December 29, 2011

Trrrrng..."H'lo. Celebrate Life."

"Good Morning Sir. You are eligible for a Credit Card free of charge." This was the call I got as I was entering the office today.

November 24, 2011

Science Vs God

This is a reproduction of a very interesting argument between a Professor and a very astute student. Read on... one of The Best Arguments I have ever read.

November 09, 2011

A Gentle Nudge

A gentle nudge to all my unfortunate audience.

As a newspaper ’Middle’ writer once said, one has to cajole, caress and coax the teasing wispy feather-like words into shape for publication, either in print or on the web. Writing involves, for the occasional rambler like me, a humungous effort to churn-out a piece. All too suddenly, the thoughts converge from all corners on the mind's palimpsest as I learn the ropes of bloggery and crawl out of writer's block. Yes, it is an essay – in both its senses, as literary composition (value to be determined by the readers) and as an attempt. In those good ol’days, as the legend goes, the churning brought out the nectar and now it brings out a blogpost. Find it exaggerating?


October 13, 2011

CPUs on the Prowl. Beware.

All Ye Hyderabadis! Beware of the CPUs on the move. These ubiquitous species can be seen on all the roads in Hyderabad. No, they are not any new devices invented by the traffic cops to harass us. They are a breed apart from the normal road users of Hyderabad.

August 13, 2011

On Being Left-Handed

It is a world dominated by right-handers and the right-handed people take their dominance for granted. Can the right-handed dispute this fact? The majority of right-handed people are cruelly oblivious to the plight of those who are left to suffer the handism in equipment design, from potato peelers to scissors, to wrist watches, computer keyboards to mouses. Even the flush handle on the WC and the handles on the doors favour the right.

June 09, 2011

The Beauty in Black and White

How do I drape this perfectly shaped and skimpily clad beauty? The stunner appears in absolute dishabille every day. Seduced, I wonder if the cues really help me in doing so. I grew up looking at these in awe and intent upon covering the unclothed beauty, at least partially, but in vain. Yet, to this day it is a humongous task and yet again, with unfailing regularity, I return to ogle at the beauty as she beckons me to cover her nudity with my brainwork. Beaten black and ‘white’ (blue) and lost in those labyrinthine squares, I seek solace from the Random House Dictionary.

May 03, 2011

Neither a borrower, nor a lender be

Recently I was skimming through the Shakespearean drama Hamlet and had to set aside my scan reading abruptly to read carefully the haughty, if not trite, kernels of wisdom bestowed by Polonius, the father, on his hotheaded son Laertes. I reproduce the lines:

February 18, 2011

The Oxymoronic Persiflage

A tedious brief scene of young Pyramus
And his love Thisbe; very tragical mirth.
Merry and tragical! tedious and brief!
That is hot ice and wondrous strange snow.
How shall we find the concord of this discord?

- A Midsummer Night's Dream, Act V, scene i, 60-64

January 31, 2011

Mrs. Malaprop Lives On and On and On...

Walt Whitman described the English language as the "grandest triumph of the human intellect." But many users transcend intellectual barriers and run amok with their inopportune use of words to land in the comity of Malapropists. Yet, they add embellishment, emphasis, exaggeration, exclamation, flourish, irony, and luxuriance to the English language.

Many writers and, especially speakers, appear to ignore the rules of grammar. For example, too many well "educated" speakers have been heard to say something like, "Everyone should do their best to improve themselves." If you do not see anything wrong with this statement, then you are an active candidate for deportation to the Land of Malapropists.

January 18, 2011

English in the Linguistic Melting Pot of India

India presents its diversity in many a variety. No, I have no intention to list out these varieties, as there are books galore to do this, and more importantly, I am not competent to do this. Yet, one such diversity, I presume, has not been publicised well - the diverse transformations of Queen's English. Across the country - a linguistic melting pot - we see many variants of our very dear Indlish (Indian English). The mosaic is as varied as we see across the globe. We have, for instance, Gujlish, Punjlish, Benglish, Tamlish, Mallish et al. Despite this diversity, there is general homogeneity in syntax and vocabulary among the varieties of Indian English.