Advertisements
Advertisements
Question
| Mukesh's family is among them. None of them know that it is illegal for children like him to work in the glass furnaces with high temperatures, in dingy cells without air and light; that the law, if enforced, could get him and all those 20,000 children out of the hot furnaces where they slog their daylight hours, often losing the brightness of their eyes. Mukesh's eyes beam as he volunteers to take me home, which he proudly says is being rebuilt. We walk down stinking lanes choked with garbage, past homes that remain hovels with crumbling walls, wobbly doors, no windows, crowded with families of humans and animals coexisting in a primaeval state. He stops at the door of one such house, bangs a wobbly iron door with his foot, and pushes it open. We enter a half-built shack. In one part of it, thatched with dead grass, is a firewood stove over which sits a large vessel of sizzling spinach leaves. On the ground, in large aluminium platters, are more chopped vegetables. |
Which of the following sentence is not correct in context to the working of children?
Options
Children should not be allowed to work in glass furnaces.
Glass furnaces have dingy cells without light and air.
There is a high temperature inside the glass furnaces.
However, sometimes the temperature remains moderate.
MCQ
Advertisements
Solution
There is a high temperature inside the glass furnaces.
shaalaa.com
Reading Comprehension (Entrance Exam)
Is there an error in this question or solution?
