Class 8th ncert honeydew solution
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Chapter 1 The Best Christmas Present in the World
Comprehension
Check (Page 10)
Questions:
1.
What
did the author find in a junk shop?
2.
What
did he find in a secret drawer? Who do you think had put it in there?
Answers:
1.
The
author found a roll-top desk for sale in a junk shop. It was made of oak wood,
but it was in a veiy bad condition.
2.
In
the secret drawer of the desk, the author found a small tin box. It had a
letter in it. I think the owner of the roll-top desk might have put it there.
Comprehension
Check (Page 14)
Questions:
1.
Who
had written the letter, to whom, and when?
2.
Why
was the letter written — what was the wonderful thing that had happened?
3.
What
jobs did Hans Wolf and Jim Macpherson have when they were not soldiers?
4.
Had
Hans Wolf ever been to Dorset? Why did he say he knew it?
5.
Do
you think Jim Macpherson came back from the war? How do you know this?
Answers:
1.
John
Macpherson, a captain in the British army, had written that letter, dated Dec.
26, 1914, to his wife Connie.
2.
The
letter described a wonderful event. The two armies-the British and the German—fighting
against each other celebrated Christmas together.
3.
Before
joining the army, Hans played the cello in the orchestra and Jim was a teacher.
4.
No,
Hans had never been to Dorset. He had only read about Dorset in Hardy’s novel
‘Far from the Madding Crowd’.
5.
No,
Jim Macpherson never came back home from the war. Perhaps therefore his wife
Connie had preserved his letters.
Comprehension
Check (Page 15)
Questions:
1.
Why
did the author go to Bridport?
2.
How
old was Mrs Macpherson now? Where was she?
Answers:
1.
The
author went to Bridport to meet Mrs Jim Macpherson and deliver to her Jim’s
letter.
2.
Macpherson
was 101 years old. She was in a nursing home.
Comprehension
Check (Page 16)
Questions:
1.
Who
did Connie Macpherson think her visitor was?
2.
Which
sentence in the text shows that the visitor did not try to hide his identity?
Answers:
1.
Connie
thought that the visitor was her own husband, Jim Macpherson.
2.
That
sentence is, “you told me you’d come home by Christmas, dearest,” she said,
“And here you are, the best Christmas present in the world. Come closer, Jim
dear, sit down.
Working
with the Text (Page 16)
Question
1:
For
how long do you think Connie had kept Jim’s letter? Give reasons for your
answer.
Answer:
Connie had kept Jim’s last letter till January 25, 1915. The letter was dated
Dec. 26, 1914.
Question
2:
Why
do you think the desk had been sold, and when?
Answer:
The desk must have been sold when Connie’s house had burnt. The table had been
damaged by fire as well as water.
Question
3:
Why
do Jim and Hans think that games or sports are good ways of resolving
conflicts? Do you agree?
Answer:
Both Jim and Hans were soldiers. Both were warm hearted. They had seen the
sufferings of war. So it was natural for them to hate war. They favoured a
peaceful solution to settle disputes. Games or sports, they said, were good
ways of resolving conflicts. I also quite agree with them.
Question
4:
Do
you think the soldiers of the two armies are like each other, or different from
each other? Find evidence from the story to support your answer.
Answer:
All human beings are alike in many ways. They love peace and hate war. They
want to live together. Examples from the story: “Then they were calling out to
us from a cross no man’s land. “Happy Christmas, Tommy! Happy Christmas! “When
we had got
Question
5:
Mention the various ways in which the British and the German soldiers become
friends and find things in common at Christmas.
Answer:
The British and the German soldiers belonged to different camps. They were
enemies in war time. But after all they were human beings and therefore they
had similar feelings. They shared the festive spirit of the Christmas. They got
over hatred and played games, feasted and drank like good friends. Both hated
war. Both were anxious to go back to their families at the end of war.
Question
6:
What
is Connie’s Christmas present? Why is it the best Christmas present in the
world?
Answer:
Connie thought that Jim had come back home from war. She mistook the author for
Jim. She had been waiting for her husband Jim. So the coming home of Jim was
the best Christmas present in the world for her.
Question
7:
Do
you think the title of the story is suitable for it? Can you think of any other
title(s)?
Answer:
Decidedly the title of the story is most suitable. For the old Connie, no other
present could have given her such joy as the coming home of Jim, her husband.
Her presumption might be wrong, but she got the greatest happiness of her life.
Since the story revolves around Christmas, the alternate title of the story
could be War and Peace’ or ‘Christmas Gift’. But neither can be a match to the
present title.
Working
with Language (Page 17)
Question
1:
Look
at these sentences from the story.
I spotted it in a junk shop in Bridport… The man said it was made in the early
nineteenth century… This one was in a bad condition…
The italicised verbs are in the past tense. They tell us what
happened in the past, before now.
(i)
Read the passage below and underline the verb in the past tense.
A man got on the train and sat down. The compartment was empty except for one
lady. She took her gloves off. A few hours later the police arrested the man.
They held him for 24 hours and then freed him.
Answer:
A man got on the train and sat down. The compartment was empty except for one
lady. She took her gloves off. A few hours later the police arrested the man.
They held him for 24 hours and then freed him.
Now
look at these sentences.
The veneer had lifted almost everywhere. Both fire and water had taken their
toll on this desk.
Notice
the verb forms had lifted, had taken (their toll).
The author found and bought the desk in the past. The desk was damaged before
the author found it and bought it. Fire and water had damaged the desk before
the author found it and bought it.
·
We
use verb forms like had damaged for an event in the ‘earlier past’. If there
are two events in the past, we used the ‘had ….’ form for the event that
occurred first in the past.
·
We
also use the past perfect tense to show that something was wished for, or
expected before a particular time in the past. For example, I had always wanted
one
·
Discuss
with your partner the difference in meaning in the sentences below.
·
When
I reached the station, the train left.
·
When
I reached the station, the train had left.
(ii)
Fill in the blanks using the correct form of the verbs in brackets.
My little sister is very naughty. When she———- (come) back
from school yesterday, she had ———- (tear) her dress.
We——————————————————— (ask) her how it had——– (happen).
She—– (say) she——- (have, quarrel) with a
boy. She———– (have, beat) him in a race and he——— (have,
try) to push her. She——— (have, tell) the teacher and
so he——- (have, chase) her and she———- (have, fall) down
and——– (have, tear) her dress.
Answer:
My little sister is very naughty. When she came back from
school yesterday, she had torn her dress. We asked her
how it had happened. She said she had quarrelled with
a boy. She had beaten him in a race and he had tried to
push her. She had told the teacher and so he had chased her
and she had fallen down and had torn her
dress.
(iii)Underline
the verbs and arrange them in two columns, Past and Earlier
(a) My friends set
out to see the caves in the next town, but I stayed at home, because I had seen
them already.
(b) When they arrived at the station, their train had left. They
came back home, but by that time I had gone out to see a movie!
(c) So they sat outside and ate the lunch I had packed for them.
(d) By the time I returned, they had fallen asleep!
Answer:
Question
2:
Dictionary Work
By
the end of the journey, we had run out of drinking water.
Look at the verb run out of in this sentence. It is a phrasal verb: it has two
parts, a verb and a preposition or an adverb. Phrasal verbs often have meanings
that are different from the meanings of their parts.
Find
these phrasal verbs in the story.
Write
down the sentences in which they occur. Consult a dictionary and write down the
meaning that you think matches the meaning of the phrasal verb in the sentence.
Answer:
·
“House
number 12 turned out to be nothing but a burned-out shell …………….. (destroyed
by fire).
·
That
was the moment her eyes lit up with recognition, and her face……………… (brightened).
·
Hans
Wolf and I looked on and cheered, clapping our hand……… : (considered
somebody to be somebody)
·
The
time came, and all too soon when the game was finished, the schnapps and the
run and the sausage had long since run out, and we knew it was all over, (become
used up, finished)
·
Hans
Wolf and I looked on and cheered clapping our hands and stamping our feet, to
keep out the cold as much as anything, (to avoid)
Question
3:
Noun Phrase
Read the following sentence.
I took out a small black tin box.
·
The
phrase in italics is a noun phrase.
·
It
has the noun—box—as the head word, and three adjectives preceding it.
·
Notice
the order in which the adjectives occur—size (small), colour (black) and material
(tin) of which it is made.
We
rarely use more than four adjectives before a noun and there is no rigid order
in which they are used, though there is a preferred order of
modifires/adjectives in a noun phrase, as given below.
Determiner |
Modifier 1 |
Modifier 2 |
Modifier 3 |
Modifier 4 |
Hard word |
a/an/the |
Nice/
lazy/ beautiful |
tall
/ round/ old / young |
red/
white/ light/dark |
Silk/cotton
woollen |
Woman
man/table/chair |
Question
4:
The table below contains a list of nouns and some adjectives. Use as many
adjectives as you can to describe each noun. You might come up with some funny
descriptions!
Nouns |
Adjectives |
elephant |
circular, striped,
enormours, multicoloured, round, cheerful, wild, blue, red,
chubby, large, medium-sized, cold |
face |
|
building |
|
water |
Answer:
1.
elephant—enormous,
striped, wild
2.
face—cheerful,
round, chubby
3.
building—circular,
large, multicoloured
4.
water—blue,
cold.
Speaking
(Page 19)
Question
1:
In
groups discuss whether wars are a good way to end conflicts between countries.
Then present your arguments to the whole class.
Answer:
War means bloodshed, hate and destruction. It shows the animalism in man. Even
the animals fight for some sound reason. But nations go to war to settle some
petty dispute or in the name of religion. War solves no problem. Understanding
alone can end differences. All religions condemn greed and bloody quarrels. Let
us learn this great lesson from history.
Question
2:
What
kind of presents do you like and why? What are the things you keep in mind when
you buy presents for others? Discuss with your partner. (For example, you
might buy a book because it can be read and re-read over a period of time.)
Answer:
Personally I am against the practice of exchanging expensive gifts. A rose or a
token of affection suits every person and every pocket. This is why some guests
offer bouquets or greeting cards alone. In case the gift is essential, it
should satisfy some need and1 have utility.
When I go to buy a present, I first take into account the liking of my
classmate, relative or girl/boy friend.
Writing
(Page 20)
Question
1:
Imagine
that you are Jim. You have returned to your town after the war. In your diary
record how you feel about the changes you see and the events that occur in your
town. You could begin like this
25 December,
1919 It’s Christmas today, but the town looks…..
OR
Suppose
you are the visitor. You are in a dilemma. You don’t know whether to disclose
your identity and disappoint the old lady or let her believe that her dear Jim
has come back. Write a letter to a friend highlighting your anxiety, fears and
feelings.
Answer:
25 December, 1919
It’s Christmas today, but the town looks very much different from what I had
imagined. It has been ravaged by war. Buildings are in ruins and there is
graveyard silence. My own house burnt when it was hit by a bombardment. The
events of war have taken a toll of civilians as well as soldiers. I hate the
fighting instinct in us and curse the war makers (monger). Can’t we live in
peace like brothers?
OR
Answer:
12-A, Block 4,
Dorset
August 10, 2009 Dear Smith,
I am in a dilemma. It seems to be insolvable. I, therefore, seek your help in
making a decision.
You know I had purchased an old desk. Inside it I got a box containing an old
letter. It was written by Jim, a British soldier, to his wife. I decided to
deliver that letter to Mrs. Jim at Briport.
I reached her house. She was 101 years old. When I gave her the letter, her
eyes lit up. She thought I was her long lost husband Jim, who had come home to
keep his promise. She was excited and she kissed me. She didn’t listen to what
I tried to tell her about my identity.
I don’t know whether or not I should tell who I am. I only walked away from her
quickly.
Question
2:
Given below is the outline of a story. Construct the story using the outline.
A young, newly married doctor———- freedom fighter——– exited to the Andaman and
Nicobar Islands by the British————– infamous cellular Jail———— prisoners
tortured ——- revolt by inmates——— doctor hanged———- wife waits for his return
—– becomes old——– continues to wait with hope and faith.
Answer:
It was the year 1930. India was a British colony. But English education
enlightened a section of people. They started fighting for freedom. A young,
newly- married doctor was implicated in a conspiracy case. He was sent to Black
Waters (Kalapani) It was a group of Islands in the Bay of Bengal. Many
freedom fighters and revolutionaries were sent there for life. They were put in
cellular Jail for a few years. They were subjected to torture. The doctor was
hanged. But his wife kept waiting for the return of her husband. She grew old.
However, her hope and faith did not fade.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I.
SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question
1:
How
did the author find Jim’s letter? What did it contain?
Answer:
The author found Jim’s letter in the small black tin box, put in the drawer of
an old table. Jim’s letter was addressed to his wife. He was a British soldier
but he was glad to have celebrated Christmas together with the German soldiers.
He put it down in the letter and promised to come back home on Christmas.
Question
2:
Jim
talks about an incident that had just happened at the front. What was it?
Answer:
England and Germany were at war with each other. The British soldiers were
waiting to shoot the German soldiers. But on Christmas, a strange development
took place. The German soldiers came out of their hiding places and called out
‘Happy Christmas’. They were unarmed and they waved a white flag. The British
soldiers led by captain Jim Macpherson agreed to celebrate the festival
together.
Question
3:
Who
are Fritz and Tommy in the story?
Answer:
Fritz and Tommy are the names given to the German and the British soldiers
respectively.
II.
LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question
1:
Describe
in brief the author’s meeting with Connie.
Answer:
Connie or Mrs Macpherson was 101 years old. When the author took Jim’s letter
to her in a nursing home she became very excited. Her eyes lit up and she
mistook the author for her husband. She kissed his cheek. She said that she had
been reading his letter every day. But she wanted to hear his voice. She had
made a Christmas cake also for him as he had promised to come home. She thought
that he was back home. She called his presence at home as the best Christmas
present for her in the world.
What had happened to Mrs. Macpherson? Describe her condition.
Answer:
Mrs. Macpherson lived alone after her husband (Jim Macpherson) went to join the British army during the First World War. One day her house caught fire. But she was saved by the firemen. From then she had been in a nursing home for treatment. She had grown extremely old and couldn’t walk on herself. And her life got confined to a wheelchair.
Chapter 2 The Tsunami
Comprehension Check (Page 27)
Say whether the following are true or
false.
Questions:
1.
Ignesious lost his wife, two children,
his father-in-law, and his brother-in-law in the tsunami.
2.
Sanjeev made it to safety after the
tsunami.
3.
Meghna was saved by a relief helicopter.
4.
Almas’s father realised that a tsunami
was going to hit the island.
5.
Her mother and aunts were washed away
with the tree that they were holding on to.
Answers:
1.
True
2.
False
3.
False
4.
True
5.
True
Comprehension Check (Page 28)
Answer the following in a phrase or
sentence.
Questions:
1.
Why did Tilly’s family come to Thailand?
2.
What were the warning signs that both
Tilly and her mother saw?
3.
Do you think Tilly’s mother was alarmed
by them?
4.
Where had Tilly seen the sea behaving in
the same strange fashion?
5.
Where did the Smith family and the
others on the beach go to escape; from the tsunami?
6.
How do you think her geography teacher
felt when he heard about what Tilly had done in Phuket?
Answers:
1.
Tilly’s family had come to Thailand to
celebrate Christmas.
2.
Both saw the sea rise and it started to
foam and form whirlpools.
3.
No, Tilly’s mother was not alarmed by
them.
4.
Tilly had seen the strange sea behaviour
in a video.
5.
They went to the third floor of the
hotel and were saved.
6.
She felt very pleased and satisfied.
Comprehension Check (Page 30)
Answer using a phrase or a sentence.
Questions:
1.
In the Tsunami 150,000 people died. How
many animals died?
2.
How many people and animals died in Yala
National Park?
3.
What do people say about the elephants
of Yala National Park?
4.
What did the dogs in Galle do?
Answers:
1.
Very few animals died.
2.
Sixty visitors and two animals.
3.
People say that the elephants ran from
the beach an hour before the Tsunami hit the coast.
4.
The dogs in Galle refused to go to the
beach for their daily exercise.
Working With the Text (Page 30)
Discuss the following questions in
class. Then write your own answers.
Question 1:
When he felt the earthquake, do you think Ignesious immediately worried about a
Tsunami? Give reasons for your answer. Which sentence in the text tells you
that the Ignesious family did not have any time to discuss and plan their
course of action after the tsunami struck?
Answer:
No, Ignesious did not think about the tsunami. He thought that it was just an
earthquake. So he took the television off the table and put it on the ground.
His family did not have time to discuss and plan their course of action. The
following sentence tells about the chaos and confusion. “…two of his children
caught hold of the hands of their mother’s father and mother’s brother, and
rushed in the opposite direction.”
Question 2:
Which words in the list below describe
Sanjeev, in your opinion?
Answer:
brave, heroic, selfless
Use words from the list to complete the three sentences below.
1.
I don’t know if Sanjeev was cheerful,
………………. or……………….
2.
I think that he was very brave, ………………..
and……………….
3.
Sanjeev was not heartless, ………………..
or……………….
Answer:
1.
ambitious or brash.
2.
heroic and selfless.
3.
careless or humorous.
Question 3:
How are Meghna and Almas’s stories similar?
Answer:
Meghna and Almas—both were lucky. Meghna was carried away with her parents and
other people. But she alone survived. She was washed ashore by a wave. Almas
climbed on to a log of wood. When she opened her eyes, she found herself in a
hospital in Kamorta.
Question 4:
What are the different ways in which
Tilly’s parents could have reacted to her behaviour? What would you have done
if you were in their place?
Answer:
Tilly foresaw the danger of tsunami at
once. She became hysterial. Her parents didn’t ignore her. They were sure that
something wrong must be going to happen. So they all left the beach and were
saved. If I were in place of Tilly parents, I might not have believed her. I
might have scolded her for making a nonsense situation.
Question 5:
If Tilly’s award was to be shared, who
do you think she should share it with— her parents or her geography teacher?
Answer:
It is very obvious. Tilly’s award should
be shared with her geography teacher. Her parents could not guess the tsunami
was coming.
Question 6:
What are the two different ideas about
why so few animals were killed in the tsunami? Which idea do you find more
believable?
Answer:
Very few animals were killed in the tsunami. Perhaps they feel the tremor much
before humans do. Secondly, the animals have sixth sense. They can guess the
coming disaster and so run away to safer places/higher ground. The idea that
the animals are gifted with the sixth sense is more believable. They move fast
to get over the crisis.
Working with Language (Page 31)
Question 1:
Go through Part-I carefully, and make a
list of as many words as you can find that indicate movement of different
kinds. (There is one word that occurs repeatedly-count how many times!). Put
them into three categories.
fast movement slow movement neither slow nor fast Can you explain why there are
many words in one column and not in the others?
Answer:
There are more words in column A. These are related to fast movements of escape
from the tsunami. It was natural for men and animals to make fast movements in
such situation. The waves also overtook some people very fast and washed them
away.
Question 2:
Fill in the blanks in
the sentences below (the verbs given in brackets will give you a clue).
1.
The earth trembled, but not many people
felt the………………………… (tremble)
2.
When the zoo was flooded, there was a
lot of……………………. and many animals escaped into the countryside, (confuse)
3.
We heard with………………. that the lion had
been recaptured, (relieve)
4.
The zookeeper was stuck in a tree and
his ……………………… was filmed by the TV crew, (rescue)
5.
There was much……………….. in the village
when the snake charmer came visiting. (excite)
Answer:
1.
termbling/termors
2.
confusion
3.
relief
4.
rescue
5.
excitement.
Question 3:
Study the sentences in
the columns A and B.
Compare the sentences in A to the ones in B. Who is the ‘doer’ of the action in
every case? Is the ‘doer’ mentioned in A, or in B?
Notice the verbs in A: ‘was
swept away’, ‘was hit’, ‘were
washed away’, ‘were found’. They are in
the passive form. The sentences are in the Passive Voice. In these sentences,
the focus is not on the person who does the action.
In B,
the ‘doer’
of the action is named. The verbs are in the active form. The sentences are in
the Active Voice.
Say
whether the following sentences are in the Active or the Passive voice. Write A
or P after each sentence as shown in the first sentence.
(i) Someone
stole my bicycle. A
(ii) The
tyres were deflated by the traffic police. ____________
(iii) I
found it last night in a ditch near my house. _____________
(iv) It
had been thrown there. ________
(v) My
father gave it to the mechanic. __________
(vi) The
mechanic repaired it for me. ___________
Answer:
(ii) P
(iii) A
(iv) P
(v) A
(vi) A
Speaking And Writing (Page 32)
Question 1:
Suppose you are one of the volunteers
who went to the Andaman and Nicobar Islands for relief work after the tsunami.
You work in the relief camps, distributing food, water and medicine among the
victims. You listen to the various stories of bravery of ordinary people even
as they fight against odds to bring about some semblance of normalcy in their
lives. You admire their grit and determination. Write a diary entry.
You may start in this way.
31 December, 2004
The killer tsunami struck these islands five days ago. But the victims are
being brought in even now. Each one has a story to tell….
Answer:
The killer tsunami struck these islands five days ago. But the victims are
being brought in even now. Each one has a story to tell. Their stories are hair
raising as well as heartening or inspiring. Many were determined to start a new
life. They don’t want to stay in the camp for long. They feel small because
living on charity was disgraceful. Most of them want to return to their
cottages which are no more there, and to get a fishing boat to earn their
livelihood. One woman, though old, recalled how she had saved a child from
drowning.
Question 2:
The story shows how a little girl saved the lives of many tourists when a
tsunami struck the beach, thanks to the geography lesson that she had learnt at
school. She remembered the visuals of a tsunami and warned her parents.
Do
you remember any incident when something that you learnt in the classroom
helped you in some way outside the classroom?
Write
your experiences in a paragraph of about 90-100 words or narrate it to the
whole class like an anecdote.
Answer:
For self-attempt
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What is a Tsunami? When did it hit so
many countries and sea coasts?
Answer:
A tsunami is a very large and powerful wave. It is caused by earthquakes under
the sea. The deadly tsunami hit Thailand, India and the Andaman Islands on 26
December, 2004.
Question 2:
Do animals get foreknowledge of the
tsunami coming?
Answer:
Yes, it is true that animals sense the coming disaster earlier than human
beings. It became evident in 2004. The tsunami killed more than 1,50,000 people
in a dozen countries. But very few animals were reported dead. Buffaloes, goats
and dogs remained unharmed. So did elephants and leopards. They ran away to
higher places to save their lives.
Question 3:
Who was Ignesious? Why did he put his
television down on the ground from table?
Answer:
Ignesious was the manager of a cooperative society in Katchall. When his wife told
him about an earthquake, he immediately took his television set off its table
and put it down on the ground so that it would not fall and break.
Question 4:
How did Sanjeev lose his life?
Answer:
When Sanjeev heard cries for help from the wife of John, the guest house cook,
he immediately jumped into the water to rescue her. But unfortunately they were
both swept away by the powerful waves.
Question 5:
What is the view of some experts about
the animals?
Answer:
Some experts believe that animals more acute hearing helps them to hear or feel
the earth’s vibration. They can sense an approaching disaster long before
humans realise what’s going on.
Question 6:
How did Tilly Smith save her family from
the deadly waves?
Answer:
Tilly Smith with her family was celebrating Christmas at a beach in Thailand.
She was only 10 years old. She noted the sea water flowing towards, the beach.
She was reminded of a geography lesson and the video of Hawaiian Islands in
1946. She started shouting to her parents to clear off the beach. Her parents
heeded her. They all took shelter in the third floor of the hotel and were
saved.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Give a brief account of how the animate
saved themselves when the giant waves hit India and Sri Lanka.
Answer:
Before the great waves moved towards the coast in India and Sri Lanka, the wild
and domestic animals foresaw the danger. Elephants ran for higher ground. Dogs
refused to go outdoors. Zoo animals rushed into their shelters. This was
perhaps the animals possess a sixth sense, which is very sharp and work as
warning during disasters. So not many animals lost their lives in 2004 Tsunami
while thousands people were washed away.
What happened to Almas and her family?
Answer:
When the tremors came early in the morning, Almas and her family were sleeping. Suddenly Almas’s father saw the sea water recede. He understood that the water would come rushing back with great force. He woke everyone up and tried to rush them to a safer place. As they ran, her grandfather was hit on the head by something and fell down. Her father rushed to help him. But soon a giant wave came and swept both of them away. Her mother and ants too were washed away by the mighty waves. Almas was somehow saved. But she became the victim of trauma.
Comprehension Check (Page 45)
Questions:
1.
Look at picture 1 and
recall the opening lines of the original song in Hindi. Who is the singer? Who
else do you see in this picture?
2.
In picture 2 what do
you understand by the Company’s ‘superior weapons?
3.
Who is an artisan? Why
do you think the artisans suffered? (Picture 3)
4.
Which picture,
according to you, reveals the first sparks of the fire of revolt?
Answers:
1.
The opening lines of
the Hindi Song are “Aye Mere Waten Ke Logon, Turn Khub Logo Nara: Ye
Shubh Din Hai Hum Sab Ka Lehralo Tiranga Pyara, Par Mat Bhulo Seema Par Veron
Ne Hain Pran Gawayen.” It was sung by Lata Mangeskar. We see Pt. Jawaharlal
Nehru, Lai Bahadur Shastri and Mrs. Indira Gandhi in this picture.
2.
The East India Company
conquered India by using their superior weapons, the guns and diplomacy.
3.
An artisan is a
craftsman, skilled in some trade. They suffered because the goods that they
produced lost demand in the Indian market.
4.
Picture 7 reveals the
first spark of the fire of revolt.
Working With the Text (Page 45)
Answer the following questions.
Question 1:
Do you think the
Indian princes were short-sighted in their approach to the events of 1757?
Answer:
Yes, the Indian princes were short-sighted in their approach. They fought
against each other with the help of the British. Thus the British became the
virtual rulers.
Question 2:
How did the East India
Company subdue the Indian Princes?
Answer:
The East India company spread their wings in India to promote their trade. They
supported one Indian Prince to finish the other. As a result power passed onto
their hands.
Question 3:
Quote
the words used by Ram Mohan Roy to say that every religion teaches the same
principles.
Answer:
The words of Ram Mohan Roy spoken to his wife were: “Cows are of different
colours, but the colour of their milk is the same. Different teachers have
different opinions but the essence of every religion is the same.”
Question 4:
In
what ways did the British officers exploit Indians?
Answer:
The British rulers passed a resolution under which an Indian could be sent to
jail without trial in a court. The goods manufactured in England were exempted
from custom duty. The officers prospered on the company’s loot and their
private business flourished.
Question 5:
Name these people.
1.
The
ruler who fought pitched battles against the British and died fighting.
2.
The
person who wanted to reform the society.
3.
The
person who recommended the introduction of English education in India.
4.
Two
popular leaders who led the revolt (choices may vary.)
Answer:
1.
Tipu
Sultan of Mysore.
2.
Raja
Ram Mohan Roy of Bengal.
3.
Lord
Mecaulay
4.
Nana
Sahib Peshwa, Kunwar Singh, Begum Hazrat Mahal.
Question 6:
Mention the following.
1.
Two
examples of social practices prevailing then.
2.
Two
oppressive policies of the British.
3.
Two
ways in which common people suffered.
4.
Four
reasons for the discontent that led to the 1857 War of Independence.
Answer:
1.
Untouchability
and child marriage.
2.
The
British masters allowed imports in India tax free. They ruined Indian cottage
industries,
3.
The
farmers were taxed heavily and the thumbs of skilled workers were cut.
4.
(a) Santhals who lost their land
became desparate and they revolted.
(b) The sepoys in the English army were paid much less than the
white soldiers. So they were discontented and angry.
(c) The Brahmins were furious when they came to know that the bullets
they had to bite, contained cow fat and pig-fat.
(d) Many landlords were sore because the British policies deprived
them of their land and estate.
Working With Language
(Page 45)
In comics what the
characters speak is put in bubbles. This is direct narration. When we report
what the characters speak, we use the method of indirect narration.
Study these examples:
First farmer: Why are your men taking away the entire crop?
Second farmer: Your men have taken away everything.
Officer: You are still in arrears. If you don’t pay tax next
week, I’ll send you to jail.
·
The
first farmer asked the officer why his men were taking away the entire crop.
·
The
second farmer said that their men had taken away everything.
·
The
officer replied that they were still in arrears and warned them that if they
did not pay tax the following week, he (the officer) would send them (the farmers)
to jail.
1.Change the following
sentences into indirect speech.
(i) First man: We must educate
our brothers.
Second man: And try to improve their material conditions.
Third man: For that we must convey our grievances to the British
Parliament.
The first man said that________________ a__________________________________
The second man added that they _____b______________________________________
The third man suggested that___________ c__________________________________
(ii) First soldier: The white soldier gets huge pay, mansions and servants.
Second soldier: We get a pittance and slow promotions.
Third soldier: Who are the British to abolish our customs?
The first soldier said that______________ a___________________________________
The second soldier remarked that_____ b ______________________________________
The third soldier asked___________________ c________________________________
Answer:(i)
(a) they must educate their brothers.
(b) should try to improve their material conditions,
(c) they must convey their grievances to the British Parliament.
(ii)
(a) the white soldier got huge pay, mansions and servants.
(b) they got a pittance and slow, promotions.
(c) who the British were to abolish their customs.
Speaking and Writing
(Page 46)
Question 1:
Play
and act the role of farmers who have grievances against the policies of the
government. Rewrite their speech bubbles in dialogue form first.
See
NCERT Textbook Pages 47-48
(i)Ask one another
questions about the pictures.
·
Where
is the fox?
·
How
did it happen?
·
What
is the fox thinking?
·
Who
is the visitor?
·
What
does she want to know?
·
What
is the fox’s reply?
·
What
happens next?
·
Where
is the goat?
·
Where
is the fox now?
·
What
is the goat thinking?
Answer:
(i) The fox is in
the well.
She fell into the well by accident.
The fox thinks how to get out of there.
The visitor is a goat.
She wants to know whether the water is sweet.
The fox replies that the water is very sweet and she had a lot of it.
The goat wanted to taste the water.
The goat is dragged into the water by the fox.
The fox comes out of the well.
The goat is thinking of her mother’s advice not to trust any stranger.
(ii)Write the story in your own words. Give it a title.
Answer:
Once a fox fell into a
well accidentally. She thought how to get out of the well. A goat arrived there
by chance. She looked into the well. She asked the fox if the water was sweet.
The cunning fox played a trick. She told a lie that the water was very, very
sweet, and she had had enough of it. The foolish goat also wanted to taste the
water. The fox invited her into the well. The goat reached there soon. Now the
fox rode on the goat’s back and climbed out of the well. Then she thanked the
goat for help. The goat was reminded of her mother’s words that she must never
go by the advice of a stranger.
Question 2:
Read the following news item.
See
NCERT Textbook Page 49
Based on this news
item write a paragraph on what you think about this new method of teaching
history.
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
Question 3:
Find the chapters in your history book that correspond to the episodes and
events described in this comic. Note how the information contained in a few
chapters of history has been condensed to a few pages with the help of pictures
and ‘speech bubbles’.
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
Question 4:
Create a comic of your own using this story.
Once the Sun and the Wind began to quarrel, each one saying that he was
stronger than the other. At last they decided to test each other’s strength. A
man with a cloak around his shoulders was passing by. The Wind boasted, “Using
my strength I can make that man take off the cloak.” The Sun agreed. The Wind
blew hard. The man felt so cold that he clasped his cloak round his body as tightly
as possible.
Now it was the turn of the Sun which shone very hot indeed. The man felt so hot
that he at once removed the cloak from his body. Seeing the man taking off the
cloak, the Wind conceded defeat.
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE
QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What
helped the East India Company to overpower Indian princes?
Answer:
Indian princes were always engaged in fighting with one another. The rivalries
paved the way for the East India Company to overpower Indian princes.
Question 2:
Who
was Tipu Sultan? What happened to him?
Answer:
Tipu Sultan was a far-seeing ruler of Mysore. He was dead against the British
and their policies. He fought them till he died fighting.
Question 3:
Why
did Ram Mohan Roy go to England? What did he tell the British there?
Answer:
Ram Mohan Roy went to England to see what made the British so powerful. There
he told them that they (Indians) accepted them as rulers and they must accept
them (Indians) as subjects. He also reminded them of the responsibility a ruler
owed to his subjects.
Question 4:
What
was Regulation III?
Answer:
In 1818, the British had passed Regulation III. Under this Regulation, an
Indian could be jailed without trial in a court.
Question 5:
What
did Macaulay suggest in 1835?
Answer:
An Englishman Macaulay suggested that Indians should be taught through the
English language.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE
QUESTIONS
Question 1:
How
did the British East India Company eventually become the ruler of India? What
tactics did they adopt to expand their empire?
Answer:
The
British came to India as traders. Their chief motive was to make a fortune. But
they needed political power to carry on their trade. They imposed heavy taxes
on the peasants. The Indian goods lost their demand because the market was
flooded with imported English goods. These goods didn’t have to pay import
duty. The British, in this way, ruined the skilled Indians. They dethroned the
Indian rulers and took advantage of their rivalries. Slowly and steadily they
spread their empire all over India.
Question 2:
How
did the white rulers cripple Indian industries?
Answer:
The white rulers were chiefly traders. Their chief aim was to make profits at
all cost. Hence, they began to ruin Indian industries. They imposed heavy taxes
on farmers. They destroyed Indian cottage industries in order to sell goods
manufactured in England. They exempted all goods imported from England from
duties. In this way, their business flourished while the Indian industries
died. The British made the Indians weak as well as poor.
Question 3:
How
did the resentment against the white man grow leading to armed revolt?
Answer:
The white rulers adopted all the mean and foul tactics to take over the
princely states. By 1856, they had conquered the whole of India. The Indian
princes became their puppets. The British forced Indians to adopt Christian
religion. They paid low wages to Indian soldiers. This created resentment among
all sections of society, and the army as well. The so-called 1857 mutiny was,
in fact, India’s first War of Independence.
Question 4:
Give
a brief account of the role of Raja Rammohan Roy in spreading awareness in the
Indian society.
Answer:
Raja Ram Mohan Roy was a learned man, a social reformer and a true nationalist.
He was from Bengal. He understood well what was wrong with the Indian society.
He called upon the people to fight against social evils of untouchability and
child marriage. He also asked the people to throw out superstitions. He asked
them to feel proud of their culture and learn English. Then alone they would be
able to write to the British Parliament for a fair deal
Honeydew Chapter 4 Bepin Choudhury’s Lapse of Memory
Comprehension Check (Page 62)
Questions:
1.
Why did the man stare at Bepin Babu’s is
disbelief?
2.
Where did Bepin Babu say he went in
October’ 58?
3.
Mention any three (or more) things that
Parimal Ghose knew about Bepin Babu.
Answers:
1.
The man, Parimal Ghose, was taken aback
when Bepin failed to recognise him. He didn’t believe that Bepin had a lapse of
memory.
2.
Bepin Babu said that in October 58 he
was in Kanpur.
3.
Parimal Ghose knew that Bepin Babu’s
wife was dead, and his only brother had died in the same year in a Ranchi
lunatic asylum. He also knew that Bepin Babu had no children and he was a lover
of books.
Comprehension Check (Page 65)
Questions:
1.
Why did Bepin Babu worry about what
Parimal Ghose had said?
2.
How did he try to decide who was right—
his memory or Parimal Ghose?
3.
Why did Bepin Babu hesitate to visit Mr.
Mukerji? Why did he finally decide to phone him?
4.
What did Mr. Mukerji say? Did it comfort
Bepin Babu, or add to his worries?
Answers:
1.
Bepin Babu was taken aback to hear the
intimate details about his life from Parimal Ghose. There seeded no reason why
he should tell a lie. He wondered if he really had forgotten about his visit to
Ranchi.
2.
In order to resolve the puzzle about his
visit to Ranchi, Bepin Babu decided to contact Dinesh Mukerji. Parimal had said
that Mukerji was also in Ranchi at that time
3.
Bepin Babu hesitated to visit Mr.
Mukerji thinking that it would be ridiculous if he had really visited Ranchi.
Mukerji would think Bepin Babu had gone mad. Hence, Bepin babu finally decided
to phone him.
4.
Mukerji didn’t reply clearly. But he
said that he had been to Ranchi twice. He was not sure about the trip. Bepin
Babu exactly wanted to know. It made Bepin Babu more puzzled. He lost his
appetite.
Comprehension Check (Page 68)
Questions:
1.
Who was Chunilal? What did he want from
Bepin Babu?
2.
Why was Dr. Chanda puzzled? What was
unusual about Bepin Babu’s loss of memory?
Answers:
1.
Chunilal was an old friend of Bepin
Babu. He wanted a favour from Bepin Babu in his job.
2.
Paresh Chanda was a young physician. He
had never dealt a case of memory loss. So he was puzzled. He gave a suggestion
to Bepin Babu to visit Ranchi again.
Comprehension Check (Page 70)
Questions:
1.
Had Bepin Babu really lost his memory
and forgotten all about a trip to Ranchi?
2.
Why do you think Chunilal did what he
did? Chunilal says he has no money; what is it that he does have?
Answers:
1.
Perhaps not. He finally recollected his
memory and admitted that he had visited. Ranchi in 1958.
2.
Chunilal wanted some money from Bepin
Babu, his old friend. So he went to him for help. He assured Bepin that the
term of his fortune would be back again. Chunilal had no money but he had mind
and wit.
Working With the Text (Page 70)
Question 1:
The author describes Bepin Babu as a
serious and hardworking man. What evidence can you find in the
story to support this?
Answer:
Bepin Babu was a serious, honest and
hardworking fellow. He went to office regularly. He was doing a responsible
job. He was not a good mixer. Being serious minded, he didn’t waste time in
idle chat.
Question 2:
Why did Bepin Babu change his mind about
meeting Chunilal? What was the result of this meeting?
Answer:
Bepin Babu first refused to meet Chunilal. He was in no mood to help Chunilal
out of his trouble. But he changed his mind soon. He thought Chunilal might
remember something about his trip to Ranchi in 1958.
Question 3:
Bepin Babu lost consciousness at Hundroo Falls. What do you think was the reason
for this?
Answer:
Bepin Babu might have slipped near Hundroo Falls that made him unconscious.
Question 4:
How do you think Bepin Babu reacted when
he found out that Chunilal had tricked him?
Answer:
Bepin Babu’s first reaction was that he regretted having refused to help
Chunilal. He saw through Chunilal’s trick to test
him, and learnt a lesson.
Working With Language (Page 71)
Question 1:
Look at these two
sentences.
·
He had to buy at least five books to
last him through the week.
·
Bepin had to ask Chuni to leave.
Had to is used to show that it was very
important or necessary for Bepin Babu to do something. He had no choice. We can
also use “have to’/ ‘has to’ in the same way.
Fill
in the blanks below using ‘had to’/have to’/ ‘has to’.
(i) I
_________________ cut my hair every month.
(ii) We
_______________ go for swimming lessons last year.
(iii) She_______________
tell the principal the truth.
(iv) They_____________
take the baby to the doctor.
(v) We________________
complain to the police about the noise.
(vi) Romit_________________
finish his homework before he could come out to play.
(vii) I
_________________ repair my cycle yesterday. ——————– Bepin Choudhury’s Lapse of
Memory
Answer:
(i) have
to
(ii) had
to
(iii) had
(iv) had
to
(v) have
to
(vi) had
to
(vii) had
to
Question 2:
Here are a few idioms
that you will find in the story. Look for them in the dictionary in the
following way.
First, arrange them in the order in
which you would find them in a dictionary. (Clue: An idiom is
usually listed under the first noun, verb, adjective or adverb in it. Ignore
articles or prepositions in the idiom). To help you, we have put in bold the
word under which you must look for the idiom in the dictionary.)
(i) at/from close quarters
(close: adjective)
(ii) break into
a smile (break: verb;
look under “break into something”)
(iii) carry
on (carry: verb)
(iv) have
a clean
record (you may find
related meanings under both these words).
(v) beat about
the bush (verb) (verb)
Now
refer to your dictionary and find out what they mean.
Answer:
Question 3:
Study
the sentences in the columns below:
Compare
the sentences in the two columns, especially the verb forms. Answer the
following questions about each pair of sentences.
(i) Which
column tells us that Bepin Babu is still working at the same place?
(ii) Which
column suggests that Chunilal is now waiting for a reply from the publisher?
(iii) Which
column suggests that the person still remembers the movie he saw?
(iv) Which
column suggests that the experience of visiting Ranchi is still fresh in the
speaker’s mind?
Answer:
(i) Column
A_______
(ii) Column
A_______________
(iii) Column
B_____________
(iv) Column
A________
Question 4:
Given below are jumbled sentences.
Working in groups, rearrange the words in each sentence to form correct
sentences.
You will find that each sentence contains an idiomatic expression that you have
come across in the lesson. Underline the idiom and write down its meaning. Then
use your dictionary to check the meaning. One sentence has been worked out for
you as an example.
Jumbled
sentence: vanished/The car/seemed to/into thin/have/air.
Answer:
The car seemed to have vanished
into thin air.
Idiom: vanished into thin air: disappeared
or vanished in a mysterious way.
(i) Stop/and
tell me/beating about/what you want/the bush.
Answer:
Stop beating about the bush and
tell me what you want.
Idiom: beating about the bush—talk vaguely
(ii) don’t
pay/if you/attention/you might/the wrong train/to the announcement/ board.
Answer:
If you don’t pay attention to the announcement, you might board the wrong train.
Idiom: Pay attention: be careful
(iii) The
villagers/tried/the crime/on the young woman/to pin.
Answer:
The villagers tried to pin the
crime on the young woman.
Idiom: Pin the crime on (implicate the wrong person)
(iv) Bepin
Babu/orders to/telling people/under/loved/doctor’s/eat early/that he was.
Answer:
Bepin Babu loved telling people that he was under
doctor’s order to eat early.
Idiom: Under one’s order (doctor’s): under instruction of someone
(v) the
students/The teacher/his eyebrows/when/said that/all their lessons/ raised/they
had revised.
Answer:
The teacher raised his eyebrows when
the students said that they had revised all their lessons, (showed his
assessment).
Idiom: Raised the eyebrows—to
feel annoyed: showing annoyance.
Speaking And Writing (Page 73)
Question 1:
What do you think happened after Bepin
Babu came to know the truth?
Was he angry with this friend for playing such a trick on him? Or do you think
he decided to help a friend in need?
Answer:
Bepin Babu came to know the truth what Chunilal had done. In fact Chunilal had
only played a trick with him to test his friendship. Bepin Babu had a mixed
feeling of relief as well as anger. He was happy to know that he had not
suffered the lapse of memory. He was a little angry with his friend who was not
really helpful. But he had made Bepin feel awkward. He must have decided not to
disappoint a friend in need.
Question 2:
Imagine you are Bepin Choudhury. You have received Chunilal’s letter and feel
ashamed that you did not bother to help an old friend down on his luck. Now you
want to do something for him. Write a letter to Chunilal promising
to help him soon.
Or
A prank is a childish trick. Do
you remember any incident when someone played a prank on you or your friends?
Describe the prank in a paragraph.
Answer:
15th November, 20XX
My Dear Chunilal,
Let me first thank you for your letter dated 10th November. I am really feeling
sorry for disappointing you. I can understand your resentment. Now allow me to
give you a happy news. I spoke to my friend in Delhi, and he has agreed to
engage you as assistant manager in his firm.
Please come to me on Sunday. I shall then introduce you to my friend.
With regards
Yours sincerely
Bepin Choudhury
Or
On March 26, I
received a letter from one of my friends. It contained a happy news that I had
been granted scholarship from back date. He asked me to call on him in April,
so that both would go together to the office of the Superintendent of the
school. I was very glad. I even distributed sweets to my neighbours. But when I
reached my friend’s house, I found him laughing at me. It was April the first.
All Fools Day.’ I got over it soon and admired the practical joke or the prank.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What was Bepin Babu’s hobby? What would
he do every Monday?
Answer:
Bepin Babu’s hobby was reading books. Every Monday, he would purchase books of
crime stories, ghost stories and thrillers from Kalicharan’s shop.
Question 2:
What type of man was Bepin Babu?
Answer:
Bepin Babu was a loner. He was not a good mixer. He had a few friends and he
didn’t like spending time in idle chat.
Question 3:
What was Bepin Babu sure about?
Answer:
Bepin Babu was sure that he hadn’t visited
Ranchi in ’58, during the Pujas.
Question 4:
How can you say that Bepin Babu’s
encounter with Parimal Ghose made him restless?
Answer:
Bepin Babu’s encounter with Parimal Ghose made him really very restless. Even
in the office, he noticed that with every passing hour, his encounter with
Parimal Ghose was occupying more and more of his mind.
Question 5:
Why couldn’t Bepin Babu ignore what
Parimal Ghose had said to him?
Answer:
It was because Parimal Ghose knew a great deal about him. He knew about his
(Bepin Babu’s) wife’s death, his brother’s insanity… If the man knew so much
about him, how could he make such a mistake about the Ranchi trip.
Question 6:
What was wrong with Bepin Babu? What did
Dr. Chanda suggest him?
Answer:
He had completely forgotten about his visit to Ranchi. Dr. Chanda suggested him
to go to Ranchi once again in order to get back his lost memory.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What was Bepin Choudhury’s ailment or
problem? Was it real or deliberate?
Answer:
Bepin Babu was a lonely map. His wife had died some 10 years ago. His ailment
was the lapse of memory. He clearly forgot that he had been to Ranchi in ’58.
Nothing could revive his memory. Finally, he hit against some rock in Ranchi
and became unconscious. On returning home he received Chunilal’s letter. The
letter had an electrifying effect. And Bepin Babu felt relaxed.
Question 2:
Who was Chunilal? What is his role in
the story?
Answer:
Chunilal had once been Bepin Babu’s schoolmate. He was facing hard times and
looking for a job. He called on Bepin with hope to get help. But Bepin even
refused to see him. Later Chunilal confirmed Bepin Babu’s visit to Ranchi. He
recalled several instances in his support but Bepin was not convinced. A letter
from Chunilal gave such a news that Bepin became all right. The news was that
Chunilal’s novel had been accepted for publication and he would get a handsome
amount.
Honeydew Chapter 5 The Summit Within
Comprehension Check (Page 80)
Question 1:
Standing on Everest, the writer was
(i) overjoyed
(ii) very
sad.
(iii) jubilant
and sad.
Choose
the right item.
Question 2:
The emotion that gripped him was one of
(i) victory
over hurdles.
(ii) humility
and a sense of smallness.
(iii) greatness
and self importance.
(iv) joy
of discovery.
Choose
the right item.
Question 3:
“The summit of the mind” referes to
(i) great
intellectual achievements.
(ii) the
process of maturing mentally and spiritually.
(iii) Overcoming
personal ambition for common welfare.
(iv) living
in the world of thought and imagination.
(v) the
triumph of mind over worldly pleasures for a noble cause.
(vi) a
fuller knowledge of oneself
Mark
the item(s) not relevant.
Answers:
1.
(iii) jubilant
and sad.
2.
(ii) humility
and a sense of smallness.
3.
(vi) a
fuller knowledge of oneself.
Working With the Text (Page 81)
Question 1:
Answer the following
questions.
(i) What
are the three qualities that played a major role in the author’s climb?
Answer:
The three qualities that ensured the success of the author were ‘endurance,
persistence and will power’.
(ii) Why
is adventure, which is risky, also pleasurable?
Answer:
Mountain climbing is a great adventure but is also risky. It is a great
challenge and a doing challenging job is in itself pleasurable. It gives
immense joy to the doers.
(iii) What was it about Mount Everest that the
author found irresistible?
Answer:
Mount Everest attracted the author because it is the highest, the mightiest and
has defied many previous attempts. It takes the last ounce of one’s energy.
(iv) One
does not do it (climb a high peak) for fame alone. What
does one do it for, really?
Answer:
Conquering summit is a great physical achievement. But more than that, it gives
the climber the emotional and spiritual satisfaction. It satisfies man’s
eternal love for adventure.
(v) “He
becomes conscious in a special manner of his own smallness in this large
universe”. This awareness defines an emotion mentioned in the first paragraph.
Which is the emotion?
Answer:
That emotion is ‘humility’.
(vi) What were the ‘symbols
of reverence’ left by members of the team on Everest?
Answer:
The author left on Everest a picture of Guru Nanak. Rawat left a picture of
Goddess Durga. Phu Durgi left a relic of the Buddha. Edmund Hillary, being a
Christian, buried a Cross under the rock. All these were symbols of reverence
for God.
(vii) What
according to the writer, did his experience as an Everester teach him?
Answer:
The experience of having conquered Mount Everest changed him completely. It
made him realise his own smallness.
Question 2:
Write a sentence against
each of the following statements. Your sentence should explain the statement.
You can pick out sentences from the text and rewrite them. The first one has
been done for you.
(i) The
experience changes you completely.
One who has been to the mountains is never the same again.
_________________________________________________
(ii) Man
takes delight in overcoming obstacles.
_________________________________________________
(iii) Mountains
are nature at its best
_________________________________________________
(iv) The
going was difficult but the after-effects were satisfying
_________________________________________________
(v) The
physical conquest of a mountain is really a spiritual experience
_________________________________________________
Answer:
(ii) The
obstacles in climbing a mountain are physical. A climb to a summit is a test of
endurance and will power. It is a challenge that is difficult to resist.
(iii) Everest
is the highest and the mightiest and has defied many previous attempts.
(iv) When
the summit is climbed, there is the joy of having done something, one has the
feeling of victory and of happiness.
(v) Mountains
are a means of communion with God.
Working with Language (Page 82)
Question 1:
Look at the italicised
phrases and their meanings given in brackets.
Mountains are nature (nature’s best form and appearance)
at its best.
Your life is at risk. (in danger; you run the risk of losing your life.) (it
was his best/worst performance.)
He was at his (it was his best/worst performance.)
best/worst
in the last meeting.
Fill
in the blanks in the following dialogues choosing suitable phrases from those
given in the box.
at
hand at once at all at a low ebb at first sight
1.
Teacher: You
were away from school without permission. Go to the Principal________________
and submit your explanation.
Pupil: Yes,
Madam. But would you help me write it first?
2.
Arun: Are
you unwell?
Ila: No,
not___________________ Why do you ask?
Arun: If
you were unwell. I would send you to my uncle.
He is a doctor.
3.
Mary: Almost
every Indian film has an episode of love________________________ .
David: Is
that what makes them so popular in foreign countries?
4.
You look depressed. Why are your
spirits_______________________ today?
(Use such in the phrase)
Ashok: I
have to write ten sentences using words that I never heard before.
5.
Your big moment is
close______________________ .
Jyoti: How
should I welcome it?
Shieba: Get
up and receive the trophy.
Answer:
1.
at once
2.
at all
3.
at first sight
4.
at such a low ebb
5.
at hand.
Question 2:
Write the noun forms of
the following words adding -ance or -ence to each.
1.
endure ______________________
2.
persist_____________
3.
signify____________________
4.
confide___________
5.
maintain ___________________
6.
abhor_____________
Answer:
1.
endurance
2.
persistence
3.
significance
4.
confidence
5.
maintenance
6.
abhorrence.
Question 3:
(i)
Match words under A with their meanings under B.
Answer:
(ii)
Fill in the blanks in the sentences below with appropriate words from under A.
1.
There were ___________________ obstacles
on the way, but we reached our destination safely.
2.
We have no __________________ of finding
out what happened there.
3.
Why he lives in a house
______________________ from any town or village is more than I can tell.
4.
__________________ by gratitude, we
bowed to the speaker for his valuable advice.
5.
The old castle stands in a
_______________________ position above the sleepy town.
Answer:
1.
formidable
2.
means
3.
remote
4.
Overwhelmed
5.
dominant.
Speaking and Writing (Page 83)
Write
a composition describing a visit to the hills, or any place which you found
beautiful and inspiring.
Before writing, work in small groups. Discuss the points given below and decide
if you want to use some of these points in your composition.
·
Consider
this Sentence
Mountains
are a means of communion with God.
·
Think of the act of worship or prayer.
You believe yourself to be in the presence of the divine power. In a way, you
are in communion with that power.
·
Imagine the climber on top of the
summit—the height attained; limitless sky above; the climber’s last ounce of
energy spent; feelings of gratitude, humility and peace.
·
The majesty of the mountains does bring
you close to nature and the spirit and joy that lives there, if you have the
ability to feel it. Some composition may be read aloud to the entire class
afterwards.
Answer:
For self attempt
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What do you know about H.P.S. Ahluwalia?
Answer:
Major H.P.S. Ahluwalia was a member of the first successful Indian expedition
to Mount Everest in 1965.
Question 2:
Which other summit has been talked to by
the author?
Answer:
The other summit that has been talked to by the author is the summit of the mind.
In the author’s opinion climbing this
Question 3:
Why do people climb mountains?
Answer:
People climb mountains because it is a difficult task. They take delight in
overcoming obstacles. The obstacles in climbing a mountain are physical. A
climb to- a summit means endurance, persistence and will power. The
demonstration of these qualities is exhilarating.
Question 4:
How does the author view mountains?
Answer:
The author finds great joy in the company of mountains. He feels miserable in
the plains. Their beauty and majesty pose a great challenge. The author believes
that mountains are a means of communion with God.
Question 5:
What features of Everest did draw the
author to it?
Answer:
The beauty of Everest, its aloofness, might and ruggedness drew the author to
it. The difficulties that the author encountered on the way also were taken by
him as challenges which he couldn’t resist.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Why did the author climb Mount Everest?
Answer:
The author climbed Mount Everest because it is the highest, the mightiest and
has defied many previous attempts. It takes the last ounce of one’s energy. It
is a brutal struggle with rock and ice. Once taken up, it cannot be given up
halfway because the passage back is as difficult as the passage onwards. And
then, when the summit is climbed, there is the exhilaration, the joy of having
done something, the sense of a battle fought and won. There is a feeling of
victory and of happiness.
Question 2:
How does Ahluwalia explain the title of the
lesson, ‘The Summit Within’?
Answer:
The writer was a member of the team that reached the summit of Mount Everest.
It was a great achievement. But he did not feel vain or heroic. He felt that
his conquest of Everest was merely a physical experience. There was another
summit within every person. It was his own mind. One has to climb it also to
get fuller knowledge of oneself. This exercise is difficult. It also changes
one as does standing on the summit of Mt. Everest.
Question 3:
How did Ahluwaliah feel standing on the
summit?
Answer:
Ahluwalia was overwhelmed by a deep sense of joy and thankfulness. Looking
round from the summit, Ahluwalia told himself that his adventure, though risky,
was worthwhile. The surrounding peaks looked like a jewelled necklace. It was
an ennobling and enriching experience. He was filled with humility. He thanked
God and then left on Everest a picture of Guru Nanak.
Question 4:
How does Ahluwalia describe his
achievement?
Answer:
Ahluwalia feels that Everest is not just a physical climb. Standing on the
mountain’s top he felt how small he was in the big universe. He experienced a
sense of fulfilment. It satisfied his love for adventure. The experience was
not just physical, but also emotional and spiritual.
Question 5:
What problems do the climbers face as
they climb a mountain?
Answer:
Breathing at great height is difficult. The climber has to cut the steps in the
hard ice and he has to strain every nerve as he takes every step. Sometimes he
curses himself for undertaking such a task. There are moments when he feels
like going back for relief. But there is something that does not let him give
up the struggle.
Honeydew Chapter 6 This is Jody’s Fawn
Comprehension Check (Page 90)
Questions:
1.
What had happened to Jody’s father?
2.
How did the doe save Penny’s life?
3.
Why does Jody want to bring the fawn
home?
4.
How does Jody know that the fawn is a
male?
Answer:
1.
Jody’s father had been bitten by a
rattlesnake.
2.
Jody’s father killed the doe or she
dear. He used her heart and liver to draw out the snake’s poison. In this way
the doe saved Penny’s life.
3.
Jody’s father had killed the doe.
Without the mother-deer, the fawn was likely to starve to death in the forest.
So Jody wanted to bring the young fawn home.
4.
The spots on the fawn’s body made Jody
know that it was a male.
Comprehension Check (Page 91)
Questions:
1.
Jody didn’t want Mill-wheel with him for
two reasons. What were they?
2.
Why was Mill-wheel afraid to leave Jody
alone?
Answer:
1.
Jody didn’t want Mill-wheel to join him
in the search for the fawn. The reason was that he was not sure about the
fawn’s safety. He didn’t want Mill-wheel to see his disappointment.
2.
Mill-wheel was afraid that Jody might be
lost in the jungle.
Comprehension Check (Page 94)
Questions:
1.
How did Jody bring the fawn back home?
2.
Jody was filled with emotion after he
found the fawn. Can you find at least three words or phrases which show how he
felt?
3.
How did the deer drink milk from the
gourd?
4.
Why didn’t the fawn follow Jody up the
steps as he had thought it would?
Answer:
1.
Jody picked up the fawn into his arms
and proceeded to home. After some distance, he kept the fawn down and took
rest. Later on, the fawn followed him. Thus he brought the fawn back home.
2.
(i) (The
fawn) shook him through with the stare of its liquid eye.
(ii) The
touch of the fawn made him delirious.
(iii) As
though the fawn were a china deer.
3.
Jody dipped his fingers in the milk.
Then he left the fawn suck his fingers. He did so several times. Finally, the
fawn drank off all the milk from the gourd.
4.
The fawn didn’t know how to raise its
feet to climb the steps.
Working With the Text (Page 94)
Questions 1:
Why did Penny Baxter allow Jody to go
find the fawn and raise it?
Answer:
Penny was convinced by Jody’s argument that it would be ungrateful if they left
the fawn in the forest to starve. He realised that Jody was right.
Question 2:
What did Doc Wilson mean when he said,
“Nothing in the world ever comes quite free”?
Answer:
Doc Wilson meant that Penny must pay back to the doe whom he had killed for his
own gain by bringing up her fawn.
Question 3:
How did Jody look after the fawn, after
he accepted the responsibility for doing this?
Answer:
Jody looked after the faWh like a mother. He made it drink milk with his
fingers dipped in milk. This is how a mother feeds her baby. Jody was glad that
he had found the fawn.
Question 4:
How does Jody’s mother react when she
hears that he is going to bring the fawn home? Why does she react in this way?
Answer:
Jody’s mother turned her nose when she heard that he was going to bring back
the fawn. She gasped with surprise because she didn’t want to see an animal in
her home.
Working With Language (Page 94)
Question 1:
Look at these pairs of
sentences.
Penny said to Jody, “Will you
be back before dinner?”
Penny asked Jody if he would be
back before dinner.
“How are you feeling, Pa?” asked Jody.
Jody asked his father how he was feeling.
Here are some questions in direct
speech. Put them into reported speech.
1.
Penny said, “Do you really want it son?”
2.
Mill-wheel said, “Will he ride back with
me?”
3.
He said to Mill-wheel, “Do you think the
fawn is still there?”
4.
He asked Mill-wheel, “Will you help me
find him?”
5.
He said, “Was it up here that Pa got
bitten by the snake?”
Answer:
1.
Penny asked his son if he really wanted
the fawn.
2.
Mill-wheel enquired if Jody would ride
back with him.
3.
Jody asked Mill-wheel if he thought the
fawn was still there.
4.
He asked Mill-wheel if he would help him
find the fawn.
5.
Mill-wheel wanted to know if that was
the place where Pa had got bitten by the snake.
Question 2:
Look at these two
sentences.
He tumbled backward.
It turned its
head.
The first sentence has an intransitive
verb, a verb without an object. The second sentence has a transitive verb. It
has a direct object. We can ask: “What did it turn?” You can answer. “Its head.
It turned its head.”
Say whether the verb in each sentence below is transitive or intransitive. Ask
yourself a “what’ question about the verb, as in the example above. (For some
verbs, the object is a person, so ask the question ‘who’ instead of ‘what’).
(i) Jody
then went to
the kitchen.
(ii) The
fawn wobbled after
him.
(iii) You found him.
(iv) He picked it
up.
(v) He dipped his
fingers in the milk.
(vi) It bleated frantically
and butted
(vii) The
fawn sucked his
fingers.
(viii) He lowered his
fingers slowly into the milk.
(ix) It stamped its
small hoofs impatiently.
(x) He held his
fingers below the level of the milk,
(xi) The
fawn followed
(xii) He walked all
day.
(xiii) He stroked its
sides.
(xiv) The
fawn lifted its
nose.
(xv) Its
legs hung limply.
Answer:
Question 3:
Here are some words from the lesson.
Working in groups, arrange them in the order in which they would appear in the
dictionary. Write down some idioms and phrasal verbs connected to these words.
Use the dictionary for more idioms and phrasal verbs.
Answer:
Idioms or phrasal verbs connected to the
above words.
Clearing: clearing,
campaign
Close: close
shave, close up, close quarters
Draw: draw
the curtain on/over, draw a blank
Light: in
the light of, bring to light
Make: make
the most of, make up
Part: part
with, parted comparing
Pick: pick
up, pick and choose
Scrawny: the
scrawny neck
Sweet: have
a sweet tooth, sweet seventeen, sweet tongued, sweet nothings
Wonder: wonder
world, wonder load, nine day’s wonder, wonder about, do wonders.
Speaking (Page 96)
Question 1:
Do you think it is right to kill an
animal to save a human life? Give reasons for your answer.
Answer:
Most of the animals are our friends. Dogs, horses, elephants, cows are a few
such animals that serve us. But man has been killing codfish or the whales for
oil. Tigers are killed for their skin and bones. This is not fair. But there is
no harm if any of them are killed strictly to save human life, properly and
agriculture.
However, killing animals is a crime. It is wrong to kill wild life for their
hide or for pleasure.
Question 2:
Imagine you wake up one morning and find
a tiny animal on your doorstep. You want to keep it as a pet but your parents
are not too happy about it. How would you persuade them to let you keep it?
Discuss it in groups and present your arguments to the class.
Answer:
The young ones of cats, dogs and some birds attract us as does a human child.
When I was a child, I wanted to adopt a kitten or a puppy as pet. I found a
good breed puppy at my doorstep one day. But it created a commotion in the
house. My mother got irritated at the veiy presence of pets in the house. They
bite and bark, enter the kitchen or sit on our beds and make things dirty. But
I assured her that I would look after my puppy and train it. The loyal dog would
act as security guard and a playmate. My parents finally relented and let me
have the poor puppy as a pet.
Writing (Page 96)
Question 1:
Imagine you have a new pet that keeps
you busy. Write a paragraph describing your pet, the things it does, and the
way it makes you feel. Here are some words and phrases that you could use.
frisky, smart, disobedient, loyal,
happy, enthusiastic, companion, sharing, friend, rolls in mud, dirties the bed,
naughty, lively, playful, eats up food, hides the newspaper, drinks up milk,
runs away when called, floats on the water as if dead.
Answer:
I have taken a kitten as my pet. It is female with silky fur and skin. She
keeps me busy. My mother does not take interest in my pet. She curses the
little one for doing mischief, for moving about in the house, for making the
bed and floor dirty. The kitten enters the kitchen and drinks up milk. She is
naughty and disobedient also. She is most unlike a dog which is loyal, obedient
and strong. Still I like my pet because it is lively, playful and frisky.
Question 2:
Human life is dependent on nature
(that’s why we call her Mother Nature). We take everything from nature to live
our lives. Do we give back anything to nature?
(i) Write
down some examples of the natural resources that we use.
(ii) Write
a paragraph expressing your point of view regarding our relationship with
nature.
Answer:
(i) Man
and nature are complementary to each other. Man for ages has been using
forests, minerals and chemicals for his survival. Earth and nature are our lifelines.
They help us directly or indirectly. Take for example the paper we print, our
books and newspapers. They are products of trees. We get fruits, flowers and
fodder from nature. We get water and air free from nature. It is unfortunate
that we are over using the limited resources and are also polluting them.
Nature is our Mother. We must not use up
anything to the extent that it is not restored naturally. By cutting down trees
or killing whales we are, in a way, depriving our children of their share. Let
us give back to nature for the benefits we get from it.
(ii) Some
of the natural resources that we use are water, coal, mineral oil, etc.
Question 3:
In This is Jody’s Fawn, Jody’s father
uses a “home remedy’ for a snake bite. What
should a person now do if he or she is bitten by a snake? Are all snakes
poisonous?
With the help of your teacher and others, find out answers to such questions.
Then write a short paragraph on—What to do if a snake chooses to bite you.
Answer:
Snakes are the most dreaded of wild creatures. This is why we use sticks to
kill them. There are many poisonous snakes. Green snakes or water snakes are
not poisonous. Still we cannot be sure of it. So we don’t take a chance. We
call in a snake charmer to draw the cobra out of the house. A snake-bite can
kill the victim in a few minutes. But the victim can be saved if he gets the
first aid in the form of blood-letting and anti-venom serum. The cure for snake
bite is prepared front the snake’s poison.
In case I am bitten by a poisonous snake, the
first thing I would do is to put a band tightly over the bitten part. Then I
shall use a blade or knife to make a small cut on the bitten part, and press
the poisonous blood out. Then I shall go to hospital for medical help. I shall
not go to sleep until I feel better and safe.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
When and why does Jody’s father need a
remedy?
Answer:
Penny, Jody’s father, is bitten by a poisonous rattlesnake. Instead of going to
a doctor, he kills a she deer and uses her liver to draw out the poison.
Question 2:
How does Jody react to the cruelty of
his father?
Answer:
Jody, the small boy, tells his father that he had left the fawn alone and
defenceless to die. So it is their moral duty to save the innocent and hungry
young one of the doe.
Question 3:
How does Penny take his son’s argument?
Answer:
Penny agreed with Jody’s argument that it would be ungrateful to leave the fawn
to starve.
Question 4:
What did Doc Wilson say about Jody’s
suggestion?
Answer:
Doc Wilson said that they had to pay the price for everything. He justified the
plan of Jody and Penny about the fawn.
Question 5:
Why did Jody see only vultures and kites
feeding on the dead body of the doe?
Answer:
The sand showed large footprints of tigers or leopards but they did not eat up
the dead doe. The reason was that the big cats killed an animal themselves to
eat its flesh. Vultres and kites are birds of prey. They also feed on the dead
bodies.
Question 6:
How did Jody approach and win the trust
of the fawn?
Answer:
The fawn shook with fear as Jody drew near. It lifted its nose and scented the
visitor. Jody moved forward on all fours and put his arms around its body.
Question 7:
How did Jody feel as he touched the
fawn’s skin?
Answer:
Jody found the fawn’s skin very soft and clean. He stroked its sides gently as
though it were made of clay and would break soon.
Question 8:
How did Jody feed the fawn?
Answer:
Jody decided to give away his share of milk to the fawn. He poured the milk
into a small pot. Then he dipped his fingers in the milk and put them into its
mouth. The fawn sucked slowly until the milk vanished.
Question 9:
What message does the story of the fawn
convey to the readers?
Answer:
The story highlights two things. It is not fair to kill an animal for its use
as a cure. Secondly, one should have pity and love for the animals.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
How did Jody persuade his father to go
to the forest to bring back the fawn?
Answer:
Jody was a small, brave and sensitive boy. He was with his father when he (his
father) was bitten by a rattlesnake. His father quickly killed a doe and used
its heart and liver to draw out the snake’s poison. Jody was happy to see that
his father got a new life but at the same time he was worried for the little
fawn who was left alone without its mother. He wanted to bring back the fawn. He
requested his father to allow him to go to the forest to find the fawn. He told
him that he didn’t need to drink milk because he was now a big boy. He would
give the milk to the fawn. He also said that it was ungrateful to leave the
fawn to starve. His father was in a fix. He couldn’t say “no’ to his son. And
finally allowed him (Jody) to go to the forest to find the fawn.
Question 2:
How did Jody feed the little fawn?
Answer:
Jody poured milk into a small gourd. He dipped his fingers in the milk and
thrust them into the fawn’s soft wet mouth. It sucked greedily. When he
withdrew them, it bleated frantically and butted him. He dipped his fingers
again and as the fawn sucked, he lowered them slowly into the milk. The fawn
blew and sucked and snorted. It stamped its small hoofs impatiently. As long as
he held his fingers below the level of the milk, the fawn was content.
Honeydew Chapter 7 A Visit to Cambridge
Comprehension Check (Page 104)
Which
is the right sentence?
Questions:
1. “Cambridge
was my metaphor for England.” To the writer
(i) Cambridge
was a reputed university in England.
(ii) England
was famous for Cambridge.
(iii) Cambridge
was the real England.
2. The
writer phoned Stephen Hawking’s house
(i) From
the nearest phone booth.
(ii) From
outside a phone booth.
(iii) From
inside a phone booth.
3. Every time he spoke to the
scientist, the writer felt guilty because
(i) He
wasn’t sure what he wanted to ask.
(ii) He
forced the scientist to use his voice synthesiser.
(iii) He
was face to face with a legend.
4. “I
felt a huge relief…in the possibilities of my body.” In the given context, the
highlighted words refer to
(i) Shifting
in the wheelchair, turning the wrist.
(ii) Standing
up, walking.
(iii) Speaking,
writing.
Answers:
1.
(ii) England
was famous for Cambridge.
2.
(i) From
the nearest phone-booth.
3.
(ii) He
forced the scientist to use his voice synthesiser.
4.
(i) Shifting
in the wheelchair, turning the wrist.
Working With the Text (Page 104)
Answer
the following Questions.
Question 1:
1.
Did the prospect of meeting Stephen Hawking
make the writer nervous? If so, why?
2.
Did he at the same time feel very
excited? If so, why?
Answer:
1.
The writer felt nervous because he was
doubtful whether he would be granted the interview.
2.
He felt excited at the same time because
he had been there to see Prof. Hawking for half an hour.
Question 2:
Guess the first question put to the
scientist by the writer.
Answer:
The writer’s first question might be about Hawking’s disability and how he had
accepted it.
Question 3:
Stephen Hawking said, “I’ve had no
choice.” Does the writer think there was a choice? What was it?
Answer:
Living creatively with the reality of his weakening body was a choice.
Question 4:
“I could feel his anguish.” What
could be the anguish?
Answer:
Prof. Hawking’s mind was full of great ideas but he couldn’t speak them out
clearly and forcefully.
Question 5:
What endeared the scientist to the
writer so that he said he was looking at one of the most beautiful men in the
world?
Answer:
Prof. Hawking’s one-way smile.
Question 6:
Read aloud the description of ‘the
beautiful’ man. Which is the most beautiful sentence in the description?
Answer:
The line is “before you like a lantern
whose walls are worn so thin, you glimpse only the light inside, is the incandescence
of a man”.
Question 7:
1.
If ‘the lantern’ is the man, what would
its ‘walls’ be?
2.
What is housed within the thin walls?
3.
What general conclusion does the writer
draw from this comparison?
Answer:
1.
The walls of the lantern in Hawking’s
case were his skeleton like physical structure.
2.
The glow of the eternal soul was housed
within the thin walls of his body,
3.
The writer draws conclusion that the
eternal soul is more important than the body.
Question 8:
What is the scientist’s message for the
disabled?
Answer:
Prof. Hawking’s message for the disabled is that they should concentrate on
what they are good at. It is foolish to try to copy the normal people.
Question 9:
Why does the writer refer to the guitar
incident? Which idea does it support?
Answer:
The writer spent many years trying to play a big Spanish guitar. One night he
loosened the strings joyfully. This incident supports the idea that the
disabled people should practise only what they are good at.
Question 10:
The writer expresses his great gratitude
to Stephen Hawking. What is the gratitude for?
Answer:
The author felt much inspired after meeting with Stephen Hawking. Therefore he
felt grateful to him.
Question 11:
Complete the following sentences taking
their appropriate parts from both the boxes below.
1.
There was his assistant on the line…
2.
You get fed up with people asking you to
be brave….
3.
There he was ………
4.
You look at his eyes which can speak,
……..
5.
It doesn’t do much good to know…
A
·
tapping at a little switch in his hand
·
and I told him
·
that there are people
·
as if you have a courage account
·
and they are saying something huge and
urgent
B
·
trying to find the words on his
computer.
·
I had come in a wheelchair from India.
·
on which you are too lazy to draw a
cheque.
·
smiling with admiration to see you
breathing still.
·
it is hard to tell what.
Answer:
1.
There was his assistant on the line and
I told him I had come in a wheelchair from India.
2.
You get fed up with people asking you to
be brave, as if you have a courage account on which you are too
lazy to draw a cheque.
3.
There he was tapping at a little switch
in his hand, trying to find the words on his computer.
4.
You look at his eyes which can speak and
they are saying something huge and urgent it is hard to tell what.
5.
It doesn’t do much good to know that
there are people smiling with admiration to see you breathing still.
Working With Language (Page 106)
Question 1:
Fill in the blanks in
the sentences below using the appropriate forms of the words given in the
following box.
guide
, succeed , chair , travel, pale , draw ,true
1.
I met a_________ from an antique land.
2.
I need special_________ in mathematics.
I can’t count the number of times I have failed in the subject.
3.
The guide called Stephen Hawking a
worthy__________ to Issac Newton.
4.
His other problems ________ into
insignificance beside this unforeseen mishap.
5.
The meeting was by the youngest member
of the board.
6.
Some people say “yours________ ’when
they informally refer to themselves.
7.
I wish it had been a________ We would
have been spared the noise of celebrations, at least.
Answer:
1.
traveller
2.
guidance
3.
successor
4.
paled
5.
chaired
6.
truly
7.
drawn
Question 2:
Look at the following
words.
walk
stick
Can you create a meaningful phrase using
both these words? (It is simple. Add ing to the verb and use it before the
noun. Put an article at the beginning.) …a walking stick
Now
make six such phrases using the words given in the box.
read
/ session
smile /
face
revolve / chair
walk
/
tour
dance /
doll
win / chance
Answer:
1.
a reading session
2.
a smiling face
3.
a revolving chair
4.
a walking tour
5.
a dancing doll
6.
a winning chance
Question 3:
Use all or both in the
blanks. Tell your partner why you chose one or the other.
1.
He has two brothers. _________are
lawyers.
2.
More than ten persons called. _________
of them wanted to see you.
3.
They_________cheered the team.
4.
_________ her parents are teachers.
5.
How much have you got? Give me_____ of
it.
Answer:
(i) Both (ii) All (iii) all (iv) Both (v) all
Question 4:
Complete each sentence using the right
form of the adjective given in brackets,
1.
My friend has one of the cars on the
road, (fast)
2.
This is the _________ story I have ever
read, (interesting)
3.
What you are doing now is_________ than
what you did yesterday, (easy)
4.
Ramesh and his wife are both________
(short)
5.
He arrived________ as usual. Even the
chief guest came________than he did. (late, early)
Answer:
1.
fastest
2.
most interesting
3.
easier
4.
short
5.
late, earlier
Speaking and Writing (Page 107)
Question 1:
Say the following words with correct
stress. Pronounce the parts given in colour loudly and clearly.
(i) In a word having more than one syllable, the stressed syllable is the one
that is more prominent than
the other syllable(s)
(ii) A word has as many syllables as it has vowels.
(iii) The mark (‘) indicates that the first syllable in ’manner’ is more prominent
than the other.
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
Question 2:
Underline stressed
syllables in the following words. Consult the dictionary or ask the teacher if
necessary.
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
Question 3:
Writing a notice for the School Notice
Board.
Step
1
Discuss why notices are put up on the notice board.
What kinds of “notices’ have you lately seen on the board?
How is a notice different from a letter or a descriptive paragraph?
Step
2
Suppose you have lost or found something on the campus.
What have you lost or found?
You want to write a notice about it. If you have lost something, you want it
restored to you in case someone has found it. If you have found something, you
want to return it to its owner.
Step
3
Write a few lines describing the object you have lost or found. Mention the
purpose of the notice in clear terms. Also write your name, class, section and
date.
Step 4
Let one member of each group read aloud the notice to the entire class. Compare
your notice with the other notices, and make changes, if necessary, with the
help of the teacher.
Or
·
Imagine that you are a journalist.
·
You have been asked to interview the
president of the village panchayat.
·
Write eight to ten questions you wish to
ask.
·
The questions should elicit comments as
well as plans regarding water and electricity, cleanliness and school education
in the village.
Or
The
questions that I would ask the president of the Village Panchayat:
1. What steps will you take for the
development of education in your area?
2. What will you do for health facilities?
3. What will you do for roads?
4. What will you do for civil amenities?
5. How will you improve agriculture of your village?
6. What will you do for farmers?
7. What do you plan for female child promotion?
MORE QUESTIONS
SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Who is Stephen Hawking?
Answer:
Stephen Hawking is a great scientist, an astrophysicist. But he is disabled. He
has written the book ‘A Brief History of Time’. He can express himself only
through a computer.
Question 2:
What took the author Firdaus to England?
Why did he wish to see Hawking?
Answer:
Firdaus Kanga visited Britain in order to write a book about his travels. He
himself could move only in a wheel-chair. On the advice of his guide, Kanga
planned to meet the most brilliant and completely paralysed astrophysicist
(Hawking) in Cambridge.
Question 3:
How did Kanga fix the interview with
Hawking?
Answer:
Kanga phoned Hawking and requested the scientist’s assistant to arrange the
interview. He asked for ten minutes but he got half an hour.
Question 4:
What advice do people usually give to
the disabled? Was Hawking brave by choice?
Answer:
The people generally advise the disabled to be brave. Hawking admitted
truthfully that he hadn’t been brave. In fact, he had had no choice.
Question 5:
What advice does the scientist give to
the handicapped?
Answer:
He advises the disabled people to concentrate on what they are good at. They
should not try to copy the normal people.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Write about Stephen Hawking and Firdaus Kanga.
Answer:
Both of them are disabled people. Stephen Hawking is one of the greatest scientists
of our time. He suffers from paralysis that confines him to a wheelchair, and
allows him to ‘speak’ only by punching buttons on a computer, which speaks for
him in a machine like voice.
Firdaus Kanga is a writer and journalist. He lives and works in Mumbai. He was
born with ‘brittle bones’ that tended to break easily when he was a child. Like
Hawking, Kanga moves around in a wheelchair.
Question 2:
Why did the writer feel guilty talking
to Stephen Hawking?
Answer:
The writer felt guilty every time he spoke to Stephen Hawking because by doing
this he forced him to respond. There he (Hawking) was, tapping at the little
switch in his hand, trying to find the words on his computer with the only bit
of movement left to him, his long, pale fingers. His eyes would often shut in
frustrated exhaustion. The writer could feel his anguish but he had no option.
He had gone to his house to talk to him on certain points.
Honeydew Chapter 8 A Short Monsoon Diary
Comprehension Check (Page 115)
Questions:
1.
Why is the author not able to see Bijju?
2.
What are the two ways in which the hills
appear to change when the mist comes up?
Answers:
1.
The author could not see Bijju because
of the mist that concealed the hills. He could only hear his voice but could
not see him.
2.
When the mist comes up, it covers the
hills and spreads silence.
Comprehension Check (Page 117)
Questions:
1.
When does the monsoon season begin and
when does it end? How do you prepare to face the monsoon?
2.
Which hill-station does the author
describe in the diary entry?
3.
For how many days does it rain without
stopping? What does the author do on these days?
4.
Where do the snakes and rodents take
shelter? Why?
5.
What did the author receive in the mail?
Answers:
1.
The monsoon season in Mussorie begins
from June 24/25. By August 2, the people are fed up with rain. It ends by
August 31. Then begins winter rains which end by late March. We take out our
rain coats and umbrellas to face the monsoon.
2.
Mussoorie
3.
It rains non-stop for eight or nine
days. The author keeps pacing the room and looking out of the window.
4.
The rodents and snakes take shelter in
roofs, attics and godowns. They do so because their holes are flooded with rain
water.
5.
The author received a cheque in the
mail.
Working With the Text (Page 118)
Question 1:
Look carefully at the diary entries for
June 24-25, August 2 and March 23. Now write down the changes that happen as
the rains progress from June to March.
Answer:
Rains in Mussoorie begin in June and end by March. June 24 is the first day of
monsoon mist which covered the hills and spreads silence. On August 2 it rained
all night and made sleeping difficult. By late March ends winter as well as the
rains.
Question 2:
Why did the grandmother ask the children
not to kill the Chuchundar?
Answer:
The grandmother told the children not to kill the Chuchundars because
they brought good luck and money.
Question 3:
What signs do we find in Nature which
show that the monsoons are about to end?
Answer:
By the end of the monsoon the greenery is at its peak. The seeds of the cobra
lily turn red. A rainbow is formed in the sky.
Question 4:
Complete the following
sentences.
1.
Bijju is not seen but his voice is heard
because__________ .
2.
The writer describes the hill station
and valley as _________ .
3.
The leopard was’ successful in________
but had to flee when
4.
The minivets are easily noticed because
_________ .
5.
It looks like a fashion display on the
slopes when_________.
6.
During the monsoon season, snakes and
rodents are found in roofs and attics because _________.
Answer:
1.
dense mist covers and hides the hills.
2.
‘A paradise that might have been.’
3.
killing a dog but had to flee when
Bijju’s mother arrived crying curses.
4.
of their bright colours.
5.
they are covered by a variety of
flowers.
6.
their holes are flooded with water and
these places provide them convenient shelter.
Question 5:
‘Although tin roofs are given to springing unaccountable leaks, there is a
feeling of being untouched by, and yet in touch with, the rain.’
1.
Why has the writer used the word,
‘springing’?
2.
How is the writer untouched by the rain?
3.
How is the writer in touch with the rain
at the same time?
Answer:
1.
The word ‘springing’ is used to show
suddenness with which water starts leaking.
2.
Because he is inside the room.
3.
He hears the drumming of rain on the tin
roof. He also looks out of the window to see the rains.
Question 6:
Mention a few things that can happen
when there is endless rain for days together?
Answer:
A long spell of rain makes life miserable. One is closed up in his room.
Everything becomes damp and soggy. Rodents, snakes and insects enter the house
for shelter.
Question 7:
What is the significance of cobra lily
in relation to the monsoon season, its beginning and end?
Answer:
At first cobra lily appears with the arrival of the monsoon. When the cobra
seeds begin to turn red, it indicates the rains are coming to an end.
Working With Language (Page 118)
Question 1:
Here are some words that are associated with the monsoon. Add as many words as
you can to this list. Can you find words for these in your languages?
downpour
floods mist cloudy powercuts cold umbrella
Answer:
rain, water, fog, raincoats, thunder, dampness, lakes etc.
In my language I find the alternative words like the following:
बौछार , बूंदाबांदी
, तुषार, धुंध
, सीत , छतरी,
रेनकोट , आंधी
, इत्यादी l
Question 2:
Look at the sentences
below.
(i) Bijju
wandered into the garden in the evening.
(ii) The
trees were ringing with birdsong.
Notice the highlighted verb.
The verb wandered tells us what Bijju did that evening. But the verb was
ringing tells us what was happening continually at same time in the past (the
birds were chirping in the trees).
Now look the at sentences below. They tell us about something that happened in
the past. They also tell us about other things that happened continually* at
the same time in the past.
Put the verbs in
the brackets into their proper forms. The first one is done for you.
1.
We (get out) of the school bus. The bell
(ring) and everyone (rush) to class.
2.
The traffic (stop). Some people (sit) on
the road and they (shout) slogans.
3.
I (wear) my raincoat. It (rain) and
people (get) wet.
4.
She (see) a film. She (narrate) it to
her friends who (listen) carefully.
5.
We (go) to the exhibition. Some people
(buy) clothes while others (play) games,
6.
The class (is) quiet. Some children
(read) books and the rest (draw).
Answer:
1.
We got out of the school bus. The bell
was ringing and everyone was rushing to class.
2.
The traffic stopped. Some people were
sitting on the road and they were shouting slogans.
3.
I wore my raincoat. It was raining and
people were getting wet.
4.
She saw a film. She was narrating it to
her friends who were listening carefully,
5.
We went to the exhibition. Some people
were buying clothes while others were playing games.
6.
The class was quiet. Some children were
reading books and the rest were drawing.
Question 3:
Here are some words from the lesson
which describe different kinds of sounds.
drum
swish tinkle caw drip
(i)
Match these words with their correct meanings.
1.
to fall in small drops.
2.
to make a sound by hitting a surface
repeatedly.
3.
to move quickly through the air, making
a soft sound.
4.
harsh sound made by birds.
5.
ringing sound (of a bell or breaking
glass, etc.).
(ii)
Now fill in the blanks using the correct form of the words given above.
1.
Ramesh _______ on his desk in
impatience.
2.
Rain water_____ from the umbrella all
over the carpet.
3.
The pony______ its tail.
4.
The_____ of breaking glass woke me up.
5.
The_____ of the raven disturbed the
child’s sleep.
Answer:
(i) (1) drip (2) drum (3) swish (4) caw (5) tinkle.
(ii) (1) drummed (2) dripped (3) was
swishing (4) tinkle (5) caw
Question 4:
And sure enough. I received a cheque in the mail.
Complete
each sentence below by using appropriate phrase from the ones given below.
sure
enough colourful enough
serious enough
kind
enough big
enough
fair enough
brave
enough foolish enough
anxious enough
1.
I saw thick black clouds in the sky
and___ ____ it soon started raining heavily.
2.
The blue umbrella was___ ____ for the
brother and sister.
3.
The butterflies are___ _____ to get
noticed.
4.
The lady was___ _____to chase the
leopard.
5.
The boy was____ ____ to call out to his
sister.
6.
The man was____ ____ to offer help.
7.
The victim’s injury was____ _____ for
him to get admitted in hospital.
8.
That person was____ _____ to repeat the
same mistake again.
9.
He told me he was sorry and he would
compensate for the loss. I said, ‘___ _____’.
Answer:
1.
sure enough
2.
big enough
3.
colourful enough
4.
brave enough
5.
anxious enough
6.
kind enough
7.
serious enough
8.
foolish enough
9.
Fair enough
Speaking (Page 120)
Question 1:
Do you believe in superstitions? Why, or
why not? Working with your partner, write down three superstitious beliefs that
you are familiar with.
Answer:
Truly speaking, I don’t believe in superstitions. These are blind beliefs. The
ignorant and conservative people observe them. Superstitions have no scientific
base or proof. The common superstitions are:
(i) 13
is an ominous number.
(ii) Don’t
start a new project on Saturday.
(iii) Stop
if a black cat crosses your path.
Question 2:
How many different kinds of birds do you
come across in the lesson? How many varieties do you see in your neighbourhood?
Are there any birds that you used to see earlier in your neighbourhood but not
now? In groups discuss why you think this is happening.
Answer:
We come across different kinds of birds in this lesson. These are minivets,
drongos, tree creepers and crows. We see sparrows, pigeons, and nightingales in
our neighbourhood. Earlier we used to see big birds like kites and parrots in
our neighbourhood. But these have become extinct now.
Writing (Page 121)
Question 1:
The monsoons are a time of great fun and
even a few adventures: playing in the rain and getting wet, wading through
knee-deep water on your way to school, water flooding the house or the
classroom, power cuts and so on. Write a paragraph describing an incident that
occurred during the rains which you can never forget.
(See
NCERT Text Book Page 121)
Or
Write a poem of your own about the season of spring when trees are in full
bloom.
Answer:
Attempt it yourself.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What is a diary? What do the extracts
from Ruskin Bond’s diary portray?
Answer:
A diary is a record of personal experiences/events that occur in one’s life. It
is written day after day over a long period of time. The extracts from Ruskin
Bond’s diary portray monsoon season and the changes that occur as the rains
progress from June to March.
Question 2:
How does the author describe the first
day of monsoon mist?
Answer:
On the first day of monsoon mist all the birds suddenly fall silent and with it
absolute silence is spread. The hills got hidden by the mist. The forest is
deadly still as though it were midnight.
Question 3:
How does the author describe the scarlet
minivets?
Answer:
The scarlet minivets are seen during rainy season. They flit silently among the
leaves like brilliant jewels. No matter how leafy the trees, these brightly coloured
birds cannot hide themselves.
Question 4:
Why couldn’t the author sleep on August
2 night?
Answer:
On August 2 it rained throughout the night. The rain had been drumming on the
corrugated tin roof. There had been a steady swish of a tropical downpour. The
author, therefore, couldn’t sleep.
Question 5:
What happened on August 12?
Answer:
Heavy downpour started on August 12. The rain continued for eight or nine days.
Everything got damp and soggy. The author had to stay inside during these days.
Question 6:
Name the flowers that you come across in
the lesson.
Answer:
Wild balsom, dahlias, begonias, ground orchids, cobra lilies etc.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Who are the seasonal visitors? How does
the author describe them?
Answer:
The seasonal visitors are a leopard, several thousand leeches and different
kinds of birds. The leopard created nuisance. It lifted a dog from near the
servants’ quarter below the school. In the evening, it attacked one of Bijju’s
cows. The scarlet minivets flitted silently among the leaves like brilliant
jewels. No matter how leafy the trees, these brightly coloured birds could not
conceal themselves. There was also a pair of drongos. They looked aggressive
and chased the minivets away.
A tree creeper moved rapidly up the trunk of the oak tree, snapping up insects,
all the way.
Question 2:
Sum up the main ideas of the author’s
Monsoon Diary in about 100 words.
Answer:
The writer was in Mussoorie, a hill station in U.P. The first day of monsoon
brought mist. The birds got silent and the hills became invisible. On June 25,
came the early monsoon rain. He described the hill station as A paradise’ that
might have been’ to a school boy. With the onset of the monsoon one could see
leopards and leeches and the colourful minivet birds. There was no dearth of
insects for the birds to eat. On August 2, it rained heavily and non-stop. The
roofs began to leak. The rain stopped on August 3. The sunlight fell on the
hills and the song birds began to sing. On August 12, there was heavy downpour
and mist for more than a week. Everything was damp. Meanwhile wild flowers
began to appear. August 31 saw the greenery at its peak. Snakes and rodents
came out of their flooded holes and hid in roofs or godowns. Winter rain,
hailstones and snow came on October 3. The author couldn’t go outside and he
felt very lonely in his room. Late March saw the end of winter. He received a
cheque in the mail.
Honeydew Chapter 9 The Great Stone Face I
Write
‘True’ or ‘False’ against each of the following statements.
1.
The Great Stone Face stood near where
Ernest and his mother lived.
2.
One would clearly distinguish the
features of the Stone Face only from a distance.
3.
Ernest loved his mother and helped her
in her work.
4.
Though not very rich, Gathergold was a
skilful merchant.
5.
Gathergold died in poverty and neglect.
6.
The Great Stone Face seemed to suggest
that Ernest should not fear the general.
Answer:
1.
False
2.
True
3.
True
4.
False
5.
True
6.
True
WORKING WITH THE TEXT (Page 130)
Answer the following questions.
Question 1:
1.
What was the Great Stone Face?
2.
What did Young Ernest wish when he gazed
at it?
Answer:
1.
The Great Stone Face was the work of
nature. The rocks were put one over the other on the mountain side. They
resembled the features of a human face.
2.
Young Ernest wished that the stone face
could speak. He wished to love the man dearly whoever resembled that face.
Question 2:
What was the story attributed to the Stone Face?
Answer:
The story attributed to the Stone Face was that some day a child with the
likeness of that face would be born. He would become the greatest and noblest
person of his age.
Question 3:
What gave the people of the valley the idea that the prophecy was about to come
true for the first time?
Answer:
A youngman named Gathergold had left the valley many years ago. By the time he
grew old, he had grown rich. When he returned to his native valley, a rumour
spread that he resembled the Stone Face. People thought that the prophecy had
come true.
Question 4:
1.
Did Ernest see in Gathergold the
likeness of the Stone Face?
2.
Who did he confide in and how was he
proved right?
Answer:
1.
No, Ernest did not see any likeness of
the Stone Face in Gathergold.
2.
He confided in the Great Stone Face.
After Gathergold’s death as his wealth and gold had already disappeared, it was
generally agreed that Gathergold had no resemblance with the Great Stone Face.
Question 5:
1.
What made people believe General Blood-
and-Thunder was their man?
2.
Ernest compared the man’s face with the
Stone Face. What did he conclude?
Answer:
1.
General Blood-and-thunder had risen to
high position from a soldier. When he returned to the valley, his childhood
friends said that the General had always looked like the Stone Face.
2.
Ernest could not find any likeness
between the General and the Stone Face.
WORKING WITH THE LANGUAGE (Page 130)
Question 1:
Look
at the following words.
Like — likeness
punctual — punctuality
The words on the left are adjectives and those on the right are their noun
forms.
Write
the noun forms of the following words by adding -ness or -itv to them
appropriately. Check the spelling of the new words.
1.
lofty _____________
2.
able _____________
3.
happy _____________
4.
near _____________
5.
noble _____________
6.
pleasant _____________
7.
dense _____________
8.
great _____________
9.
stable _____________
Answer:
1.
loftiness
2.
ability
3.
happiness
4.
nearness
5.
nobility
6.
enormity
7.
pleasantness
8.
density
9.
greatness
10.
stability
Question 2:
Add-iv
to each of the following adjectives, then use them to fill in the blanks.
1.
Why didn’t you turn up at the meeting?
We all were ______ waiting for you.
2.
______ write
your name and address in capital letters.
3.
I was______ surprised to see him at the
railway station. I thought he was not coming.
4.
It is______ believable that I am not
responsible for this mess.
5.
He fell over the step and ______ broke
his arm.
Answer:
1.
eagerly
2.
kindly
3.
pleasantly
4.
perfectly
5.
nearly
Question 3:
Complete
each sentence below using the appropriate forms of the verbs in brackets.
1.
I ______ (phone) you when I (get) home
from school.
2.
Hurry up! Madam ______ (be)
annoyed if we ______ (be) late.
3.
If it ______ (rain) today, we ______
(not) go to the play.
4.
When you ______ (see) Mandal
again, you ______ (not/recognise) him. He is growing a beard.
5.
We are off today. We
______ (write) to you after we ______ (be) back.
Answer:
1.
shall phone: get
2.
will be; are
3.
rains, shall not go
4.
see; will not recognise
5.
shall write; are
SPEAKING AND WRITING (Page 131)
Question 1:
Imagine you are Ernest. Narrate the story that his mother told him.
Begin like this: My mother and I were sitting at the door of our cottage. We
were looking at the Great Stone Face. I asked her if she had ever seen any one
who looked like the Stone Face. Then she told me this story.
Answer:
She had heard that story from her own Mother that some day a child would be
born resembling the Stone Face. In manhood he would become the greatest and
noblest person of his time.
Question 2:
Imagine you are Gathergold. Write briefly the incident of your return to the
valley.
Begin like this: My name is Gathergold. I left the valley of the Great Stone
Face fifty years ago. I am now going back home. Will the people of the valley
welcome me? Do they know that I am very rich?
Answer:
I drove to my native village in a horse drawn carriage. The people mistook me
for the Great Stone Face. They welcomed me and shouted, “Sure enough, the old
prophecy is true and the great man has arrived at last”.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What is the significance of the Great Stone Face?
Answer:
The Stone Face was a work of nature. It was formed on the side of a mountain by
rocks. Viewed from a distance, those rocks looked like the features of a human
face. People linked stories to that face. The people living in that valley
believed that some day a great and noble person with the likeness of that face
would come.
Question 2:
What did the spectator see when he went near the Great Stone Face?
Answer:
When the spectator went near the Great Stone Face, he lost the outline of the
enormous face and could see only a heap of gigantic rocks, piled one upon
an¬other.
Question 3:
How did Ernest grow up to be a mild and quiet youth?
Answer:
Ernest never forgot of the story that his mother told him. He was dutiful to
his mother and helpful to her many things, assisting her much with his little
hands, and .more with his loving heart. In this manner he grew up to be a mild
and quiet youth.
Question 4:
How did Gathergold become rich?
Answer:
Gathergold was a young man when he left his native valley and settled at a
distant seaport. He set up there as a shopkeeper. He was very sharp in business
matters and therefore became very rich in a very short span of time.
Question 5:
How did people’s opinion change about Gathergold after his death?
Answer:
Gathergold died one day. His wealth had disappeared before his death. Since the
melting away of his gold, it had been generally believed that there was no
like¬ness between the ruined merchant and the majestic face upon the mountain.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What was the prophecy connected with the Stone Face? Did it come true?
Answer:
The prophecy is a statement about some event in future. The people of the
valley believed that the Stone Face was auspicious for them. It made the land
fertile with its gaze.
The old prophecy about the Stone Face was that at some future day a child would
be born there who will grow up to become great and noble. The child would look
like the Stone Face. Some people thought it was just idle talk. It appears
finally Ernest himself would be declared to be the great man resembling the
Stone Face.
Question 2:
Who was Ernest? What personal qualities made him great?
Answer:
Ernest was a little boy who lived with his Mother in a valley. His interest
grew in the Great Stone Face which smiled on him. His Mother told him the
prophecy about that Face. The boy never forgot that story. He spent hours
looking at that face. He regarded it as his teacher. He was inspired to be
noble, kind and helpful. These qualities could make him the man with the
likeness of the Face.
Honeydew Chapter 10 The Great Stone Face II
Comprehension Check (Page 136)
Questions:
Write
‘True’ or ‘False’ against each of the following statements.
1.
Ernest’s words reminded people of the
wise old sayings. __________
2.
Total strangers from far away, who
visited Ernest in the valley, found his face familiar. _______
3.
The Great Stone Face confirmed Ernest’s
view that the poet could be worthy of its likeness. _______
4.
When Ernest and the poet met, they
respected and admired each other equally. ________
5.
The poet along with Ernest addressed the
inhabitants of the valley. ___________
6.
The poet realised that Ernest’s thoughts
were far nobler than his own verses. _________
Answers:
1.
True
2.
True
3.
False
4.
True
5.
False
6.
True
Working With the Text (Page 137)
Answer the following questions.
Question 1:
How was Ernest different from others in
the valley?
Answer:
Ernest was unlike other commoners in the valley. He was a good, simple hearted,
noble and thoughtful person. He had been under observation. He did not go with
the crowd. He welcomed total strangers as the prophets.
Question 2:
Why did Ernest think the poet was like
the Stone Face?
Answer:
The poet wrote wonderful songs. He had celebrated the Great stone Face in one
of his poems. When Ernest read this poem he became convinced that the poet was
like the stone face.
Question 3:
What did the poet himself say about his
thoughts and poems?
Answer:
The poet confessed that he was not worthy to be compared with the Stone Face.
His actions did not match with his thoughts.
Question 4:
What made the poet proclaim Ernest was the Stone Face?
Answer:
Ernest and the poet together went to a meeting place. Ernest addressed the
gathering. His words had power and his thoughts had depth. They were the words
of life, a life of good deeds and selfless love. The poet was convinced that
Ernest – was much nobler than him. Ernest’s face had such a grand expression
that he declared that Ernest bore the likeness of the Great Stone Face.
Question 5:
Write ‘Ernest’ or ‘Poet’, against each
statement below.
(i) There
was a gap between his life and his words.
(ii) His
words had the power of truth as they agreed with his thoughts.
(iii) His
words were as soothing as a heavenly song but only as useful as a vague dream.
(iv) His
thoughts were worthy.
(v) Whatever
he said was truth itself.
(vi) His
poems were noble.
(vii) His
life was nobler than all the poems.
(viii) He
lacked faith in his own thoughts.
(ix) His
thoughts had power as they agreed with the life he lived.
(x) Greatness
lies in truth. Truth is best expressed in one’s actions. He was truthful,
therefore he was great.
Answer:
(i) Poet
(ii) Ernest
(iii) Poet
(iv) Poet (v) Ernest
(vi) Poet
(vii) Ernest (viii) Poet
(ix) Ernest (x) Ernest
Question 6:
(i) Who,
by common consent, turned out to be like the Great Stone Face?
(ii) Did
Ernest believe that the old prophecy had come true? What did he say about it?
Answer:
(i) Ernest
was accepted by common consent exactly like the Great Stone Face.
(ii) No,
Ernest still was not convinced that the old prophecy had come true. He hoped
that some day, a man wiser and nobler than him would come, and would look truly
similar to the Great Stone Face.
Working With Language (Page 137)
Question 1:
Mark the meaning that best fits the word or a phrase in the
story.
(i) (sun)
going down
(a) becoming
smaller
(b) weakening
(c) setting
(ii) brightening
(a) making
(it) look bright and cheerful
(b) lending
(it) a special glow
(c) causing
(it) to appear hopeful
(iii) spacious
(a) lonely
and wild
(b) big
and wide
(c) special
and important
(iv) prophecy
(a) proverb
(b) prediction
(c) rumour
(v) marvellous
(a) wonderful
(b) surprising
(c) shocking
(vi) proclaim
(a) reveal
(b) declare
(c) shout
(vii) cease
(a) happen
(b) stop
(c) remain
(viii) (a
night’s shelter)
(a) stay
(b) safety
(c) hospitality
(ix) gazed
(a) wandered
about
(b) stared
at
(c) thought
of
(x) took
on (an expression)
(a) challenged
(b) resembled
(c) assumed
Answers:
(i) c
(ii) a
(iii) b (iv) b
(v) a
(vi) b
(vii) b (viii) a
(ix) b
(x) c
Question 2:
(i) Read
the following sentences.
(a) I
do hope I’ll live to see him.
(b) He will
come! Fear not, Earnest: the man will
come.
(c) Gathergold is
arriving tomorrow, people said.
(d) Blood-and-Thunder starts his
journey back to the valley next week, everyone proclaimed.
(e) The
great man is going to spend
his old age in his native town.
Notice that in the above sentences, verbs in bold type are in four different
forms, denoting four important ways of expressing future time. None of these
can be said to be exclusively used to show future time, though each is used to
refer to some action in future.
(ii) Which
form of the verb is more natural in these sentences? Encircle your choice.
(a) I’m
not free this evening. I will
work/am working on a project.
(b) Have
you decided where you will go for your higher secondary? Yes, I have. I will go/ am going to
the Kendriya Vidyalaya.
(c) Don’t
worry about the dog. It won’t
hurt/isn’t hurting you
(d) The
weatherman has predicted that it will
snow/is snowing in Ranikhet tonight.
(e) Swapna
can’t go out this evening. Her father will
come/is coming to see her.
Answers:
(a) am
working
(b) am
going
(c) won’t
hurt
(d) will
snow
(e) is
coming.
Question 3:
(i) Complete
these pieces of conversation using will or going to with the verbs
Answer:
(a) am
going to listen
(b) will
lend
(c) is
going to rain
(d) will
have
(e) am
going to make
(f) will
go
(g) am
going to get, will get
(ii) Let
pairs of children take turns to speak aloud the dialogues.
Answer:
For class activity
Speaking and Writing (Page 139)
Question 1:
Each of the following
words has the sound /f/ as in feel/ The words on the left have it initially.
Those on the right have it finally. Speak each word clearly.
flail
life
philip
puff
flowed
deaf
fact
tough
fail
laugh
fast
stiff
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
Question 2:
Underline the letter or
letters representing / f/in each of the following words.
file
slough
faint
lift
cough
defence
afford
enough
photograph
staff
tough
aloof
affront
philosophy sophistry
Answer:
file
slough faint
life
cough
defence
afford
enough
photograph
staff
tough
aloof
affront
philosophy
sophistry
Question 3:
Imagine that you are the poet. You have
come to your native valley to meet a famous preacher called Ernest. the incident
of your first meeting with him.
Answer:
I lived so far away from the valley. But I had heard about Ernest’s character
and wisdom. One summer day I called on him. I found him reading a book. We sat
down together and talked. I found Ernest wise, gentle and kind. Ernest greeted
me warmly and called me a ‘gifted guest’ Then I introduced myself as one who
wrote the poems Ernest was reading.
Ernest compared my face with the Stone Face. He had hoped to see the fulfilment
of the prophecy but he was disappointed. I told him I was not worthy of that
likeness. I said that my thoughts and actions had no harmony.
I went with my host to a meeting place. I heard his address and found depth in
his thoughts. In the golden light of the setting sun, Ernest appeared to me
exactly like the Great Stone Face. The gathering also agreed with me.
Question 4:
(i) Put
each of the following in the correct order to construct sentences.
·
a resident of Noida near Delhi/is
visually impaired/George Abraham.
·
confidence and competitive spirit/and
infuses discipline among the participants/It provides.
·
he has helped/The brain behind the World
Cup Cricket, /the disabled to dream.
·
to the blind school in Delhi/It was a
chance visit/that changed his life.
·
sport is a powerful tool/the disabled/He
believes that/for rehabilitation of.
Answer:
·
George Abraham, a resident of Noida near
Delhi, is visually impaired.
·
It provides confidence and competitive
spirit and infuses discipline among the participants.
·
The brain behind the World Cup Cricket,
he has helped the disabled to dream.
·
It was a chance visit to the blind
school in Delhi that changed his life.
·
He believes that sport is a powerful
tool for rehabilitation of the disabled.
(ii) Now
rearrange the sentences above to construct a paragraph.
Answer:
George Abraham, a resident of Noida near Delhi, is visually impaired. The brain
behind the World Cup Cricket, he has helped the disabled to dream. It was a
chance visit to the blind school in Delhi that changed his life. He believes
that sport is a powerful tool for rehabilitation of the disabled. It provides
confidence and competitive spirit and infuses discipline among the
participants.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What changes come to be seen in Ernest
with passing of time?
Answer:
Ernest was now a man of middle age. His
hairs turned white and there were wrinkles across his forehead and furrows in
his cheeks. He had become wiser with profound thoughts. The valley people
respected him and took his advice on several occasions.
Question 2:
Why did Ernest become sad after he
examined the poet’s features?
Answer:
The poet had celebrated the Great Stone Face in one of his poems. When Ernest
read that poem he became convinced that the poet had the likeness of the Great
Stone Face. But when he met the poet, all his hopes shattered. He found no
resemblance between the poet and the Stone Face. This was the reason why he
became sad.
Question 3:
Why did the poet’s eyes fill with tears?
Answer:
The poet became sentimental to listen to Ernest. His words had power because
they had depth. They were the words of life, a life of good deeds and selfless
love. The poet felt that the life and character of Ernest were nobler strain of
poetry that he had ever written. His eyes filled with tears and he said to
himself that never was there so worthy a sage as that thoughtful face, with the
glim of white hair diffused about it.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Give a character-sketch of Ernest.
Answer:
Ernest was a small boy when he became
interested in the Great Stone Face. He felt that the face smiled on him. He
wished to love the man with such a face. He was dutiful and helpful to his
Mother. He grew up to be a gentle and quiet youth. He regarded the Stone Face
as his teacher. He turned to the face for advice. He was not influnced by the
common belief that Gathergold or Blood- and-Thunder General had any resemblance
with the Stone Face. Even the poet’s face made him sad. And he was right when
the poet himself admitted that he wasn’t worthy to be the likeness of the face.
Finally, the same poet shouted with joy that Ernest himself was the likeness of
the Stone Face. But Ernest remained humble to the last. He kept hoping that
some wiser and better man than himself would appear.
Question 2:
How did Ernest feel when people hailed
him as the likeness of the Stone face?
Answer:
Ernest was truly noble and humble. His
deeds matched with his thoughts. He received the poet warmly. For a while he thought
the writer of those poems was truly the greatest and wisest person. The poet
and the people ultimately hailed him as the man with the likeness of the Stone
Face. But Ernest did not agree with them. He kept hoping that a wiser and
better man than himself would appear to make the prophecy true.
Question 3:
Describe in brief Ernest’s reaction on
three occasions when Gathergold, General Blood-and-Thunder and the poet came to
the valley.
Answer:
The inhabitants of the valley believed the story that one day a man bearing
resemblance to the Stone Face would come there. The first one to arrive was a
rich merchant Gathergold. The people were greatly excited. But Ernest noticed
no resemblance between Gathergold’s face and that of the Stone Face. Likewise
he did not agree with the people who welcomed General Blood-and-Thunder as the
greatest man. But Ernest almost believed that the poet was the person he had
been waiting for. But again he was disappointed. In fact, Ernest himself was
accepted as the Prophet.
Honeydew Chapter 7 A Visit to Cambridge
Comprehension Check (Page 104)
Which
is the right sentence?
Questions:
1. “Cambridge
was my metaphor for England.” To the writer
(i) Cambridge
was a reputed university in England.
(ii) England
was famous for Cambridge.
(iii) Cambridge
was the real England.
2. The
writer phoned Stephen Hawking’s house
(i) From
the nearest phone booth.
(ii) From
outside a phone booth.
(iii) From
inside a phone booth.
3. Every time he spoke to the
scientist, the writer felt guilty because
(i) He
wasn’t sure what he wanted to ask.
(ii) He
forced the scientist to use his voice synthesiser.
(iii) He
was face to face with a legend.
4. “I
felt a huge relief…in the possibilities of my body.” In the given context, the
highlighted words refer to
(i) Shifting
in the wheelchair, turning the wrist.
(ii) Standing
up, walking.
(iii) Speaking,
writing.
Answers:
1.
(ii) England
was famous for Cambridge.
2.
(i) From
the nearest phone-booth.
3.
(ii) He
forced the scientist to use his voice synthesiser.
4.
(i) Shifting
in the wheelchair, turning the wrist.
Working With the Text (Page 104)
Answer
the following Questions.
Question 1:
1.
Did the prospect of meeting Stephen Hawking
make the writer nervous? If so, why?
2.
Did he at the same time feel very
excited? If so, why?
Answer:
1.
The writer felt nervous because he was
doubtful whether he would be granted the interview.
2.
He felt excited at the same time because
he had been there to see Prof. Hawking for half an hour.
Question 2:
Guess the first question put to the
scientist by the writer.
Answer:
The writer’s first question might be about Hawking’s disability and how he had
accepted it.
Question 3:
Stephen Hawking said, “I’ve had no
choice.” Does the writer think there was a choice? What was it?
Answer:
Living creatively with the reality of his weakening body was a choice.
Question 4:
“I could feel his anguish.” What
could be the anguish?
Answer:
Prof. Hawking’s mind was full of great ideas but he couldn’t speak them out
clearly and forcefully.
Question 5:
What endeared the scientist to the
writer so that he said he was looking at one of the most beautiful men in the
world?
Answer:
Prof. Hawking’s one-way smile.
Question 6:
Read aloud the description of ‘the
beautiful’ man. Which is the most beautiful sentence in the description?
Answer:
The line is “before you like a lantern
whose walls are worn so thin, you glimpse only the light inside, is the incandescence
of a man”.
Question 7:
1.
If ‘the lantern’ is the man, what would
its ‘walls’ be?
2.
What is housed within the thin walls?
3.
What general conclusion does the writer
draw from this comparison?
Answer:
1.
The walls of the lantern in Hawking’s
case were his skeleton like physical structure.
2.
The glow of the eternal soul was housed
within the thin walls of his body,
3.
The writer draws conclusion that the
eternal soul is more important than the body.
Question 8:
What is the scientist’s message for the
disabled?
Answer:
Prof. Hawking’s message for the disabled is that they should concentrate on
what they are good at. It is foolish to try to copy the normal people.
Question 9:
Why does the writer refer to the guitar
incident? Which idea does it support?
Answer:
The writer spent many years trying to play a big Spanish guitar. One night he
loosened the strings joyfully. This incident supports the idea that the
disabled people should practise only what they are good at.
Question 10:
The writer expresses his great gratitude
to Stephen Hawking. What is the gratitude for?
Answer:
The author felt much inspired after meeting with Stephen Hawking. Therefore he
felt grateful to him.
Question 11:
Complete the following sentences taking
their appropriate parts from both the boxes below.
1.
There was his assistant on the line…
2.
You get fed up with people asking you to
be brave….
3.
There he was ………
4.
You look at his eyes which can speak,
……..
5.
It doesn’t do much good to know…
A
·
tapping at a little switch in his hand
·
and I told him
·
that there are people
·
as if you have a courage account
·
and they are saying something huge and
urgent
B
·
trying to find the words on his
computer.
·
I had come in a wheelchair from India.
·
on which you are too lazy to draw a
cheque.
·
smiling with admiration to see you
breathing still.
·
it is hard to tell what.
Answer:
1.
There was his assistant on the line and
I told him I had come in a wheelchair from India.
2.
You get fed up with people asking you to
be brave, as if you have a courage account on which you are too
lazy to draw a cheque.
3.
There he was tapping at a little switch
in his hand, trying to find the words on his computer.
4.
You look at his eyes which can speak and
they are saying something huge and urgent it is hard to tell what.
5.
It doesn’t do much good to know that
there are people smiling with admiration to see you breathing still.
Working With Language (Page 106)
Question 1:
Fill in the blanks in
the sentences below using the appropriate forms of the words given in the
following box.
guide
, succeed , chair , travel, pale , draw ,true
1.
I met a_________ from an antique land.
2.
I need special_________ in mathematics.
I can’t count the number of times I have failed in the subject.
3.
The guide called Stephen Hawking a
worthy__________ to Issac Newton.
4.
His other problems ________ into
insignificance beside this unforeseen mishap.
5.
The meeting was by the youngest member
of the board.
6.
Some people say “yours________ ’when
they informally refer to themselves.
7.
I wish it had been a________ We would
have been spared the noise of celebrations, at least.
Answer:
1.
traveller
2.
guidance
3.
successor
4.
paled
5.
chaired
6.
truly
7.
drawn
Question 2:
Look at the following
words.
walk
stick
Can you create a meaningful phrase using
both these words? (It is simple. Add ing to the verb and use it before the
noun. Put an article at the beginning.) …a walking stick
Now
make six such phrases using the words given in the box.
read
/ session
smile /
face
revolve / chair
walk
/
tour
dance /
doll
win / chance
Answer:
1.
a reading session
2.
a smiling face
3.
a revolving chair
4.
a walking tour
5.
a dancing doll
6.
a winning chance
Question 3:
Use all or both in the
blanks. Tell your partner why you chose one or the other.
1.
He has two brothers. _________are
lawyers.
2.
More than ten persons called. _________
of them wanted to see you.
3.
They_________cheered the team.
4.
_________ her parents are teachers.
5.
How much have you got? Give me_____ of
it.
Answer:
(i) Both (ii) All (iii) all (iv) Both (v) all
Question 4:
Complete each sentence using the right
form of the adjective given in brackets,
1.
My friend has one of the cars on the
road, (fast)
2.
This is the _________ story I have ever
read, (interesting)
3.
What you are doing now is_________ than
what you did yesterday, (easy)
4.
Ramesh and his wife are both________
(short)
5.
He arrived________ as usual. Even the
chief guest came________than he did. (late, early)
Answer:
1.
fastest
2.
most interesting
3.
easier
4.
short
5.
late, earlier
Speaking and Writing (Page 107)
Question 1:
Say the following words with correct
stress. Pronounce the parts given in colour loudly and clearly.
(i) In a word having more than one syllable, the stressed syllable is the one
that is more prominent than
the other syllable(s)
(ii) A word has as many syllables as it has vowels.
(iii) The mark (‘) indicates that the first syllable in ’manner’ is more prominent
than the other.
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
Question 2:
Underline stressed
syllables in the following words. Consult the dictionary or ask the teacher if
necessary.
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
Question 3:
Writing a notice for the School Notice
Board.
Step
1
Discuss why notices are put up on the notice board.
What kinds of “notices’ have you lately seen on the board?
How is a notice different from a letter or a descriptive paragraph?
Step
2
Suppose you have lost or found something on the campus.
What have you lost or found?
You want to write a notice about it. If you have lost something, you want it
restored to you in case someone has found it. If you have found something, you
want to return it to its owner.
Step
3
Write a few lines describing the object you have lost or found. Mention the
purpose of the notice in clear terms. Also write your name, class, section and
date.
Step 4
Let one member of each group read aloud the notice to the entire class. Compare
your notice with the other notices, and make changes, if necessary, with the
help of the teacher.
Or
·
Imagine that you are a journalist.
·
You have been asked to interview the
president of the village panchayat.
·
Write eight to ten questions you wish to
ask.
·
The questions should elicit comments as
well as plans regarding water and electricity, cleanliness and school education
in the village.
Or
The
questions that I would ask the president of the Village Panchayat:
1. What steps will you take for the
development of education in your area?
2. What will you do for health facilities?
3. What will you do for roads?
4. What will you do for civil amenities?
5. How will you improve agriculture of your village?
6. What will you do for farmers?
7. What do you plan for female child promotion?
MORE QUESTIONS
SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Who is Stephen Hawking?
Answer:
Stephen Hawking is a great scientist, an astrophysicist. But he is disabled. He
has written the book ‘A Brief History of Time’. He can express himself only
through a computer.
Question 2:
What took the author Firdaus to England?
Why did he wish to see Hawking?
Answer:
Firdaus Kanga visited Britain in order to write a book about his travels. He
himself could move only in a wheel-chair. On the advice of his guide, Kanga
planned to meet the most brilliant and completely paralysed astrophysicist
(Hawking) in Cambridge.
Question 3:
How did Kanga fix the interview with
Hawking?
Answer:
Kanga phoned Hawking and requested the scientist’s assistant to arrange the
interview. He asked for ten minutes but he got half an hour.
Question 4:
What advice do people usually give to
the disabled? Was Hawking brave by choice?
Answer:
The people generally advise the disabled to be brave. Hawking admitted
truthfully that he hadn’t been brave. In fact, he had had no choice.
Question 5:
What advice does the scientist give to
the handicapped?
Answer:
He advises the disabled people to concentrate on what they are good at. They
should not try to copy the normal people.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Write about Stephen Hawking and Firdaus Kanga.
Answer:
Both of them are disabled people. Stephen Hawking is one of the greatest scientists
of our time. He suffers from paralysis that confines him to a wheelchair, and
allows him to ‘speak’ only by punching buttons on a computer, which speaks for
him in a machine like voice.
Firdaus Kanga is a writer and journalist. He lives and works in Mumbai. He was
born with ‘brittle bones’ that tended to break easily when he was a child. Like
Hawking, Kanga moves around in a wheelchair.
Question 2:
Why did the writer feel guilty talking
to Stephen Hawking?
Answer:
The writer felt guilty every time he spoke to Stephen Hawking because by doing
this he forced him to respond. There he (Hawking) was, tapping at the little
switch in his hand, trying to find the words on his computer with the only bit
of movement left to him, his long, pale fingers. His eyes would often shut in
frustrated exhaustion. The writer could feel his anguish but he had no option.
He had gone to his house to talk to him on certain points.
Honeydew Chapter 8 A Short Monsoon Diary
Comprehension Check (Page 115)
Questions:
1.
Why is the author not able to see Bijju?
2.
What are the two ways in which the hills
appear to change when the mist comes up?
Answers:
1.
The author could not see Bijju because
of the mist that concealed the hills. He could only hear his voice but could
not see him.
2.
When the mist comes up, it covers the
hills and spreads silence.
Comprehension Check (Page 117)
Questions:
1.
When does the monsoon season begin and
when does it end? How do you prepare to face the monsoon?
2.
Which hill-station does the author
describe in the diary entry?
3.
For how many days does it rain without
stopping? What does the author do on these days?
4.
Where do the snakes and rodents take
shelter? Why?
5.
What did the author receive in the mail?
Answers:
1.
The monsoon season in Mussorie begins
from June 24/25. By August 2, the people are fed up with rain. It ends by
August 31. Then begins winter rains which end by late March. We take out our
rain coats and umbrellas to face the monsoon.
2.
Mussoorie
3.
It rains non-stop for eight or nine
days. The author keeps pacing the room and looking out of the window.
4.
The rodents and snakes take shelter in
roofs, attics and godowns. They do so because their holes are flooded with rain
water.
5.
The author received a cheque in the
mail.
Working With the Text (Page 118)
Question 1:
Look carefully at the diary entries for
June 24-25, August 2 and March 23. Now write down the changes that happen as
the rains progress from June to March.
Answer:
Rains in Mussoorie begin in June and end by March. June 24 is the first day of
monsoon mist which covered the hills and spreads silence. On August 2 it rained
all night and made sleeping difficult. By late March ends winter as well as the
rains.
Question 2:
Why did the grandmother ask the children
not to kill the Chuchundar?
Answer:
The grandmother told the children not to kill the Chuchundars because
they brought good luck and money.
Question 3:
What signs do we find in Nature which
show that the monsoons are about to end?
Answer:
By the end of the monsoon the greenery is at its peak. The seeds of the cobra
lily turn red. A rainbow is formed in the sky.
Question 4:
Complete the following
sentences.
1.
Bijju is not seen but his voice is heard
because__________ .
2.
The writer describes the hill station
and valley as _________ .
3.
The leopard was’ successful in________
but had to flee when
4.
The minivets are easily noticed because
_________ .
5.
It looks like a fashion display on the
slopes when_________.
6.
During the monsoon season, snakes and
rodents are found in roofs and attics because _________.
Answer:
1.
dense mist covers and hides the hills.
2.
‘A paradise that might have been.’
3.
killing a dog but had to flee when
Bijju’s mother arrived crying curses.
4.
of their bright colours.
5.
they are covered by a variety of
flowers.
6.
their holes are flooded with water and
these places provide them convenient shelter.
Question 5:
‘Although tin roofs are given to springing unaccountable leaks, there is a
feeling of being untouched by, and yet in touch with, the rain.’
1.
Why has the writer used the word,
‘springing’?
2.
How is the writer untouched by the rain?
3.
How is the writer in touch with the rain
at the same time?
Answer:
1.
The word ‘springing’ is used to show
suddenness with which water starts leaking.
2.
Because he is inside the room.
3.
He hears the drumming of rain on the tin
roof. He also looks out of the window to see the rains.
Question 6:
Mention a few things that can happen
when there is endless rain for days together?
Answer:
A long spell of rain makes life miserable. One is closed up in his room.
Everything becomes damp and soggy. Rodents, snakes and insects enter the house
for shelter.
Question 7:
What is the significance of cobra lily
in relation to the monsoon season, its beginning and end?
Answer:
At first cobra lily appears with the arrival of the monsoon. When the cobra
seeds begin to turn red, it indicates the rains are coming to an end.
Working With Language (Page 118)
Question 1:
Here are some words that are associated with the monsoon. Add as many words as
you can to this list. Can you find words for these in your languages?
downpour
floods mist cloudy powercuts cold umbrella
Answer:
rain, water, fog, raincoats, thunder, dampness, lakes etc.
In my language I find the alternative words like the following:
बौछार , बूंदाबांदी
, तुषार, धुंध
, सीत , छतरी,
रेनकोट , आंधी
, इत्यादी l
Question 2:
Look at the sentences
below.
(i) Bijju
wandered into the garden in the evening.
(ii) The
trees were ringing with birdsong.
Notice the highlighted verb.
The verb wandered tells us what Bijju did that evening. But the verb was
ringing tells us what was happening continually at same time in the past (the
birds were chirping in the trees).
Now look the at sentences below. They tell us about something that happened in
the past. They also tell us about other things that happened continually* at
the same time in the past.
Put the verbs in
the brackets into their proper forms. The first one is done for you.
1.
We (get out) of the school bus. The bell
(ring) and everyone (rush) to class.
2.
The traffic (stop). Some people (sit) on
the road and they (shout) slogans.
3.
I (wear) my raincoat. It (rain) and
people (get) wet.
4.
She (see) a film. She (narrate) it to
her friends who (listen) carefully.
5.
We (go) to the exhibition. Some people
(buy) clothes while others (play) games,
6.
The class (is) quiet. Some children
(read) books and the rest (draw).
Answer:
1.
We got out of the school bus. The bell
was ringing and everyone was rushing to class.
2.
The traffic stopped. Some people were
sitting on the road and they were shouting slogans.
3.
I wore my raincoat. It was raining and
people were getting wet.
4.
She saw a film. She was narrating it to
her friends who were listening carefully,
5.
We went to the exhibition. Some people
were buying clothes while others were playing games.
6.
The class was quiet. Some children were
reading books and the rest were drawing.
Question 3:
Here are some words from the lesson
which describe different kinds of sounds.
drum
swish tinkle caw drip
(i)
Match these words with their correct meanings.
1.
to fall in small drops.
2.
to make a sound by hitting a surface
repeatedly.
3.
to move quickly through the air, making
a soft sound.
4.
harsh sound made by birds.
5.
ringing sound (of a bell or breaking
glass, etc.).
(ii)
Now fill in the blanks using the correct form of the words given above.
1.
Ramesh _______ on his desk in
impatience.
2.
Rain water_____ from the umbrella all
over the carpet.
3.
The pony______ its tail.
4.
The_____ of breaking glass woke me up.
5.
The_____ of the raven disturbed the
child’s sleep.
Answer:
(i) (1) drip (2) drum (3) swish (4) caw (5) tinkle.
(ii) (1) drummed (2) dripped (3) was
swishing (4) tinkle (5) caw
Question 4:
And sure enough. I received a cheque in the mail.
Complete
each sentence below by using appropriate phrase from the ones given below.
sure
enough colourful enough
serious enough
kind
enough big
enough
fair enough
brave
enough foolish enough
anxious enough
1.
I saw thick black clouds in the sky
and___ ____ it soon started raining heavily.
2.
The blue umbrella was___ ____ for the
brother and sister.
3.
The butterflies are___ _____ to get
noticed.
4.
The lady was___ _____to chase the
leopard.
5.
The boy was____ ____ to call out to his
sister.
6.
The man was____ ____ to offer help.
7.
The victim’s injury was____ _____ for
him to get admitted in hospital.
8.
That person was____ _____ to repeat the
same mistake again.
9.
He told me he was sorry and he would
compensate for the loss. I said, ‘___ _____’.
Answer:
1.
sure enough
2.
big enough
3.
colourful enough
4.
brave enough
5.
anxious enough
6.
kind enough
7.
serious enough
8.
foolish enough
9.
Fair enough
Speaking (Page 120)
Question 1:
Do you believe in superstitions? Why, or
why not? Working with your partner, write down three superstitious beliefs that
you are familiar with.
Answer:
Truly speaking, I don’t believe in superstitions. These are blind beliefs. The
ignorant and conservative people observe them. Superstitions have no scientific
base or proof. The common superstitions are:
(i) 13
is an ominous number.
(ii) Don’t
start a new project on Saturday.
(iii) Stop
if a black cat crosses your path.
Question 2:
How many different kinds of birds do you
come across in the lesson? How many varieties do you see in your neighbourhood?
Are there any birds that you used to see earlier in your neighbourhood but not
now? In groups discuss why you think this is happening.
Answer:
We come across different kinds of birds in this lesson. These are minivets,
drongos, tree creepers and crows. We see sparrows, pigeons, and nightingales in
our neighbourhood. Earlier we used to see big birds like kites and parrots in
our neighbourhood. But these have become extinct now.
Writing (Page 121)
Question 1:
The monsoons are a time of great fun and
even a few adventures: playing in the rain and getting wet, wading through
knee-deep water on your way to school, water flooding the house or the
classroom, power cuts and so on. Write a paragraph describing an incident that
occurred during the rains which you can never forget.
(See
NCERT Text Book Page 121)
Or
Write a poem of your own about the season of spring when trees are in full
bloom.
Answer:
Attempt it yourself.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What is a diary? What do the extracts
from Ruskin Bond’s diary portray?
Answer:
A diary is a record of personal experiences/events that occur in one’s life. It
is written day after day over a long period of time. The extracts from Ruskin
Bond’s diary portray monsoon season and the changes that occur as the rains
progress from June to March.
Question 2:
How does the author describe the first
day of monsoon mist?
Answer:
On the first day of monsoon mist all the birds suddenly fall silent and with it
absolute silence is spread. The hills got hidden by the mist. The forest is
deadly still as though it were midnight.
Question 3:
How does the author describe the scarlet
minivets?
Answer:
The scarlet minivets are seen during rainy season. They flit silently among the
leaves like brilliant jewels. No matter how leafy the trees, these brightly coloured
birds cannot hide themselves.
Question 4:
Why couldn’t the author sleep on August
2 night?
Answer:
On August 2 it rained throughout the night. The rain had been drumming on the
corrugated tin roof. There had been a steady swish of a tropical downpour. The
author, therefore, couldn’t sleep.
Question 5:
What happened on August 12?
Answer:
Heavy downpour started on August 12. The rain continued for eight or nine days.
Everything got damp and soggy. The author had to stay inside during these days.
Question 6:
Name the flowers that you come across in
the lesson.
Answer:
Wild balsom, dahlias, begonias, ground orchids, cobra lilies etc.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Who are the seasonal visitors? How does
the author describe them?
Answer:
The seasonal visitors are a leopard, several thousand leeches and different
kinds of birds. The leopard created nuisance. It lifted a dog from near the
servants’ quarter below the school. In the evening, it attacked one of Bijju’s
cows. The scarlet minivets flitted silently among the leaves like brilliant
jewels. No matter how leafy the trees, these brightly coloured birds could not
conceal themselves. There was also a pair of drongos. They looked aggressive
and chased the minivets away.
A tree creeper moved rapidly up the trunk of the oak tree, snapping up insects,
all the way.
Question 2:
Sum up the main ideas of the author’s
Monsoon Diary in about 100 words.
Answer:
The writer was in Mussoorie, a hill station in U.P. The first day of monsoon
brought mist. The birds got silent and the hills became invisible. On June 25,
came the early monsoon rain. He described the hill station as A paradise’ that
might have been’ to a school boy. With the onset of the monsoon one could see
leopards and leeches and the colourful minivet birds. There was no dearth of
insects for the birds to eat. On August 2, it rained heavily and non-stop. The
roofs began to leak. The rain stopped on August 3. The sunlight fell on the
hills and the song birds began to sing. On August 12, there was heavy downpour
and mist for more than a week. Everything was damp. Meanwhile wild flowers
began to appear. August 31 saw the greenery at its peak. Snakes and rodents
came out of their flooded holes and hid in roofs or godowns. Winter rain,
hailstones and snow came on October 3. The author couldn’t go outside and he
felt very lonely in his room. Late March saw the end of winter. He received a
cheque in the mail.
Honeydew Chapter 9 The Great Stone Face I
Write
‘True’ or ‘False’ against each of the following statements.
1.
The Great Stone Face stood near where
Ernest and his mother lived.
2.
One would clearly distinguish the
features of the Stone Face only from a distance.
3.
Ernest loved his mother and helped her
in her work.
4.
Though not very rich, Gathergold was a
skilful merchant.
5.
Gathergold died in poverty and neglect.
6.
The Great Stone Face seemed to suggest
that Ernest should not fear the general.
Answer:
1.
False
2.
True
3.
True
4.
False
5.
True
6.
True
WORKING WITH THE TEXT (Page 130)
Answer the following questions.
Question 1:
1.
What was the Great Stone Face?
2.
What did Young Ernest wish when he gazed
at it?
Answer:
1.
The Great Stone Face was the work of
nature. The rocks were put one over the other on the mountain side. They
resembled the features of a human face.
2.
Young Ernest wished that the stone face
could speak. He wished to love the man dearly whoever resembled that face.
Question 2:
What was the story attributed to the Stone Face?
Answer:
The story attributed to the Stone Face was that some day a child with the
likeness of that face would be born. He would become the greatest and noblest
person of his age.
Question 3:
What gave the people of the valley the idea that the prophecy was about to come
true for the first time?
Answer:
A youngman named Gathergold had left the valley many years ago. By the time he
grew old, he had grown rich. When he returned to his native valley, a rumour
spread that he resembled the Stone Face. People thought that the prophecy had
come true.
Question 4:
1.
Did Ernest see in Gathergold the
likeness of the Stone Face?
2.
Who did he confide in and how was he
proved right?
Answer:
1.
No, Ernest did not see any likeness of
the Stone Face in Gathergold.
2.
He confided in the Great Stone Face.
After Gathergold’s death as his wealth and gold had already disappeared, it was
generally agreed that Gathergold had no resemblance with the Great Stone Face.
Question 5:
1.
What made people believe General Blood-
and-Thunder was their man?
2.
Ernest compared the man’s face with the
Stone Face. What did he conclude?
Answer:
1.
General Blood-and-thunder had risen to
high position from a soldier. When he returned to the valley, his childhood
friends said that the General had always looked like the Stone Face.
2.
Ernest could not find any likeness
between the General and the Stone Face.
WORKING WITH THE LANGUAGE (Page 130)
Question 1:
Look
at the following words.
Like — likeness
punctual — punctuality
The words on the left are adjectives and those on the right are their noun
forms.
Write
the noun forms of the following words by adding -ness or -itv to them
appropriately. Check the spelling of the new words.
1.
lofty _____________
2.
able _____________
3.
happy _____________
4.
near _____________
5.
noble _____________
6.
pleasant _____________
7.
dense _____________
8.
great _____________
9.
stable _____________
Answer:
1.
loftiness
2.
ability
3.
happiness
4.
nearness
5.
nobility
6.
enormity
7.
pleasantness
8.
density
9.
greatness
10.
stability
Question 2:
Add-iv
to each of the following adjectives, then use them to fill in the blanks.
1.
Why didn’t you turn up at the meeting?
We all were ______ waiting for you.
2.
______ write
your name and address in capital letters.
3.
I was______ surprised to see him at the
railway station. I thought he was not coming.
4.
It is______ believable that I am not
responsible for this mess.
5.
He fell over the step and ______ broke
his arm.
Answer:
1.
eagerly
2.
kindly
3.
pleasantly
4.
perfectly
5.
nearly
Question 3:
Complete
each sentence below using the appropriate forms of the verbs in brackets.
1.
I ______ (phone) you when I (get) home
from school.
2.
Hurry up! Madam ______ (be)
annoyed if we ______ (be) late.
3.
If it ______ (rain) today, we ______
(not) go to the play.
4.
When you ______ (see) Mandal
again, you ______ (not/recognise) him. He is growing a beard.
5.
We are off today. We
______ (write) to you after we ______ (be) back.
Answer:
1.
shall phone: get
2.
will be; are
3.
rains, shall not go
4.
see; will not recognise
5.
shall write; are
SPEAKING AND WRITING (Page 131)
Question 1:
Imagine you are Ernest. Narrate the story that his mother told him.
Begin like this: My mother and I were sitting at the door of our cottage. We
were looking at the Great Stone Face. I asked her if she had ever seen any one
who looked like the Stone Face. Then she told me this story.
Answer:
She had heard that story from her own Mother that some day a child would be
born resembling the Stone Face. In manhood he would become the greatest and
noblest person of his time.
Question 2:
Imagine you are Gathergold. Write briefly the incident of your return to the
valley.
Begin like this: My name is Gathergold. I left the valley of the Great Stone
Face fifty years ago. I am now going back home. Will the people of the valley
welcome me? Do they know that I am very rich?
Answer:
I drove to my native village in a horse drawn carriage. The people mistook me
for the Great Stone Face. They welcomed me and shouted, “Sure enough, the old
prophecy is true and the great man has arrived at last”.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What is the significance of the Great Stone Face?
Answer:
The Stone Face was a work of nature. It was formed on the side of a mountain by
rocks. Viewed from a distance, those rocks looked like the features of a human
face. People linked stories to that face. The people living in that valley
believed that some day a great and noble person with the likeness of that face
would come.
Question 2:
What did the spectator see when he went near the Great Stone Face?
Answer:
When the spectator went near the Great Stone Face, he lost the outline of the
enormous face and could see only a heap of gigantic rocks, piled one upon
an¬other.
Question 3:
How did Ernest grow up to be a mild and quiet youth?
Answer:
Ernest never forgot of the story that his mother told him. He was dutiful to
his mother and helpful to her many things, assisting her much with his little
hands, and .more with his loving heart. In this manner he grew up to be a mild
and quiet youth.
Question 4:
How did Gathergold become rich?
Answer:
Gathergold was a young man when he left his native valley and settled at a
distant seaport. He set up there as a shopkeeper. He was very sharp in business
matters and therefore became very rich in a very short span of time.
Question 5:
How did people’s opinion change about Gathergold after his death?
Answer:
Gathergold died one day. His wealth had disappeared before his death. Since the
melting away of his gold, it had been generally believed that there was no
like¬ness between the ruined merchant and the majestic face upon the mountain.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What was the prophecy connected with the Stone Face? Did it come true?
Answer:
The prophecy is a statement about some event in future. The people of the
valley believed that the Stone Face was auspicious for them. It made the land
fertile with its gaze.
The old prophecy about the Stone Face was that at some future day a child would
be born there who will grow up to become great and noble. The child would look
like the Stone Face. Some people thought it was just idle talk. It appears
finally Ernest himself would be declared to be the great man resembling the
Stone Face.
Question 2:
Who was Ernest? What personal qualities made him great?
Answer:
Ernest was a little boy who lived with his Mother in a valley. His interest
grew in the Great Stone Face which smiled on him. His Mother told him the
prophecy about that Face. The boy never forgot that story. He spent hours
looking at that face. He regarded it as his teacher. He was inspired to be
noble, kind and helpful. These qualities could make him the man with the
likeness of the Face.
Honeydew Chapter 10 The Great Stone Face II
Comprehension Check (Page 136)
Questions:
Write
‘True’ or ‘False’ against each of the following statements.
1.
Ernest’s words reminded people of the
wise old sayings. __________
2.
Total strangers from far away, who
visited Ernest in the valley, found his face familiar. _______
3.
The Great Stone Face confirmed Ernest’s
view that the poet could be worthy of its likeness. _______
4.
When Ernest and the poet met, they
respected and admired each other equally. ________
5.
The poet along with Ernest addressed the
inhabitants of the valley. ___________
6.
The poet realised that Ernest’s thoughts
were far nobler than his own verses. _________
Answers:
1.
True
2.
True
3.
False
4.
True
5.
False
6.
True
Working With the Text (Page 137)
Answer the following questions.
Question 1:
How was Ernest different from others in
the valley?
Answer:
Ernest was unlike other commoners in the valley. He was a good, simple hearted,
noble and thoughtful person. He had been under observation. He did not go with
the crowd. He welcomed total strangers as the prophets.
Question 2:
Why did Ernest think the poet was like
the Stone Face?
Answer:
The poet wrote wonderful songs. He had celebrated the Great stone Face in one
of his poems. When Ernest read this poem he became convinced that the poet was
like the stone face.
Question 3:
What did the poet himself say about his
thoughts and poems?
Answer:
The poet confessed that he was not worthy to be compared with the Stone Face.
His actions did not match with his thoughts.
Question 4:
What made the poet proclaim Ernest was the Stone Face?
Answer:
Ernest and the poet together went to a meeting place. Ernest addressed the
gathering. His words had power and his thoughts had depth. They were the words
of life, a life of good deeds and selfless love. The poet was convinced that
Ernest – was much nobler than him. Ernest’s face had such a grand expression
that he declared that Ernest bore the likeness of the Great Stone Face.
Question 5:
Write ‘Ernest’ or ‘Poet’, against each
statement below.
(i) There
was a gap between his life and his words.
(ii) His
words had the power of truth as they agreed with his thoughts.
(iii) His
words were as soothing as a heavenly song but only as useful as a vague dream.
(iv) His
thoughts were worthy.
(v) Whatever
he said was truth itself.
(vi) His
poems were noble.
(vii) His
life was nobler than all the poems.
(viii) He
lacked faith in his own thoughts.
(ix) His
thoughts had power as they agreed with the life he lived.
(x) Greatness
lies in truth. Truth is best expressed in one’s actions. He was truthful,
therefore he was great.
Answer:
(i) Poet
(ii) Ernest
(iii) Poet
(iv) Poet (v) Ernest
(vi) Poet
(vii) Ernest (viii) Poet
(ix) Ernest (x) Ernest
Question 6:
(i) Who,
by common consent, turned out to be like the Great Stone Face?
(ii) Did
Ernest believe that the old prophecy had come true? What did he say about it?
Answer:
(i) Ernest
was accepted by common consent exactly like the Great Stone Face.
(ii) No,
Ernest still was not convinced that the old prophecy had come true. He hoped
that some day, a man wiser and nobler than him would come, and would look truly
similar to the Great Stone Face.
Working With Language (Page 137)
Question 1:
Mark the meaning that best fits the word or a phrase in the
story.
(i) (sun)
going down
(a) becoming
smaller
(b) weakening
(c) setting
(ii) brightening
(a) making
(it) look bright and cheerful
(b) lending
(it) a special glow
(c) causing
(it) to appear hopeful
(iii) spacious
(a) lonely
and wild
(b) big
and wide
(c) special
and important
(iv) prophecy
(a) proverb
(b) prediction
(c) rumour
(v) marvellous
(a) wonderful
(b) surprising
(c) shocking
(vi) proclaim
(a) reveal
(b) declare
(c) shout
(vii) cease
(a) happen
(b) stop
(c) remain
(viii) (a
night’s shelter)
(a) stay
(b) safety
(c) hospitality
(ix) gazed
(a) wandered
about
(b) stared
at
(c) thought
of
(x) took
on (an expression)
(a) challenged
(b) resembled
(c) assumed
Answers:
(i) c
(ii) a
(iii) b (iv) b
(v) a
(vi) b
(vii) b (viii) a
(ix) b
(x) c
Question 2:
(i) Read
the following sentences.
(a) I
do hope I’ll live to see him.
(b) He will
come! Fear not, Earnest: the man will
come.
(c) Gathergold is
arriving tomorrow, people said.
(d) Blood-and-Thunder starts his
journey back to the valley next week, everyone proclaimed.
(e) The
great man is going to spend
his old age in his native town.
Notice that in the above sentences, verbs in bold type are in four different
forms, denoting four important ways of expressing future time. None of these
can be said to be exclusively used to show future time, though each is used to
refer to some action in future.
(ii) Which
form of the verb is more natural in these sentences? Encircle your choice.
(a) I’m
not free this evening. I will
work/am working on a project.
(b) Have
you decided where you will go for your higher secondary? Yes, I have. I will go/ am going to
the Kendriya Vidyalaya.
(c) Don’t
worry about the dog. It won’t
hurt/isn’t hurting you
(d) The
weatherman has predicted that it will
snow/is snowing in Ranikhet tonight.
(e) Swapna
can’t go out this evening. Her father will
come/is coming to see her.
Answers:
(a) am
working
(b) am
going
(c) won’t
hurt
(d) will
snow
(e) is
coming.
Question 3:
(i) Complete
these pieces of conversation using will or going to with the verbs
Answer:
(a) am
going to listen
(b) will
lend
(c) is
going to rain
(d) will
have
(e) am
going to make
(f) will
go
(g) am
going to get, will get
(ii) Let
pairs of children take turns to speak aloud the dialogues.
Answer:
For class activity
Speaking and Writing (Page 139)
Question 1:
Each of the following
words has the sound /f/ as in feel/ The words on the left have it initially.
Those on the right have it finally. Speak each word clearly.
flail
life
philip
puff
flowed
deaf
fact
tough
fail
laugh
fast
stiff
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
Question 2:
Underline the letter or
letters representing / f/in each of the following words.
file
slough
faint
lift
cough
defence
afford
enough
photograph
staff
tough
aloof
affront
philosophy sophistry
Answer:
file
slough faint
life
cough
defence
afford
enough
photograph
staff
tough
aloof
affront
philosophy
sophistry
Question 3:
Imagine that you are the poet. You have
come to your native valley to meet a famous preacher called Ernest. the incident
of your first meeting with him.
Answer:
I lived so far away from the valley. But I had heard about Ernest’s character
and wisdom. One summer day I called on him. I found him reading a book. We sat
down together and talked. I found Ernest wise, gentle and kind. Ernest greeted
me warmly and called me a ‘gifted guest’ Then I introduced myself as one who
wrote the poems Ernest was reading.
Ernest compared my face with the Stone Face. He had hoped to see the fulfilment
of the prophecy but he was disappointed. I told him I was not worthy of that
likeness. I said that my thoughts and actions had no harmony.
I went with my host to a meeting place. I heard his address and found depth in
his thoughts. In the golden light of the setting sun, Ernest appeared to me
exactly like the Great Stone Face. The gathering also agreed with me.
Question 4:
(i) Put
each of the following in the correct order to construct sentences.
·
a resident of Noida near Delhi/is
visually impaired/George Abraham.
·
confidence and competitive spirit/and
infuses discipline among the participants/It provides.
·
he has helped/The brain behind the World
Cup Cricket, /the disabled to dream.
·
to the blind school in Delhi/It was a
chance visit/that changed his life.
·
sport is a powerful tool/the disabled/He
believes that/for rehabilitation of.
Answer:
·
George Abraham, a resident of Noida near
Delhi, is visually impaired.
·
It provides confidence and competitive
spirit and infuses discipline among the participants.
·
The brain behind the World Cup Cricket,
he has helped the disabled to dream.
·
It was a chance visit to the blind
school in Delhi that changed his life.
·
He believes that sport is a powerful
tool for rehabilitation of the disabled.
(ii) Now
rearrange the sentences above to construct a paragraph.
Answer:
George Abraham, a resident of Noida near Delhi, is visually impaired. The brain
behind the World Cup Cricket, he has helped the disabled to dream. It was a
chance visit to the blind school in Delhi that changed his life. He believes
that sport is a powerful tool for rehabilitation of the disabled. It provides
confidence and competitive spirit and infuses discipline among the
participants.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What changes come to be seen in Ernest
with passing of time?
Answer:
Ernest was now a man of middle age. His
hairs turned white and there were wrinkles across his forehead and furrows in
his cheeks. He had become wiser with profound thoughts. The valley people
respected him and took his advice on several occasions.
Question 2:
Why did Ernest become sad after he
examined the poet’s features?
Answer:
The poet had celebrated the Great Stone Face in one of his poems. When Ernest
read that poem he became convinced that the poet had the likeness of the Great
Stone Face. But when he met the poet, all his hopes shattered. He found no
resemblance between the poet and the Stone Face. This was the reason why he
became sad.
Question 3:
Why did the poet’s eyes fill with tears?
Answer:
The poet became sentimental to listen to Ernest. His words had power because
they had depth. They were the words of life, a life of good deeds and selfless
love. The poet felt that the life and character of Ernest were nobler strain of
poetry that he had ever written. His eyes filled with tears and he said to
himself that never was there so worthy a sage as that thoughtful face, with the
glim of white hair diffused about it.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Give a character-sketch of Ernest.
Answer:
Ernest was a small boy when he became
interested in the Great Stone Face. He felt that the face smiled on him. He
wished to love the man with such a face. He was dutiful and helpful to his
Mother. He grew up to be a gentle and quiet youth. He regarded the Stone Face
as his teacher. He turned to the face for advice. He was not influnced by the
common belief that Gathergold or Blood- and-Thunder General had any resemblance
with the Stone Face. Even the poet’s face made him sad. And he was right when
the poet himself admitted that he wasn’t worthy to be the likeness of the face.
Finally, the same poet shouted with joy that Ernest himself was the likeness of
the Stone Face. But Ernest remained humble to the last. He kept hoping that
some wiser and better man than himself would appear.
Question 2:
How did Ernest feel when people hailed
him as the likeness of the Stone face?
Answer:
Ernest was truly noble and humble. His
deeds matched with his thoughts. He received the poet warmly. For a while he thought
the writer of those poems was truly the greatest and wisest person. The poet
and the people ultimately hailed him as the man with the likeness of the Stone
Face. But Ernest did not agree with them. He kept hoping that a wiser and
better man than himself would appear to make the prophecy true.
Question 3:
Describe in brief Ernest’s reaction on
three occasions when Gathergold, General Blood-and-Thunder and the poet came to
the valley.
Answer:
The inhabitants of the valley believed the story that one day a man bearing
resemblance to the Stone Face would come there. The first one to arrive was a
rich merchant Gathergold. The people were greatly excited. But Ernest noticed
no resemblance between Gathergold’s face and that of the Stone Face. Likewise
he did not agree with the people who welcomed General Blood-and-Thunder as the
greatest man. But Ernest almost believed that the poet was the person he had
been waiting for. But again he was disappointed. In fact, Ernest himself was
accepted as the Prophet.
Honeydew Chapter 7 A Visit to Cambridge
Comprehension Check (Page 104)
Which
is the right sentence?
Questions:
1. “Cambridge
was my metaphor for England.” To the writer
(i) Cambridge
was a reputed university in England.
(ii) England
was famous for Cambridge.
(iii) Cambridge
was the real England.
2. The
writer phoned Stephen Hawking’s house
(i) From
the nearest phone booth.
(ii) From
outside a phone booth.
(iii) From
inside a phone booth.
3. Every time he spoke to the
scientist, the writer felt guilty because
(i) He
wasn’t sure what he wanted to ask.
(ii) He
forced the scientist to use his voice synthesiser.
(iii) He
was face to face with a legend.
4. “I
felt a huge relief…in the possibilities of my body.” In the given context, the
highlighted words refer to
(i) Shifting
in the wheelchair, turning the wrist.
(ii) Standing
up, walking.
(iii) Speaking,
writing.
Answers:
1.
(ii) England
was famous for Cambridge.
2.
(i) From
the nearest phone-booth.
3.
(ii) He
forced the scientist to use his voice synthesiser.
4.
(i) Shifting
in the wheelchair, turning the wrist.
Working With the Text (Page 104)
Answer
the following Questions.
Question 1:
1.
Did the prospect of meeting Stephen Hawking
make the writer nervous? If so, why?
2.
Did he at the same time feel very
excited? If so, why?
Answer:
1.
The writer felt nervous because he was
doubtful whether he would be granted the interview.
2.
He felt excited at the same time because
he had been there to see Prof. Hawking for half an hour.
Question 2:
Guess the first question put to the
scientist by the writer.
Answer:
The writer’s first question might be about Hawking’s disability and how he had
accepted it.
Question 3:
Stephen Hawking said, “I’ve had no
choice.” Does the writer think there was a choice? What was it?
Answer:
Living creatively with the reality of his weakening body was a choice.
Question 4:
“I could feel his anguish.” What
could be the anguish?
Answer:
Prof. Hawking’s mind was full of great ideas but he couldn’t speak them out
clearly and forcefully.
Question 5:
What endeared the scientist to the
writer so that he said he was looking at one of the most beautiful men in the
world?
Answer:
Prof. Hawking’s one-way smile.
Question 6:
Read aloud the description of ‘the
beautiful’ man. Which is the most beautiful sentence in the description?
Answer:
The line is “before you like a lantern
whose walls are worn so thin, you glimpse only the light inside, is the incandescence
of a man”.
Question 7:
1.
If ‘the lantern’ is the man, what would
its ‘walls’ be?
2.
What is housed within the thin walls?
3.
What general conclusion does the writer
draw from this comparison?
Answer:
1.
The walls of the lantern in Hawking’s
case were his skeleton like physical structure.
2.
The glow of the eternal soul was housed
within the thin walls of his body,
3.
The writer draws conclusion that the
eternal soul is more important than the body.
Question 8:
What is the scientist’s message for the
disabled?
Answer:
Prof. Hawking’s message for the disabled is that they should concentrate on
what they are good at. It is foolish to try to copy the normal people.
Question 9:
Why does the writer refer to the guitar
incident? Which idea does it support?
Answer:
The writer spent many years trying to play a big Spanish guitar. One night he
loosened the strings joyfully. This incident supports the idea that the
disabled people should practise only what they are good at.
Question 10:
The writer expresses his great gratitude
to Stephen Hawking. What is the gratitude for?
Answer:
The author felt much inspired after meeting with Stephen Hawking. Therefore he
felt grateful to him.
Question 11:
Complete the following sentences taking
their appropriate parts from both the boxes below.
1.
There was his assistant on the line…
2.
You get fed up with people asking you to
be brave….
3.
There he was ………
4.
You look at his eyes which can speak,
……..
5.
It doesn’t do much good to know…
A
·
tapping at a little switch in his hand
·
and I told him
·
that there are people
·
as if you have a courage account
·
and they are saying something huge and
urgent
B
·
trying to find the words on his
computer.
·
I had come in a wheelchair from India.
·
on which you are too lazy to draw a
cheque.
·
smiling with admiration to see you
breathing still.
·
it is hard to tell what.
Answer:
1.
There was his assistant on the line and
I told him I had come in a wheelchair from India.
2.
You get fed up with people asking you to
be brave, as if you have a courage account on which you are too
lazy to draw a cheque.
3.
There he was tapping at a little switch
in his hand, trying to find the words on his computer.
4.
You look at his eyes which can speak and
they are saying something huge and urgent it is hard to tell what.
5.
It doesn’t do much good to know that
there are people smiling with admiration to see you breathing still.
Working With Language (Page 106)
Question 1:
Fill in the blanks in
the sentences below using the appropriate forms of the words given in the
following box.
guide
, succeed , chair , travel, pale , draw ,true
1.
I met a_________ from an antique land.
2.
I need special_________ in mathematics.
I can’t count the number of times I have failed in the subject.
3.
The guide called Stephen Hawking a
worthy__________ to Issac Newton.
4.
His other problems ________ into
insignificance beside this unforeseen mishap.
5.
The meeting was by the youngest member
of the board.
6.
Some people say “yours________ ’when
they informally refer to themselves.
7.
I wish it had been a________ We would
have been spared the noise of celebrations, at least.
Answer:
1.
traveller
2.
guidance
3.
successor
4.
paled
5.
chaired
6.
truly
7.
drawn
Question 2:
Look at the following
words.
walk
stick
Can you create a meaningful phrase using
both these words? (It is simple. Add ing to the verb and use it before the
noun. Put an article at the beginning.) …a walking stick
Now
make six such phrases using the words given in the box.
read
/ session
smile /
face
revolve / chair
walk
/
tour
dance /
doll
win / chance
Answer:
1.
a reading session
2.
a smiling face
3.
a revolving chair
4.
a walking tour
5.
a dancing doll
6.
a winning chance
Question 3:
Use all or both in the
blanks. Tell your partner why you chose one or the other.
1.
He has two brothers. _________are
lawyers.
2.
More than ten persons called. _________
of them wanted to see you.
3.
They_________cheered the team.
4.
_________ her parents are teachers.
5.
How much have you got? Give me_____ of
it.
Answer:
(i) Both (ii) All (iii) all (iv) Both (v) all
Question 4:
Complete each sentence using the right
form of the adjective given in brackets,
1.
My friend has one of the cars on the
road, (fast)
2.
This is the _________ story I have ever
read, (interesting)
3.
What you are doing now is_________ than
what you did yesterday, (easy)
4.
Ramesh and his wife are both________
(short)
5.
He arrived________ as usual. Even the
chief guest came________than he did. (late, early)
Answer:
1.
fastest
2.
most interesting
3.
easier
4.
short
5.
late, earlier
Speaking and Writing (Page 107)
Question 1:
Say the following words with correct
stress. Pronounce the parts given in colour loudly and clearly.
(i) In a word having more than one syllable, the stressed syllable is the one
that is more prominent than
the other syllable(s)
(ii) A word has as many syllables as it has vowels.
(iii) The mark (‘) indicates that the first syllable in ’manner’ is more prominent
than the other.
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
Question 2:
Underline stressed
syllables in the following words. Consult the dictionary or ask the teacher if
necessary.
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
Question 3:
Writing a notice for the School Notice
Board.
Step
1
Discuss why notices are put up on the notice board.
What kinds of “notices’ have you lately seen on the board?
How is a notice different from a letter or a descriptive paragraph?
Step
2
Suppose you have lost or found something on the campus.
What have you lost or found?
You want to write a notice about it. If you have lost something, you want it
restored to you in case someone has found it. If you have found something, you
want to return it to its owner.
Step
3
Write a few lines describing the object you have lost or found. Mention the
purpose of the notice in clear terms. Also write your name, class, section and
date.
Step 4
Let one member of each group read aloud the notice to the entire class. Compare
your notice with the other notices, and make changes, if necessary, with the
help of the teacher.
Or
·
Imagine that you are a journalist.
·
You have been asked to interview the
president of the village panchayat.
·
Write eight to ten questions you wish to
ask.
·
The questions should elicit comments as
well as plans regarding water and electricity, cleanliness and school education
in the village.
Or
The
questions that I would ask the president of the Village Panchayat:
1. What steps will you take for the
development of education in your area?
2. What will you do for health facilities?
3. What will you do for roads?
4. What will you do for civil amenities?
5. How will you improve agriculture of your village?
6. What will you do for farmers?
7. What do you plan for female child promotion?
MORE QUESTIONS
SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Who is Stephen Hawking?
Answer:
Stephen Hawking is a great scientist, an astrophysicist. But he is disabled. He
has written the book ‘A Brief History of Time’. He can express himself only
through a computer.
Question 2:
What took the author Firdaus to England?
Why did he wish to see Hawking?
Answer:
Firdaus Kanga visited Britain in order to write a book about his travels. He
himself could move only in a wheel-chair. On the advice of his guide, Kanga
planned to meet the most brilliant and completely paralysed astrophysicist
(Hawking) in Cambridge.
Question 3:
How did Kanga fix the interview with
Hawking?
Answer:
Kanga phoned Hawking and requested the scientist’s assistant to arrange the
interview. He asked for ten minutes but he got half an hour.
Question 4:
What advice do people usually give to
the disabled? Was Hawking brave by choice?
Answer:
The people generally advise the disabled to be brave. Hawking admitted
truthfully that he hadn’t been brave. In fact, he had had no choice.
Question 5:
What advice does the scientist give to
the handicapped?
Answer:
He advises the disabled people to concentrate on what they are good at. They
should not try to copy the normal people.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Write about Stephen Hawking and Firdaus Kanga.
Answer:
Both of them are disabled people. Stephen Hawking is one of the greatest scientists
of our time. He suffers from paralysis that confines him to a wheelchair, and
allows him to ‘speak’ only by punching buttons on a computer, which speaks for
him in a machine like voice.
Firdaus Kanga is a writer and journalist. He lives and works in Mumbai. He was
born with ‘brittle bones’ that tended to break easily when he was a child. Like
Hawking, Kanga moves around in a wheelchair.
Question 2:
Why did the writer feel guilty talking
to Stephen Hawking?
Answer:
The writer felt guilty every time he spoke to Stephen Hawking because by doing
this he forced him to respond. There he (Hawking) was, tapping at the little
switch in his hand, trying to find the words on his computer with the only bit
of movement left to him, his long, pale fingers. His eyes would often shut in
frustrated exhaustion. The writer could feel his anguish but he had no option.
He had gone to his house to talk to him on certain points.
Honeydew Chapter 8 A Short Monsoon Diary
Comprehension Check (Page 115)
Questions:
1.
Why is the author not able to see Bijju?
2.
What are the two ways in which the hills
appear to change when the mist comes up?
Answers:
1.
The author could not see Bijju because
of the mist that concealed the hills. He could only hear his voice but could
not see him.
2.
When the mist comes up, it covers the
hills and spreads silence.
Comprehension Check (Page 117)
Questions:
1.
When does the monsoon season begin and
when does it end? How do you prepare to face the monsoon?
2.
Which hill-station does the author
describe in the diary entry?
3.
For how many days does it rain without
stopping? What does the author do on these days?
4.
Where do the snakes and rodents take
shelter? Why?
5.
What did the author receive in the mail?
Answers:
1.
The monsoon season in Mussorie begins
from June 24/25. By August 2, the people are fed up with rain. It ends by
August 31. Then begins winter rains which end by late March. We take out our
rain coats and umbrellas to face the monsoon.
2.
Mussoorie
3.
It rains non-stop for eight or nine
days. The author keeps pacing the room and looking out of the window.
4.
The rodents and snakes take shelter in
roofs, attics and godowns. They do so because their holes are flooded with rain
water.
5.
The author received a cheque in the
mail.
Working With the Text (Page 118)
Question 1:
Look carefully at the diary entries for
June 24-25, August 2 and March 23. Now write down the changes that happen as
the rains progress from June to March.
Answer:
Rains in Mussoorie begin in June and end by March. June 24 is the first day of
monsoon mist which covered the hills and spreads silence. On August 2 it rained
all night and made sleeping difficult. By late March ends winter as well as the
rains.
Question 2:
Why did the grandmother ask the children
not to kill the Chuchundar?
Answer:
The grandmother told the children not to kill the Chuchundars because
they brought good luck and money.
Question 3:
What signs do we find in Nature which
show that the monsoons are about to end?
Answer:
By the end of the monsoon the greenery is at its peak. The seeds of the cobra
lily turn red. A rainbow is formed in the sky.
Question 4:
Complete the following
sentences.
1.
Bijju is not seen but his voice is heard
because__________ .
2.
The writer describes the hill station
and valley as _________ .
3.
The leopard was’ successful in________
but had to flee when
4.
The minivets are easily noticed because
_________ .
5.
It looks like a fashion display on the
slopes when_________.
6.
During the monsoon season, snakes and
rodents are found in roofs and attics because _________.
Answer:
1.
dense mist covers and hides the hills.
2.
‘A paradise that might have been.’
3.
killing a dog but had to flee when
Bijju’s mother arrived crying curses.
4.
of their bright colours.
5.
they are covered by a variety of
flowers.
6.
their holes are flooded with water and
these places provide them convenient shelter.
Question 5:
‘Although tin roofs are given to springing unaccountable leaks, there is a
feeling of being untouched by, and yet in touch with, the rain.’
1.
Why has the writer used the word,
‘springing’?
2.
How is the writer untouched by the rain?
3.
How is the writer in touch with the rain
at the same time?
Answer:
1.
The word ‘springing’ is used to show
suddenness with which water starts leaking.
2.
Because he is inside the room.
3.
He hears the drumming of rain on the tin
roof. He also looks out of the window to see the rains.
Question 6:
Mention a few things that can happen
when there is endless rain for days together?
Answer:
A long spell of rain makes life miserable. One is closed up in his room.
Everything becomes damp and soggy. Rodents, snakes and insects enter the house
for shelter.
Question 7:
What is the significance of cobra lily
in relation to the monsoon season, its beginning and end?
Answer:
At first cobra lily appears with the arrival of the monsoon. When the cobra
seeds begin to turn red, it indicates the rains are coming to an end.
Working With Language (Page 118)
Question 1:
Here are some words that are associated with the monsoon. Add as many words as
you can to this list. Can you find words for these in your languages?
downpour
floods mist cloudy powercuts cold umbrella
Answer:
rain, water, fog, raincoats, thunder, dampness, lakes etc.
In my language I find the alternative words like the following:
बौछार , बूंदाबांदी
, तुषार, धुंध
, सीत , छतरी,
रेनकोट , आंधी
, इत्यादी l
Question 2:
Look at the sentences
below.
(i) Bijju
wandered into the garden in the evening.
(ii) The
trees were ringing with birdsong.
Notice the highlighted verb.
The verb wandered tells us what Bijju did that evening. But the verb was
ringing tells us what was happening continually at same time in the past (the
birds were chirping in the trees).
Now look the at sentences below. They tell us about something that happened in
the past. They also tell us about other things that happened continually* at
the same time in the past.
Put the verbs in
the brackets into their proper forms. The first one is done for you.
1.
We (get out) of the school bus. The bell
(ring) and everyone (rush) to class.
2.
The traffic (stop). Some people (sit) on
the road and they (shout) slogans.
3.
I (wear) my raincoat. It (rain) and
people (get) wet.
4.
She (see) a film. She (narrate) it to
her friends who (listen) carefully.
5.
We (go) to the exhibition. Some people
(buy) clothes while others (play) games,
6.
The class (is) quiet. Some children
(read) books and the rest (draw).
Answer:
1.
We got out of the school bus. The bell
was ringing and everyone was rushing to class.
2.
The traffic stopped. Some people were
sitting on the road and they were shouting slogans.
3.
I wore my raincoat. It was raining and
people were getting wet.
4.
She saw a film. She was narrating it to
her friends who were listening carefully,
5.
We went to the exhibition. Some people
were buying clothes while others were playing games.
6.
The class was quiet. Some children were
reading books and the rest were drawing.
Question 3:
Here are some words from the lesson
which describe different kinds of sounds.
drum
swish tinkle caw drip
(i)
Match these words with their correct meanings.
1.
to fall in small drops.
2.
to make a sound by hitting a surface
repeatedly.
3.
to move quickly through the air, making
a soft sound.
4.
harsh sound made by birds.
5.
ringing sound (of a bell or breaking
glass, etc.).
(ii)
Now fill in the blanks using the correct form of the words given above.
1.
Ramesh _______ on his desk in
impatience.
2.
Rain water_____ from the umbrella all
over the carpet.
3.
The pony______ its tail.
4.
The_____ of breaking glass woke me up.
5.
The_____ of the raven disturbed the
child’s sleep.
Answer:
(i) (1) drip (2) drum (3) swish (4) caw (5) tinkle.
(ii) (1) drummed (2) dripped (3) was
swishing (4) tinkle (5) caw
Question 4:
And sure enough. I received a cheque in the mail.
Complete
each sentence below by using appropriate phrase from the ones given below.
sure
enough colourful enough
serious enough
kind
enough big
enough
fair enough
brave
enough foolish enough
anxious enough
1.
I saw thick black clouds in the sky
and___ ____ it soon started raining heavily.
2.
The blue umbrella was___ ____ for the
brother and sister.
3.
The butterflies are___ _____ to get
noticed.
4.
The lady was___ _____to chase the
leopard.
5.
The boy was____ ____ to call out to his
sister.
6.
The man was____ ____ to offer help.
7.
The victim’s injury was____ _____ for
him to get admitted in hospital.
8.
That person was____ _____ to repeat the
same mistake again.
9.
He told me he was sorry and he would
compensate for the loss. I said, ‘___ _____’.
Answer:
1.
sure enough
2.
big enough
3.
colourful enough
4.
brave enough
5.
anxious enough
6.
kind enough
7.
serious enough
8.
foolish enough
9.
Fair enough
Speaking (Page 120)
Question 1:
Do you believe in superstitions? Why, or
why not? Working with your partner, write down three superstitious beliefs that
you are familiar with.
Answer:
Truly speaking, I don’t believe in superstitions. These are blind beliefs. The
ignorant and conservative people observe them. Superstitions have no scientific
base or proof. The common superstitions are:
(i) 13
is an ominous number.
(ii) Don’t
start a new project on Saturday.
(iii) Stop
if a black cat crosses your path.
Question 2:
How many different kinds of birds do you
come across in the lesson? How many varieties do you see in your neighbourhood?
Are there any birds that you used to see earlier in your neighbourhood but not
now? In groups discuss why you think this is happening.
Answer:
We come across different kinds of birds in this lesson. These are minivets,
drongos, tree creepers and crows. We see sparrows, pigeons, and nightingales in
our neighbourhood. Earlier we used to see big birds like kites and parrots in
our neighbourhood. But these have become extinct now.
Writing (Page 121)
Question 1:
The monsoons are a time of great fun and
even a few adventures: playing in the rain and getting wet, wading through
knee-deep water on your way to school, water flooding the house or the
classroom, power cuts and so on. Write a paragraph describing an incident that
occurred during the rains which you can never forget.
(See
NCERT Text Book Page 121)
Or
Write a poem of your own about the season of spring when trees are in full
bloom.
Answer:
Attempt it yourself.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What is a diary? What do the extracts
from Ruskin Bond’s diary portray?
Answer:
A diary is a record of personal experiences/events that occur in one’s life. It
is written day after day over a long period of time. The extracts from Ruskin
Bond’s diary portray monsoon season and the changes that occur as the rains
progress from June to March.
Question 2:
How does the author describe the first
day of monsoon mist?
Answer:
On the first day of monsoon mist all the birds suddenly fall silent and with it
absolute silence is spread. The hills got hidden by the mist. The forest is
deadly still as though it were midnight.
Question 3:
How does the author describe the scarlet
minivets?
Answer:
The scarlet minivets are seen during rainy season. They flit silently among the
leaves like brilliant jewels. No matter how leafy the trees, these brightly coloured
birds cannot hide themselves.
Question 4:
Why couldn’t the author sleep on August
2 night?
Answer:
On August 2 it rained throughout the night. The rain had been drumming on the
corrugated tin roof. There had been a steady swish of a tropical downpour. The
author, therefore, couldn’t sleep.
Question 5:
What happened on August 12?
Answer:
Heavy downpour started on August 12. The rain continued for eight or nine days.
Everything got damp and soggy. The author had to stay inside during these days.
Question 6:
Name the flowers that you come across in
the lesson.
Answer:
Wild balsom, dahlias, begonias, ground orchids, cobra lilies etc.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Who are the seasonal visitors? How does
the author describe them?
Answer:
The seasonal visitors are a leopard, several thousand leeches and different
kinds of birds. The leopard created nuisance. It lifted a dog from near the
servants’ quarter below the school. In the evening, it attacked one of Bijju’s
cows. The scarlet minivets flitted silently among the leaves like brilliant
jewels. No matter how leafy the trees, these brightly coloured birds could not
conceal themselves. There was also a pair of drongos. They looked aggressive
and chased the minivets away.
A tree creeper moved rapidly up the trunk of the oak tree, snapping up insects,
all the way.
Question 2:
Sum up the main ideas of the author’s
Monsoon Diary in about 100 words.
Answer:
The writer was in Mussoorie, a hill station in U.P. The first day of monsoon
brought mist. The birds got silent and the hills became invisible. On June 25,
came the early monsoon rain. He described the hill station as A paradise’ that
might have been’ to a school boy. With the onset of the monsoon one could see
leopards and leeches and the colourful minivet birds. There was no dearth of
insects for the birds to eat. On August 2, it rained heavily and non-stop. The
roofs began to leak. The rain stopped on August 3. The sunlight fell on the
hills and the song birds began to sing. On August 12, there was heavy downpour
and mist for more than a week. Everything was damp. Meanwhile wild flowers
began to appear. August 31 saw the greenery at its peak. Snakes and rodents
came out of their flooded holes and hid in roofs or godowns. Winter rain,
hailstones and snow came on October 3. The author couldn’t go outside and he
felt very lonely in his room. Late March saw the end of winter. He received a
cheque in the mail.
Honeydew Chapter 9 The Great Stone Face I
Write
‘True’ or ‘False’ against each of the following statements.
1.
The Great Stone Face stood near where
Ernest and his mother lived.
2.
One would clearly distinguish the
features of the Stone Face only from a distance.
3.
Ernest loved his mother and helped her
in her work.
4.
Though not very rich, Gathergold was a
skilful merchant.
5.
Gathergold died in poverty and neglect.
6.
The Great Stone Face seemed to suggest
that Ernest should not fear the general.
Answer:
1.
False
2.
True
3.
True
4.
False
5.
True
6.
True
WORKING WITH THE TEXT (Page 130)
Answer the following questions.
Question 1:
1.
What was the Great Stone Face?
2.
What did Young Ernest wish when he gazed
at it?
Answer:
1.
The Great Stone Face was the work of
nature. The rocks were put one over the other on the mountain side. They
resembled the features of a human face.
2.
Young Ernest wished that the stone face
could speak. He wished to love the man dearly whoever resembled that face.
Question 2:
What was the story attributed to the Stone Face?
Answer:
The story attributed to the Stone Face was that some day a child with the
likeness of that face would be born. He would become the greatest and noblest
person of his age.
Question 3:
What gave the people of the valley the idea that the prophecy was about to come
true for the first time?
Answer:
A youngman named Gathergold had left the valley many years ago. By the time he
grew old, he had grown rich. When he returned to his native valley, a rumour
spread that he resembled the Stone Face. People thought that the prophecy had
come true.
Question 4:
1.
Did Ernest see in Gathergold the
likeness of the Stone Face?
2.
Who did he confide in and how was he
proved right?
Answer:
1.
No, Ernest did not see any likeness of
the Stone Face in Gathergold.
2.
He confided in the Great Stone Face.
After Gathergold’s death as his wealth and gold had already disappeared, it was
generally agreed that Gathergold had no resemblance with the Great Stone Face.
Question 5:
1.
What made people believe General Blood-
and-Thunder was their man?
2.
Ernest compared the man’s face with the
Stone Face. What did he conclude?
Answer:
1.
General Blood-and-thunder had risen to
high position from a soldier. When he returned to the valley, his childhood
friends said that the General had always looked like the Stone Face.
2.
Ernest could not find any likeness
between the General and the Stone Face.
WORKING WITH THE LANGUAGE (Page 130)
Question 1:
Look
at the following words.
Like — likeness
punctual — punctuality
The words on the left are adjectives and those on the right are their noun
forms.
Write
the noun forms of the following words by adding -ness or -itv to them
appropriately. Check the spelling of the new words.
1.
lofty _____________
2.
able _____________
3.
happy _____________
4.
near _____________
5.
noble _____________
6.
pleasant _____________
7.
dense _____________
8.
great _____________
9.
stable _____________
Answer:
1.
loftiness
2.
ability
3.
happiness
4.
nearness
5.
nobility
6.
enormity
7.
pleasantness
8.
density
9.
greatness
10.
stability
Question 2:
Add-iv
to each of the following adjectives, then use them to fill in the blanks.
1.
Why didn’t you turn up at the meeting?
We all were ______ waiting for you.
2.
______ write
your name and address in capital letters.
3.
I was______ surprised to see him at the
railway station. I thought he was not coming.
4.
It is______ believable that I am not
responsible for this mess.
5.
He fell over the step and ______ broke
his arm.
Answer:
1.
eagerly
2.
kindly
3.
pleasantly
4.
perfectly
5.
nearly
Question 3:
Complete
each sentence below using the appropriate forms of the verbs in brackets.
1.
I ______ (phone) you when I (get) home
from school.
2.
Hurry up! Madam ______ (be)
annoyed if we ______ (be) late.
3.
If it ______ (rain) today, we ______
(not) go to the play.
4.
When you ______ (see) Mandal
again, you ______ (not/recognise) him. He is growing a beard.
5.
We are off today. We
______ (write) to you after we ______ (be) back.
Answer:
1.
shall phone: get
2.
will be; are
3.
rains, shall not go
4.
see; will not recognise
5.
shall write; are
SPEAKING AND WRITING (Page 131)
Question 1:
Imagine you are Ernest. Narrate the story that his mother told him.
Begin like this: My mother and I were sitting at the door of our cottage. We
were looking at the Great Stone Face. I asked her if she had ever seen any one
who looked like the Stone Face. Then she told me this story.
Answer:
She had heard that story from her own Mother that some day a child would be
born resembling the Stone Face. In manhood he would become the greatest and
noblest person of his time.
Question 2:
Imagine you are Gathergold. Write briefly the incident of your return to the
valley.
Begin like this: My name is Gathergold. I left the valley of the Great Stone
Face fifty years ago. I am now going back home. Will the people of the valley
welcome me? Do they know that I am very rich?
Answer:
I drove to my native village in a horse drawn carriage. The people mistook me
for the Great Stone Face. They welcomed me and shouted, “Sure enough, the old
prophecy is true and the great man has arrived at last”.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
I. SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What is the significance of the Great Stone Face?
Answer:
The Stone Face was a work of nature. It was formed on the side of a mountain by
rocks. Viewed from a distance, those rocks looked like the features of a human
face. People linked stories to that face. The people living in that valley
believed that some day a great and noble person with the likeness of that face
would come.
Question 2:
What did the spectator see when he went near the Great Stone Face?
Answer:
When the spectator went near the Great Stone Face, he lost the outline of the
enormous face and could see only a heap of gigantic rocks, piled one upon
an¬other.
Question 3:
How did Ernest grow up to be a mild and quiet youth?
Answer:
Ernest never forgot of the story that his mother told him. He was dutiful to
his mother and helpful to her many things, assisting her much with his little
hands, and .more with his loving heart. In this manner he grew up to be a mild
and quiet youth.
Question 4:
How did Gathergold become rich?
Answer:
Gathergold was a young man when he left his native valley and settled at a
distant seaport. He set up there as a shopkeeper. He was very sharp in business
matters and therefore became very rich in a very short span of time.
Question 5:
How did people’s opinion change about Gathergold after his death?
Answer:
Gathergold died one day. His wealth had disappeared before his death. Since the
melting away of his gold, it had been generally believed that there was no
like¬ness between the ruined merchant and the majestic face upon the mountain.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What was the prophecy connected with the Stone Face? Did it come true?
Answer:
The prophecy is a statement about some event in future. The people of the
valley believed that the Stone Face was auspicious for them. It made the land
fertile with its gaze.
The old prophecy about the Stone Face was that at some future day a child would
be born there who will grow up to become great and noble. The child would look
like the Stone Face. Some people thought it was just idle talk. It appears
finally Ernest himself would be declared to be the great man resembling the
Stone Face.
Question 2:
Who was Ernest? What personal qualities made him great?
Answer:
Ernest was a little boy who lived with his Mother in a valley. His interest
grew in the Great Stone Face which smiled on him. His Mother told him the
prophecy about that Face. The boy never forgot that story. He spent hours
looking at that face. He regarded it as his teacher. He was inspired to be
noble, kind and helpful. These qualities could make him the man with the
likeness of the Face.
Honeydew Chapter 10 The Great Stone Face II
Comprehension Check (Page 136)
Questions:
Write
‘True’ or ‘False’ against each of the following statements.
1.
Ernest’s words reminded people of the
wise old sayings. __________
2.
Total strangers from far away, who
visited Ernest in the valley, found his face familiar. _______
3.
The Great Stone Face confirmed Ernest’s
view that the poet could be worthy of its likeness. _______
4.
When Ernest and the poet met, they
respected and admired each other equally. ________
5.
The poet along with Ernest addressed the
inhabitants of the valley. ___________
6.
The poet realised that Ernest’s thoughts
were far nobler than his own verses. _________
Answers:
1.
True
2.
True
3.
False
4.
True
5.
False
6.
True
Working With the Text (Page 137)
Answer the following questions.
Question 1:
How was Ernest different from others in
the valley?
Answer:
Ernest was unlike other commoners in the valley. He was a good, simple hearted,
noble and thoughtful person. He had been under observation. He did not go with
the crowd. He welcomed total strangers as the prophets.
Question 2:
Why did Ernest think the poet was like
the Stone Face?
Answer:
The poet wrote wonderful songs. He had celebrated the Great stone Face in one
of his poems. When Ernest read this poem he became convinced that the poet was
like the stone face.
Question 3:
What did the poet himself say about his
thoughts and poems?
Answer:
The poet confessed that he was not worthy to be compared with the Stone Face.
His actions did not match with his thoughts.
Question 4:
What made the poet proclaim Ernest was the Stone Face?
Answer:
Ernest and the poet together went to a meeting place. Ernest addressed the
gathering. His words had power and his thoughts had depth. They were the words
of life, a life of good deeds and selfless love. The poet was convinced that
Ernest – was much nobler than him. Ernest’s face had such a grand expression
that he declared that Ernest bore the likeness of the Great Stone Face.
Question 5:
Write ‘Ernest’ or ‘Poet’, against each
statement below.
(i) There
was a gap between his life and his words.
(ii) His
words had the power of truth as they agreed with his thoughts.
(iii) His
words were as soothing as a heavenly song but only as useful as a vague dream.
(iv) His
thoughts were worthy.
(v) Whatever
he said was truth itself.
(vi) His
poems were noble.
(vii) His
life was nobler than all the poems.
(viii) He
lacked faith in his own thoughts.
(ix) His
thoughts had power as they agreed with the life he lived.
(x) Greatness
lies in truth. Truth is best expressed in one’s actions. He was truthful,
therefore he was great.
Answer:
(i) Poet
(ii) Ernest
(iii) Poet
(iv) Poet (v) Ernest
(vi) Poet
(vii) Ernest (viii) Poet
(ix) Ernest (x) Ernest
Question 6:
(i) Who,
by common consent, turned out to be like the Great Stone Face?
(ii) Did
Ernest believe that the old prophecy had come true? What did he say about it?
Answer:
(i) Ernest
was accepted by common consent exactly like the Great Stone Face.
(ii) No,
Ernest still was not convinced that the old prophecy had come true. He hoped
that some day, a man wiser and nobler than him would come, and would look truly
similar to the Great Stone Face.
Working With Language (Page 137)
Question 1:
Mark the meaning that best fits the word or a phrase in the
story.
(i) (sun)
going down
(a) becoming
smaller
(b) weakening
(c) setting
(ii) brightening
(a) making
(it) look bright and cheerful
(b) lending
(it) a special glow
(c) causing
(it) to appear hopeful
(iii) spacious
(a) lonely
and wild
(b) big
and wide
(c) special
and important
(iv) prophecy
(a) proverb
(b) prediction
(c) rumour
(v) marvellous
(a) wonderful
(b) surprising
(c) shocking
(vi) proclaim
(a) reveal
(b) declare
(c) shout
(vii) cease
(a) happen
(b) stop
(c) remain
(viii) (a
night’s shelter)
(a) stay
(b) safety
(c) hospitality
(ix) gazed
(a) wandered
about
(b) stared
at
(c) thought
of
(x) took
on (an expression)
(a) challenged
(b) resembled
(c) assumed
Answers:
(i) c
(ii) a
(iii) b (iv) b
(v) a
(vi) b
(vii) b (viii) a
(ix) b
(x) c
Question 2:
(i) Read
the following sentences.
(a) I
do hope I’ll live to see him.
(b) He will
come! Fear not, Earnest: the man will
come.
(c) Gathergold is
arriving tomorrow, people said.
(d) Blood-and-Thunder starts his
journey back to the valley next week, everyone proclaimed.
(e) The
great man is going to spend
his old age in his native town.
Notice that in the above sentences, verbs in bold type are in four different
forms, denoting four important ways of expressing future time. None of these
can be said to be exclusively used to show future time, though each is used to
refer to some action in future.
(ii) Which
form of the verb is more natural in these sentences? Encircle your choice.
(a) I’m
not free this evening. I will
work/am working on a project.
(b) Have
you decided where you will go for your higher secondary? Yes, I have. I will go/ am going to
the Kendriya Vidyalaya.
(c) Don’t
worry about the dog. It won’t
hurt/isn’t hurting you
(d) The
weatherman has predicted that it will
snow/is snowing in Ranikhet tonight.
(e) Swapna
can’t go out this evening. Her father will
come/is coming to see her.
Answers:
(a) am
working
(b) am
going
(c) won’t
hurt
(d) will
snow
(e) is
coming.
Question 3:
(i) Complete
these pieces of conversation using will or going to with the verbs
Answer:
(a) am
going to listen
(b) will
lend
(c) is
going to rain
(d) will
have
(e) am
going to make
(f) will
go
(g) am
going to get, will get
(ii) Let
pairs of children take turns to speak aloud the dialogues.
Answer:
For class activity
Speaking and Writing (Page 139)
Question 1:
Each of the following
words has the sound /f/ as in feel/ The words on the left have it initially.
Those on the right have it finally. Speak each word clearly.
flail
life
philip
puff
flowed
deaf
fact
tough
fail
laugh
fast
stiff
Answer:
Attempt yourself.
Question 2:
Underline the letter or
letters representing / f/in each of the following words.
file
slough
faint
lift
cough
defence
afford
enough
photograph
staff
tough
aloof
affront
philosophy sophistry
Answer:
file
slough faint
life
cough
defence
afford
enough
photograph
staff
tough
aloof
affront
philosophy
sophistry
Question 3:
Imagine that you are the poet. You have
come to your native valley to meet a famous preacher called Ernest. the incident
of your first meeting with him.
Answer:
I lived so far away from the valley. But I had heard about Ernest’s character
and wisdom. One summer day I called on him. I found him reading a book. We sat
down together and talked. I found Ernest wise, gentle and kind. Ernest greeted
me warmly and called me a ‘gifted guest’ Then I introduced myself as one who
wrote the poems Ernest was reading.
Ernest compared my face with the Stone Face. He had hoped to see the fulfilment
of the prophecy but he was disappointed. I told him I was not worthy of that
likeness. I said that my thoughts and actions had no harmony.
I went with my host to a meeting place. I heard his address and found depth in
his thoughts. In the golden light of the setting sun, Ernest appeared to me
exactly like the Great Stone Face. The gathering also agreed with me.
Question 4:
(i) Put
each of the following in the correct order to construct sentences.
·
a resident of Noida near Delhi/is
visually impaired/George Abraham.
·
confidence and competitive spirit/and
infuses discipline among the participants/It provides.
·
he has helped/The brain behind the World
Cup Cricket, /the disabled to dream.
·
to the blind school in Delhi/It was a
chance visit/that changed his life.
·
sport is a powerful tool/the disabled/He
believes that/for rehabilitation of.
Answer:
·
George Abraham, a resident of Noida near
Delhi, is visually impaired.
·
It provides confidence and competitive
spirit and infuses discipline among the participants.
·
The brain behind the World Cup Cricket,
he has helped the disabled to dream.
·
It was a chance visit to the blind
school in Delhi that changed his life.
·
He believes that sport is a powerful
tool for rehabilitation of the disabled.
(ii) Now
rearrange the sentences above to construct a paragraph.
Answer:
George Abraham, a resident of Noida near Delhi, is visually impaired. The brain
behind the World Cup Cricket, he has helped the disabled to dream. It was a
chance visit to the blind school in Delhi that changed his life. He believes
that sport is a powerful tool for rehabilitation of the disabled. It provides
confidence and competitive spirit and infuses discipline among the
participants.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
What changes come to be seen in Ernest
with passing of time?
Answer:
Ernest was now a man of middle age. His
hairs turned white and there were wrinkles across his forehead and furrows in
his cheeks. He had become wiser with profound thoughts. The valley people
respected him and took his advice on several occasions.
Question 2:
Why did Ernest become sad after he
examined the poet’s features?
Answer:
The poet had celebrated the Great Stone Face in one of his poems. When Ernest
read that poem he became convinced that the poet had the likeness of the Great
Stone Face. But when he met the poet, all his hopes shattered. He found no
resemblance between the poet and the Stone Face. This was the reason why he
became sad.
Question 3:
Why did the poet’s eyes fill with tears?
Answer:
The poet became sentimental to listen to Ernest. His words had power because
they had depth. They were the words of life, a life of good deeds and selfless
love. The poet felt that the life and character of Ernest were nobler strain of
poetry that he had ever written. His eyes filled with tears and he said to
himself that never was there so worthy a sage as that thoughtful face, with the
glim of white hair diffused about it.
II. LONG ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS
Question 1:
Give a character-sketch of Ernest.
Answer:
Ernest was a small boy when he became
interested in the Great Stone Face. He felt that the face smiled on him. He
wished to love the man with such a face. He was dutiful and helpful to his
Mother. He grew up to be a gentle and quiet youth. He regarded the Stone Face
as his teacher. He turned to the face for advice. He was not influnced by the
common belief that Gathergold or Blood- and-Thunder General had any resemblance
with the Stone Face. Even the poet’s face made him sad. And he was right when
the poet himself admitted that he wasn’t worthy to be the likeness of the face.
Finally, the same poet shouted with joy that Ernest himself was the likeness of
the Stone Face. But Ernest remained humble to the last. He kept hoping that
some wiser and better man than himself would appear.
Question 2:
How did Ernest feel when people hailed
him as the likeness of the Stone face?
Answer:
Ernest was truly noble and humble. His
deeds matched with his thoughts. He received the poet warmly. For a while he thought
the writer of those poems was truly the greatest and wisest person. The poet
and the people ultimately hailed him as the man with the likeness of the Stone
Face. But Ernest did not agree with them. He kept hoping that a wiser and
better man than himself would appear to make the prophecy true.
Question 3:
Describe in brief Ernest’s reaction on
three occasions when Gathergold, General Blood-and-Thunder and the poet came to
the valley.
Answer:
The inhabitants of the valley believed the story that one day a man bearing
resemblance to the Stone Face would come there. The first one to arrive was a
rich merchant Gathergold. The people were greatly excited. But Ernest noticed
no resemblance between Gathergold’s face and that of the Stone Face. Likewise
he did not agree with the people who welcomed General Blood-and-Thunder as the
greatest man. But Ernest almost believed that the poet was the person he had
been waiting for. But again he was disappointed. In fact, Ernest himself was
accepted as the Prophet.
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