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Maharashtra State BoardSSC (English Medium) 10th Standard

Dialogue writing. Put the sentences in proper order. I am reading a book. Which book you are reading? I am reading Wings of fire What are you doing? Complete the dialogue. A. Do you like sports?

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Question

Dialogue writing.

  1. Put the sentences in proper order.   [1]
    1. I am reading a book.
    2. Which book you are reading?
    3. I am reading Wings of fire
    4. What are you doing?
  2. Complete the dialogue.   [1]
    A: Do you like sports? 
    B: ______
    A: Which sports do you like?
    B: ______
  1. Develop a meaningful dialogue between you and your friend regarding the precautions to take during the pandemic situation of the coronavirus. (Minimum three exchanges)   [3]
Writing Skills
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Solution

A.

iv. What are you doing?
i. I am reading a book.
ii. Which book are you reading?
iii. I am reading Wings of fire.

B.

A: Do you like sports?
B: Yes, I do like sports.
A: which sports do you like?
B: I like cricket.

C.

Kriti (I) Hey Vicky! How’ve you been?
Vicky (Friend) Hey Kriti! I’m fine. Hope you and your family members are good too.
Kriti Yeah, yeah. Good going. But, this current situation of the pandemic has tensed all of us and none of us are going out anywhere.
Vicky That’s really sad to know what the world is going through.
We too are staying completely at home.
Kriti But, we need to take due care and precaution. We must keep washing our hands frequently with water and soap or use a sanitizer.
Vicky Rightly said, Kriti. Also, if at all, need be, we’re going out, we must wear a face mask.
Kriti We must maintain a distance of 3 meters from other people in public.
Vicky Yes. Social distancing is important during pandemic times. I pray for the times to ease out and the novel coronavirus to take a backseat.
Kriti Same here.
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Dialogue Writing
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Chapter 5: Section 5: Writing Skill - Activity Set 1

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SCERT Maharashtra English [Marathi] Standard 10 Maharashtra State Board
Chapter 5 Section 5: Writing Skill
Activity Set 1 | Q 5. (B) B1.

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B2. Dialogue writing

Look at the following News Headline and develop a dialogue between you and your Friend. Use the points given in the call-outs. MASTER-blaster's last innings.


Read the following extract and convert it into a dialogue between Charles and Oliver in  about 120 words
[You may begin with: Charles: Hi Orlando! I am a famous wrestler ..... ]

   Frederick had a very famous wrestler, called Charles, in his court. He was champion of the country and had fought many brave and strong young men. Now, Orlando was a fine wrestler, too, and decided to try his strength against Charles. Charles came to see Oliver about this, asking him to persuade Orlando to give up his idea.
   'I am a professional wrestler, sir,' Charles explained to Oliver, 'and I must always fight to win, in order to keep my reputation. Anyone who fights me runs the risk of being badly hurt, Please warn your younger brother, and persuade him to change his mind.
   But the wicked Oliver thought this was a good opportunity to get rid of Orlando, so he told Charles all kinds of lies about the young man. lie pretended that Orlando was bad and ungrateful, and deserved any punishment which Charles could give him. I would rather you broke his neck than his finger,' Oliver said, 'and you have my permission to do. what you like with the boy.'
So Charles promised to do his best to kill Orlando. 'If he comes to the fight tomorrow, I'll give him his payment,' Charles said. 'If he can walk away after I have finished with him, never wrestle again.'


Read the following extract and convert it into a dialogue in about 120 words :

[You may begin with: Herman: Roma, let's come here ..... ]

We piled back into Siq's car, Roma and I sharing the backseat. As European Jews who had survived the war, we were aware that much had been l.eft unsaid between us. She broached the subject, ''Where were you during the war?'' She aked softly.
'The camps,' I said, the terrible memories still vivid, the
irreparable loss I had tried to forget. But you can never forget.
She nodded. ''My family was hiding on a farm in Germany,
not far from Berlin,'' she told me. ''My father knew a priest, and he got us Aryan papers.''
I imagined how she 1nust have suffered too, fear, a constant
companion. And yet here we were both survivors, in a new world.
''There was a carmp next to the farm,'' Roma continued. ''I
saw a boy there and I would throw him apples every day.''
What an amazing coincidence that she had helped some
other boy. ''What did he look like?'' I asked. ''He was tall, skinny, and hungry. I must have seen him eve1y day for six months''.
My heart was racing. I couldn't believe it. This couldn't be.
''Did he tell you one day not to come back because he was leaving Schlieben?''
Roma. looked at me in amazement. ''Yes!''
''That was me!''
I was ready to burst with joy and awe, flooded with emotions.
I couldn't believe it! My angel!
''I'm not letting you go." I said to Roma. And in the back of
the car on that blind date, I proposed to her. I didn't want to wait.


Read the following extract and convert it into a dialogue between Rosalind and Celia in about 120 words :

[You may begin with: Rosalind: There are many thieves ..... ]

        The two girls made their plans. There were many thieves on the roads in those days, and it was dangerous for rich and beautiful young women to travel alone. So they stained their faces with a brown juice to make them look sunburned, and wore simple country clothes. Rosalind, who was much taller than Celia, dressed as a young man and took the name of Ganymede. Celia decided to call herself Aliena. They took with them a kind old servant called Touchstone, who served as Court jester, or ''Fool'', to Duke Frederick. (A Jester's duty was to keep the court amused with merry jokes and songs, and to make his master laugh when he felt sad or dull.) 
        Touchstone had always been very fond of Celia, and he gladly agreed to accompany her and Rosalind into the Forest of Arden. He still wore his Jester's clothes of red and black, with little bells hanging from his cap; and he was a great comfort to the two lonely girls, making them laugh with his merry jokes, and cheering them when they were tired or frightened.
        As you can imagine, Duke Frederick was very angry when he was told that Celia had gone with Rosalind. He knew how much they had admired the young Orlando de Boys, and he suspected that the two girls had joined the young man and that they had all run away together. 'Send at once.to Oliver's house,' he said angrily. 'and if Orlando is not there, bring his brother to me. I'll make him find him. Everything must be done to bring back these foolish runaways'.


Read the following extract and convert it into a dialogue between Oliver and Rosalind in about 120 words:

[You may begin with: Oliver: I had searched for Orlando .....]

Oliver told them his story. He had searched for Orlando everywhere in the forest, he said, and at last, tired and hungry, he had fallen asleep under a tree. On his way from Rosalind’s cottage, Orlando had seen his brother lying asleep. A big snake had curled round Oliver’s neck and was just going to bite him when it saw. Orlando and slipped away into a bush. And then Orlando saw that a hungry lion was waiting under the same bush, ready to kill Oliver as soon as he woke up.

Orlando thought of all his brother’s unkindness to him in the past. Why should he risk his own life to save this brother who had always been cruel to him? Twice he turned away to leave Oliver, but he had a kind and noble heart and at last, decided that he could not leave his brother to die. So he fought the lion. The fierce animal tore and bit his arm, but he managed to kill it. Oliver wakened by the noise of the fight, saw that Orlando was risking his own life to save him. He was filled with shame at all his past unkindness to his young brother, and he begged Orlando to forgive him.

Orlando took his brother to the Duke, who gave him food and clothes. Orlando said nothing about the wound the lion had given him, but it had been bleeding all the time and suddenly he fell to the ground and fainted from loss of blood. As soon as he recovered consciousness, Orlando begged Oliver to go to Ganymede and Aliena. ‘Show them this blood-stained handkerchief,’ he said, ‘and explain to them why I have broken my promise to be with them at two o’clock’.


Read the following extract and convert it into a continuous write-up in about 120 words:
 
You may begin with : George flashed a pocket torch and saw the boys looking about….
 
(George flashes a pocket torch. The boys look about them but not so far up stage as to notice the white models, nor do they see the skull, towards which their backs are turned.)
 
Tom :  (crossing R. C.). This is a queer place. I wonder if there’s anybody in the house.
 
George : You’ve picked three empty houses already, and you let us sing the whole of While Shepherds Watched outside the last one before you found out your mistake.
 
Tom : Well, that’s better than what you did — you picked the house where they had that bulldog.
 
George : (contemptuously). I wasn’t afraid of the bulldog.
 
Tom : No, maybe you weren’t: but I’m not sure that the savage beast hasn’t torn off a bit of young Alfie’s suit, and if he has there won’t half be a row! (Alfie fidgets nervously at the mention of his damaged suit.)
 
Tom : (down R.C.). How much money have we collected?
 
Ginger : (crossing C. to George). Let’s have a look under the light. (After counting coppers, with the aid of George’s torch.) Eightpence halfpenny.
 
Tom : (in a tone of disgust). Only eightpence halfpenny — between four of us —after yelling our heads off all the evening! Crikey! Money’s a bit tight round these parts, isn’t it?
 
George : I told you it was too early for carol-singing. It’s too soon after Guy Fawkes’ day.
 
(Faint distant scream off R.)
 
Tom : (startled). What was that?
 
George: What was what?
Tom : That noise — it sounded like a scream.
 
George: Nonsense.
 
Alfie :   (L). Let’s go home.

George : (contemptuously) I wasn’t afraid of the bulldog.
Tom : No, maybe you weren’t; but I’m not sure that the savage beast hasn’t torn off a bit of young Alfie’s suit, and if he has there won’t half be a row! (Alfie fidgets nervously at the mention of his damaged suit)
Tom : (down R.C.) How much money have we collected?
Ginger : (crossing C. to George) let’s have a look under the light.
(after counting coppers, with the aid of George’s torch) Eight pence half penny.
Tom : (in a tone of disgust) only eight pence half penny – between four of us – after yelling our heads off all the evening! Crikey! Money’s a bit tight round these parts, isn’t it?
George: I told you it was too early for carol‐singing. It’s too soon after Guy Fawke’s day.
(Faint distant scream off R.)
Tom : (startled) What was that?
George: What was what?
Tom : That noise – it sounded like a scream.
George: Nonsense.
Alfie : (L) Let’s go home.
George: You chaps do get scared easily. It wouldn’t do for you to be in the club that Bert Williams and I are running. We go out looking for adventures like this.
Ginger: Club? I thought it was a gang.
George: Gangs are getting too common. We have turned ours into a club – “The Do and Dare Club” we call it and no one in it must ever show a sign of fear.
Tom : I shouldn’t think you’d have many members. Why, everybody’s afraid of something – if it’s not one thing, it’s bound to be another.
George: (in a very superior tone) Ours isn’t a club for kids; it’s for daring young fellows keen on adventure. 
Question: 
Convert the extract into a short continuous write‐up in about 120 words. You may begin with: ”George wasn’t afraid of the bull‐dog....” 

Your friend Aditya/Aditi has passed the examination of Homi Bhabha – Bal Vaidnyanik recently. Write a dialogue between you and your friend about his /her achievement, preparation, the way of his/her studies etc.


Dialogue Writing :
Write a conversation between you, Raj/Rupa with your friend  Sahil/ Sakshi about the positive effects of
‘Ban on the use of Plastic’. You can use the following points –
• Contains harmful chemicals
• Not degradable
• Clog gutters, block waters
• Harmful for birds and animals


Read the following extract carefully and convert it into a dialogue between Daisy and Lark.

You may begin with: 'Daisy: Why are you singing so sadly, little bird?'

On the following morning, when the flower once more stretched forth its tender petals, like little arms, towards the air and light, the daisy recognised the bird's voice, but what it sang sounded so sad. Indeed the poor bird had good reason to be sad, for it had been caught and put into a cage close by the open window. It sang of the happy days when it could merrily fly about, of fresh green corn in the field, and of the time when it could soar almost up to the clouds. The poor lark was most unhappy as a prisoner in a cage. The little daisy would have liked so much to help it, but what could be done? Indeed, that was very difficult for such a small flower to find out. It entirely forgot how beautiful everything around it was, how warmly the sun was shining, and how splendidly white its petals were. It could only think of the poor captive bird, for which it could do nothing. Then two little boys came out of the garden; one of them had a large sharp knife, like that with which the girl had cut the tulips. They came straight towards the little daisy, which could not understand what they wanted.

"Here is a fine piece of turf for the lark," said one of the boys, and began to cut out a square round the daisy, so that it remained in the centre of the grass.


Read the following extract and convert it into a dialogue between Rosalind and Orlando:
[You may begin with: Rosalind: Dear Orlando, it's better not to fight with Charles.]

Next day, the wrestling match was arranged to take place in front of the Duke's palace. Celia and Rosalind happened to be there when the Duke and his lords arrived, so they decided to stay and watch the fight. Frederick spoke to Orlando and tried to persuade him not to fight the Wrestler, but Orlando was determined.
At last, Frederick turned to Rosalind and Celia and said: 'Speak to him, ladies; see if you can persuade him.'
Charles had just fought three other young men and had nearly killed them. It seemed certain that Orlando would be treated in the same way. And so the two girls spoke to the tall, good-looking young man, begging him not to fight. 'You have seen cruel proof of this man's strength', said Celia. 'We pray you for your own sake to give up this fight. Do not run such a risk!'
'Please do what we ask, young sir,' said Rosalind. 'No one will call you a coward: We will ask the Duke to stop the wrestling.' But Orlando answered: 'Please do not be angry if I refuse to do what you ask. It is not easy to say no to ladies who are so beautiful and gentle. But let your fair eyes and gentle wishes go with me to my trial. No one will be sorry if I am killed, because I have no friends to love me. I fill up a place in the world which may be better filled by another man if I leave it empty.'


Prepare a dialogue from the jumbled sentences:

  1. Yes, I have got some awards.
  2. Of course, Kabaddi!
  3. Have you been awarded in this game?
  4. Which is your favourite game?

Group Discussion:

You along with your friends Sujit, Rohit and Kishore discussing their likes and dislikes. But all are fascinated with the reading habit. Write a short group discussion in the form of dialogue telling the importance of reading for enhancing knowledge.


Write a dialogue between Ram and Shyam on the given theme (minimum three meaningful exchanges).

Importance of education'


Group Discussion:

You along with your friends Sujit, Rohit and Kishore discussing their likes and dislikes. But all are fascinated with the reading habit. Write a short group discussion in the form of dialogue telling the importance of reading for enhancing knowledge.


Complete the dialogue.

Anil: Which is your favourite book?
Sunil: __________________
Anil: What type of book is it?
Sunil:  __________________

Complete the dialogue.

Anil:  Which is your favourite book?
Sunil: ____________
Anil:  What type of book is it?
Sunil: ____________

Write a dialogue between Ram and Shyam on the given theme (minimum three meaningful exchanges).

‘Importance of education'


Rama, Asif, Rachana and Aarav are participating in a group discussion. The evaluator has given them a topic ‘Teenagers are more inclined towards junk food nowadays’. Write suitable dialogues for each participant giving his/her opinion on the topic.

Evaluator: You’ve all been given a few minutes to think on your topic for today’s group discussion, which is ‘Teenagers are more inclined towards junk food’. You may now begin the discussion. Who would like to start?
Rama: __________________
Asif: __________________
Aarav: __________________
Rachana: __________________
Evaluator: Please conclude.
Aarav: __________________

Write a dialogue between a student and teacher on 'Importance of Yoga'.


Rama, Asif, Rachana and Aarav are participating in a group discussion. The evaluator has given them the topic ‘Teenagers are more inclined towards junk food nowadays’. Write suitable dialogues for each participant giving his/her opinion on the topic.

Evaluator: You’ve all been given a few minutes to think on your topic for today’s group discussion, which is ‘Teenagers are more inclined towards junk food’. You may now begin the discussion. Who would like to start?
Rama: __________________
Asif: __________________
Aarav: __________________
Rachana: __________________
Evaluator: Please conclude.
Aarav: __________________

Group Discussion:

You along with your friends Sujit, Rohit and Kishore discussing their likes and dislikes. But all are fascinated with the reading habit. Write a short group discussion in the form of dialogue telling the importance of reading for enhancing knowledge.


Complete the dialogue.

Anil: Which is your favourite book?
Sunil: ____________
Anil: What type of book is it?
Sunil: ____________

Draft an imaginary dialogue between a scientist and Ritesh/Ruta about the importance of developing a scientific
attitude. You can use the following points:

  • Helps to fight against social evils.
  • Develops rational and logical thinking.
  • Helps to understand the latest technology.
  • For the betterment of humanity.
  • Strengthens economy.

Group Discussion:

You along with your friends Sujit, Rohit and Kishore discuss their likes and dislikes. But all are fascinated with the reading habit. Write a short group discussion in the form of dialogue telling the importance of reading for enhancing knowledge.


Complete the dialogue:

Mohan:  Do you like to watch movies?
Sohan: ..........................................
Mohan: Which is your favourite movie?
Sohan: ..........................................

Complete the dialogue:

Anil : Which is your favourite book?
Sunil: ____________
Anil: What type of book is it?
Sunil: ____________

Draft an imaginary dialogue between a scientist and Ritesh/Ruta about the importance of developing a scientific attitude. You can use the following points:

  • Helps to fight against social evils.
  • Develops rational and logical thinking.
  • Helps to understand the latest technology.
  • For the betterment of humanity.
  • Strengthens economy.

Write a dialogue between Ram and Shyam on the given theme (minimum three meaningful exchanges).

‘Importance of education'


Complete the dialogue.

Anil: Which is your favourite book?
Sunil: ______
Anil: What type of book is it?
Sunil: ______

Dialogue Writing: 

Draft an imaginary dialogue between a scientist and Ritesh/Ruta about the importance of developing a scientific
attitude. You can use the following points:

  • Helps to fight against social evils.
  • Develops rational and logical thinking.
  • Helps to understand the latest technology.
  • For the betterment of humanity.
  • Strengthens economy.

Write a dialogue between Ram and Shyam on the given theme (minimum three meaningful exchanges).

'Importance of education’


Write a dialogue between Ram and Shyam on the given theme (minimum three meaningful exchanges).

‘Importance of education'


Dialogue writing

Attempt the following with the help of the advertisement given below: 

With the help of the advertisement given, write a dialogue between you and your friend on how you enjoyed your visit to the exhibition

GRAND ARTS AND CRAFT COMPETITION

  • Come one and all,
  • Painting, photography, artefacts
  • Stalls depicting arts from
  • Various states of India
  • Traditional wear
  • Folk Dances
  • Food stalls.

 

Venue
- SCZCC, Nagpur
Dates:
- December 25th to 5th Jan.
Time:
9.00 a.m. to 9.00 p.m.
 Parking and Entrance free 

Group Discussion:

You along with your friends Sujit, Rohit and Kishore discussing their likes and dislikes. But all are fascinated with the reading habit. Write a short group discussion in the form of dialogue telling the importance of reading for enhancing knowledge.


Draft an imaginary dialogue between a scientist and Ritesh/Ruta about the importance of developing scientific atitude. You can use the following points:

  • Helps to fight against social evils.
  • Develops rational and logical thinking.
  • Helps to understand latest technology.
  • For betterment of humanity.
  • Strengthens cconomy.

Group Discussion:

You along with your friends Sujit, Rohit and Kishore discussing their likes and dislikes. But all are fascinated with the reading habit. Write a short group discussion in the form of dialogue telling the importance of reading for enhancing knowledge.


Complete the dialogue.

Anil: Which is your favourite book?
Sunil: ______________________
Anil: What type of book is it?
Sunil: _____________________

Group Discussion:

You along with your friends Sujit, Rohit and Kishore discussing their likes and dislikes. But all are fascinated with the reading habit. Write a short group discussion in the form of dialogue telling the importance of reading for enhancing knowledge.


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