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Read the Extract Given Below and Answer the Question that Follow. What Were They Doing on the Hill?

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प्रश्न

The women came out on the shore, and made for the stepping—?stones. They had plenty to laugh and bicker about, as they approached the river in a noisy crowd. They girded up their skirts, so as to jump from stone to stone, and they clanked their sickles and forks together over their shoulders to have ease of movement. They shouted their quarrels above the gush of the river. Noise frightens crocodiles. The big mugger did not move, and all the women crossed in safety to the other bank. Here they had to climb a steep hillside to get at the grass, but all fell to with a will, and sliced away at it wherever there was foothold to be had. Down below them ran the broad river, pouring powerfully out from its deep narrow pools among the cold cliffs and shadows, spreading into warm shallows, lit by kingfishers. Great turtles lived there, and mahseer weighing more than a hundred pounds. Crocodiles too. Sometimes you could see them lying out on those slabs of clay over there, but there were none to be seen at the moment.

Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow.

What were they doing on the hill?

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उत्तर

The women climbed the hill to reach the grass there and cut it with their sickles and then gather with their hay forks so that they could take it and sell in the market.

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  क्या इस प्रश्न या उत्तर में कोई त्रुटि है?
अध्याय 2.08: The Blue Bead - Passage 3

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संबंधित प्रश्न

After you have made a choice do you always think about what might have been, or do you accept the reality?


You can find more information about Robert Frost at the following websites.
http://www.poets.org/poets/poets.cfm?prmID=1961.
Hear the poet (who died almost forty years ago!) reading the poem at
http://www.poets.org/poems/poems.cfm ?prmID= 1645
To view a beautiful New England scene with each poem on this web site: "Illustrated
Poetry of Robert Frost":
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Olympus/1487/index.html


Six humans trapped by happenstance
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Each one possessed a stick of wood,
Or so the story's told.
Their dying fire in need of logs;
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For on the faces around the fire,
He noticed one was black.

Read the lines given above and answer the question that follow:

What do the logs denote?


"Now tell us what 'twas all about,"
Young Peterkin, he cries;
And little wilhelmine looks up
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And what they fought each other for."
"It was the English," Kaspar cried,
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Mark your choice.


Answer the following questions.

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Find these sentences in the story and fill in the blanks.

(i) This made Taro ___________________ than ever. (3)

(ii) He decided to work ___________________ than before. (3)

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That’s not a proper remark to make under the circumstances.


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