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Balbharati solutions for English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board chapter 3.3 - Note–Making [Latest edition]

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Balbharati solutions for English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board chapter 3.3 - Note–Making - Shaalaa.com
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Solutions for Chapter 3.3: Note–Making

Below listed, you can find solutions for Chapter 3.3 of Maharashtra State Board Balbharati for English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board.


Ice BreakersBrainstorming (A1)
Ice Breakers [Page 147]

Balbharati solutions for English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board 3.3 Note–Making Ice Breakers [Page 147]

Ice Breakers | Q 1 | Page 147

Complete the web.

Ice Breakers | Q 2 | Page 147

Discuss in groups why you take notes.

Ice Breakers | Q 3 | Page 147

Better notes will help you remember concepts, develop meaningful learning skills, and gain a better understanding of a topic. Discuss in groups of different styles or methods you use in your note-making/taking. For example, to underlining important facts.

Brainstorming (A1) [Page 151]

Balbharati solutions for English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board 3.3 Note–Making Brainstorming (A1) [Page 151]

Brainstorming (A1) | Q 1 | Page 151

Read the following passage carefully and complete the activities.

Occasional self-medication has always been part of normal living. The making and selling of drugs has a long history and is closely linked, like the medical practice itself, with belief in magic. Only during the last hundred years or so, the development of scientific techniques made, diagnosis possible. The doctor is now able to follow up on the correct diagnosis of many illnesses with specific treatment of their causes. In many other illnesses of which the causes remain unknown, he is still limited, as the unqualified prescriber, to the treatment of symptoms. The doctor is trained to decide when to treat symptoms only and when to attack the cause. This is the essential difference between medical prescribing and self-medication.
The advancement in technology has brought about much progress in some fields of medicine, including the development of scientific drug therapy. In many countries, public health organization is improving and people’s nutritional standards have risen. Parallel with such beneficial trends are two which have an adverse effect. One is the use of high-pressure advertising by the pharmaceutical industry which has tended to influence both patients and doctors and has led to the overuse of drugs generally. The other is the emergence of eating, insufficient sleep, excessive smoking, and drinking. People with disorders arising from faulty habits such as these, as well as from unhappy human relationships, often resort to self-medication and so add the taking of pharmaceuticals to the list. Advertisers go to great lengths to catch this market.
Clever advertising, aimed at chronic sufferers who will try anything because doctors have not been able to cure them, can induce such faith in preparation, particularly if cheaply priced, that it will produce-by suggestion-a very real effect in some people. Advertisements are also aimed at people suffering from mild complaints such as simple cold and coughs which clear up by themselves within a short time.
These are the main reasons why laxatives, indigestion-remedies, painkillers, cough-mixtures, tonics, vitamin and iron tablets, nose drops, ointments and many other preparations are found in quantity in many households. It is doubtful whether taking these things ever improves a person’s health, it may even make it worse. Worse, because the preparation may contain unsuitable ingredients; worse because the taker may become dependent on them; worse because they might be taken
excess; worse because they may cause poisoning, and worst of all because symptoms of some serious underlying cause may be asked and therefore medical help may not be sought. Self-diagnosis is a greater danger than self-medication.

Complete the following points with the help of the above text. (Give a suitable title.)

1.

2. 

3.

Solutions for 3.3: Note–Making

Ice BreakersBrainstorming (A1)
Balbharati solutions for English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board chapter 3.3 - Note–Making - Shaalaa.com

Balbharati solutions for English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board chapter 3.3 - Note–Making

Shaalaa.com has the Maharashtra State Board Mathematics English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board Maharashtra State Board solutions in a manner that help students grasp basic concepts better and faster. The detailed, step-by-step solutions will help you understand the concepts better and clarify any confusion. Balbharati solutions for Mathematics English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board Maharashtra State Board 3.3 (Note–Making) include all questions with answers and detailed explanations. This will clear students' doubts about questions and improve their application skills while preparing for board exams.

Further, we at Shaalaa.com provide such solutions so students can prepare for written exams. Balbharati textbook solutions can be a core help for self-study and provide excellent self-help guidance for students.

Concepts covered in English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board chapter 3.3 Note–Making are Letter Writing, Flyer, Compering, Review, Essay Writing, View and Counterview, Writing Skills, Notice Writing, Appeal, Blog Writing, Dialogue Writing, E-mails Writing, Expansion of Ideas, Film Review, Interview Questions, Report Writing, Speech Writing, Reading Skills, Information Transfer, Narration, Paragraph Writing, Tourist Leaflet, Summary Writing, Note Making, Figures of Speech, Parts of Speech, Spotting Errors, Free Verse, Homonyms, Grammar, Spotting Errors, Modal Auxiliary, Articles - A, An, The, Change the Voice, Vocabulary, Types of Sentences, Degrees of Comparison, Use ‘As Soon As’, ‘either ... or’ and ‘No Sooner ... Than’, Tense, Synonyms, Preposition, Use ‘Not Only but Also’, Degrees of Comparison, Direct-Indirect Speech, Gerunds, Participles, and Infinitives, Root Word, Idioms and Phrases, Clauses, Make a Sentence.

Using Balbharati English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board solutions Note–Making exercise by students is an easy way to prepare for the exams, as they involve solutions arranged chapter-wise and also page-wise. The questions involved in Balbharati Solutions are essential questions that can be asked in the final exam. Maximum Maharashtra State Board English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board students prefer Balbharati Textbook Solutions to score more in exams.

Get the free view of Chapter 3.3, Note–Making English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board additional questions for Mathematics English - Yuvakbharati 12 Standard HSC Maharashtra State Board Maharashtra State Board, and you can use Shaalaa.com to keep it handy for your exam preparation.

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