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Identify one example of a main clause and one example of a dependent clause from page 74. - English (Second/Third Language)

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Question

Identify one example of a main clause and one example of a dependent clause from page 74.

Answer in Brief
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Solution

When daybreak arrived, little remained of the proud, prosperous city that had resisted attack for ten years.

  1. Main clause: nothing remained of the proud, affluent metropolis.
  2. Subordinate clause: that had resisted the attack for ten years
  3. Subordinate clause: when the dawn came.
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The Fall of Troy
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Chapter 3.2: The Fall of Troy - ENGLISH WORKSHOP [Page 76]

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Balbharati My English Coursebook [Marathi] Standard 9 Maharashtra State Board
Chapter 3.2 The Fall of Troy
ENGLISH WORKSHOP | Q 6. (c) | Page 76

RELATED QUESTIONS

Why? : Form groups of five. Choose a familiar character from any one of the epics you know. One person from the group plays the role of that character. Others in the group frame questions related to that character’s life. The condition is that all the questions should begin with ‘Why ... ?’. They interview the character using these ‘Why-?’ questions. Practice and present the interview in the classroom.


How?: Follow the above procedure. Now all questions should begin with ‘How-?’


Correct the following sentence using facts from the passage.

Troy traded in cattle and grass, with other cities.


Correct the following sentence using facts from the passage.

During the war, Trojans jumped over the fort gates to fight the enemy.


Correct the following sentence using facts from the passage.

The Greek armies and heroes always defeated the Trojans.


Correct the following sentence using facts from the passage.

Both the enemies were eager to continue fighting.


From either of our two Indian epics, find out which battle/war lasted the longest? Write down its cause, the enemy armies, its heroes, its duration, and the final outcome.

  1. Cause _________________.
  2. The enemy armie _________________.
  3. Heroes _________________.
  4. Duration _________________.
  5. Final outcome _________________.

Find and write the Greek and Trojan names used in the story (Part I and II).


Note the following construction carefully and then use them to express your ideas:

They are afraid of the long voyage home, too.

______ afraid of______ .


Note the following construction carefully and then use them to express your ideas:

They made it too big to go inside your city.

______ too ______ to ______.


Form pairs. Imagine you are a pair of Trojans and you have come to know about Odysseus’s plan. Make a counter plan to defeat the Greeks. Write down your plan as you would explain it to your fellow Trojans.


Do you know stories from any epics or mythological poems?


Who is your favourite mythological character?

What do you like about that character?


Who is your favourite warrior?


What was the cause of the ten-year-old war between the Greeks and Trojans?


Who were the brave heroes on either side who were killed in the war?


Read the story and ‘retell’ it in your mother tongue. When you ‘retell’ a story, you tell it using your style and not translate it word by word. (Part I)


Underline the subject in the following sentence:

The Greeks waited to take revenge on Troy.


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The fighting went on.


Was the big wooden horse really an offering to the god of the sea?


How did the cunning Greek explain the presence of such a large wooden horse?


What did the Greek soldiers hidden in the wooden horse do after nighfall?


What was the destiny of the royal family of Troy and that of Helen?


Refer to the Language Study pages and read the following entries:

  1. word
  2. phrase
  3. clause
  4. sentence.

A phrase is a meaningful group of words. Read the following phrases:

  • The wise Odysseus
  • A great horse of wood
  • A skilful engineer
  • The greatest heroes
  • The secret of opening and shutting the entrance
  • On the seashore outside the walls
  • In the darkness
  • Watching for the return of the fleet
  • Part of their strong wall

All the above phrases are parts of sentences; they do not form a complete sentence by themselves. A sentence expresses a complete idea. You know that it has a subject and a predicate. A sentence has at least one finite verb in it. Read the following examples:

  • The tents had been burnt.
  • The shore was deserted.
  • The Greek ships had all gone.

Write three sentences using your own ideas.


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