many tourists. Desert Tours in India Most popular safaries are located in Jaisalmer, Bikaner, Jodhpur, Pushkar and the Shekhawati regions. The durations vary, it can be a day to a few months. The best time to go on a safary is winter, because on summer, the desert gets very hot. Taj Mahal The Taj Mahal is the most tourist attractive mausoleum in the world. It was built by the 5th Mughal emperor Shahjahan in memory of his beloved wife. The Taj is a symbol of Indian womanhood. Bekal Fort It is located on the most northen point of the Kerala state. The fort is over 35 acres of land and more than 300 years old. The fort was built to stop invasions from the sea. The observation tower provides a stunning view of the Arabian Sea. References http://www.vacationsindia.com for the information http://www.google.com for the images
-kin – napkin -ock – buttock, hillock, bullock -et – bullet, pallet, tablet, cigarette, kitchenette, balconette, suffragette, o To form abstract nouns 8 -dom – kingdom, serfdom, freedom -hood – likelihood, manhood, childhood, womanhood -ness – likeness, everydayness, bitterness, kindness, blindness, darkness -ship – friendship, kinship, scholarship, citizenship, relationship, membership -th – growth, stealth, brith, death, oath, strength, filth, health, truth, depth o Romance -age – suffrage, passage, baggage, carriage, vicarage, village, homage, marriage
derer, hermit, inventor, nurse, savior, artist, l u n a t i c , lover, clown, king, victim, slave, worker, rebel, adventurer, tragic failure, coward, saint, monster, etc. T h e many creative p o s s i b i l i t i e s of the form far outweigh its potential for abuse. GENDER PROBLEMS T h e Hero's Journey is sometimes critiqued as a masculine theory, cooked up by men to enforce their dominance, and with little relevance to the unique and quite different journey of womanhood. There may be some masculine bias built into the description of the hero cycle since many of its theoreticians have been male, and I freely admit it: I'm a man and can't help seeing the world through the filter of my gender. Yet I have tried to acknowledge and explore the ways in which the woman's journey is different from the man's. I believe that much of the journey is the same for all humans, since we share