Corrections

BANTU BUAT PEMBETULAN SEKARANG!Tidak dapat dibatalkan

Teks daripada alex3518 - English

  • idioti

  • EXAMPLE TEXT I awake, and, for just a moment, I have forgotten the pain.
  • I open my eyes, ever so slowly, and reach for my cane that always hangs at my side – well you can imagine how hard it must be to get in and out of a hammock at my age – I need all the help I can get.
  • Every day the weariness grows.
  • One day I hope I will awake, rejuvenated by some ghost-demon magic, or dead, either one would be a relief.
  • Sometimes I dream of my hammock as a cocoon from which I shall emerge, reborn, a beautiful butterfly – but it is only a dream.
  • Dreams set me free – in them I can run, and jump, and make love like a young buck, master of the jungle.
  • The irony is that, between the pain of my joints and the weakness of my bladder, I don’t have many dreams; even empty sleep is a welcome luxury.
  • I place my cane firmly on the ground and, slowly, with its aid, I lower myself from the hammock.
  • Now the rains have gone my joints don’t hurt so bad.
  • Today won’t be too bad, I think – I’m prone to be over optimistic.
  • The great fire ball begins to rise in the air and narrow splinters of light pierce the leafy walls of the hut.
  • At this time the jungle is strangely subdued.
  • Half awake or half asleep, its denizens are in transition.
  • For me this time of day has always been special.
  • The time when all thing change.
  • As the bats fly to their roosts the early rising birds welcome the dawn with their softly chirped fanfare.
  • Dark gradually becomes light, and sleep gives way to consciousness.
  • It is the magical crossover between two different worlds.
  • At this time of day I can find joy in the simplest things: the sun’s reflection in a drop of dew; the yawn of a child dragged from slumber by its mother; a leaf falling slowly from a tree.
  • All around me I find the wonders of nature that comfort me in my old age.
  • I am not alone.
  • The hut is full of humanity in different states between the two great worlds.
  • My grand-daughter Monasi is already busy tending the embers of last night’s fire.
  • She pokes around in the ashes to find an ember still glowing and too it she adds some dry kindling.
  • Within minutes she has skilfully brought it to life and started a new fire and the daily cycle begins to repeat itself once again.
  • She starts to boil water.
  • I walk across the dirt floor to the fire side and squat down on my haunches by its side.
  • I warm my bones by the fire as a lizard might steal the early morning sun.
  • Outside there is a disturbance in the village.
  • I hear shouting from outside but my old ears cannot make out the words, I hear people running.

MOHON BANTU UNTUK BETULKAN SETIAP AYAT! - English