My Hobby Tamil Essay
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Hobbies can be divided into three types based on their relationship to making. Making: Making hobbies are activities that directly involve making objects or items. Examples include woodworking, metalwork, and sewing. Hobbyists might learn a new skill, such as how to cook, play a musical instrument, or knit, and this learning process becomes a hobby.
Collecting hobbies are those where objects of interest are collected. Historically, collecting has been associated with social prestige, but the concept has become increasingly democratized and commercialized in recent decades. The number of hobbies has increased, partly because this makes some of them more accessible. Collecting can often involve purchasing objects, such as stamps, coins, or books, and in some cases it can involve acquiring material that is rare or not easily available, such as wine or gemstones. It has become popular with people in middle class countries; the strong connection between income and hobby status limits the hobbyist population to the upper classes in most countries. Collecting does not always involve a material object, even if the hobbyist chooses to collect stamps based purely on recognising the objects and their historical significance. Some of the objectives of collecting are to acquire a new skill, to transport oneself into a different place or era, and to make an investment. Jeremy Bentham wrote in his book Papers on the Probable Consequences of the Public Spirit of Benevolence and Propriety: "If it should turn out that the jargon of collectors curtails the recreation of the country from its proper pursuits, by preventing an indispensible recreation of leisure from being turned to the cultivation of such studies, the nation may be convinced, that it could not hope to have a collection complete, by means of necessity preserved, of anything that it could well direct to its own use. The paper on railways of Mr. Dixon, in the Philosophical Transactions, is an instance in which there has been more collected than there was occasion for; but still this collection was not the object of a collection, and the arts presented in so extraordinary a manner, remained the same in being. d2c66b5586