Advertisements
Advertisements
प्रश्न
Let’s practice with P and F.
| pleased | pricked | pinched | punished |
| fat | fruit | fell | forgotten |
| palm | pair | proud | parade |
| farm | fare | frown | fish |
Advertisements
उत्तर
Do it yourself.
APPEARS IN
संबंधित प्रश्न
Listen carefully and guess how the sentence would end.
Once there was a crow. He was very thirsty.
He wanted to drink ______ ______.
Listen to the passage about Nammazhwar, an environmental crusader from Tamil Nadu. As you listen, answer the following question. The listening act can be repeated if required.
What was the turning point in the life of Nammazhwar?
Listen to the passage about Nammazhwar, an environmental crusader from Tamil Nadu. As you listen, answer the following question. The listening act can be repeated if required
How is the “Bread sandwich method” a boon to the farmers?
Listen to the passage about Nammazhwar, an environmental crusader from Tamil Nadu. As you listen, answer the following question. The listening act can be repeated if required.
Explain in your own words the meaning of “Farming ___________ even in the 21st Century”.
______ does not happen overnight.
They watched the ______ tumbling towards the shore.
The three boys went for ______ in the sea.
The __________ and __________ of your journey must also be selected.
After filling information and captcha click on __________ booking.
Dilli Haat is a _______.
Shorter bird vocalizations are ______.
In the beginning, the Nobel Committee ignored the great advances in theoretical physics because.
Listen to the flash news. Read the question given below, then listen to the flash news again and complete the response.
When did it escape?
Nandhu pressed a button.
Listen to the audio and answer the following.
Who has the robot?
- Jacklin
- Shabeena
Can we use cellphone while driving?
Listen to the conversation and answer the following.
How long will it take to make Adai?
- 5 minutes
- 10 minutes
- 15 minutes
First, read the question given below, then listen to the poem, read aloud by the teacher, or played on an audio player. Then answer the question based on your listening of the poem.
Midnight Wonders
I was tossing in my bed in the midnight hour, struggling to get a wink of sleep, but my eyes lay on the clock tower.
I looked upon the dark sky; it was adorned with sparkling pearls, which giggled at me and put a shine to my curls.
I gazed at the chubby moon, which was white and glistening like milk. Gave me a lovely, motherly smile through her lips as rosy pink.
All these magnificent objects made my mind calm. My eyelids started drooping. I was grateful for their wonderful charm.
Nature had arrived to aid me when I was trying to catch sleep. She, with her caring palms, lulled me to slumber, so deep.
1. The poet was tossing in the bed awake because ______
- he was worried
- he was struggling to sleep
- it was daytime
- he was tired
2. The ______were ‘sparkling as pearls’.
- moon
- sun
- stars
- meteoroids
3. The ______gave the poet a motherly smile.
- sun
- stars
- moon
- sky
4. ______made the poet’s eyelids droop.
- nature
- rosy lips
- songs
- tiredness
5. ______is the title of the poem.
- Wonders
- Midnight Wonders
- Nature
- Midnight dreams
First, read the following statements. Then, listen to the passage read aloud by your teacher or played on the recorder and complete the statements. You may listen to it again, if required.
There are many answers to this question. Firstly, 1 would say that we owed much to the work of previous climbers on Everest: to the experience and know ledge they passed on, and to the fact that they had gone on trying and had never given up hope.
Next, I w ould place the careful and thorough planning done before the climb began. On the Everest, a large number of people have to do different things in different places at the same time. Unless every detail had been worked out in advance, things would quickly have gone wrong.
The third reason was the excellence of our equipment. In particular, our oxygen apparatus was very important, and it worked well. Without it. we could not have reached the summit.
Our own fitness played a big part in the climb, and this was due to our periods of training, in which we got used gradually to great heights: and to our food; and to the care and attention we received from our doctors.
Above all else, I should like to mention how well we worked together. That was the biggest single reason why we got to the top. In the four months we were together we lived and worked as a team. Not everyone could climb to the top. Some of the members had jobs to do on other parts of the mountain; jobs that were less exciting than climbing to the summit, but just as dangerous and uncomfortable. But everyone played his part to the full. That was the biggest thing of all.
In the same way, our Sherpas were magnificent. Without our tents, our oxygen, our food, our climbing gear, the summit could not have been reached. And without the Sherpas, we could
not have lifted all this equipment, which weighed 750 lb., up to 26,000 feet, ready for the assaults. No praise is too high for these cheerful and
gallant men.
Finally, there was the weather. For five weeks we had bad weather; then, after the middle of May, we were lucky. It no longer snowed, and even the wind sometimes dropped.
Complete the following.
a) List any three aspects which contributed to the success of the ascent of the summit.
- ______
- ______
- ______
b) Without the help of ______nothing would have been possible.
c) The main idea of the passage is ______.
d) The biggest thing of all is ______.
e) ______were cheerful and gallant men.
