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प्रश्न
Answer any four of the following questions in 30-40 words each:
(a) What did Franz wonder about when he entered the class that day?
(b) What shocking experience did Douglas have at YMCA pool?
(c) Why does Kamala Das compare her mother to 'a pale winter's moon'?
(d) What rich bountry has the heaven given us? (A Thing of Beauty)
(e) Why did the Maharaja have to pay a bill of three lakh rupees to the British jewellers?
(f) What problem did Roger Skunk face when he went to play with his friends. How did he solve it?
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उत्तर
(a) That day when Franz entered class, he wondered something was not correct about the day. He feared some bad news was waiting for him. He had all these thoughts because there was no usual hustle-bustle of the classroom which could be heard out in the street (the opening and closing of the desks, repetition of lessons in unison very loud ,the teachers great ruler rapping on the table). The teacher was wearing his beautiful green coat, his frilled shirt and his little black silk cap all embroidered, and on the back benches of the classroom, the villagers were sitting like students.
b) Douglas refers to the incident at the Y.M.C.A. swimming pool where he almost drowned as a “misadventure.” The author was about ten or eleven years old at the time and had barely begun to learn swimming, primarily by aping others. As he was thrown suddenly into the water by someone and he couldn’t swim, he started drowning. The struggle to come to surface and to avoid getting drowned left him with a deep fear of water which deprived him from enjoying water-related activities for many years.
c) With the growing age, the poet’s mother has started losing all her vitality and radiance. The poet uses the simile of ‘late winter’s moon’ for her mother to indicate her approaching death. Winter, being the last season of the year, is synonymous with lifelessness and dormancy. Also, a winter’s moon is pale-white in colour bearing close resemblance with her mother who, having lost all her strength and beauty, looks ’wan’ and ‘pale’ to the poet. Her mother, too, is in the last phase of her life.
d) The above line is taken from the poem "A Thing Of Beauty" written by John Keats. Through the poem Keats reveals to the readers the immortality of the nature. Beauty of nature is boundless and know no limits. Heaven which is known to be the most beautiful paradise, is the bounty of the earth. The bounty of the earth is like an endless fountain that pours the beauty of nature over the mankind. This beauty is called the heaven's immortal drink that constantly pours into our hearts and moves away the "pall" from our "dark spirits". The peace we derive from this immortal drink is also eternal as it washes away the malice from the soul and refreshens it with love and kindness.
e) The Maharaja had not allowed the British officer to hunt tigers in kingdom and so there was fear of losing his own kingdom to the British. So, the King thought of a plan to lure the officer and his wife by extending some really expensive gift. So he oredered few rings worth three lakh of rupees from a jeweller and sent them to duraisani. The bill raised was the price of those rings.
f) Roger Skunk had a problem, he smelled foul. It was because of his stink, nobody mingled with him. Even his friend avoided him. They did not play with him. For this reason Roger used to remain disturbed. He cried for this.
To find a solution to his problem he went to the wise owl, who suggested him to meet the wizard. He went to meet the wizard. The wizard helped him to get rid of the foul smell by some spell. After the magic charm he was smelling like roses. The wizard asked for seven pennies for his work. However, Roger had only four pennies.
संबंधित प्रश्न
Read the passage carefully.
1. I remember my childhood as being generally happy and can recall experiencing some of the most carefree times of my life. But I can also remember, even more vividly, moments of being deeply frightened. As a child, I was truly terrified of the dark and getting lost. These fears were very real and caused me some extremely uncomfortable moments.
2. Maybe it was the strange way things looked and sounded in my familiar room at night that scared me so much. There was never total darkness, but a street light or passing car lights made clothes hung over a chair take on the shape of an unknown beast. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw curtains move when there was no breeze. A tiny creak in the floor would sound a hundred times louder than in the daylight and my imagination would take over, creating burglars and monsters. Darkness always made me feel helpless. My heart would pound and I would lie very still so that 'the enemy' wouldn't discover me.
3. Another childhood fear of mine was that I would get lost, especially on the way home from school. Every morning, I got on the school bus right near my home ‒ that was no problem. After school, though, when all the buses were lined up along the curve, I was terrified that I would get on the wrong one and be taken to some unfamiliar neighbourhood. I would scan the bus for the faces of my friends, make sure that the bus driver was the same one that had been there in the morning, and even then ask the others over and over again to be sure I was in the right bus. On school or family trips to an amusement park or a museum, I wouldn't let the leaders out of my sight. And of course, I was never very adventurous when it came to taking walks or hikes because I would go only where I was sure I would never get lost.
4. Perhaps, one of the worst fears I had as a child was that of not being liked or accepted by others. First of all, I was quite shy. Secondly, I worried constantly about my looks, thinking people wouldn't like me because I was too fat or wore braces. I tried to wear 'the right clothes' and had intense arguments with my mother over the importance of wearing flats instead of saddled shoes to school. Being popular was very important to me then and the fear of not being liked was a powerful one.
5. One of the processes of evolving from a child to an adult is being able to recognise and overcome our fears. I have learnt that darkness does not have to take on a life of its own, that others can help me when I am lost and that friendliness and sincerity will encourage people to like me. Understanding the things that scared us as children helps to cope with our lives as adults.
(a) On the basis of your reading of the above passage, make notes using headings and subheadings. Use recognizable abbreviations wherever necessary.
(b) Make a summary of the passage in not more than 80 words using the notes made and also suggest a suitable title.
Describe Miss Stapleton's first encounter with Sir Henry in about 125 words
Answer the following in 30-40 words each:
(a) Why do you think the booking clerk refused to accept the money? Why did the narrator get out so fast?
(b) Why could the Russian research vessel, ‘The Akademik Shokaskiy’ not move any further? What did the captain decide then?
(c) What sort of hunts did the Maharaja offer to organize for the high-ranking British officer? What trait of the officer does it reveal?
(d) What did Jo want the wizard to do when Mommy Skunk approached him?
Read the following extract and complete the activities given below :
A1 Compare the old and new house and complete the table :
| Points | Old House | New House |
| Surrounding | razzle-dazzle | – |
| Size of the house | – | big |
I was thirteen, the year we moved to the Cantonment at Allahabad. In stark contrast to the razzle-dazzle of the city’s commercial areas like Katra and Chowk, the Cantonment was a quiet, orderly place with broad tree-lined roads that still carried the names of long-dead Britishers. Our bungalow was on a sleepy by-lane called MacPherson Road. When we first saw it, my brothers and I were delighted. It was by far the biggest house we had ever lived in. The task of furnishing those huge, echoing rooms daunted mother.
“Is a slightly smaller house not available?” she asked father, “We do not have enough curtains for this place. And the furniture seems a little inadequate. Why did they have to plan the kitchen at such a distance from the dining-room? It is like doing a route march. And who is going to help me keep this place clean and dusted?”
Her misgivings and objections were undoubtedly valid. But, seeing our crestfallen faces, she sighed and gave in. We made extravagant promises to help in the household chores. Keep our rooms tidy. Put away our toys and books. She smiled with amused disbelief, her mind already working out how many meters of curtain-cloth would be needed and so on.
A2 Complete :
Complete the following list of objections that the mother had with the new house :
(i) Inadequate _______
(ii) Do not have _______
(iii) Kitchen at a distance from _______
(iv) A very big _______
A3 Personal response:
Do you agree with the objections raised by the mother? Explain.
Answer the following question in 150-200 words:
Why did Anne like her father more than she liked her mother?
Would you agree that the author’s grandmother was a person strong in character? If yes, give instances that show this.
Notice these expression in the text. Infer their meaning from the context.
ducking back
Notice the kind of English Tsetan uses while talking to the author. How do you think he picked it up?
What was the reason for the anxiety of Paul's mother as he grew older?
Explain the contradiction in the similies, ‘Like a child from the womb, like a ghost from the tomb’.
The power of poetry lies in suggestion and understatement. Discuss this with reference to the poem.
Find from the poem, positive qualities to fill up the web.

Name the world-famous personality who reached great heights despite of humble circumstances.

Make a list of the preparations made for an assault on Tiger Hill.
Bofors guns _____________.
Doctors who do special advanced study of specific parts of the body have special terms.
In your group try to match the specialist doctors with who / what they treat.
| Specialists | Who/What they treat | ||
| 1. | Dentist | a. | bone |
| 2. | Cardiologist | b. | brain/with spine |
| 3. | Ophthalmologist | c. | small kids |
| 4. | Orthopedic | d. | teeth |
| 5. | Pediatrician | e. | animals/birds |
| 6. | Neurologist | f. | eye |
| 7. | Veterinarian | g. | heart |
Suggest what you would do in the following situation:
You realise that you no longer want to pursue your studies in the stream you have selected.
Show the three categories of volcanoes using the following tree diagram structure.
How was the committee formed?
Note that most of the time well-known works are parodied, because people can enjoy the parody better when they know the original. Try to find more examples of parodies in English or other languages.
Read the poem and answer the following.
Which are the two different places where strawberries grow?
He decided to find his cousins’ home without their help. He asked the policeman for information in Italian because he.
Read the letter again and write a few lines on each of the following.
- things that the coach taught….
- transformation in the child……..
- things that amazed the writer……..
What kind of learning brings joy to you?
One of the Lilliputians gave a ten minutes talk in Gulliver’s language.
Anitha shares her experience about______.
Mother nature gives everything for all ______.
If we didn’t have boundaries, we don’t need _______.
When do you feel proud?
Secondly the greedy merchant is ready to offer______.
Why did he rub the circle again and again?
