: meredith_nutting/Flickr

 

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Photo credit: Tim Venchus/Flickr

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Photo credit: Shanna Terry/Flickr

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Photo credit: Frank Douwes/Flickr

Sources: Wikipedia / Wild Singapore via Arkinspace and http://www.amusingplanet.com

Natarajan

 

 

Message for the Day…” HE Sees, Hears, and Knows Everything…”

The Lord is attained only through supreme devotion (para-bhakthi).Supreme devotion can be acquired only through spiritual wisdom (jnana).Spiritual wisdom can be cultivated only through faith (sraddha), and faith comes only through love. So how is love to be cultivated? Through two methods: 1. Always consider the faults of others, however big, to be insignificant and negligible. Always consider your own faults, however insignificant and negligible, to be big, and feel sad and repentant. By these means, you avoid developing bigger faults and defects, and acquire the qualities of brotherliness and forbearance. 2. Whatever you do, with yourself or with others, do it remembering that God is omnipresent. He sees, hears and knows everything. Discriminate between the true and the false, and speak only the truth. Discriminate between right and wrong, and do only the right. Endeavour every moment to be aware of the omnipotence of God.

Sathya Sai Baba

” Why Do Many Countries’ Names End in “-stan,” …?

Stan, An, and Ish

Denoting that it is a piece of the earth associated with a particular group of people, the suffix -stan simply means “land of.”

An ancient suffix of Persian origins, for many people, particularly in Central Asia, the addition of –stan to the name of their cultural or ethnic group identifies that a certain place belongs to them, e.g., Kazakhstan is the “land of the Kazakhs.”

-Stan‘s roots go even further back than Persia, however, to the Indo-Iranian element, *stanam, which meant both “place” or even more literally, “where one stands.” This old construction is derived from the even earlier Proto-Indo-European root *sta, which also meant “to stand.”

The use of a suffix to denote “land of” is not unique to -stan, however. In English, we often use –land to identify a nation or place, and familiar words include England, Finland, Greenland, Iceland, Ireland, Netherlands, New Zealand, Poland, and Thailand, as well as Maryland and Newfoundland. Other languages use the convention as well, such as the German Deutschland.

Adding –an at the end of country or place names to identify a person’s heritage or ethnicity also traces its origins back to ancient times, and the Proto-Indo-European root *-no-, which meant “pertaining to.” More recently (but still relatively ancient), in Latin this element gave rise to –anus, as in Rōma ‎(“Rome”) → Rōmānus ‎(“Roman”). Over the years this has in turn morphed into our current ending –an, as in American, Mexican and Romanian. Not exclusive to regional references, we also see this nomenclature in many other words like Christus ‎(“Christ”) → christiānus ‎(“christian”).

In addition, in English, this –an is often modified with the addition of an “i,” such as in the aforementioned Romanian and christian, as well as in things like Brazilian, Canadian and Parisian.
And if you’re wondering, the suffix –ish, as in British, comes from the Proto-Germanic suffix *-iska which meant “of the nativity or country of.” It morphed into the Old English –isc before becoming the modern English, Irish, Spanish, etc.

Source…….www.today i foundout .com

Natarajan