Read the passage and answer to the questions

Blogs, on line version of diaries which is very much customized to individual person have been a craze for quite some time now. some of us, before the internet age, used to maintain a small diary to jot down random thoughts, reflections, sayings, poems, and other such stuff. Their online versons, however, are much more thab that. The biggest differenence between a blog and an individual's diary is that while the letter was very private affair accessible not even to family members, bloge is a public account. In fact the whole world connected to the internet gets to read its contents if they come across it. What blogger should keep in mind while blogging is that by displaying out thouhgt, emotions, opinions and personal life in full public glory, we are revealig a part of our private life. We are giving outsiders, strangers, friends colleagues and reletives a full view of what's happening inside us and without lives, something we would hesitate to do in real life. Once blogging begins, it's difficult to control and we end up sharing our personal thougt and emotions that we would otherwise have kept to ourselves. The blog entices us, and we fall to be bait. Bloges don't preserve our anonymity. They let us pulish our pictures, professional and personal | details, physical address and locations, etc. The biggest precaution to be observed therefore is to think twice before publishing anything, and ask oneself if one would like to make such matters public. The blog readers try to judge us, understand us, get information about us, and take pleasure while peeping into our private lives without realising it.

A word from the passage which means the same as "the state of remaining unknown".

Created: 1 year ago | Updated: 1 year ago

After help, we can use object + infinitive (with or without to).

Can you help me (to) find my ring? (NOT Can you help me finding my ring?)
Thank you so much for helping us (to) repair the car.
Our main task is to help the company (to) become profitable.

Help can also be followed directly by an infinitive without an object.

Would you like to help pack?

If you say that you cannot/can’t help doing something (especially in British English), you mean that you can’t stop yourself, even if you don’t want to do it.

She’s a selfish woman, but somehow you can’t help liking her.
Excuse me – I couldn’t help overhearing what you said.
Sorry I broke the cup – I couldn’t help it.

Can’t help can be followed by but + infinitive (without to), with the same meaning as can’t help verb + ing. This is common in American English.

I can’t help but wonder what I should do next.

 

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