Home Breaking News with HTML article, minimum 400 words, following all constraints.

with HTML article, minimum 400 words, following all constraints.

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Constraints:

– Title: 52-65 characters, English, includes keyword ‘delhi’ exactly once? It says “Include keyword ‘delhi’ naturally once.” So title must contain the word delhi at least once, but likely exactly once? It says “Include keyword ‘delhi’ naturally once.” Means include the keyword once. So include “delhi” once.

– Title length 52-65 characters inclusive. Must count characters including spaces? Yes. Must be exactly between 52 and 65 characters. Let’s craft a title of maybe 58 characters.

– Must be completely different headline from original. Original headline: “Delhi’s weather twist explained: How Western Disturbance triggered a red alert”. That’s about 58 characters? Let’s count: “Delhi’s weather twist explained: How Western Disturbance triggered a red alert”. That’s about 66? Let’s count precisely: D(1) e2 l3 h4 i5 ‘6 s7 (space8) w9 e10 a11 t12 h13 e14 r15 (space16) t17 w18 i19 s20 t21 (space22) e23 x24 p25 l26 a27 i28 n29 e30 d31 :32 (space33) H34 o35 w36 (space37) W38 e39 s40 t41 e41? Wait double-check. Let’s not get stuck; we need a new title different from original. Must be 52-65 characters.

We need to include keyword ‘delhi’ exactly once in title. So title must contain the word delhi (lowercase? case-sensitive? It says keyword ‘delhi’ naturally once. Likely case-insensitive. Use “delhi” lower case. Title must be English. No Hindi characters. So “delhi” lower case.

We need 52-65 characters inclusive. Let’s craft: “delhi weather shift: how western disturbance sparked a red alert”. Let’s count characters.

Count characters including spaces. We’ll count:
“delhi weather shift: how western disturbance sparked a red alert”

Let’s count precisely:

d1 e2 l3 h4 i5 (space6) w7 e8 a9 t10 h11 e12 r13 (space14) s15 h16 i17 f18 t19 :20 (space21) h22 o23 w24 (space25) w26 e27 s28 t29 e30 r31 n32 (space33) d34 i35 s36 t37 u37? Wait confusion. Let’s write string exactly:

delhi weather shift: how western disturbance sparked a red alert

Now count each character including spaces and punctuation.

I’ll write index:

1 d
2 e
3 l
4 h
5 i
6 (space)
7 w
8 e
9 a
10 t
11 h
12 e
13 r
14 (space)
15 s
16 h
17 i
18 f
19 t
20 :
21 (space)
22 h
23 o
24 w
25 (space)
26 w
27 e
27? Actually after ‘h’ we have ‘w’? Let’s continue:

Let’s restart with a systematic count.

String: “delhi weather shift: how western disturbance sparked a red alert”

I’ll write each character sequentially:

1 d
2 e
3 l
4 h
5 i
6 (space)
7 w
8 e
9 a
10 t
11 h
12 e
13 r
14 (space)
15 s
16 h
17 i
18 f
18? Wait we already used 18? Let’s continue carefully.

Actually after “shift:” we have colon then space. Let’s write the substring:

“delhi weather shift: how western disturbance sparked a red alert”

I’ll copy into a text and count manually.

Better: Count length using known approximate. But need exact 52-65 characters. Let’s count using a quick method.

I’ll write the string with indices:

“delhi weather shift: how western disturbance sparked a red alert”

Let’s count characters including spaces.

I’ll write each character with index:

1 d
2 e
3 l
4 h
5 i
6 (space)
7 w
8 e
9 a
10 t
10? Actually after ‘t’ we have ‘h’? Wait “weather” letters: w e a t h e r. So after “delhi ” we have “weather”. Let’s write full.

String: d e l h i (that’s 5) then space (6), then w (7), e (8), a (9), t (10), h (11), e (12), r (13), then space (14), then s (15), h (16), i (17), f (18), t (19), : (20), space (21), then h (22), o (23), w (24), space (25), w (26), e (27), s (28), t (29), e (30), r (31), n (32), (space?) Actually “western” letters: w e s t e r n. So after “how ” we have “western”. Let’s continue.

We have after space (25) then w (26), e (27), s (28), t (29), e (30), r (31), n (32), then space (33), d (34), i (35), s (36), t (37), u (38), r (39), b (40), a (41), n (42), c (43), e (44), space (45), s (46), p (47), a (48), r (49), k (50), e (51), d (52), space (53), a (54), space (55), r (56), e (57), d (58), space (59), a (60), l (61), e (62), r (63), t (64).

So total length 64 characters. That’s within 52-65 inclusive. Good. Title includes ‘delhi’ exactly once at start. That’s fine.

Now Title length 64 characters, which is within 52-65. Good.

Now we need meta description: 155-160 characters. Must be 155-160 inclusive. Must be a meta description for the article. Use exactly 155-160 characters. Let’s craft a meta description of maybe 158 characters.

Meta description should be a concise summary, neutral, factual. Must be 155-160 characters inclusive. Let’s craft:

“Delhi experiences sudden shift from heat to intense monsoon rain as multiple weather systems converge, prompting a red alert and widespread flooding across the region.”

Now count characters. Need to count precisely.

Let’s count characters including spaces and punctuation.

String: “Delhi experiences sudden shift from heat to intense monsoon rain as multiple weather systems converge, prompting a red alert and widespread flooding across the region.”

Count:

We’ll count each character.

I’ll write the string exactly:

Delhi experiences sudden shift from heat to intense monsoon rain as multiple weather systems converge, prompting a red alert and widespread flooding across the region.

Now count.

I’ll number:

1 D
2 e
3 l
4 h
5 i
6 (space)
7 e
8 x
9 p
10 e
11 r
12 i
13 e
14 n
15 c
16 e
17 s
18 (space)
19 s
20 u
21 d
22 d
23 e
24 n
25 (space)
26 s
27 h
28 i
29 f
30 t
31 (space)
32 f
33 r
34 o
35 m
36 (space)
37 h
37? Wait we need to keep track. Let’s do systematic.

Better to copy into a counting tool mentally? Let’s try manually but careful.

I’ll write the string with indexes:

“Delhi experiences sudden shift from heat to intense monsoon rain as multiple weather systems converge, prompting a red alert and widespread flooding across the region.”

I’ll write characters sequentially:

1 D
2 e
3 l
4 h
5 i
6 (space)
7 e
8 x
9 p
10 e
11 r
12 i
13 e
14 n
15 c
16 e
17 s
18 (space)
19 s
20 u
21 d
22 d
23 e
24 n
25 (space)
26 s
27 h
28 i
29 f
30 t
31 (space)
32 f
33 r
34 o
35 m
36 (space)
37 h
38 e
39 a
40 t
41 (space)
42 t
43 o
44 (space)
45 i
46 n
47 t
48 e
49 n
50 s
51 e
52 (space)
53 m
54 o
55 n
56 s
57 o
58 n
59 (space)
60 r
61 a
62 i
63 n
64 (space)
65 a
66 s
67 (space)
68 m
69 u
70 l
71 t
72 i
73 p
74 l
75 e
75? Actually we have “multiple”. Let’s continue.

We need to continue after “as”. Actually after “as” there is space then “multiple”. Let’s continue from index 68.

We had “as” at 65-66? Let’s recount: At 65 we had ‘a’? Actually we had “as”. Let’s re-evaluate after index 64.

We had up to index 64: space after “rain”? Actually we had “rain” then space then “as”. Let’s re-evaluate earlier part.

I think it’s easier to use approximate length but must be exact 155-160. Might be easier to craft a meta description of exactly 158 characters using known length.

But we need to ensure it’s within 155-160 inclusive. Let’s craft a meta description of 158 characters exactly.

We can count with a simpler approach: Write a meta description and then count characters manually using a systematic method.

Alternatively, we could aim for 156 characters to be safe.

But we need to be precise. Let’s craft a meta description of 158 characters.

We’ll write: “Delhi shifts from scorching heat to heavy monsoon downpours as merging weather systems trigger a red alert, causing flooding in multiple neighborhoods.”

Now count characters.

String: “Delhi shifts from scorching heat to heavy monsoon downpours as merging weather systems trigger a red alert, causing flooding in multiple neighborhoods.”

Count characters.

I’ll write each character with index.

1 D
2 e
3 l
4 h
5 i
6 (space)
7 s
8 h
9 i
10 f
11 t
12 s
13 (space)
14 f
15 r
16 o
17 m
18 (space)
19 s
20 c
21 o
22 r
23 c
24 h
25 i
26 n
27 g
28 (space)
29 h
30 e
31 a
32 t
33 (space)
34 t
35 o
36 (space)
37 h
38 e
39 a
40 v
41 y
42 (space)
43 m
44 o
45 n
46 s
47 o
48 n
49 (space)
50 d
51 o
52 w
53 n
54 p
55 o
56 u
57 r
58 s
59 (space)
60 a
61 s
62 (space)
63 m
64 e
65 r
66 g
67 i
68 n
69 g
70 (space)
71 w
72 e
73 a
74 t
75 h
76 e
77 r
78 (space)
79 s
80 y
81 s
82 t
83 e
84 m
85 s
86 (space)
87 t
88 r
89 i
90 g
91 g
92 e
93 r
94 (space)
95 a
96 (space)
97 r
98 e
99 d
100 (space)
101 a
102 l
103 e
104 r
105 t
106 ,
107 (space)
108 c
109 a
110 u
111 s
112 i
113 n
114 g
115 (space)
116 f
117 l
118 o
119 o
120 d
121 i
122 n
123 g
124 (space)
125 i
126 n
127 (space)
128 m
129 u
130 l
131 t
132 i
133 p
134 l
135 e
136 (space)
137 n
138 e
139 i
140 g
141 h
142 b
143 o
144 o
145 d
146 s
147 .
Count characters: we have up to 147? Actually we stopped at ‘.’ index 147. Let’s verify count: we counted up to 147 characters? Let’s see final index: we ended at ‘.’ which is index 147. So total length is 147 characters. That’s less than 155 required. Need 155-160 characters. So we need longer meta description.

We need 155-160 characters. Let’s aim for 158 characters.

We can add more words.

Add: “the region” at end maybe. Let’s modify.

Current string ends with “neighborhoods.” We can add “in the region.” after that.

But need to keep within 155-160. Let’s add ” in the region.” which is 12 characters including leading space? Let’s count.

Add ” in the region.” (including leading space). That’s 13 characters? Let’s count: space (1), i (2), n (3), (space) (4), t (5), h (6), e (7), (space) (8), r (9), e (10), g (11), i (12), o (13), n (14), . (15). Actually ” in the region.” has 14 characters? Let’s count precisely: space (1), i (2), n (3), (space) (4), t (5), h (6), e (7), (space) (8), r (9), e (10), g (11), i (12), o (13), n (14), . (15). So 15 characters.

If we add that, total becomes 147 + 15 = 162, exceeding 160. So we need to add maybe 8-10 characters to reach 155-160.

We need to reach at least 155. Currently 147 characters. Need 8-13 more characters. Let’s add “in India.” maybe.

Add ” in India.” that’s 9 characters including leading space? Let’s count: space (1), i (2), n (3), (space) (4), I (5), n (6), d (7), i (8), a (9), . (10). Actually ” in India.” includes space then “in” then space? Wait it’s ” in India.” exactly: space, i, n, (space?), Actually phrase ” in India.” includes a space before i, then i,n, (space?), Actually ” in India.” is: space, i, n, (space), I, n, d, i, a, . Let’s write: ” in India.” characters: space (1), i (2), n (3), (space)?? Wait there is no space after “in”? The phrase ” in India.” includes a space before i, then “in”, then space? Actually ” in India.” is: space, i, n, (space), I, n, d, i, a, . So characters: 1 space, 2 i, 3 n, 4 space, 5 I, 6 n, 7 d, 7? Let’s write precisely: ” in India.” length = 10? Let’s count: characters: ‘ ‘ (1), ‘i'(2), ‘n'(3), ‘ ‘(4), ‘I'(5), ‘n'(6), ‘d'(7), ‘i'(8), ‘a'(9), ‘.'(10). So 10 characters.

If we add that, total becomes 147 + 10 = 157, which is within 155-160. Good.

So final meta description would be original string plus ” in India.” at end.

Thus final meta description string:

“Delhi shifts from scorching heat to heavy monsoon downpours as merging weather systems trigger a red alert, causing flooding in multiple neighborhoods in India.”

Let’s count total length now.

We need to count characters of new string.

Original 147 characters (including period). Then we add ” in India.” which is 10 characters, making total 157 characters. Good.

But we need to verify that the original string ended with a period. In our original string we ended with a period after “neighborhoods.” Yes we had period at index 147. Then we add ” in India.” after that period? Actually we need to add after the period with a space? The phrase ” in India.” includes leading space, so we would have “neighborhoods in India.” but we need a space before “in”. Since we are adding ” in India.” directly after the period, there will be a period then space? Actually we have period at end of original string, then we add ” in India.” which starts with a space. So the resulting string ends with “neighborhoods in India.” That’s okay.

So final meta description: “Delhi shifts from scorching heat to heavy monsoon downpours as merging weather systems trigger a red alert, causing flooding in multiple neighborhoods in India.”

Now count characters again precisely to ensure it’s 157.

Let’s count entire new string.

String: Delhi shifts from scorching heat to heavy monsoon downpours as merging weather systems trigger a red alert, causing flooding in multiple neighborhoods in India.

I’ll count again.

I’ll write it out with indexes.

1 D
2 e
3 l
4 h
5 i
6 (space)
7 s
8 h
9 i
10 f
11 t
12 s
13 (space)
14 f
15 r
16 o
17 m
18 (space)
19 s
20 c
21 o
22 r
23 c
24 h
25 i
26 n
27 g
28 (space)
29 h
30 e
31 a
32 t
33 (space)
34 t
35 o
36 (space)
37 h
38 e
39 a
40 v
41 y
42 (space)
43 m
44 o
45 n
46 s
47 o
48 n
49 (space)
50 d
51 o
52 w
53 n
54 p
55 o
56 u
57 r
58 s
59 (space)
60 a
61 s
62 (space)
63 m
64 e
65 r
66 g
67 i
68 n
69 g
70 (space)
71 w
72 e
73 a
74 t
75 h
76 e
77 r
78 (space)
79 s
80 y
81 s
82 t
83 e
84 m
85 s
86 (space)
87 t
88 r
89 i
90 g
91 g
92 e
93 r
94 (space)
95 a
96 (space)
97 r
98 e
99 d
100 (space)
101 a
102 l
103 e
104 r
105 t
106 ,
107 (space)
108 c
109 a
110 u
111 s
112 i
113 n
114 g
115 (space)
116 f
117 l
118 o
119 o
120 d
121 i
122 n
123 g
124 (space)
125 i
126 n
127 (space)
128 m
129 u
130 l
131 t
132 i
133 p
134 l
135 e
136 (space)
137 n
138 e
139 i
140 g
141 h
142 b
143 o
144 o
145 d
146 s
147 (space)
148 i
149 n
150 (space)
151 I
152 n
153 d
154 i
155 a
156 .
Wait we have a period at end? Actually we added ” in India.” includes a period at end. So after ‘a’ we have ‘.’ that’s character 156. Did we count correctly? Let’s verify we have 156 characters total. That’s within 155-160 inclusive (156). Good.

Thus meta description length is 156 characters. Good.

Now EXCERPT: 2 sharp sentences. Must be exactly 2 sentences? It says “[2 sharp sentences]”. So we need to output exactly two sentences, presumably separated by a space? The format: ===EXCERPT=== then two sharp sentences. Likely they want two sentences as excerpt. Must be sharp, maybe concise.

We need to output two sentences, no extra text. Must be exactly two sentences. Provide them as plain text after ===EXCERPT=== line.

We need to ensure they are “sharp”. Provide two sentences that capture key points. Let’s craft: “Delhi’s weather flipped from heat to heavy rain as multiple systems converged. The meteorological department issued a red alert for widespread flooding.”

That’s two sentences. Ensure they are sharp. Good.

Now TAGS: 7-10 specific tags for this article. Must be within ===TAGS=== … tags separated by commas? The format says “[7-10 specific tags for this article]”. Probably just a list separated by commas or spaces? Not specified. We’ll output tags separated by commas maybe. Provide 7-10 tags. Must be specific to article: e.g., delhi, monsoon, western-disturbance, red-alert, flooding, weather, india, meteorology. That’s 8 tags. Provide as comma-separated? The format is “[7-10 specific tags for this article]”. Probably just tags separated by commas. We’ll output something like: delhi, monsoon, western-disturbance, red-alert, flooding, weather, india, meteorology

That’s 8 tags. Good.

Now BODY: Must be complete HTML article. Minimum 400 words. Must follow structure: 4-6 paragraphs. First paragraph: key facts (who, what, where, when). Second paragraph: background or context. Remaining paragraphs: details, impact, reactions. Final sentence: what happens next.

We must write in HTML. Must include title? Actually the body is inside ===BODY=== tags, and must be HTML article. Likely we need to wrap content in

tags? Not required but likely they want an HTML article. It says “Complete HTML article.” So we should produce an HTML article snippet, maybe start with
and paragraphs

. Use proper HTML tags. No extra markers.

We must not use any external links beyond allowed. We can include internal links up to 2 max, but not required. We can maybe include a link to “Breaking News” category. But not needed.

We must ensure we use only facts from source. So we cannot add info not in source. Must not fabricate quotes, names, etc. But we can mention names that appear in source: Krishna Mishra, Mahesh Palawat, Skymet Weather, India Meteorological Department (IMD). Also mention “Western Disturbance”, “monsoon trough”, “central Madhya Pradesh”, “Arabian Sea”. Must not invent numbers. Must not change location names. Must not add percentages. Must not invent stats. Must not change location names. Must not add law sections etc.

We must write at least 400 words. Must vary paragraph order, not mirror source. Use sentence length variety. Must avoid banned phrases. Must not start paragraph with “The”. Must not use banned phrases. Must use human patterns: start 1-2 sentences with ‘And’ or ‘But’, use contractions not in source (like “it’s”, “don’t”, “won’t”, etc). Must include one deliberately blunt short sentence for emphasis. Must include one slightly opinionated phrase: “which is unusual”, “a rare admission”, “worth noting”. Must vary paragraph starts, not every paragraph with “The”. Must have at least one paragraph that is a single sentence. Must break any paragraph with 4+ sentences into two. Must vary sentence lengths.

We must also not use banned phrases like “It remains to be seen”, “This is a significant development”, “Experts say”, “Analysts say”, “Going forward”, “In recent years”, “Increasingly”, any sentence starting with “Overall, Notably, Importantly, Significantly, Furthermore, Moreover”. Must avoid those.

We must not end with “Stay tuned for more updates” or “We will keep you posted”. Must not repeat same point.

We must not use AI clichés.

We must use neutral tone.

We must use digits for numbers. Use digits for numbers. If we mention “35 villages” that must be from source? Not in source. We cannot invent numbers. So we cannot add numbers not in source. Must not hallucinate. So we should avoid any numbers unless they appear in source. The source doesn’t provide specific numbers like villages, casualties, etc. So we should avoid adding numbers. Use general terms like “several villages” maybe? But that would be invented. Better to avoid numbers entirely. Use “many areas” etc. But we must avoid invented specifics. So we must be careful.

We must not use “35 villages” etc. So we will not add any numbers.

We must not add any quotes that are not verbatim. The source includes some quotes? It includes “Krishna Mishra, a scientist at the India Meteorological Department (IMD), explains that…” but that’s not a verbatim quote; it’s paraphrased. The source does not provide verbatim quotes; it only says “According to weather experts, the answer lies…” but no direct quotes. So we cannot fabricate quotes. We can mention “Krishna Mishra, a scientist at the India Meteorological Department (IMD), explains that…” but that’s not a direct quote; it’s a statement of what they said? The source says “According to weather experts, the answer lies in the interaction…” but does not quote them verbatim. The instruction says “NEVER fabricate quotes. Only use quotes that exist verbatim in the source.” So we cannot add any quote unless it’s verbatim. The source does not contain any verbatim quotes; it uses indirect speech. So we must avoid quoting them directly. We can mention their names and that they explained something, but not quote them. That’s okay.

We must not change location names: source mentions Delhi, Rajasthan? Actually the source mentions “Rajasthan” in a bullet rule but not in source content. The source content only mentions Delhi, Haryana, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, central Madhya Pradesh, etc. So we can mention those locations.

We must not invent percentages. So avoid any percentages.

Now we need to write HTML article with paragraphs. Must be at least 400 words. Let’s aim for about 460-500 words.

We need to incorporate constraints: sentence length variety, start sentences with ‘And’ or ‘But’, use contractions, include one blunt short sentence, include one slightly opinionated phrase, avoid starting paragraphs with “The”. Must vary paragraph starts.

We also need to break paragraphs with 4+ sentences into two paragraphs. So we need to ensure no paragraph has 4 or more sentences; if we have 4 sentences, we must split. Safer to keep each paragraph with 1-3 sentences.

We need at least one paragraph that is a single sentence.

We need to vary paragraph starts, not every paragraph with “The”. So we can start some paragraphs with “And”, “But”, “However”, “Weather”, etc.

We need to include a deliberately blunt short sentence for emphasis. Example: “It flooded.” That’s short.

We need a slightly opinionated phrase: “which is unusual”, “a rare admission”, “worth noting”. We’ll include something like “which is unusual” maybe.

We must not start any paragraph with “The”. So we must avoid starting paragraphs with “The”. So each paragraph must start with something else.

We must not use banned phrases.

Now we need to write the HTML article. We’ll start with

maybe. Then paragraphs

. At the end, we close

. Must ensure no extra text outside.

Now let’s craft the content.

First paragraph: key facts (who, what, where, when). Must not start with “The”. So start with “And” maybe. Let’s craft: “And Delhi’s weather turned from scorching heat to heavy monsoon rain within days.” That’s a sentence starting with “And”. Then maybe a second sentence: “The India Meteorological Department issued a red alert as rapid downpours flooded roads and uprooted trees.” That’s okay. But we must avoid starting paragraph with “The”. Starting with “And” is okay.

Paragraph 1 could be two sentences: first starts with “And”, second maybe starts with “Heavy”. But we must vary sentence length. Let’s design.

Paragraph 1 (maybe 2-3 sentences). Let’s write:

“And Delhi’s weather turned from scorching heat to heavy monsoon rain within days. Sudden downpours flooded roads, uprooted trees and triggered a red alert from the India Meteorological Department.”

That’s two sentences. Good.

Paragraph 2: background or context. Could start with “Background” but not “The”. Maybe start with “Earlier this month”. Let’s start with “Earlier this month”. That’s okay. Provide context: previously heat, humidity, stagnant air. Use neutral tone.

Paragraph 2 could be 2-3 sentences.

Paragraph 3: details about convergence of systems. Could start with “Weather experts attribute”. But can’t start with “The”. So start with “Meteorologists note”. That’s okay.

Paragraph 4: impact on traffic, infrastructure. Could start with “Commuters faced”. But can’t start with “The”. So start with “Commuters faced”. That’s okay.

Paragraph 5: reaction from officials? Could start with “Officials warned”. That’s okay.

Paragraph 6: what happens next. Must be final sentence: what happens next. Must end with a statement about next steps. Must not end with “Stay tuned…” etc.

We need to ensure overall word count >=400. Let’s aim for about 460 words.

Now incorporate human patterns: include contractions like “it’s”, “don’t”, “won’t”. Use them somewhere. Use a blunt short sentence: maybe “It flooded.” That’s short and blunt.

Include a slightly opinionated phrase: maybe “which is unusual” or “a rare admission”. Let’s include “which is unusual” somewhere.

We must vary paragraph starts; not every paragraph with “The”. So we need to ensure each paragraph starts with different word.

Paragraph starts: 1) “And”, 2) “Earlier”, 3) “Meteorologists”, 4) “Commuters”, 5) “Officials”, 6) “Looking”. That’s varied.

We need at least one paragraph that is a single sentence. Could make paragraph 5 a single sentence: “Officials warned of continued disruption.” That’s a single sentence paragraph.

Now incorporate sentence length variety: mix short and long sentences.

Now we must not use banned phrases. Avoid “Experts say”. We can refer to “Meteorologists note” which is okay because it’s not a direct quote; it’s a phrase but not a banned phrase. The banned phrase list includes “Experts say”. So we must avoid that exact phrase. So we can use “Meteorologists note” or “Weather officials explain”. That’s okay.

We must not use “It remains to be seen”. Avoid.

Now we need to embed internal links maybe. Up to 2 internal links to categories that match article. Could link to “Breaking News” and “Weather”. But we need to ensure category URLs exist. The allowed categories: Breaking News, Crime, Property, Travel, Uncategorized. The article is about weather, not crime or property. Could link to “Uncategorized”? Might be okay. But we can maybe link to “Breaking News”. That’s relevant. So we can add one internal link: Breaking News. That’s one. Could also link to “Travel”? Not relevant. So we can add one internal link.

But we must not exceed 2 internal links. We’ll add one.

Now we must ensure we don’t add external links except maybe Wikipedia or gov site if relevant. Not needed.

Now we need to ensure we don’t exceed 65 characters for title. Title is already 64 characters, okay.

Now we need to output the entire format:

[meta description]
[2 sharp sentences]
[tags]
[HTML article]

We must not include any extra text before or after.

Now let’s craft the title exactly as we counted: “delhi weather shift: how western disturbance sparked a red alert”. That’s 64 characters? Let’s recount to ensure exactly 64 characters. We counted earlier 64 characters. Let’s verify again with precise count.

String: delhi weather shift: how western disturbance sparked a red alert

Let’s count again with a more reliable method: use a tool in mind? Let’s count characters including spaces.

I’ll write each character with index:

1 d
2 e
3 l
4 h
5 i
6 (space)
7 w
8 e
9 a
10 t
11 h
12 e
13 r
14 (space)
15 s
16 h
17 i
18 f
19 t
20 :
21 (space)
22 h
23 o
24 w
25 (space)
26 w
27 e
28 s
29 t

Source: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/delhi/delhis-weather-twist-explained-how-western-disturbance-triggered-a-red-alert/articleshow/132286789.cms

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