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The
Uses of Libraries
- Introduction: libraries are necessary for educational, social and national or cultural progress.
- They provide all sorts of books.
- They provide newspapers and magazines.
- Videocassettes and films in libraries need to be provided.
- The atmosphere in libraries is generally is suitable for studies.
- Conclusion – our need for well – equipped libraries should be fulfilled.
- Libraries are necessary for educational, social and national progress. they are storehouses of knowledge where we can find all kinds of books and ideas.
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“Libraries were full of
ideas—perhaps the most dangerous and powerful of all weapons.”
Sarah J. Maas
Firstly,
a library provides all sorts of books on different subjects. We can read many
various books on an equivalent subject by various writers. Thus, for reading
the ideas of various writers on an equivalent subject or for comparing their
ideas (for comparative study) the library is that the best place. For example,
a student or scholar may wish to read the ideas of various writers on
democracy. He finds perhaps many books on the history and dealing of democracy
by foreign writers and our own. He can then write fine essays or maybe books on
democracy and other systems of state himself. A person cannot normally buy a
really sizable number of books on a topic. Even if he can but most of them, he
cannot keep them all the time in his house. He cannot change his rooms into a
library.
“Libraries are our friends.”
Neil Gaiman
Secondly,
a library provides different newspapers in different languages. We can read any
newspapers we like and then compare the news and views in one with those in
others. We cannot practically buy so many newspapers each day. A library makes available
so many magazines coming from different parts of the country and from all
corners of the world. We may be able to borrow them at times.