Another wonderful chat with Ruskin Bond!

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  • Опубликовано: 26 окт 2024

Комментарии • 39

  • @Severus.S
    @Severus.S 2 года назад +9

    He just looks so happy and nice and exactly how Ruskin Bond should look like

  • @TheEnglishNut
    @TheEnglishNut  2 года назад +18

    For the fans of Ruskin Bond: This is a chat you won't want to miss! :)

  • @Nupsahil
    @Nupsahil 2 года назад +1

    Just loved this. What a smooth talk

  • @roopalivs6782
    @roopalivs6782 2 года назад +1

    That was such a treat 💯❤️❤️. Thank you Eng nut and keep rocking 👍🏾 ✔️

  • @PursitofGod
    @PursitofGod 2 года назад

    Really love this channel

  • @bindukp1645
    @bindukp1645 2 года назад +5

    Stepney is a word that is very commonly used in Kerala. If we go to a workshop with a punctured tyre, the first question from the boy in the workshop would be ' Have you got a stepney Sir?'
    I never thought it is uncommon in the other parts of the country.

    • @marinathomas7820
      @marinathomas7820 2 года назад

      Absolutely. Very commonly used in Kerala. Also another word 'lintel' is known even to homemakers. But in other places only architects and engineers might be using it. That's my discovery. Hope it's correct.

    • @bindukp1645
      @bindukp1645 2 года назад +1

      @@marinathomas7820 Yes. In Kerala 'lintel' is a very common word. But I don't know weather it is uncommon in other states in India.
      By the way, let me 'reveal' one of my 'discoveries' also.
      Here in Kerala we have a typical Mallu word 'underskirt'. It means, a skirt that we wear as an undergarment with a Zari. In fact it is a word for word translation from the Malayalam word 'Adi Pavada.' 😄
      I don't know whether people other than Keralites use it. Anyway in Delhi people won't. Instead they use the word Petticoat. Maybe that's the correct word!

  • @SaipriyaViswanathan
    @SaipriyaViswanathan 2 года назад +1

    This is so good to watch. I absolutely loved this episode! Keep up the good work, you great Nut! :D

  • @marinathomas7820
    @marinathomas7820 2 года назад +3

    Thank you Mr Nut ☺️ for connecting us with this great writer. And he said it well that dictionaries can be used for weightlifting 😃

  • @BIKASHKUMAR-gh7cz
    @BIKASHKUMAR-gh7cz 2 года назад +1

    I love your channel ❤️

  • @aleemahmed349
    @aleemahmed349 2 года назад +1

    In Gujarat, we still use the word stepney!
    I love watching your videos, especially those which have Mr. Bond in them.

  • @prasadtokekar
    @prasadtokekar 2 года назад +4

    Of Galluses: Just remembered having read somewhere...."I never trust a man who wears both, the suspenders and the belt. How do I trust a man who can't trust his own trousers?" :-)

  • @sd6397
    @sd6397 2 года назад

    I have introduced my students to your videos for I am sure they won't find a better teacher than you.

  • @Nileshpandey0907
    @Nileshpandey0907 2 года назад +8

    Absolutely spectacular episode. I would liek to say tha this channel is absolutely underrated & less subscribers you atleast deserve 1 or 1.5 million subscribers.
    Sir i am english learner and my grammar and vocabulary is not strong please if times allows you and if you feel possibility then make video 's how to improve english as well as vocabulary.
    Lots of love support and respect from mumbai🙏
    28/08/2022 sunday 08:16AM

    • @TheEnglishNut
      @TheEnglishNut  2 года назад +7

      Thank you. I have 190 videos on this channel. Do watch. Your English will improve!

    • @Nileshpandey0907
      @Nileshpandey0907 2 года назад +1

      @@TheEnglishNut thank you so much sir i will watch them.

  • @poonamchoudhury3416
    @poonamchoudhury3416 2 года назад

    my fav Ruskin bond

    • @Nileshpandey0907
      @Nileshpandey0907 2 года назад

      Have you ever read his books?? I am thinking about to start kindly tell which books will be best for the starter? I dont know much about this author.

    • @poonamchoudhury3416
      @poonamchoudhury3416 2 года назад

      @@Nileshpandey0907 yeah in my English text books in school i still read his books my fav author

    • @munmunbhowmik8630
      @munmunbhowmik8630 2 года назад

      @@Nileshpandey0907 "The room on the roof" is a great one for starters.

  • @bhoomiverma1216
    @bhoomiverma1216 2 года назад

    I'm very excited....!!!

  • @salonikumar7528
    @salonikumar7528 2 года назад

    Sir i wannt to take grammer and english classes.. Do you provide

  • @Yourcursedchai
    @Yourcursedchai 2 года назад

    Yayyyyyy can't wait ‼️‼️

  • @farooqakhtarahmed
    @farooqakhtarahmed 2 года назад +1

    The only time I heard the word stepney before today was around 15-16 years ago in an English nursery rhyme called "Oranges and Lemons". It is quite melodious. It goes like "When will that be, says the bells of Stepney, I'm sure i don't know, says the great bell of Bow."
    ruclips.net/video/azAZoF0rxe4/видео.html

  • @shantinaturechild6385
    @shantinaturechild6385 2 года назад

    I like this man but rare words like Welsh is truly not of much importance globally although l admire all local identity and culture!

  • @ambutvlm
    @ambutvlm 2 года назад

    🙏

  • @shrutinair1931
    @shrutinair1931 2 года назад

    Hey Mr. Nut!
    I've got a doubt, hope you would help me out with it.
    Whenever I start reading a book, I underline the words that I'm not familiar with, and search it's meaning for a better understanding.
    But after a first few pages, I cease to continue this way because it kills the momentum of reading and suppresses the flow and curiosity of the next event in the story.
    And this happens with almost all the books, there is some or the other word who's exact meaning is not known to me. So I try to make a wild guess, based on the sentence that particular word belongs to, which might perfectly suit the scenario and continue without trying to find the real meaning.
    Also, looking for the word on the dictionary while you're reading the book or searching it on Google every now and then, is a tedious job.
    What would you suggest me to do?

    • @swapnilghorpadewce
      @swapnilghorpadewce 2 года назад +1

      You can use kindle. Can install dictionary in it. If you select a word, it will show meaning of it.

    • @shrutinair1931
      @shrutinair1931 2 года назад

      @@swapnilghorpadewce Okay! I'll have to buy one. 😅 Thanks...

    • @swapnilghorpadewce
      @swapnilghorpadewce 2 года назад

      @@shrutinair1931 Welcome.
      There is app available too, which offers similar experience like device.

    • @shrutinair1931
      @shrutinair1931 2 года назад

      @@swapnilghorpadewce Alright, I'll search for it. 😊

    • @TheEnglishNut
      @TheEnglishNut  2 года назад +1

      Hi, so you got your answer. :)

  • @mj1_5676
    @mj1_5676 Год назад

    The Stepney Spare Wheel was invented by Thomas Morris Davies in Llanelli in 1904. At that time, early motor cars were made without spare wheels, so a puncture was an event dreaded by all drivers. Mr. Davies's brilliant idea was to make a spokeless wheel rim fitted with an inflated tyre.
    Pretty soon T. Morris Davies and his brother Walter were in business, turning out spare wheels in their Llanelli works. They became very wealthy men as their business grew and they set up agencies across the world.
    Their 1909 catalogue proudly claimed that Stepney Spare Wheels were fitted to all London taxis. In 1922 the company became Stepney Tyres Ltd and their operations moved from Llanelli to Walthamstow. The days of the patent spare wheel had drawn to a close, as car manufacturers began to provide spare wheels with all new cars. However, the name lived on, long after the last spare wheel was made. A "stepney" is still today the everyday name for a spare wheel in India, Bangladesh, Malta and Brazil, where it is called an "estepe". A further twist to the tale is that in Dehli an easy going member of staff, who is not much help, can also be called a "stepney".
    Source - www.bbc.co.uk/ahistoryoftheworld/objects/qPgTiS8fQ6SeIqZLvZVfXQ#:~:text=The%20Stepney%20Spare%20Wheel%20was,fitted%20with%20an%20inflated%20tyre.