Question Bank
Class 12 English Core
Foreword
With a view to support teachers in the endeavour to move away from a culture of
rote
learning
and impact pedagogy in the
classroom, CBSE is delighted
to share this
Resource
for Teachers in
English Core for Class XII. Exemplar questions from each
chapter of both the books have been prepared. These exemplar questions are for
the
question number 3,4,5,10,11,12, and
13 of the Sample
Question Paper 2020-21 and have been
numbered
accordingly.
This resource
will equip teachers and
learners to
become
familiar with the new
patterns and understand, acquire
and practice the requisite skills and competencies
listed in the curriculum. It will also serve as a guideline for teachers to prepare a
question bank individually and
collaboratively.
As you will
observe, the questions in
the
document are
not
based on mere recall
or rudimentary comprehension. Rather, they have been designed to foster in
students the skill
to think critically and
creatively with
a focus on inferential abilities.
It is important to
note
that the larger intent of this resource
is
providing to teachers an indicative
framework to
conceptualise and
practice analysis-based learning
and
problem solving. It is hoped that the questions herein
will also
enable
teachers to reflect on
their teaching practices, and promote a movement away from ‘teaching
to the test’ towards a
focus on the process of discovery, openness, imaginative
engagement and
activity-based learning in ways that they bring the text to the child,
as
much as the child
to the text.
It is our belief that the potential
of
the English
Core curriculum, to
stimulate learners and
teachers, can be
glimpsed in
this Resource. We
hope
that teachers will welcome
this document as a reminder of this potential, and find in
it
a ready resource
not
only to equip their students, but to jumpstart their own thinking and engagement processes.
L-1 The Last Lesson
Text-Flamingo |
|
Q3 |
Multiple Choice
Questions
based on an extract |
A. |
Poor man! It was in honour of this last lesson
that he had put on his fine Sunday clothes, and now I understood why the
old
men of the village were sitting there in the back
of the room. It was because they were sorry, too, that they had not gone to school more. It was
their way of thanking our master for his forty years of faithful
service and of showing
their respect for
the
country that was theirs
no more. |
i |
Why does
the narrator refer to M. Hamel
as ‘Poor man!’? a) He
empathizes with
M. Hamel as he
had to leave
the
village. b) He believes that M. Hamel’s “fine Sunday clothes” clearly reflected that he was not rich. c) He feels sorry
for M. Hamel
as it was his last French lesson. d) He thinks
that M. Hamel’s
patriotism and sense of duty resulted in his
poverty. |
ii |
Which of the following idioms might describe the villagers’ act of attending the last lesson
most accurately? a) ‘Too
good to
miss’ b) ‘Too
little, too late’ c) ‘Too many cooks spoil the broth’ d) ‘Too
cool for school’ |
iii |
Choose the option that might raise a question about M. Hamel’s “faithful service”. a) When Franz came late, M. Hamel told him that he was about to begin class without him. b) Franz
mentioned
how
cranky
M.
Hamel
was and
his “great
ruler rapping
on the table”. c) M. Hamel often sent students to water his flowers, and gave a holiday when
he wanted
to go fishing. d) M. Hamel permitted villagers put their children “to work on a farm or at the mills” for some extra
money. |
iv |
Choose the option
that most appropriately fills in
the
blanks, for the following description of the given
extract. The villagers and their children
sat in class, forging with their old
master a (i) togetherness. In that moment, the class
room stood (ii) _. It was France
itself, and the last French
lesson a desperate
hope to (iii) _ to
the remnants of what they had
known and taken
for granted. Their own (iv) . a) (i) graceful; (ii) still; (iii) hang on; (iv) country
b) (i) bygone; (ii) up; (iii) keep on; (iv) education |
|
c) (i) beautiful; (ii) mesmerised; (iii) carry on; (iv) unity d) (i) forgotten; (ii) transformed; (iii) hold on; (iv) identity |
B. |
M. Hamel went on to talk of the French language, saying that it was the most beautiful language in the world — the clearest, the most logical; that we must guard it among us and never forget it, because when a people are enslaved, as long as they hold fast to their language it is as if they had the key to their
prison. Then he opened a grammar book and read us our
lesson. I was amazed to see how well I understood it. All he said seemed so easy, so easy! |
i |
Which of the following can be attributed to M. Hamel’s declaration about the French
language? a) subject expertise
b) nostalgic pride c) factual accuracy d) patriotic magnification |
ii |
Read the
quotes given below. Choose the
option that might best describe M.
Hamel’s viewpoint. (i) Those who
know nothing of (ii) Language
is the road map of a foreign languages know nothing of culture.
It tells
you where its their own. people come from and where they – Johann Wolfgang von
Goethe are going. – Rita Mae
Brown (iii) A poor man is like a
(iv) The
greatest propaganda
in the world foreigner
in his
own
is our mother tongue, that is what
we country. learn as
children,
and
which we
learn – Ali Ibn Abi
Talib unconsciously.
That
shapes
our perceptions for life. – Marshal McLuhan a) Option
(i) b) Option (ii)
c) Option (iii)
d) Option
(iv) |
iii |
“I was amazed
to see how well
I understood
it.” Select the option that does NOT explain why Franz found the grammar lesson “easy”. a) Franz was paying
careful
attention
in class this time. b) M. Hamel
was being extremely patient and
calm in
his teaching. c) Franz was
inspired
and
had
found
a
new meaning and purpose to
learning. |
|
d) Franz had realized that French was
the
clearest and most
logical
language. |
|||
iv |
Franz was able
to
understand
the grammar lesson easily because he
was a) receptive. b) appreciative.
c) introspective. d)
competitive. |
|||
Q 5. |
Stand-alone
MCQs |
|||
i |
Franz saw a huge crowd assembled in front of the bulletin board, but did not
stop. How
would you
evaluate
his reaction? a) Franz was too little
to
care about the news of lost battles. b) Nobody in
Franz’s family was in the army, so
it did not matter. c) Bad news had become
very normal, so
he went about his task. d) It was too crowded
for Franz to find out what news was up on the board. |
|||
ii |
There was usually great bustle and noise when school began, but it was all very quiet. Which of the
following describes Franz’ emotions most accurately? a) shock and awe b) disappointment and
anxiety c) confusion and
distress d) curiosity and uncertainty |
|||
iii |
“I never saw him look so tall”. Which
of
the following
best captures M. Hamel on the
last day of school? a) cranky, miserable, dedicated, resigned b) patient, dignified, emotional, courageous
c) calm, nostalgic, disappointed, patriotic d) proud, reproachful, persistent, heroic |
|||
iv |
Look at the
table below. Column
A provides instances from the
story ‘The
Last Lesson’. Column
B provides titles of some famous English language poems. Choose the option that correctly match items of Column
A with Column B. |
|||
|
Column A |
Column B |
|
|
1. M. Hamel distributed
new copies that looked like little French flags, and ended
the class
with
an emphatic “Vive La
France!”. |
(i) ‘Remorse is
memory
awake’ (Emily Dickinson) |
|||
2. Hauser sat at the
end
of the class,
thumbing his primer,
desperately |
(ii) ‘A House called Tomorrow’ (Alberto
Rios) |
|
|
trying to
learn with the children, even as he
cried. |
|
|
3. M. Hamel shared how
Alsace always put
off
learning,
and how its people
always
thought they had plenty of time. |
(iii) ‘For Whom the Bell Tolls’ (John Donne) |
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4. Class ended when
the
church-
clock struck twelve. And then the Angelus.
Simultaneously, Prussian
trumpets sounded under the
school
windows. |
(iv) ‘Do Not
Go gentle
into
that Good night’ (Dylan Thomas) |
|||
a) 1 –
(i); 2 – (ii); 3 –
(iii); 4 – (iv) b) 1 – (ii); 2 – (iii); 3 –
(iv); 4 – (i) c) 1 –
(iii); 2 – (iv); 3 –
(i); 4 – (ii) d) 1 – (iv); 2 – (i); 3 –
(ii); 4 – (iii) |
||||
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40 words |
|||
i |
If this had
been M.
Hamel’s
first lesson,
how do
you think the school
experience
of the students might have been impacted? |
|||
ii |
Little Franz is the narrator of the story.
The name
‘Franz’ means ‘from France’. In what way does the story being told as a first-person narrative of Franz
impact your reading and understanding of the story? Provide at least one
evidence from the text to support your opinion. |
|||
iii |
At the end of his last lesson, M. Hamel decides to leave a little note for each
of his students for them to find the next day at their desks. Based on your reading
of the story, what might his note to
Franz read? You may begin like this: Dear Franz, I know you have always preferred to run in the open fields … |
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Q12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
|||
i |
Though tempted by the bright day, Franz stated that he had
“the
strength
to resist, and hurried off to school.” As the
story progresses,
the reader realizes that Franz, M. Hamel and the villagers
would perhaps need “the
strength to resist” much
larger forces. Discuss how the story provides strategies for resistance and protection of one’s identity and
community through its events and characters.
Provide relevant textual
details to support your argument. |
|||
ii |
On the day of the last lesson, Franz felt that the “whole school was strange”. |
|
Throughout the story, the
reader encounters Franz’ account of how school
usually was, and what it was like
on the last day of class
with M. Hamel. This contrast comes across through events, and the actions and viewpoints of various characters. • In what way can the story be seen as a comment on schooling in
general? • Does Franz’ description of
school life resonate with your
own experience? • Do you think
the
story
might also
provide
advice on
what
good
education
entails? Substantiate your argument with relevant instances from the text. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3 A i – c ; ii –
b ; iii – c ; iv –
d B i – d ; ii – b ;
iii – d ; iv – a Q5 i – c ; ii – b ;
iii – b ; iv –
d |
Q3 |
Multiple Choice
Questions
based on an extract. |
A |
“I will learn
to drive a car,” he answers, looking straight
into my eyes. His dream looms
like a
mirage amidst
the dust
of streets that fill
his town
Firozabad, famous for its bangles. Every other family in Firozabad is engaged in making bangles. It is the centre of India’s glass-blowing industry where
families have spent generations working
around furnaces, wielding glass, making bangles
for all the women in
the
land it seems. Mukesh’s family is among
them. None of them know that it is illegal for children like
him to work in the glass furnaces with
high temperatures, in
dingy cells
without air and light; that the law, if enforced, could
get him and all those 20,000 children out of the hot furnaces where they slog their
daylight hours, often losing
the
brightness of
their
eyes.
Mukesh’s
eyes
beam as
he volunteers to take me home, which he proudly
says is being
rebuilt. |
i |
The simile
‘dream looms like a mirage amidst the dust of streets’ indicates that
his dream was a) a reality, yet seemed distant. b)
lost in the sea
of dust. c) illusory and
indistinct. d) hanging
in the dusty air. |
ii |
‘I will
learn to
drive a car,’
he answers, looking straight into my eyes. This sentence highlights Mukesh was 1. determined 2. fearless 3. hopeful 4. valiant 5. ambitious 6. stern a) 1
& 5 b) 2 & 4 c) 2 & 5 d) 3
& 6 |
iii |
Which of the
following statements is NOT TRUE with
reference to
the
extract? a) Children
work in
badly lit and poorly ventilated
furnaces. b) The
children are unaware
that it is forbidden by law to
work in the
furnaces. c) Children toil
in the furnaces for hours which affects their eyesight. d)
Firozabad has emerged
as
a nascent producer of bangles in the country. |
iv |
Every other family in Firozabad is engaged in making bangles indicates that |
|
a) bangle making
is the only industry that flourishes in Firozabad.
b) the entire
population of Firozabad is involved in
bangle
making. c) majority of the
population in
Firozabad is involved in
bangle
making. d) bangle
making is the most loved occupation
in Firozabad. |
B |
She still has bangles on her wrist, but no light in
her eyes. “Ek waqt ser bhar khana bhi nahin
khaya.” she says, in a voice drained of joy. She
has not enjoyed even one full meal in her entire lifetime-that’s what she has reaped! Her husband, an
old
man with a flowing
beard
says, “I know nothing except
bangles. All
I have
done
is make a house
for the
family to
live in.” Hearing him one wonders if he
has achieved what many have
failed
in their lifetime. He has a
roof over his head! The cry of not having
money to do
anything except carry on
the
business of making bangles, not even enough
to eat, rings in
every home. The young
men echo the
lament of
the
elders. Little has moved with time,
it seems
in Firozabad, years of mind-numbing toil have
killed all initiative
and
the ability to dream. |
i |
‘She still
has bangles on
her wrist, but no light in her eyes.’
This implies that a) she
is married
but has lost the
charm in her eyes. b) she
is a married woman
who
has lost her grace
and
beauty. c)
though she is married, her eyes are devoid of happiness. d) she
is a married
woman who
has lost her eyesight. |
ii |
‘He has a
roof over his head!’ The
tone
of the author is a) pessimistic.
b) empathetic.
c) sympathetic. d) optimistic. |
iii |
Choose the term which best matches the statement ‘The young men echo the lament of their elders.’ a) acceptance
b) reflection c) reiteration d) doubtfulness |
iv |
‘Years
of mind-numbing toil have killed all initiative and the ability to dream’. This shows that a) the
bangle makers are exhausted
yet they are enterprising and
have
dreams. b) the
drudgery of work has destroyed their willingness to improve their lot. c) the daily grind
has stolen the dreams of the
bangle makers and made them
dull. d) the bangle
makers have
been working
so hard that there’s no time to
dream. |
Q 5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
i |
‘But promises like mine abound in
every corner of his bleak world’. This suggests that a) there is no
dearth of promises which remain
unfulfilled. b) there is a scarcity of people promising things for betterment.
c) people make a
lot of promises which are often fulfilled. d) promises made, live
up to the expectations of people. |
ii |
From this chapter, it is evident that the author has an attitude
of a) sympathy. b)
apathy. c) empathy. d) bewilderment. |
iii |
‘That’s why they left, looking
for gold
in
the big city.’
Here ‘gold’
indicates a) misfortune of circumstances. b)
ample
wealth. c) means of survival. d)
a
sign of luxury. |
iv |
Choose the
statement that is NOT TRUE about ragpickers in Seemapuri. a) Children
are
equally involved
in rag picking as their parents.
b) The ragpickers settle down
in a place permanently. c) Rag
picking has accomplished itself as a skill
and form of art. d)
Ragpickers live in
unsteady shanties on
the
outskirts of Delhi. |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40 words |
i |
Why do
you think Mukesh
is content to dream of cars and
doesn’t dream of flying
a plane? |
ii |
Do you believe that ‘God-given lineage can be broken’? Support your position with a rationale. |
iii |
How do you think
the author’s life
might have
been impacted
after her interactions with
the
children
and
their families mentioned in ‘Lost Spring’? |
Q12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
How does the
story, ‘Lost Spring’ highlight the apathy of society and those in
power to end the vicious cycle
of poverty? Support your answer with
textual
evidence. |
ii |
Certain traditions and lineage, condemn thousands of children to a life of abject poverty and
choke
their aspirations. |
|
• Do you agree? Explain. • How can we
change this? Suggest some ways to tackle this issue. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3 A. i
– c); ii
- a);
iii – d); iv – c) B
i – c); ii – d); iii – c);
iv – b) Q5 i
– a); ii – a); iii –
c); iv – c); v –
b) |
L-3 Deep Water
Text-Flamingo |
|
Q3 |
Multiple
Choice Questions
based on an extract |
A |
My breath
was gone. I was frightened. Father laughed, but there was terror in my heart at the overpowering force of
the waves. My introduction to the
Y.M.CA. swimming pool revived unpleasant memories and
stirred
childish fears. But in a
little
while I gathered
confidence. I paddled with my new water wings, watching the other boys and trying to learn by aping them. I did this
two
or three times on different days and was just beginning to
feel at ease
in the water when the misadventure
happened. |
i |
Choose the
correct option
with reference to the two statements given
below. Statement 1: The author’s father laughed
to mock his son’s inability to
swim. Statement 2: The author wanted to
swim just to
prove to his father that he
can swim. a) Statement 1
is true but Statement 2
is false.
b) Statement 1
is false but Statement 2
is
true. c) Both Statement 1 and
Statement 2 cannot be inferred. d)
Both
Statement 1 and
Statement 2 can be
inferred. |
ii |
“My introduction
to the Y.M.CA. swimming pool
revived unpleasant memories and stirred childish fears.” It can be
inferred that this was a clear case of a) suppression
b) oppression
c) depression d) repression |
iii |
The misadventure that took place
right after the author felt comfortable was that a) the
author slipped and fell into
the
swimming pool. b)
a
bully tossed
him into the pool for the sake of fun. c) his coach
forgot to
teach
him how to
handle deep
water. d) his father couldn’t help him from drowning
into the water. |
iv |
Choose the
option that describes the equipment used
by the author while learning
to swim. |
|
a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
B |
Then all effort ceased. I relaxed. Even
my legs felt limp; and a
blackness swept over my brain. It wiped out fear; it wiped out terror. There was no
more panic. It was quiet and
peaceful. Nothing to
be afraid of. This is nice... to
be drowsy... to
go to sleep... no need to
jump... too
tired to jump... it’s nice
to be carried
gently... to float along in space... tender arms around
me... tender
arms like Mother’s... now I must go to
sleep... I crossed to oblivion, and
the
curtain of life fell. |
i |
Choose the
correct option
with reference to
the two statements given
below. Statement 1: The
author tried his best to jump
out of water.
Statement 2: After a while, the author was not anxious in water. a) If Statement 1 is the
cause, Statement 2
is the effect.
b) If Statement 1
is the effect, Statement 2 is the
cause. c) Both the statements are the effects of a common cause. d) Both
the statements are the effects of independent causes. |
ii |
The ‘curtain (of life) fell’ corresponds to
an aspect of a) Geometry.
b) History. c) Sports. d)
Drama. |
iii |
The purpose of using “…” in the above passage
is to a)show
omission. b)indicate pauses. c) shorten a dialogue. d)replace an
idea. |
iv |
Which option indicates that the
poet lost consciousness? a) ‘It was quiet and peaceful.’ b) ‘I crossed
to oblivion.’ c) ‘Tender arms like Mother’s.’ d) ‘It wiped
out fear.’ |
Q5 |
Stand Alone MCQs |
i |
The most appropriate justification for the
title
of the chapter ‘Deep
Water’
is that a) it's about the
dangerous depth of the swimming pool. b) It reveals
the author’s lack of surety about overcoming his fear of |
|
swimming. c) it underlines the author’s fear of water and how
he overcomes it. d) it includes the
methods of the author’s coach
to overcome
the fear of deep
water. |
ii |
Choose the
quote
that DOES NOT resonate with the central
idea
of the chapter. a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
iii |
Samuel has a
phobia
of heights but is scared and can’t overcome
it. Choose the option that displays an
advice. 1 2 3 4 Go to the If I were you, I’d Unbelievable! Fear is a
major swimming pool
begin small. Like
What’s the issue if you let it and
jump in it
spending 10 problem? I’ve control
you. I from the highest mins. looking done bungee think it will take diving
board that
down
from my
jumping! It’s a
a firm grip
on you see there. balcony, each piece
of cake. you
if you don’t day, for a week. address it soon. a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
iv |
The chap that threw me in
was saying, “But I was only
fooling.” Choose the option
mentioning the personality traits of this ‘chap’. 1. persuasive 2. irresponsible 3. domineering 4. manipulative 5. callous |
|
a) 1,
2, 4 b) 2,
4, 5 c) 2, 3, 5 d) 1, 3, 5 |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
Seemingly small
everyday wins are
actually the
greatest learnings of life. Comment on the statement with reference
to the chapter “Deep Water”. |
ii |
If you
could give the chapter a new title, what would it be? Support your answer with
reference
to
the chapter “Deep
Water”. |
iii |
Getting rid of fear is an extremely difficult task. Elucidate
with reference
to the chapter “Deep Water”. |
iv |
Discus the significance
of the references to
the
natural world in the
chapter “Deep Water”. |
v |
Describe
both the physical and emotional impacts that the
misadventure at
the
YMCA pool had
on the narrator. |
Q12 |
Answer in 120 - 150 words |
i |
Imagine
that the
bully who threw
Douglas into the pool, reads this chapter and
realizes his mistake. As the bully, write
a dairy entry penning
down your response
to Douglas’ perseverance and
your own
feelings of guilt and regret. |
ii |
Douglas’ mother writes to the YMCA authorities holding them accountable for the mishap as well as demanding that the
authorities employ a team of guards near the
pool
for supervision of the children. As the mother, write
a letter to the authorities with reference
to the case of your son. You may begin
like
this: Sir Subject: Negligence on Premises This is
with reference to the incident of near fatal
drowning of my
son, William on your premises. We were… |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3 A. i. (c) ii. (d) iii. (b) iv. (d) B. i. (a) ii. (d) iii. (b) iv. (b) Q5 i.(c) ii. (b) iii. (b) iv. (c) v. (c) |
L-4 The Rattrap
Text-Flamingo |
|
Q3 |
Multiple Choice Questions based on an extract |
A. |
“Since you have been so nice to me all day long, as if I was a
captain, I want to be nice to you, in return, as if I was a real captain — for I do not want you to
be embarrassed
at this Christmas season by a thief; but you
can give back the money to the
old man on
the roadside, who
has the money pouch
hanging on
the
window
frame
as a bait for poor wanderers. The rattrap is a Christmas present from a
rat who would
have
been
caught in this world’s rattrap if he had not been raised to captain, because in that way
he got power to clear himself. “Written
with friendship and high regard, Captain von Stahle.” |
i |
Which of the following CANNOT be attributed to the peddler, according to the
above extract? a) indebtedness
b) reform c) self-pity d) self-awareness |
ii |
Why did the peddler gift a
rattrap as a Christmas present? a) It was all the peddler had that he could give away, and represented his turn to
honesty. b) It symbolized his successful escape from entrapment as he returned the
stolen
money. c) It served as a reminder
for Edla to be wary of the dangerous temptations of the world. d) It was a practical and convenient present that the lady of the house could
effectively use. |
iii |
The word ‘frame’ has been used to
indicate a rigid
structure that surrounds
something
such as
a picture,
door, or
windowpane. There are other
meanings of ‘frame’ too. Choose the option that DOES NOT list the
meaning of ‘frame’. a) Option
(1) b) Option (2)
c) Option (3)
d) Option
(4) |
iv |
This communication includes 1) a promise |
|
2) regret 3) an
apology 4) shame a) only 4 b) only 1 c) 1
& 3 d) 2 & 4 |
|||
B. |
…it was a big and
confusing
forest which he
had
gotten into. He
tried, to
be sure, to
walk in a definite direction, but the
paths twisted
back and forth
so strangely! He walked and walked without coming to the end of the wood, and finally he realised that he had only been walking around in the same part of the forest. All at once he recalled
his thoughts about the world and
the rattrap. Now his own turn had come. He had let himself be fooled
by a bait and had
been caught. The whole forest, with
its trunks and
branches, its
thickets and
fallen
logs, closed
in upon him like an impenetrable prison from which
he could never escape. |
|||
i |
How would you
characterise the mood of the
above extract? a) mysterious, restful b) ominous, despairing c)
thoughtful, whimsical d) philosophical, anguished |
|||
ii |
By what bait had
the
peddler been fooled? a) He
had chosen to
take
the
‘safe’ forest route. b) He
had decided
to avoid the public highway. c) He had stolen
money from the
trusting
crofter. d) He didn’t realize
the
power of his rattrap analogy. |
|||
iii |
The consequence of ‘his own turn’ having come was that the peddler
had a) got irreversibly lost in the thick, warped forest. b) been
fooled
and imprisoned
in a hopeless prison.
c) been walking
around the
same
part of the forest. d) walked the whole
forest without finding the end. |
|||
iv |
The above
extract richly employs literary devices. Look at the
table below.
Choose the option that correctly matches the
instances/ examples in Column A with
the
literary devices in
Column B: |
|||
|
Column A |
Column B |
|
|
1. The forest
closed
in upon
the
peddler like an
impenetrable
prison. |
(i) Imagery |
|||
2. The big and confusing forest with its twisted paths, trunks,
branches, |
(ii) Allegory |
|
|
thickets and fallen logs. |
|
|
3. The lost peddler
was reminded of
the
world and the rattrap. |
(iii) Metaphor |
|||
4. It was a
big and confusing
forest which he had
gotten into. The peddler had
been fooled and was trapped in the forest. |
(iv) Simile |
|||
a) 1 - (i) ; 2 – (ii) ; 3 – (iii) ; 4 – (iv)
b) 1 – (iv) ; 2 –
(i) ; 3 – (ii) ; 4
– (iii) c) 1 – (iii) ; 2 –
(iv) ; 3 – (i) ; 4
– (ii) d) 1 – (ii) ; 2 – (iii) ; 3 – (iv) ; 4 – (i) |
||||
Q5. |
Stand-alone
MCQs |
|||
i |
Imagine that
the peddler from
‘The Rattrap’
turned his life around, and
decided to
write
of his experience. Which
of the following is likely to be the peddler’s book, from the
popular books shown below? a) Option
(i) b) Option (ii)
c) Option (iii)
d) Option (iv) |
|||
ii |
“Left to his own meditations”, one day the
peddler fell
into “a line
of thought,
which really
seemed to
him entertaining”. What does the
peddler’s
conception
of the world
as a rattrap, signify about him? a) The
peddler had a
lot of time on
his hands, with nothing
much to do. b) The
peddler was a
reflective
man whose wisdom did not depend on
his
status. c) The peddler was a lonely vagrant trying
to make sense of his fortunes.
d) The peddler was a rattrap seller, and his work deeply inspired him. |
|||
iii |
“Yes, that was a fine fellow
you let into the
house,” said her father. |
|
What light does the
given line throw
on the ironmaster as a
father? a) The
ironmaster was disapproving
of Edla’s decision
to let the
peddler stay. b) The
ironmaster blamed his daughter for harbouring a criminal at home. c) The ironmaster was being playful
with Edla, and
supported
her decisions.
d) The ironmaster loved
Edla but thought her to
be too naïve
and
idealistic. |
iv |
Though the reader
does not meet
Captain
von
Stahle in
person,
they encounter the
captain symbolically. How? a) The ironmaster misidentifies the peddler as his old friend, the Captain and
invites him home. b) The reader
realizes the peddler is actually Captain von Stahle when
he signs off the letter. c) Edla attends to the peddler as respectfully, caringly and kindly, as she
would have the Captain. d) The peddler accepts the error of his ways,
and displays the qualities expected of a Captain. |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
If the world is “nothing but a big rattrap” as the tramp stated in the story ‘The Rattrap’, who
might the rattrap
peddler be? Discuss. |
ii |
Despite his philosophical insights, the
vagabond
fails to
resist temptations.
What would
you attribute this to? Explain with reference to
any instance from the text. |
iii |
Do you
think the
story reinforces a stereotype
that women
are more trusting,
forgiving and less practical than
men?
Comment with reference
to Edla’s actions in
the
story. |
iv |
What might
be the significance
of setting the story’s
events during Christmas? Justify your opinion. |
Q12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
How would you compare the peddler’s actions in relation to the crofter and Edla? Would you
say kindness does not always
beget kindness, and that the conditions for receiving kindness
are important
for
it to
truly transform people? Elaborate. Provide
relevant textual details to support the analysis. |
ii |
Imagine that you overheard the following snippet of an interaction between
the
valet and
the
housekeeper at the ironmaster’s mansion at the end of the
story. Speaker 1 - Trust is a difficult choice, which
may or may not be rewarded. Speaker 2 – Yes, indeed. Ms. Willmansson really believed in that fellow, didn’t she? And he didn’t disappoint. She was so happy reading his letter, oh her tears of joys filled my heart with so much admiration for her. Such a kind, |
|
wonderful young lady. Speaker 1 – Absolutely. But I wonder, what if that vagabond had run away with the silver spoons? Would you
speak so glowingly of Ms. Willmansson
then?
Our master’s daughter was a bit too
gullible. Wouldn’t you say? Speaker 2 –
But she did what was right. That must count for something. It’s Christmas, and
she helped
that poor man. It didn’t matter what he did. Surely the choice of right and
wrong does not depend
on the outcome. Speaker 1 –
Wouldn’t it? I should jolly well
think so. How would
you respond
to the questions raised
in
this conversation in relation to
the
story? Write
your response
in the form of an entry in
your daily journal. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3 A i – c ; ii – a
; iii – d ; iv – c B i – b ; ii – c ; iii – a ; iv – b Q5 i – b ; ii – c ; iii – a ; iv – d |
L-5 Indigo
Text -Flamingo |
||||
Q3 |
Multiple Choice Questions based on an extract |
|||
A |
They thought he would demand repayment in full of the money which they
had illegally and deceitfully
extorted from the sharecroppers. He asked only 50 per cent. “There
he seemed adamant,” writes Reverend
J. Z. Hodge, a British
missionary in Champaran who
observed the entire episode at close
range. “Thinking probably that he would not give
way, the representative of
the planters offered to refund to the extent of 25 per cent,
and to his amazement Mr. Gandhi took him at his word, thus breaking the deadlock.” This settlement was adopted unanimously by the commission. |
|||
i |
Gandhi knew
that he
would not get an agreement on the
demand for 50% repayment. Choose the
option that offers the correct justification
for the
assumption made
above. a) He had anticipated
the
negotiating
tactics of the planter’s representative. b)
He had been informed
about the
depleting
funds of the planters. c) He
had taken
the
advice of the
Reverend
on board. d) He had evaluated the commission’s attitude
towards Indians. |
|||
ii |
Given
below are
four real-life
situations. Choose the option that perfectly
describes a deadlock. Situation 1 Situation 2 Situation 3 Situation 4 Tariq is unable
Sunita cannot get The bank Harpreet was to
manage the
a job
because employees
stuck between
front-end
and she
has no started deciding the backend
experience and protesting whether to go
forums at his
she
can’t have against their to
the
USA or company any experience
receding annual
the UK for
without any because
she has
salary and other higher studies. support. no job. incentives. a) Situation 1 b)
Situation 2 c) Situation 3 d)
Situation 4 |
|||
iii |
Based on the
given context, choose
the option that exemplifies a deceitful
extortion, out of the examples given below. |
|||
|
1. The artisans demonstrated for their rights, peacefully, on the streets. |
2. The head
of the artisan union pretended to
address all
the
problems faced
by them. |
|
|
3. The head of the artisan union
came with goons and
took all the assets of the poor artisans. |
4. The artisans in
Hafrgunj decided to
sell their wares directly
to the government outlets. |
|
a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
iv |
The deadlock broke
because a) Gandhi’s settlement offer was worth
considering. b) All
commission members agreed
to
adopt the representative’s offer. c)
Reverend J. Z. Hodge’s
intervention brought both parties together.
d) The sharecroppers refused
to be convinced by the
commission. |
B |
But Champaran did not begin as an act of defiance. It grew out of
an attempt
to
alleviate the distress of large numbers of poor peasants. This was the typical Gandhi pattern — his politics were intertwined with
the
practical, day- to-day problems of the millions. His was not a
loyalty to abstractions; it was a
loyalty to living, human beings. In everything Gandhi did, moreover, he tried to
mould a new free
Indian
who could stand
on his own feet and
thus make
India free. |
i |
Choose the
option listing the sentence that is the
most appropriate
example of an ‘act of defiance’, from the
following: She picked up the telephone
terrified of what was about to come. She
could hear nobody on the other side. Meanwhile, there was a thud
at the door loud
enough to scare her. Curious as she was, she wanted
to open it as soon as
possible. Her mother tried
to stop her several times, but she
went ahead,
nevertheless. a) She picked up
the telephone
terrified of what was about to come. b)
Meanwhile, there
was a thud
at the door loud enough to
scare her. c) Curious as she
was, she
wanted to open
it as soon
as possible. d) Her mother tried
to stop her several
times but she went ahead nevertheless. |
ii |
Choose the
correct option
with reference to the two statements given
below. Statement 1: His was not a loyalty to
abstractions; it was a loyalty to
living, human beings. Statement 2: Gandhi
was a humanitarian at heart. a)
Statement 1 is the
cause of Statement 2. b) Statement 2 is the effect of Statement 1. c) Statement 2 can
be inferred from Statement 1. d) Statement 1
and Statement 2 are
independent of each other. |
iii |
The given extract DOES NOT talk about |
|
a) details of the daily problems faced by human beings. b)
efforts to relieve suffering
of the common people. c) the reason for the occurrence of Champaran.
d) Gandhi’s principles in the field of politics. |
iv |
Which option showcases an
example of action (A)
-result (R), from the
passage? (1)
A=
defiance (2) A= free
Indians R= poor peasants R= free
India (3) A=
free India (4) A=
defiance R= defiance R= free
Indians a) Option 1 b) Option 2 c) Option 3 d) Option 4 |
Q 5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
i |
In the light of the following
statement, pick the option that lists characteristics
of Gandhi. “Gandhi never contented himself with large
political or economic solutions.
He saw the cultural
and
social backwardness
in the Champaran
villages and
wanted to do
something about it immediately.” 1. pragmatic 2. obedient 3. compassionate 4. philanthropic 5. patient 6. dramatic a) 1, 3, 6 b)
2, 4,
5 c) 1,
3, 4 d) 2, 5, 6 |
ii |
Complete the statement about the form of the chapter, ‘Indigo’. The chapter ‘Indigo’
is a Louis Fischer book. a) a preface
to b) the
blurb for c) the foreword
of d) an
excerpt from |
iii |
Gandhi’s protest in Champaran is most appropriately a great model of a) power. |
|
b) leadership. c) charity. d) sponsorship. |
Q 10 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
The peasants were themselves the
most crucial agents in the success of the Champaran Civil Disobedience. Expand. |
ii |
Gandhi makes it clear that money and finance are a secondary aspect of the struggle in
Champaran.
Comment on
aspect that you
think
was
most important for Gandhi. |
iii |
Gandhi was a lawyer himself. Examine how his professional expertise helped
in Champaran. |
iv |
Explain the possible
reasons for Gandhi’s quick
popularity among
the
peasants of Champaran. |
Q 12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
I |
Imagine
Gandhi were
to deliver a
speech to students in present day India showing them the path to becoming responsible world leaders.
Based on
your understanding
of Gandhi’s own leadership
skills, write a speech, as Gandhi,
addressing the students about the qualities that every leader and politician
should
nurture. Dear students, you are all
leaders of social
change. I see many
bright and enthusiastic faces
that assure me
that our future is
in good hands. I have learnt from my own experience……………(continue)…………. |
ii |
Let us assume it was Rajendra Prasad who
informed Charles Freer Andrews
of Gandhi’s decision and
the
reasons for other leaders’ support of him. Thinking creatively of how Andrews would have responded and pen down the discussion you
think would have
taken place
between
Rajendra Prasad
and
Andrews. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3 A. i. (a) ii. (b) iii. (c) iv. (b)
B. i. (d) ii. (c) iii. (a) iv. (b) Q5 i. (c) ii. (a) iii. (d) iv. (c) v. (b) |
Q3 |
Multiple Choice Questions
based on an extract. |
A |
His success in films
overshadowed and dwarfed his literary achievements-or so
his critics felt. He composed several truly original ‘story poems’ in folk
refrain and diction and also wrote a sprawling novel Thillana Mohanambal with dozens of very deftly etched characters. He
quite successfully recreated the mood
and
manner of the Devadasis of the early 20th
century. He
was an amazing
actor-he
never aspired to
the
lead roles-but whatever subsidiary role he
played
in any of the films, he performed
better than
the
supposed main players. He had a
genuine love
for anyone he
came across and his house
was a permanent
residence
for dozens
of near and far
relations and
acquaintances. |
i |
Which of these
statements is NOT TRUE about Subbu? a) His literary accomplishments stole the limelight from his films. b) He
was a gifted
poet and writer and
his literary works
were noteworthy. c)
He was selfless in
nature
and
was empathetic towards others. d) He never hankered
after lead roles and performed minor roles in
films. |
ii |
The word
‘sprawling’ has been used
with the word ‘novel’. Pick the option with which
the
word
‘sprawling’
CANNOT be used. a) metropolis
b) handwriting
c) campus d) portrait |
iii |
The phrase
‘deftly etched’
shows that Subbu a) created the roles delicately. b) was skilful in
creating the characters. c) pondered beyond
necessity about the characters. d)
gave very little
thought to the characters. |
iv |
Pick the option
that best describes Subbu
according to the extract. 1. benevolent 2. powerful 3. accomplished 4. witty 5. generous 6. temperamental a) 4, 5 &
6 b) 2, 3 &
4 c) 1,3 & 5 d) 3 ,4
& 6 |
B |
Barring the office
boys and a couple of clerks, everybody else
at the Studios radiated leisure, a pre-requisite for poetry. Most of them wore khadi and
worshipped Gandhiji but beyond that they had not the faintest appreciation for political thought of
any kind. Naturally,
they
were
all
averse to
the
term ‘Communism’. A communist was a godless man-he had
no filial or conjugal
love; he had no compunction about killing his own
parents or his children; he was always out to
cause and spread
unrest and violence among
innocent and ignorant people. Such
notions, which prevailed
everywhere
else in South
India at that time also, naturally, floated about vaguely among the khadi-clad poets
of Gemini
Studios. Evidence
of it was soon
forthcoming. |
i |
Pick the option
that uses the same
figure
of speech as ‘A communist is a
godless man.’ a) She is as determined as Gandhi when it is a fight against
injustice. b) She is a Gandhi when she
raises her voice against ‘hinsa’
or violence.
c) She, like
Gandhi, feels
that the earth
is
crying for deliverance. d) She
lives a life of opulence and calls herself a follower of Gandhi. |
ii |
Based on
the
extract, choose the correct option with
reference to
the
two
statements given below. Statement 1: At Gemini
Studios, the poets had
a profound knowledge
about Communists. Statement 2: Communists were
responsible
for anarchy and
discontent in the country. a) Statement 1 is true
but Statement 2 is false.
b) Statement 1
is false but Statement 2 is true. c) Both Statement 1 and
Statement 2 cannot be inferred.
d) Both Statement 1
and Statement 2 can
be inferred. |
iii |
Why do you
think leisure is a pre-requisite
for poetry? a) Poetry means
freedom of expression. b) One
can enjoy poetry when
there’s free time. c)
In order to
write poetry, one
needs free
time. d) Poetry means
freedom from work. |
iv |
Asokamitran
says that leisure is a pre-requisite
for poetry. He says this
because poets a) need to
relax for a
period of time before
composing lines.
b) maintain
a leisured
pace in all tasks they do. c) are
creative and need
to
have free time
to
weave their thoughts. d) begin
poetic compositions in rushed
way and
end
in a relaxed
manner. |
Q 5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
i |
‘In any case, there was this man in the make-up
department who
would wish the direst things for Subbu’. Here
‘direst things’
refers to something that is |
|
a) urgent. b) desperate.
c) disastrous. d)
dreadful. |
ii |
Pick the quote
which
best describes Subbu’s role in
Gemini
Studios based
on the story. 1. Life’s too short to hang
out with people who
aren’t resourceful. 2. The
more a person limits himself, the
more resourceful
he becomes. 3. Success is not about your resources. It’s about how
resourceful you
are with what you
have. 4. Resourcefulness: Seeing where
you want to
go and taking the first step. a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
iii |
‘An extremely talented actress, who
was also
extremely temperamental, once
blew
over
on the sets’. Pick the idiom
that matches best with
‘blew
over’. a) At one’s
wits end b) Get bent out of shape c)
Have the
blues d) Experience pins and
needles |
iv |
‘Often he looked alone
and
helpless- a
man of cold logic in a crowd
of dreamers…’. It can
be inferred that the
man a) rationalised
every thought before it was spoken. b) failed
to consider human
emotions and
social dynamics. c) was critical
of what others did around him. d) egoistic and always
thought others lacked reason. |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
What kind of effect does Asokamitran’s style
of writing
have on the reader? |
ii |
Discuss the
significance
of the make-up room in
the chapter, ‘Poets and Pancakes’. |
iii |
‘In all instances of frustration, you will always find the anger directed towards a single person
openly or covertly…’ Do you think it
is right to
direct our anger
towards
someone
who is
not responsible
for the
cause of anger?
Justify. |
iv. |
The people left in ‘utter bafflement’ after the
English poet’s speech. |
|
Mention two things the speaker could have kept in mind before addressing an
audience to
avoid such
a reaction. Give your rationale for it. |
Q12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
Imagine Asokamitran witnesses a film shooting and visits a film set of present-
day Bollywood. As Asokamitran write a diary entry penning
down
the
transformation you notice between film making of yesteryears and
today. |
ii |
After
reading
this story, you are impressed
by the author’s use of
gentle
humour to point out human foibles. Evaluate whether using
such humour contributes towards bringing about change in people’s attitude and accepting their
foibles. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3. A. i. (a) ii. (d) iii. (b) iv. (c)
B. i.(b) ii. (d) iii. (c) iv. (c) Q5. i.(d) ii. (c) iii. (b) iv. (b) |
L-7 The Interview
Text-Flamingo |
|
Q3 |
Multiple Choice Questions based on an extract |
A. |
Maybe I give the impression of doing many things. But in
the end, I am convinced I am always doing the same thing…
And then I have
a secret. Did you
know what will happen
if
you eliminate
the
empty spaces from the universe, eliminate the empty spaces in all the
atoms? The universe will become as big as my fist. Similarly, we have a lot of empty spaces in our lives. I call them interstices. Say you are coming over to my place. You are in
an elevator and
while you
are coming up, I am waiting
for you. This is an interstice, an
empty space. I work in
empty spaces. |
I |
Read the questions given
below. Imagine
they were
interjections raised
by the interviewer based
on the above extract. Choose
the
option that correctly
describes the
given questions. (i) If you are
“always
doing the
same thing”,
isn’t
your work
lacking in
originality? (ii) Could you elaborate on these larger ethical, philosophical interests that
inform your work? (iii) All writing happens in empty spaces. In fact, why don’t I tell you all about my experiences? a) (i) is not relevant; (ii) is appropriate; and
(iii) is unnecessary b) (i) is appropriate; (ii) is repetitive; and (iii) is useful
information
c) (i) is inappropriate; (ii) is relevant; and (iii) is not relevant d) (i) is unnecessary; (ii) is intrusive; and
(iii) is extrapolatory |
Ii |
Based on your reading of Part I of ‘The Interview’, which one of the following may NOT be an
appropriate title to
the above
extract? a) The Empty Spaces of Umberto Eco b) Big
Exposé: Eco’s Secret Revealed! c) “I am always
doing the same
thing”: Eco’s Echoes d) Umberto
Eco, Mr. Prolific! |
Iii |
“I work in empty spaces”. Choose the option that most accurately captures Eco’s idea of empty spaces. (i) management of time (ii) organization
of space (iii) philosophical inclination (iv) command
of thought a) Options (i) and (ii) b) Options (iii) and (iv)
c) Options (i) and (iii)
d) Options (ii) and
(iv) |
Iv |
Umberto Eco states that ‘empty spaces’ actually fill spaces, and without
them the
universe
would be the size of the
human fist. He also goes on to
say that it is in an interstice such as waiting, which the dictionary defines as
a time for pause, that he
works. That is, passive waiting
is essentially active
writing time. Choose the literary device that best describes
what Eco does |
|
with the
concepts of ‘empty spaces’ and ‘waiting’. a) juxtaposition b) irony c) oxymoron d) symbolism |
B. |
Saul Bellow, who has consented
to
be interviewed on several occasions, nevertheless once described interviews as being like
thumbprints on his windpipe. Yet despite the
drawbacks of the interview, it is a supremely
serviceable
medium of communication. “These days, more
than at any other
time, our most vivid impressions of our contemporaries are
through interviews,” Denis Brian has written. “Almost everything of moment reaches
us through one
man
asking questions of another. Because
of this, the
interviewer holds a
position
of unprecedented
power and
influence.” |
I |
How would you describe Denis Brian’s opinion on interviews? Choose the most appropriate
option. (i) appeasing (ii) utilitarian (iii) approving (iv) praising a) Options (i) and (ii) b) Options (iii) and
(iv) c) Options (ii) and (iii) d) Options (i) and
(iv) |
Ii |
According to Saul Bellow, interviews
are like thumbprints on his windpipe.
What emotion might best describe
such an image? a) sadness b) frustration
c) pain d) fear |
Iii |
Denis Brian states that the interviewer occupies a position of power and
influence as _ a) everything
reaches us through
one man
asking questions of another. b) the
interview is a supremely serviceable medium of communication. c) our most vivid
impressions of our contemporaries are through
interviews. d) interviews are like
thumbprints on
the
interviewee’s windpipe. |
iv |
The use
of the word
“serviceable” implies that interviews are
_ a) significant. b) powerful. c) advanced.
d) useful. |
Q 5. |
Stand-alone
MCQs |
i |
According to Christopher Silvester, the interview can be “in its highest form, a source of truth”. Choose the option that does NOT enable
this? a) An interview allows for discovery of new knowledge about the interviewee
and/ or the subject being
discussed. b) An interview enables the interviewer to probe deeply, seek clarifications,
and confirm understandings. c) An interview represents an opportunity to open doors to experiences that may not otherwise find a voice. d) An interview requires the interviewer to have in-depth prior knowledge of
the
interviewee
and the subject. |
ii |
Column A below describes Rudyard Kipling’s views on interviews. Column B provides fictional descriptions of some of Kipling’s
works if they were about interviews and interviewers.
Choose the option
that correctly matches
interview
attributes given in
Column A to the works in
Column B: Column A Column
B 1. immoral (i) ‘The Mark of the Beast’ – An illicit tale of
unforgivable
offences against
man
and society. 2. cowardly (ii) ‘The
Jungle
Book’
–
A
journey
into
the
corrupt jungle
of information where
conscience
and principles do not exist. 3. vile (iii)
‘The Light
that
Failed’ –
A story
of audacious truth
being left in the dark alleys of
craven scandal and
misrepresentation. 4. criminal (iv) ‘The Man Who Would be King’ – A saga of evil depravity of a man
who ruled over heroes
and became a villain. a) 1 –
(i); 2 – (ii); 3 –
(iii); 4 – (iv) b) 1 – (ii); 2 – (iii); 3 – (iv); 4 – (i)
c) 1 – (iii); 2 – (iv); 3 –
(i); 4 – (ii) d) 1 – (iv); 2 – (i); 3 –
(ii); 4 – (iii) |
iii |
Mukund Padmanabhan
mentions that much
like his novels, Umberto
Eco’s
“scholarly work has a certain playful and personal quality about it.” To what
is this attributed? a) Eco thought regular academic style was depersonalised, dry and boring.
b) Eco presented
his first Doctoral
dissertation
in Italy in
this style. c) Eco realized
that scholarly books should
tell
the
story of the research. d) Eco identified himself with the academic and
scholarly community. |
|
|
iv |
Umberto Eco
mentioned
that he
was not puzzled by the
tremendous mass
popularity of his novel, The
Name of the
Rose. What does this tell
you about
Umberto Eco? a) He believes he understands readership
trends well, and writes
accordingly to ensure mass appeal. b) He
elevates himself above publishers and
journalists who were surprised
by the success of the book. c) He respects and understands that there are variations in people’s reading choices and experiences. d) He
feels that the
success of a
book is a
mystery, and there was no
point pondering over it. |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
Why do you think Christopher Silvester describes the
viewpoints of other writers and
authors when discussing the concept of an
interview? Support
your opinion
with reference
to
any one writer cited. |
ii |
How would you evaluate
Mukund Padmanabhan as an
interviewer?
Mention
at least two qualities he displays in
his interview, supported
by textual
evidence. |
iii |
Christopher
Silvester shares authors’ reservations about interviewing. Bearing
that in
mind, would
you interview
a writer of your choice?
If
so, what would
you pay particular attention
to in interviewing
the
said writer? |
Q12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
Imagine
that you are Christopher Silvester. You
have
been invited
to a seminar series titled –
‘Ethics and Techniques of Interviewing’. The organisers would
like you to speak about the
challenges of conducting interviews, and skills interviewers must have
in order to conduct good and ethical interviews. Based on your reading of The Interview, Part I and
II, draft your speech. Include
relevant details from the
text in
support of your answer. |
ii |
Mukund Padmanabhan
was gifted the ‘Penguin
Book of Interviews - An
Anthology from 1859 to
the
Present Day’ edited by Christopher Silvester, after interviewing Eco. He shared his thoughts on his personal blog exploring his own
concerns about interviewing a distinguished writer like Eco, followed by an evaluation
of the interview
in light of his reading. As Mukund Padmanabhan, write the blog post. |
iii |
Part I of ‘The Interview’ is an excerpt from the Penguin Book of Interviews. Do
you think that the extract fails to present a balanced perspective about
interviews? Substantiate your answer with
relevant textual
details. |
|
If this were the entire introduction, what would your expectation from the book be? |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3 A. i – c ; ii – b ; iii –
c ; iv – b B. i – c ; ii – c ; iii – a ; iv –
d Q5 i – d ; ii –
b ; iii – c ; iv –
c |
L-8 Going Places
Text-Flamingo |
|
Q3 |
Multiple Choice
Questions
based on an extract |
A |
“She thinks money
grows
on
trees, don’t she,
Dad?’ said little
Derek, hanging on the back of his father’s chair. Their mother sighed.
Sophie watched her back stooped over the sink and
wondered at the incongruity of
the delicate bow which fastened her apron strings. The delicate-seeming bow
and the
crooked back. The
evening had already
blacked in the windows and the small room was steamy from the
stove
and
cluttered
with the heavy-breathing
man in his vest at the table and
the
dirty washing piled
up in the corner. Sophie
felt a tightening in
her throat. She went to
look for her brother Geoff. |
i |
Choose the correct option
about Sophie’s parents based
on the extract given above. a) Sophie’s parents’
marriage was an example
of harmony and affection. b) Sophie’s relationship with her parents was warm and friendly. c) Sophie’s mother was subdued while
her father was detached.
d) Sophie and
her brother didn’t like to
stay with their parents. |
ii |
Choose the
option that supports the
contention coming
through Derek’s dialogue, “She
thinks money grows on trees, don’t she, Dad?”. a) Derek thought his sister to
be unreasonable at times. b) Derek had no faith
in Sophie’s abilities to open
a boutique. c) Derek thought of his sister as someone
who was not realistic. d) Derek was not at all happy about Sophie’s
habit of day dreaming. |
iii |
It could be
inferred
that Sophie’s mother was fatigued
and
burdened.
Choose the option listing the elements that form the basis of this inference. a) her sigh b) her delicate bow c) her apron’s strings d) her crooked back a) 1,
2 b) 3, 4 c) 2,
3 d) 1, 4 |
iv |
“Sophie
felt a tightening in
her throat.” Pick the option that lists Sophie’s feelings in this context. 1) anxious 2) annoyed 3) uneasy 4) terrified |
|
a) Options 1
& 3 b) Options 2
& 3 c) Options 1 &
4 d) Options 2 & 4 |
|||||
B |
On Saturday they made their weekly pilgrimage to watch United. Sophie
and her father and little
Derek went
down near the goal —
Geoff, as
always, went with his mates higher up. United won two-nil and Casey drove in
the
second goal, a blend of innocence and Irish genius, going round the
two big defenders
on
the edge of the
penalty area,
with her
father screaming
for him to pass, and beating the hesitant goalkeeper from a
dozen yards. Sophie
glowed
with pride. Afterwards Geoff was ecstatic. |
|||||
i |
Their visit to
the
match was like a ‘weekly pilgrimage’ refers to a) strong bond
as a family.
b) love for a
fixed routine. c) similar
feelings of devotion.
d) excitement for the match. |
|||||
ii |
Based on the
following statements, choose the correct option. Assertion: “Geoff, as always, went with his mates higher up.” Reason 1: Geoff was not very close to his family and
lived in
his own world.
Reason 2: Geoff was rude
and
indifferent towards everyone
around him and didn’t care
about anyone at all. a) Reason
1 and Reason
2 both can be
inferred from the assertion. b) Reason 1 can
be inferred but Reason 2
cannot be
inferred from the assertion. c) Reason 1 cannot be
inferred
but Reason
2 can be inferred.
d) Reason 1 and
Reason 2 both cannot be
inferred. |
|||||
iii |
‘Sophie glowed
with pride.’ Her pride is the
result of a) belonging to
a region where everyone thought of Danny as a hero. b) watching her father cheer and support Danny. c) The
information
she gathered
from her brother, about Danny. d) being an
avid fan and her sense
of closeness with Danny. |
|||||
iv |
Choose the
option listing
the
situation in which one would be
‘ecstatic’. |
|||||
|
Scenario 1 |
Scenario 2 |
Scenario 3 |
Scenario 4 |
|
|
Going to an
old age home and listening
to them share stories
from the
past. |
Being
seated next to your
favourite pop singer during a short flight. |
Going to a dog show
and
losing your pet there. |
Coming home and finding
that
there
are 11 messages
from your Principal in
your email
inbox. |
(2) (1) (2) (3)
|
a) Scenario 1 b)
Scenario
2 c) Scenario 3 d)
Scenario
4 |
Q 5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
i |
Choose the
option listing the possible titular justifications for the
chapter ‘Going Places’. 1. It includes
the system of going to
watch the
football game
on a regular basis. 2. It expresses Sophie’s deepest desire
to go out with Danny Casey. 3. It is about a girl
named Sophie who
is an idealist and often
dreams of
going to various places. 4. It is an idiomatic expression that refers to Sophie
going ahead
in her career, trying
to beat poverty. a) 1,
2 b) 2, 3 c) 3,
4 d) 1, 4 |
ii |
Choose the
option that marks
the differences between the personalities of Sophie and Jansie, even though both
of
them belong to
impoverished families. Sophie Jansie Sophie Jansie a) realist c) fantasized
about a) idealist c) realist becoming an b) fantasized actress b) dreamt d) practical about
about having a d)
imaginative owning a
house
boutique (1)
(2) Sophie Jansie Sophie Jansie a) fantasized c) impractical a) irrational c)
dreamt about
about owning a
becoming an d) irrational b) unreasonable boutique actress
d) gossip-monger b) rational (3)
(4) |
|
a) Option (1)
b) Option
(2) c) Option
(3) d) Option (4) |
iii |
“He said little at all, ever, voluntarily. Words had to
be prized
out of him like stones out of the
ground.” Choose the option that states the
characteristics of the
person being
talked about in the above lines. 1) rigid 2) stubborn 3) distant 4) invincible 5) reserved a) 1,
4 b) 2, 5 c) 2,
3 d) 3, 5 |
iv |
“Jansie, knowing they were
both earmarked
for the
biscuit factory, became melancholy.” Choose the
option that DOES NOT make
the correct usage of the word ‘earmarked’. a) The money in
the
locker had
been earmarked
for another purpose. b)
The
investments made
in the share
market were earmarked
for two years. c) Lakshay and
Samrat were
earmarked for behaving
notoriously in
the
classroom. d) My
family had been earmarked since we had
shifted
from our old home. |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
The story is written in a manner that it makes it difficult to
point out clearly if Sophie met Danny Casey or not. Suggest possible
reasons for such writing. |
ii |
“Sophie felt a tightening in
her throat. She went to
look for her brother
Geoff.” In the
light of this quote, discuss the
relationship Sophie
shared with
Geoff. |
iii |
Sophie is caught between
the
world she lives in and the
world she wants to live in. Elucidate. |
iv |
Evaluate the two different perspectives to
life that Jansie and Sophie
represent. |
v |
According
to you, should Sophie have continued to
dream, or should she |
|
have stuck to
the
path that had
already been chosen for her?
Justify your choice
in detail. |
Q12 |
Answer in 120-150
words |
i |
Imagine
Sophie’s father finds out about Sophie’s going to
the
canal
to meet Danny Casey which leads him to think that she
has lied to
everyone about the whole affair. He
is infuriated
and
prohibits Sophie from going anywhere
except to school. As Geoff, write
a diary entry disapproving of your father’s punishment by
citing your reasons for being
sympathetic to
Sophie. You may begin this way: Monday, 2 September 1940
9 PM I cannot get myself to stand with father in his tirade against Sophie. Sure, she is not the most… |
ii |
Imagine Sophie meets Danny Casey after several
years. Write a dialogue exchange
between them where
Sophie
explains what that
meeting means to
her. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3 A. i. (c) ii. (c) iii. (d) iv. (a) B.
i. (c) ii. (b) iii. (d) iv. (b) Q5 i. (c) ii. (b) iii. (d) iv. (a) |
P-1 My Mother
at Sixty-six
Text-Flamingo |
|
Q4 |
Multiple
Choice Questions based on an extract |
A |
Driving
from my parent’s
home to Cochin
last Friday morning, I saw
my mother, beside
me, doze, open
mouthed, her face ashen like that of a corpse
and
realized with
pain that she was as old
as she looked but soon put that thought away… |
i |
Choose the
option that best applies to the given extract. 1) a
conversation 2) an argument 3) a piece of advice 4) a
strategy 5) a
recollection 6) a
suggestion a) 1, 3
& 6 b) 2, 4 &
5 c) Only 5
d) Only 1 |
ii |
Choose the
book title that perfectly describes the condition
of the poet’s mother. Title 1 Title 2 Title 3 Title 4 You’re Only The Gift of Somewhere The Book You
Wish Old Once! Years Towards the End Your Parents Had by Dr. Seuss by
Joan by Diana Athill Read Chittister
by Philippa Perry a) Title 1 b)
Title
2 c) Title 3 d)
Title
4 |
iii |
Choose the option that applies correctly to
the
two statements given
below.
Assertion: The poet wards off the thought of her mother getting
old quickly. Reason: The poet didn’t want to
confront the inevitability of fate that was to
dawn upon her mother. a) Assertion
can be inferred
but the Reason cannot be
inferred.
b) Assertion cannot be inferred
but the Reason can be
inferred. c) Both Assertion
and
Reason
can be inferred. d) Both Assertion
and
Reason
cannot be inferred. |
iv |
Choose the
option that displays
the same literary device as in
the
given lines of the extract. her face ashen like that of a corpse… a) Just as I had
I had
this thought, she appeared
and… b) My thoughts were
as heavy as lead
that evening when
… c) I think like
everyone
else
who… d) I like
to think aloud
when … |
B |
And looked out at Young Trees sprinting, the
merry children
spilling
out of their homes, but after the airport’s
security check, standing
a few yards away, I looked again
at her, wan, pale as a late winter’s moon and
felt that old familiar ache… |
i |
What is the
most likely reason the poet capitalised ‘Young Trees’? This was to a) convey a clearer meaning. b) highlight the adj.-noun
combination.
c) enhance
the contrast. d) draw
a connection with the
title. |
ii |
Choose the option that appropriately describes the
relationship between
the
two
statements given below. Statement 1: The poet knows her mother has aged. Statement 2: The poet feels the
pain of separation. a)
Beginning –
Ending b) Cause
– Effect c) Question – Answer |
|
d) Introduction –
Conclusion |
iii |
Choose the
option that completes the sentence given below. Just as the brightness of the winter’s moon is veiled behind the haze and mist, similarly, . a) the
pain of separation
has shaded mother’s expression. b) age has fogged
mother’s youthful
appearance. c) growing up
has developed a
seasoned maturity in
the
poet.
d) memories warm the
heart like the pale moon in
winter. |
iv |
Choose the
correct option
out of the ones given below. a) Option 1 b)
Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
Q 5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
I |
The phrase
‘old familiar ache’
has been
used
to refer to
a fear, in this extract.
This phrase can also
be used to a) compare
physical pain
with mental agony. b)
elicit someone’s unanswered queries. c) substantiate
reasons for aches and pains.
d) describe a longing one has been
aware of. |
Ii |
The tone of the poet in
the
poem is primarily a combination
of and _ _. 1. dauntlessness 2. apprehension 3. dejection 4. disappointment a) 1,
2 b) 2, 3 c) 3,
4 d) 1, 4 |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
I |
The pain of separation is expressed
both literally and metaphorically in
this poem. Elucidate. |
Ii |
Comment on the tone of the poem with references to
“My Mother at Sixty- Six”. |
iii |
Imagery
was an effective literary device
to bring out the contrast between
the “merry children” and mother. Comment. |
Iv |
The poet does not directly mention the fear of her mother’s death and
yet she
is successfully able to
convey the same
through
different poetic techniques. Discuss. |
Q12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
I |
Imagine
the
mother gets to know of the poet persona’s fears. Write
a letter, as the mother, telling the daughter why she must not dwell on
these
fears. You may begin this way: Pallipuram Cochin, Kerala 22 August ‘60 My dear Kamala I am writing to you because when you left me at the airport, I felt
something wasn’t right.
Judging by how little you spoke that day
………………………. ………………………………………(continue)………………………………… With love Amma |
Ii |
Imagine you
are the poet’s friend. Write a dialogue exchange between yourself and the poet where
the
latter confides in you
about her fears and
asks for your advice. What would
your advice be
–to
face her fears, to ignore
them or something
else? |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q4 A. i. (c) ii. (c) iii. (c) iv. (b)
B. i. (c) ii. (b) iii. (b) iv. (d) Q5 i. (d) ii. (b) |
P2-An Elementary School Classroom
in
a Slum Text-Flamingo |
|
Q4 |
Multiple Choice
Questions based on an extract. |
A |
Far far from gusty waves these children’s faces. Like rootless weeds, the hair torn
around their pallor:
The tall
girl with her weighed-down head. The paper- seeming
boy, with rat’s eyes. The stunted, unlucky
heir of twisted bones, reciting a father’s gnarled
disease, his lesson, from the
desk. At back of the dim class
one unnoted, sweet and
young. |
i |
The phrase ‘weighed-down
head’
DOES NOT refer to
being a) burdened by poverty.
b) ashamed at her plight. c) distressed due
to
difficulties. d)
dizzy
with a headache. |
ii |
Pick the
option that matches the words / phrases with the literary device. Word/ phrase Literary
device 1. like rootless weeds A.
metaphor 2. paper-seeming boy B.
pun 3. reciting C. synecdoche D. simile a) 1-A, 2-D, 3-C b) 1-D, 2-B,
3-A c) 1-D, 2-A,
3-B d) 1-B, 2-A, 3-C |
iii |
Pick the option
that enumerates the tone
of the poet in this extract. 1. apprehensive 2. compassionate 3. resentful 4. thoughtful 5. disillusioned 6. woeful a) 2, 4
and 6 b) 1, 4 and
5 c) 3, 5 and
6 d) 1, 3 and 6 |
iv |
The ‘gusty waves’, most likely, indicate a) survival and struggle.
b) verve and brightness.
c) drudgery and
dullness. d) animation and alertness. |
B |
This map becomes their windows and
these
windows That shut upon their lives like catacombs, Break O break open till they break the town And show the children
to green fields, and
make their world Run azure on
gold
sands, and let their tongues Run naked into
books the white
and
green
leaves open History theirs whose
language is the
sun. |
i |
Pick the option
that is NOT TRUE according to this extract. a) The
children should be
allowed
to read books and
form their opinions. b)
Education without breaking the shackles of poverty, is meaningless. c) The policy makers show the reality of the real
world to the children. d) The
children see
the
world of poverty and
misery through the windows. |
ii |
Pick the
options that matches best with the phrase
‘break o break open’. 1. break free 2. break silence 3. break out 4. break even 5. break through 6. break ground a) 1, 3 and
5 b) 2, 3 and 6 c) 1, 4 and 6 d)
2, 3
and 5 |
iii |
Look at the given book covers. Pick the option that reflects the
meaning of ‘catacomb’ in
the
extract. a) Option 1 b) Option 2 c) Option 3 d) Option 4 |
iv |
On the basis of the
extract, pick
the opinion
that is closest to
that of the poet. The children
should be The children must be given
given
free time to play in freedom to experience the the fields to develop their wholesome bounties
of creativity.
nature. (1)
(2) The condition of the The children
can spread
children can improve if light and awareness if they they are shown
the become morally
beautiful world out of responsible. their window. (3)
(4) a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
Q5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
i |
Based on
the poem, choose
the
correct option
with reference
to the two
statements given below. Statement 1: The poet is in
anguish at the plight of the children in
slums and is
sympathetic towards them. Statement 2: The poet presents an
exaggerated version
of the struggles of the slum children, to garner sympathy. a) Statement 1 is true
but Statement 2 is false.
b) Statement 1
is false but Statement 2
is
true. c) Both
Statement 1
and Statement 2 are
true. d) Both
Statement 1
and Statement 2 cannot be
inferred. |
ii |
A child in
the slum experiencing the
dreary life would have the least access to a) shelter. b) information.
c) water. d) education. |
iii |
Pick the quote that highlights the
contrasting
image
portrayed in
the poem. |
|
a) ‘The worst form of inequality is to try and make
unequal
things equal.’ b) ‘An
imbalance between the rich
and
poor is the
oldest and most fatal ailment of all
republics.’ c) ‘We must work together to ensure
equitable distribution of wealth,
opportunity and
power in
our society.’ d) ‘No amount of artificial
reinforcement can offset the
natural inequalities of human individual.’ |
iv |
Pick phrases that portray ‘poverty and hopelessness’
in the poem. 1. slag heap 2. spectacles of steel 3. gusty waves 4. run azure on gold
sands 5. mended
glass 6. squirrel’s game 7. language is the
sun a) 2, 4
and 7 b) 1, 3 and
5 c) 3, 4 and
6 d) 1, 2 and 5 |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40 words |
i |
If you
were given the responsibility to ensure that children of the
slums have a life of mental and physical freedom, what would be the first few things
you would do towards the same? |
ii |
Voicing
one’s opinion against
injustice is
the
first step
in the
struggle
for equality. Comment with
reference
to the poem. |
iii |
Compare the change in the poet’s attitude from being angry and aggressive in
the
second stanza
to being cynical
in the third. |
Q12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
You have been asked to deliver a
speech in the assembly on
the
role of the youth in bridging the gap between the rich and the poor.
Write the speech draft. You may begin like this: Dear friends I stand before you today, to voice my thoughts on… |
ii |
You are a member of the ‘Interact Club’ of your school that conducts ‘Teach
the
Young’ programme in
the
slums in the neighbourhood. It is a programme to
teach
young children
living in the slums. Write a diary entry to share
your experience of teaching these
children and your interactions with them. Combine your ideas with those revealed in the |
|
poem. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q4 A. i. (d) ii. (c) iii. (a) iv. (b)
B. i.(c) ii. (b) iii. (c) iv. (b) Q5 i.(a) ii. (b) iii. (b) iv. (d) |
P-3 Keeping Quiet
Text-Flamingo |
||||
Q4 |
Multiple Choice Questions based on an extract |
|||
A. |
For once on the
face
of the Earth
let’s not speak in
any language, let’s stop for one second, and not move
our arms so much. It would
be an exotic moment without rush, without engines, we would all
be together
in a sudden strangeness. |
|||
i |
The poet uses the word “let’s” to __ a) initiate a conversation between the poet and
the
readers. b) invite
readers as part of the
poem’s larger call to humanity. c)
welcome readers into
the
world of the
poem and its subject. d) address readers as fellow
members of the
human race. |
|||
ii |
Margaret Atwood
said, “Language divides us into fragments, I wanted to
be whole.” Choose the option that correctly comments on the
relationship between Margaret Atwood’s words and the line
from the above extract – “let’s not
speak in any language” a) Atwood
endorses Neruda’s call to not speak in
any language. b) Atwood
justifies Neruda’s request to
not engage
in any speaking. c) Atwood
undermines
Neruda’s intent to stop and not speak
in
any language. d) Atwood surrenders
to Neruda’s desire
for silence and not speak in any language. |
|||
iii |
Why do you think the
poet employs words like “exotic” and “strangeness”? a) To highlight the importance of everyone being
together suddenly for once.
b) To emphasize
the
frenetic activity and
chaos that usually envelops human
life. c) To indicate the unfamiliarity of a sudden moment without rush or without
engine. d) To direct us towards keeping quiet and how we would all be together in
that silence. |
|||
iv |
Choose the option that correctly matches the idioms given in Column A with
their meanings in Column
B. |
|||
|
Column A |
Column B |
|
|
1. On the face of the earth |
(i) In existence |
|||
2. What on earth |
(ii) To do all possible to accomplish something |
|||
3. Move heaven and earth |
(iii) To express surprise or shock |
|||
4. The salt of the earth |
(iv) To be good
and
worthy |
|
a) 1 – (i); 2 – (iv); 3 –
(iii); 4 – (ii) b) 1 – (i); 2 – (iii); 3 –
(ii); 4 – (iv) c)
1 – (ii); 2 – (i); 3 – (iv); 4 – (iii)
d) 1 – (iv); 2
– (ii); 3 – (iii); 4
– (i) |
B. |
If we
were not so
single-minded about keeping our lives moving,
and for once
could do nothing,
perhaps a
huge silence might interrupt this sadness of never understanding ourselves and
of threatening
ourselves with death. |
i |
Look at the images given below. Choose
the image to which the above extract can
be seen as an appropriate response. a) Option (i)
b) Option
(ii) c) Option
(iii) d) Option (iv) |
ii |
What do
you think is the
mood
of the poet in the above
extract? a) gloomy, cynical b) reflective, inspired c) introspective, aware
d) critical, demotivated |
iii |
Pick the option that DOES NOT complete the given sentence
suitably, as per the
extract. Threatening
ourselves with
death
_ _ a) feeds on
the
fear of death. b) challenges finiteness of life. c) keeps us rushing through
life. d) makes us restless and
impatient. |
iv |
What might the “huge silence” signify? |
|
a) melancholy b) understanding
c) discomfort d) flexibility |
Q5 |
Stand-alone
MCQs |
I |
Read the statements given below carefully. Choose the option that best
describes these statements, with reference
to the poem. Statement I – The poem ‘Keeping Quiet’ calls for change as much in the
individual
as human society at large. Statement II – The poem ‘Keeping Quiet’ implies that individual change will lead
to bigger societal change. Statement
III – Neruda believes
that when
people
come
together
as a community, they will
be able to bring
a transformation
in each person. a) Statement I is True, Statement II is False, and Statement III cannot be
inferred. b) Statement I and
II
cannot be
inferred, Statement III is True.
c) Statement I is True, Statements II and
III cannot be inferred. d) Statement I cannot
be inferred, Statement
II cannot
be inferred, Statement III is False. |
ii |
“What I want should
not be
confused with total inactivity.” Choose the option that draws the
most accurate
parallel.
keeping quiet: total inactivity = : a) reflection and death b) silence and chaos c) stagnation and
introspection
d) mindfulness and fear |
iii |
What statement does Neruda make about wars? a) Wars are of varied kinds – internal, green wars,
wars with gas, with fire etc. b) Wars are wasteful and cause irrecoverable loss and damage to property and life. c) Wars never yield any winners, and the loss is far greater than what can be
measured. d) Wars are unavoidable in the enduring struggle for human dignity and
power. |
iv |
“Now I’ll count up to twelve and you keep quiet and I will go.” Why does the poet wish
to go at the end
of the poem? a) The
poet does not believe people
will
be quiet. b) The
poet has already invested enough
time. |
|
c) The poet will
move on and
seek to inspire others. d) The
poet is marking
the
end of the poem by leaving. |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40 words |
i |
In a world that is constantly running after ‘more’ chasing the next new thing, would it be
fair to think of Neruda’s call as merely a
fanciful
idea? |
ii |
The world has become a global village, and people across boundaries,
nationalities and communities are now connected
to one another. With the
advancement of technology, and the advent of social
media, do you
think that the task of keeping
quiet, as envisaged by Neruda, has become easier or more
complicated?
Justify your stance. |
Q12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
It could
be said that the poem
‘Keeping
Quiet’ presents
the
poet’s philosophy for a
different kind of world. If you were
asked to highlight elements of Neruda’s vision
that resonate in your specific social, political and cultural context, which
three main
ideas would you
engage
with? Use relevant textual
details to support your analysis. |
ii |
The last two years of school tend
to be about planning
for life after school.
This
can be motivating,
overwhelming or
encouraging
for
some, and
stressful for others. Write a diary entry recording your thoughts on the following: • Neruda’s ideas in ‘Keeping
Quiet’ as a guide
in this situation. • Thinking differently about your decisions with reference to Neruda’s ‘Keeping Quiet’. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q4 A i – b ; ii –
a ; iii – b ; iv –
b B i – d ; ii –
c ; iii – b ; iv –
b Q5 i – a ; ii – a ; iii –
c ; iv – c |
P4- A Thing of Beauty
Text-Flamingo |
|
Q4 |
Multiple Choice Questions based on an extract. |
A |
Therefore, on every morrow, are we
wreathing A flowery
band to bind us to the earth, Spite of despondence, of the
inhuman dearth Of noble
natures, of the gloomy days, Of all
the
unhealthy and
o’er darkened ways Made
for our searching: yes, in
spite of all,
Some shape of beauty moves away the
pall From our dark spirits. |
i |
In which of the following options can the underlined
words be replaced with ‘despondence’? a) The man paced
about the
room showing restlessness.
b) A chat with
a close friend can
take away our blues. c) I was in jitters, seeing the boy trapped in
the
trench, d) Being
dogged is what led him to negotiate the challenges. |
ii |
Pick the
option that is NOT an
example of ‘unhealthy and o’er darkened ways.’ a) A person who is egoistic and looks down
upon others. b)
A person who seeks God’s help for all his problems. c) A person
who
is uses evil ways to deceive
others.
d) A person who
is corrupt and
manipulative. |
iii |
Pick the option that enumerates what ‘noble
natures’
would include. 1. selflessness 2. insensitivity 3. enthusiasm 4. aggression 5. meticulousness 6. judiciousness a) 1, 4
and 5 b) 2, 3 and 6 c) 2, 4 and
5 d) 1, 3 and 6 |
iv |
Based on the
poem, choose
the
correct option with reference
to the two
statements given below. Statement 1: The earth without the
beautiful things is a
place full of despair
and unpleasantness. Statement 2: The ornate
band created by human beings; ushers hope
in their
lives. a) Statement 1 is true but Statement 2 is false. b)
Statement 1
is false but Statement 2
is
true. |
|
c) Both Statement 1 and
Statement 2
can be inferred. d) Both
Statement 1
and Statement 2 cannot be inferred. |
B |
Rich with a sprinkling of fair musk-rose
blooms; And such too is the
grandeur of the dooms We have imagined
for the
mighty dead; All lovely tales
that we have heard
or read; An
endless fountain of immortal drink,
Pouring unto
us from the
heaven’s brink. |
i |
Pick the quote
that matches best with— ‘And such
too is the
grandeur of the
dooms we
have imagined
for the
mighty dead.’ a) In the night of death, hope
sees a
star, and listening
love
can hear the
rustle of a
wing. b) When a great man
dies, for years
the light he
leaves behind
him, lies on
the
paths of men. c) Endings are not always
bad, most times they’re just beginnings in disguise. d) Cowards die many times before their death; the
valiant never taste of death but once. |
ii |
Pick the
option that refers to
what ‘an endless fountain of immortal drink’ suggests. 1. inspirational
deeds of great men 2. a
ceaseless series of dreams 3. an infinite source
of strength 4. an elixir of life for upliftment of the soul 5. an eternal source of delight 6. a boundless gift of love a) 1, 4 and
5 b) 2, 3 and
5 c) 1, 2 and
6 d) 2, 4 and 6 |
iii |
Pick the
option that pairs
the TRUE statements based
on the extract, from the list below. 1. The
bushes with
fragrant flowers lift the
human spirit and
bring joy. 2. Death
is inevitable
and
everyone
faces it no matter how
powerful. 3. Immortality is achieved
by man when he
drinks the nectar of joy. 4. Legendary heroes and their heroic deeds instil
inspiration
in us. a) 1 and
2 b) 2 and 4 c) 1 and
4 d) 2 and 3 |
iv |
Pick the
option that uses the
same literary device as the
‘mighty dead’. a) sleepless nights b)
deafening silence c) glaring
lights d) time
is a thief |
Q 5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
i |
On the basis of the extract, pick
the opinion that is NOT TRUE about the
theme
of the poem. A thing of beauty Beauty doesn’t dispel
transcends time and darkness
and is
doesn’t fade away. surrounded by evil. (1)
(2) A thing of beauty
is not A beautiful thing has a only physical but spiritual therapeutic quality and as well.
brings in a ray of hope. (3)
(4) a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
ii |
Pick the option
that matches the
words / phrases with
the
literary device. Word/ phrase Literary
device 1. simple
sheep A.
imagery 2. gloomy
days B.
metaphor 3. bower
quiet C. symbolism D. transferred
epithet a) 1-C, 2-D,
3-B b) 1-B, 2-A, 3-D c) 1-D, 2-B,
3-C d) 1-C, 2-A, 3-B |
iii |
Pick the
statement that contradicts the idea
of beauty as expressed
by the |
|
poet. a) People
are beautiful
not in looks but just in what they are. b)
Beautiful people have known suffering, struggle and loss. c) We
must think of all the beauty that is left around us and
be happy.
d) We must dwell
on the beauty in life and
be inspired
by it. |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40 words |
i |
If you were given an opportunity to share
your perception of beauty, what would you
say? Explain. |
ii |
‘Beauty is best left undefined’. Support your position on this statement with your rationale, coupled with ideas in
the
poem. |
iii |
Artists, singers and
musicians have
a
different
perception
of beauty
as compared
to people who are
in other professions. Comment. |
Q12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
We have often heard the phrase: ‘Beauty is skin deep’. In spite of that, we
often see
people idolising actors and celebrities who are
good looking
and
attractive. You have a conversation
regarding this with
your friend who believes that physical
beauty defines a person. Write down
that conversation. |
ii |
You are a blogger who loves to record travel stories. You recently visited a picturesque location and
you were enamoured by its beauty. Pen down the post for your blog giving vivid descriptions of the natural beauty of this place. Supplement your writing with Keats’
ideas about beauty. |
Answer keys for MCQs |
|
Q4 A. i. (b) ii. (b) iii. (d) iv. (c)
B. i.(b) ii. (a) iii. (c) iv. (b) Q5 i.(b) ii. (a) iii. (b) |
P5- A
Roadside Stand
Text-Flamingo
|
|
Q4 |
Multiple Choice
Questions based on an extract. |
A |
No, in country money, the
country scale
of gain, The
requisite lift of spirit has never been
found, Or so the voice of the country seems
to complain, I can’t help owning the great relief it would
be To put these
people at one
stroke out of their pain. And
then
next day as I come back into the
sane, I wonder
how I should
like you to come
to me And
offer to
put me gently out of my pain. |
i |
The ‘country money’ contextually here refers to a) money kept aside
for the
rural development.
b) wealth accumulated by the whole
country. c) meagre
income
earned by the countryside
people. d)
riches collected
by the ancestral farmers over time. |
ii |
Pick the option
that mentions elements justifying
monetary aspect as the ‘requisite lift of spirit’. 1. confidence 2. ego 3. self-esteem 4. status 5. fame a) 1, 2,
4 b) 2, 4, 5 c) 1, 3,
4 d) 1, 3, 5 |
iii |
Choose the
correct option
with respect to the two statements given below. Statement 1: The poet is agitated and depressed. Statement 2: The poet realizes the
futility of his thought about giving
up. a) Statement 1
can be inferred
but Statement 2 cannot be
inferred.
b) Statement 1
cannot be
inferred but Statement 2 can
be inferred.
c) Statement 1 and Statement 2
can be inferred. d) Statement 1 and
Statement 2 cannot be
inferred. |
iv |
Choose the
option that correctly paraphrases the
given lines
from the above extract. “I can’t help owning the great relief it would
be To put these
people at one stroke out of their pain.” a) The
poet wants to kill
the
impoverished people. b) The
poet feels that death is better than living
such a miserable
life. |
|
c) The poet wants to
eliminate
poverty from the
society. d) The
poet states that it is important that these
people become
rich. |
B |
The polished traffic passed with a mind ahead, Or if ever aside
a moment, then
out of sorts At having
the
landscape
marred with the artless paint Of signs that with N turned
wrong and S turned
wrong… |
i |
The polished
traffic in
particular refers to the a) sophisticated city dwellers in
their vehicles. b)
shiny cars that the
poet sees on the road. c) extremely affluent people living in
the neighbourhood.
d) civilized
manner in
which traffic is coordinated. |
ii |
‘The urban and
educated
people
have their minds ahead.’ Choose the
option suggesting the correct meaning
behind
this line. 1 2 The people
are
well- The people
are
concentrating educated and on the road that is ahead
in knowledgeable about the order to
drive safely. condition of the poor. 3 4 The people
are The people are focused on
preoccupied only by the
their goal
of bettering
the
thoughts of their lives and country. nothing else. a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
iii |
What do the urban rich feel about the
S and
N signs that have been
painted
wrong? a) Tolerant
b) Amused c) Sympathetic
d) Annoyed |
iv |
The passers-by find the sign artless but the landscape
_ . a) animated
b) aesthetic c) amusing d)
ancient |
Q5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
i |
Based on
your reading of the poem, choose the option that correctly lays out the difference between
the
city-dwellers and
the
countryside
people. 1. City dwellers Countryside
people • unaware • greedy • casual
• concerned 2. City dwellers Countryside
people • indifferent • suffering • grumpy • disappointed 3. City dwellers Countryside
people • short-tempered
• optimistic • materialistic • savage 4. City dwellers Countryside
people • stressed • protesting • dismissing • objectionable a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
ii |
“I wonder how I should
like you to come to
me And
offer to
put me gently out of my pain.” The tone of the poem by the end, as depicted by the
given lines is
a) frustrated. b) commanding.
c) Introspective.
d) emotional. |
iii |
Pick the
option with the slogan
that is likely to be used by a person
selling
at the roadside stand. Slogan 1 Slogan 2 Slogan 3 Slogan 4 Men and women
By
the people
I see humans
Corruption, in equality; a
and
for the but no corruption, you
road to dignity.
people. humanity. leave
my country. That’s all I pray! a) Slogan
1 b) Slogan 2 c) Slogan
3 d) Slogan 4 |
|
|
iv |
Choose the
option that correctly categorizes the
given literary devices as per the given analogy. selfish cars : …............. :: …................ : metaphor a) personification; polished
traffic b) transferred
epithet; trusting
sorrow c) metaphor; pitiful
kin d) oxymoron; greedy good-doers |
v |
Choose the
option that correctly mentions the
complaints made by the
poet
through this poem. 1. The
rich people
drive carelessly on
the
road hitting
the
poor people
on purpose. 2. The city-dwellers remain
highly insensitive and offhand
towards the poor people. 3. The urban
people are
unable
to understand
the
struggles of the impoverished
people. 4. The
goods are
not being bought by the
wealthy people
even at
discounted rates. a) 1, 2 b)
2, 3 c) 3, 4 d) 1, 4 |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
Though money
holds the same value everywhere,
the
poet draws
a
distinction between
city money and
country money. Elaborate. |
ii |
The roadside stand and the moving cars are a contrast around which the entire poem is woven. Expound. |
iii |
Comment on
the
significance
of
the symbol of the
car in the poem. |
iv |
Does the poet reach a conclusive solution
for the
issue at hand?
Discuss. |
Q12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
Imagine a car stops and actually buys from the
roadside stand. Keeping in mind the reaction you think the peasants would have, write a
diary entry as the farmer describing
not only your immediate
experience but
also your after-thoughts on
being able to
earn “city-money”. You may begin this way: Wednesday, 2nd March XX
9 PM We had an unexpectedly good day
today!... |
ii |
Imagine a child
from the
farmer’s family migrates to
the
city for their
education. As the child, write
back to your family telling
them whether you would or would not want to turn into a city-person. Use the context of the
poem “A Roadside Stand” in mind to pen
down this letter. You may begin this way: 12, Davidson County 23 January ‘XX Dear mom I have been thinking about the roadside stall lately. Now that I find myself surrounded by
city-people all the time, I think…………………………………….. With love Jennifer |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q4 A. i. (c) ii. (d) iii. (b) iv. (b)
B. i. (a) ii. (c) iii. (d) iv. (d) Q5 i. (b) ii. (d) iii. (c) iv. (b) v. (b) |
P-6 Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers
Text-Flamingo |
|
Q4 |
Multiple Choice Questions based on an extract |
A. |
Aunt Jennifer's finger fluttering through her wool Find even the ivory needle hard to
pull. The massive weight of Uncle's wedding
band Sits heavily upon
Aunt Jennifer's hand. |
i |
How would you describe
Aunt Jennifer based on
the above extract? a) oppressed b) malnourished c)
aging d) diseased |
ii |
Uncle’s wedding
band sits heavily on
Aunt Jennifer’s hand
because a) it is an
expensive
and
heavy ring. b) she
was married
against her will. c) she feels burdened in
her marriage. d) their relationship is lacking
in love. |
iii |
Pick the option that displays
the image which correctly corresponds
to the type of task Aunt is engaged in. a) Option
(i) b) Option (ii)
c) Option (iii)
d) Option
(iv) |
iv |
Which of the following
is an example of an alliteration? a) finger fluttering
through the wool b) upon
Aunt Jennifer’s hand
c) ivory needle
hard
to
pull d) massive weight of Uncle's wedding band |
B. |
When Aunt is dead, her terrified
hands will
lie Still ringed
with ordeals she was mastered
by. The tigers in
the
panel that she made Will go on prancing, proud and unafraid. |
i |
Read the statement given below: Aunt Jennifer’s plight is best explained by her hands, they hold both her freedom
and the instrument of her imprisonment. Choose the
option
that
best explains
the
above statement,
as per
the
extract. a) Aunt Jennifer’s hands are terrified, but when she is dead, her tigers will roam free. b) Aunt Jennifer knits her desires, but is overpowered by the wedding ring she
wears. c) Aunt Jennifer’s tigers are proud and unafraid, but she is mastered by ringed ordeals. d) Aunt Jennifer makes panels
of tigers when
she has
time
from
her responsibilities. |
ii |
Which of the following CANNOT be
inferred from the given
extract? a) Aunt Jennifer’s tigers
will keep
her alive in everyone’s memory. b) Aunt Jennifer feels oppressed
and
constricted
in her marriage. c) Even in death, Aunt Jennifer cannot escape
patriarchal
subjugation. d) Aunt Jennifer’s tigers prance as a lasting symbol of her desires. |
iii |
What makes the
tigers “proud
and
unafraid”? a) They embody the grandeur and
supremacy of animals in
the wild. b) They symbolise authority and are ‘topaz denizens of green’. c) They represent Aunt’s repressed desires for freedom
and power.
d) They are a product of Aunt’s imagination
and
colonial
experience. |
iv |
Choose the
option
that DOES NOT reflect
the
movement
implied
by ‘prancing’. a) bounding
b) frolicking
c) strutting
d) shuffling |
Q 5. |
Stand-alone
MCQs |
i |
Read the
statements
given below.
Choose
the
option
that accurately
describes the given statements. Statement I - The
poem is a manifesto against
the institution of marriage.
Statement II - Aunt Jennifer represents all
women artists. Statement III – The poem embodies an alternative for women to express
their repressed desires through art. a) Statement I is
True, Statement
II is
False, Statement
III cannot
be inferred. |
|
b) Statement I and
III are False, Statement II cannot be
inferred.
c) Statement I and
II
are True, Statement III cannot be inferred. d) Statement I is False, Statement II cannot be inferred, Statement III is True. |
ii |
Which of
the
following
does NOT represent the contrast between
Aunt Jennifer and the tigers? a) uncertainty and
confidence b) terror and
fearlessness c) fiefdom and freedom d) authority and autonomy |
iii |
Choose the option that does
NOT reflect what the tigers represent in the
poem: a) Aunt Jennifer’s undying hopes
b) Aunt Jennifer’s failing marriage c) Aunt Jennifer’s artistic merit d) Aunt Jennifer’s frustrations |
Q10 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
‘What knitting was to Aunt Jennifer; poetry was for Adrienne Rich’. Do you agree?
Comment with reference
to the poem ‘Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers’. |
ii |
Read the given quote. In your opinion, what silence
does the poem ‘Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers’ break? Every poem breaks a
silence that
had to be overcome. - Adrienne Rich |
iii |
Would you say that the
poem ends on a
note of hope? Justify your opinion. |
Q12 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
Read the given extract from an article published in
The
Independent: “Turn
your pain into art”: it’s a
phrase most of us have
heard before… The theory that achieving
something great requires suffering
dates back to
ancient times… Pain, however, is less an artistic necessity and
more a
result of “contagion” – a term used for the spreading of a harmful idea
or practice…In the context of the struggling
artist, it allows
mental illness to
fester; to
be glamourised and admired; even encouraged in
the name
of art. - Do you think
Aunt Jennifer “turned her pain into art”? What kind of “contagion” might her pain be a
result of? - Evaluate
Aunt Jennifer and her artistry in light of the above
extract. |
ii |
Imagine that Aunt Jennifer read the poem
that Adrienne Rich wrote about |
|
her. After much contemplation, she decided to write a letter to her husband
expressing
her
feelings and thoughts. Write
the
letter as Aunt Jennifer. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q4 A i – a ; ii – c ; iii – b ; iv – a B i – b ; ii – a ; iii –
c ; iv – d Q5 i – b ; ii – d ; iii – b |
L-1 The Third Level
Text-Vistas |
||
Q3 |
Multiple Choice
Questions
based on an extract |
|
A. |
Sometimes I think Grand Central is growing like a tree, pushing out new corridors and
staircases like roots. There’s probably a
long tunnel that nobody knows about feeling its way under
the city right now, on
its way to Times Square, and
maybe another to
Central Park. And maybe — because for so many people through the years Grand Central has been an exit, a way of escape — maybe that’s how the tunnel I got into... But I never told my
psychiatrist friend about that idea. |
|
i |
The above extract is NOT an
example of . a) allegory
b) analogy c)
imagery d) metaphor |
|
ii |
Charley decided not to tell his psychiatrist friend about his idea. Choose the option that reflects the reaction Charley anticipated from his friend. a) “That’s such a lovely comparison. Why don’t you become a writer,
Charley?” b) “Oh Charley.
It is so sad to see your desperation to run away! So very sad.” c) “Maybe that’s how
you
entered
the
third
level. Who would have thought?!”
d) “You need
help, my raving
friend. You
are way too invested
in this crazy
thought!” |
|
iii |
Look at the given image that lists some
of the ways in which the symbolism
of a tree
is employed. Which of the following would
represent an example as used by Charley in the above extract? |
|
a) ‘Stay grounded’
as the train
station is underground. b) ‘Connect with
your roots’ as he
desires to go
back to his past. c) ‘Enjoy
the view’
as the station
leads to
all tourist sights of the city. d) ‘Keep growing’
as the station
keeps renovating
and
expanding. |
||
iv |
The idiom ‘feeling its way’
implies _ movement. a) swift b) tentative
c) circular d) disorganized |
B. |
Have
you ever been
there? It’s a wonderful town still, with
big old frame
houses, huge lawns, and
tremendous trees whose branches meet overhead and
roof the streets. And
in 1894, summer evenings were
twice
as
long, and
people sat out on their lawns, the men smoking cigars
and talking quietly,
the
women waving palm-leaf fans, with
the
fire-flies all around, in
a peaceful world. To be back there with
the
First World
War still twenty years off, and World
War II over forty years in the future... I wanted two tickets for that. |
i |
Who does ‘you’
refer to? a) Charley’s psychiatrist, Sam Weiner b) Charley’s wife, Louisa c) The reader d) Nobody in
particular, it is a
figure
of speech. |
ii |
Choose the option that best describes the society represented in the above extract. a) content, peace-loving
b) leisurely, sentimental
c) orthodox, upper
class d) comfortable, ancient |
iii |
Imagine that the city of Galesburg is hosting a series of conferences and workshops. In which of the following conferences or workshops are you
least likely to find the description of Galesburg given
in the above extract? a) Gorgeous Galesburg: Archiving
a Tourist Paradise b) Welcome
to the home
you deserve: Galesburg
Realtors
c) Re-imagining a Warless Future: Technology for Peace
d) The Woman Question: The
world of women
at home |
iv |
“tremendous trees whose branches meet overhead and roof the streets”
is NOT an example of (i) imagery
(ii) metaphor (iii) alliteration (iv) anachronism a) Options (i) and
(ii) b) Options (i) and (iii)
c) Options (ii) and (iii) d) Options (ii) and
(iv) |
Q 5. |
Stand-alone
MCQs |
i |
How would you
describe Charley’s vision of his grandfather’s life
and
times? a) wistful
escapism b) idealized
sentimentality c) nostalgic
simplicity d) dreamy perfection |
ii |
‘The Third Level’ refers to
the third level
at the Grand
Central
Station. As a
metaphor, which of the following would NOT be an appropriate explanation
of the title? a) The convergence
of reality and fantasy. b) The
bridge between
the
past and
the
present. c) The oppressive monotony of modern
life. d) The
need for an alternate
plane of understanding. |
Iii |
How would you describe
Charley? a) confused, happy-go-lucky
b) escapist, adventurous c) imaginative, nostalgic d) friendly, responsible |
Iv |
Which of the following
is
a conclusion that can be drawn from the story? a) Reality is indeed stranger than fiction. b) With
all its worries, modern
life is not worth
living. c)
The past is undoubtedly better than the present. d) Imagination
might be
the
only great escape. |
Q11 |
Answer in 30-40 words |
I |
What would
you
describe as your “waking-dream wish fulfilment”?
Explain. |
Ii |
Why do you think
Charley withdrew nearly all the money he had from the bank to buy old-style currency? |
Iii |
How would you evaluate Sam’s character? Elucidate any two qualities, and substantiate
with evidence from the text. |
Iv |
At the beginning of the story, Sam is
sceptical of Charley’s discovery of the
third level. By the end of the story,
the reader is told that he found the third level and travelled back in
time. How
would Sam diagnose
himself? |
Q13 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
In the
story ‘The
Third
Level’, Charley wanted to
go to Galesburg, Illinois in the year 1894. If you had an
opportunity to
go to another time
and place,
where would you
like to
go? Why? How would Sam analyse your choice of alternate time and place? |
ii |
Imagine that you come across Louisa’s diary. What might you find in it about the third level? Compose at least one diary
entry based on any of the events from the story, ‘The Third
Level’. |
Q3
A i – a ; ii –
d ; iii – d ; iv –
b
B i – c ; ii –
c ;
iii – c ; iv – d
Q5
i – b ; ii – c ; iii – c
; iv – d
L-2 The Tiger King
Text-Vistas |
|
Q3 |
Multiple Choice
Questions
based on an extract. |
A |
From that day onwards it was celebration time for all the tigers inhabiting Pratibandapuram. The
state banned
tiger hunting
by anyone except the
Maharaja. A proclamation
was issued to
the
effect that if anyone
dared to
fling
so much as a stone
at a tiger, all
his wealth and property would be
confiscated. The Maharaja
vowed he would
attend to
all other matters only after killing the hundred
tigers. Initially the
king
seemed
well set to
realise his ambition. Not that he faced no
dangers. There were
times when
the bullet missed its
mark, the tiger leapt upon him and he fought the
beast with
his bare hands. Each
time
it was the
Maharaja
who won. |
I |
The tone of the author when
he says, ‘it was celebration
time
for all
tigers’ is a) solemn. b) sarcastic. c) sympathetic.
d) mocking. |
Ii |
Pick the pair of TRUE statements based on
the extract. 1. Tiger hunting was absolutely banned
in the kingdom. 2. The Maharaja
was extremely courageous and fearless. 3. The Maharaja
paid
no heed to
matters related
to his kingdom. 4. The Maharaja
was able to
fulfil
his ambition, without any perils. a) 1 and
2 b) 2 and
4 c) 2 and
3 d) 1 and
4 |
iii |
In which of the
following
options can the underlined words NOT be
replaced with ‘proclamation’? a) The politician
shared his manifesto
during
the
election
meeting. b) All
the
citizens of the kingdom had to
abide by the
emperor’s
edict.
c) The communique made
by the official had
a disastrous effect. d) The decree of the state
forbade cruelty against
animals. |
iv |
On the basis
of
this passage, pick the
option that
enumerates
the characteristics of the king. 1. gullible 2. arrogant 3. wilful 4. aggressive 5. apathetic 6. scrupulous |
|
a) 1, 2
and 6 b) 3, 4 and
6 c) 3, 5 and
6 d) 2, 3 and 5 |
B |
At midnight when the town slept in
peace, the dewan and his aged
wife dragged the tiger into
the
car and shoved
it into the seat. The dewan himself drove the car straight to the forest where
the Maharaja was hunting. When
they reached the forest, the tiger launched its satyagraha and refused to get
out of the car. The dewan was thoroughly exhausted in his efforts to haul the
beast out of the car and
push
it down
to the ground. On the
following day,
the same old
tiger wandered
into the Maharaja’s
presence and
stood
as if in
humble supplication, “Master, what do
you
command of me?” It was with boundless joy that
the Maharaja took careful aim at the
beast. The
tiger fell
in a crumpled
heap. |
i |
Pick the option
that uses the same
figure
of speech as ‘town
slept in
peace’. a) His actions really flared up
my temper, so I walked
out. b) She is going
through
a rollercoaster of emotions. c) My
alarm clock yells at me
every morning until
I get out of bed.
d) The children were
screaming and shouting in
the
fields. |
ii |
Pick the
option that best describes the dewan’s attitude. 1. desperate 2. submissive 3. servile 4. dishonourable 5. detestable 6. flattering a) 2, 3 and
6 b) 1, 4 and 5 c) 2, 4 and
6 d) 1, 3 and 5 |
Iii |
Which of the following
is NOT an example of ‘satyagraha’? a) People on
a hunger strike
as a mark of protest against a law. b) People resorting to
violence to ensure their demands are accepted.
c) A few people
blocking a roadway or passage
peacefully. d) People participating in
a silent march
to protest against injustice. |
iv |
Pick the option
that lists the display of ‘crumpled heap’. |
|
a) Option i b)
Option
ii c) Option
iii d) Option
iv |
Q 5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
i |
‘The Maharaja’s anxiety reached a fever pitch…’ Which of these sentences DOES NOT use the phrase
‘reached a fever pitch’ correctly. a) When the bidding reached a fever pitch, one of the team’s absence
was notable. b) The excitement of the
audience reached
a fever pitch when they saw the star perform. c) The scenic beauty of the place reached
a fever pitch when
it began
to snow. d) The climax of the
film reached
fever pitch
when the protagonist was assassinated. |
ii |
Pick the
statement that is NOT an
example of satire from the story. a) The
twist of fate
when the toy tiger proved to
be fatal for the king. b) News of king’s ailment got the attention
of not one, but three surgeons.
c) King
wilfully exploiting
nature and
subjects for his selfish interests. d) The king
celebrates his triumph but readers
anticipate his doom. |
iii |
The story conveys the
idea
of transience
of life and
power. Pick the
pair of proverbs that DO NOT relate
to this idea. 1. Don’t put all
your eggs in one basket. 2. There is many a slip between a cup
and
a lip. 3. Don’t count your chickens before they are hatched. 4. Don’t cross that bridge
till
you come to it. a) 1 and 4 b)
2
and 3 c) 2 and 4 d)
3
and 4 |
iv |
‘Even the threat of a
Stuka
bomber will not throw
me off track.’ This sentence shows that the author has a
a) firm resolve to
narrate the
story. b) humorous way of conveying
an idea. c) logical style of convincing
the
reader. d) rhetorical
manner of writing
a story. |
Q11 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
Do you think an author who includes several instances of satire in a story
faces the risk of being too cynical?
Explain. |
ii |
Knowing too much of your future is never a good thing.’ In light of this quote, examine
how
knowing the
future paved way for the
king’s end. |
iii. |
The Maharaja justified
his actions based on
the
maxim: ‘You may kill even
a cow in self-defence,’ so
there would be
no objection
to killing
tigers in
self- defence.’ Do
you think it is right to justify our actions in this way?
Elaborate. |
Q13 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
Imagine you are an ardent environmentalist
who is involved in the Save the Tiger campaign. You have been
asked to deliver a
speech in a seminar related
to your campaign
and
the
need
for the youth to
be involved in
such campaigns. Draft your speech. |
ii |
You visited a wildlife sanctuary recently and
were appalled at the condition
of the sanctuary and the plight of the animals there. Write
an article for an e-zine expressing your concern and
the need to
alleviate the
facilities
at the sanctuary and provide the animals with
a secure habitat. |
iii |
The king was callous as a ruler and behaved whimsically. Thus, the people in his kingdom suffered while
he fulfilled his desire
of killing a hundred tigers. Do you
find leaders or politicians in the
world today being indifferent to the
needs of the people
and
behaving in the same way? Comment with relevant examples. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3. A. i. (b) ii. (c) iii. (c) iv. (d) B.
i.(c) ii. (a) iii. (b) iv. (b) Q5 i.(c) ii. (d) iii. (b) iv. (b) |
L 3 - Journey
to
the end of Earth
Text: Vistas |
|
Q3 |
Multiple Choice
Questions
based on an extract |
A |
You lose all earthly sense of perspective and time here. The visual scale ranges from the
microscopic to the mighty: midges
and mites to blue whales and
icebergs as big as countries (the largest recorded
was the size of
Belgium). Days go
on and on and on in
surreal 24-hour austral summer light,
and a ubiquitous silence, interrupted only by the occasional avalanche or
calving ice sheet, consecrates the place. It’s an immersion
that will
force
you to place yourself in
the
context of the earth’s geological history. And
for
humans, the
prognosis isn’t good. |
i |
The ‘visual
scale’ refers to a) a
measuring device b) range
of things one can
see c) visionary’s belief d) the
magnitude of preparation |
ii |
Four people give a reason
for the
author’s feeling
while travelling. Choose the option that correctly summarizes it based on
your understanding of the extract. Person 1 Person 2 Person 3 Person 4 I think the According to As
far as I can In
my opinion, author is being me, she
is judge, Tishani is she
is amazed
paranoid
about bewildered
by being hypocritical by the
grandeur leaving
her the travel because
she is of the icy region.
hometown. duration. comparing
the
two places. a) Person 1 b)
Person
2 c) Person 3 d)
Person
4 |
iii |
Select the option that correctly fits the category
of ‘microscopic to the mighty’ out of the ones given
below. 1. trace
of a skin cell: trace of a bird’s egg 2. a grain
of rice: field of wheat 3. a
scoop of ice cream: an
ice-cream cone 4. a drop
of water: Pacific Ocean |
|
a) 1,
2 b) 3, 4 c) 1,
3 d) 2, 4 |
iv |
Choose the option listing
the
elements that influences one to
think of earth’s physicality. 1. breakage
of an iceberg
from a glacier 2. midges
and mites 3. a
regular seen avalanche 4. summer light in
the
Southern hemisphere a) 1,
2 b) 3, 4 c) 1,
4 d) 2, 3 |
B |
Students on Ice, the programme I was working with
on the Shokalskiy, aims to
do exactly this by taking
high school students to the ends of the world and providing
them with
inspiring
educational
opportunities which will help them
foster a new
understanding
and
respect for our planet. It’s been in
operation
for six years now, headed
by Canadian Geoff Green, who got tired
of carting celebrities and retired, rich, curiosity-seekers who could
only ‘give’ back in
a limited way. With Students on
Ice, he
offers the future generation of policy-
makers a life-changing experience
at an age when they’re
ready to absorb, learn, and
most importantly, act. |
i |
Students on Ice is …………. headed
by
Geoff Green. Select the option
to fill in the
blank correctly. a) a travelogue b)
an expedition c) a globetrotting
d) a tour |
ii |
Choose the option that marks
the ODD ONE OUT based on
your reading of
the
above extract. a) Sumit donates 10%
of his monthly income
to the environment-friendly NGOs. b) Manmeet and
her twin plant a new
plant on
their birthday every year. c) Vivek invests in eco-friendly cosmetics that are
packaged
in plastic containers. d) Afsana
plans to
device a machine
that recycles the biodegradable
wastes from home. |
iii |
Pick the
option that characterizes the celebrities based on
your understanding
of the extract. 1. overachiever 2. zealous 3. miserly 4. impassive a) 1, 2 b)
3, 4 c) 1, 3 d) 2, 4 |
|||||
iv |
Choose the
option that lists the
reasons for Green’s programme. 1. making
youngsters realize the
gory reality of the planet. 2. provoking the youth
to think about the future earnestly. 3. giving a chance
of exploring the north pole to
the
young
generation 4. providing travel opportunities to students that were
unfortunate. a) 1, 2 b)
3, 4 c) 1, 3 d) 2, 4 |
|||||
Q5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
|||||
i |
“Antarctica
is a crucial
element in
this debate — not just because
it’s the
only
place in the world, which has never sustained a human population and therefore
remains relatively ‘pristine’ in this respect...” With respect to
the
given statement from the text, choose
the
option to
replace the underlined set of words. a) stays as it is throughout the
year. b) becomes a perfect place
to travel. c) is left to be
an uncorrupted
area. d) abides by the strict laws of nature. |
|||||
ii |
The central idea of the text is given
below as told by four students. Choose
the
correct option of the ones given
below. |
|||||
|
Student 1 |
Student 2 |
Student 3 |
Student 4 |
|
|
The author wants to invigorate a spirit in the readers to travel and
explore. |
The author is trying to
delineate the beauty
of Antarctica as
compared to
the rest of the world. |
The author is keen on drawing a comparison
between South
India and Antarctica in terms
of their weather. |
The author throws light on the crucial
issues of
our planet through this narrative. |
|
a) Student
1 b) Student 2 c) Student
3 d) Student 4 |
iii |
‘Take care
of the small things
and the big things will take care
of themselves.’
Choose the option
stating
the
significance
of this statement depending
on the textual context. a) We should try to focus on smaller regions like Antarctica
to improve
the
rest of the world. b) We
should tend to
smaller grasses which
eventually become a part of
the
food chain
in order to
expect bigger things
like animal
and
human lives to
change. c) We should give more opportunities to the younger generation
than the older generation if we
want to see a change
in the world. d) We
should save a little
every now and then
in order to explore
bigger opportunities in terms of travel and
tourism. |
iv |
Choose the option that correctly represents the Venn
diagram based on
the statement given below. ‘Antarctica is the
cosmic view
of whatever is happening
to our planet.’ (1)
(2) (3)
(4) a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
v |
Choose the correct option
with respect to the statements given below. |
|
Statement 1: Antarctica
is a lesson in
itself for the
readers of the text. Statement 2: Antarctica
gives an insight to
the
damage being
done to
Earth by humanity. a) Statement 1
can be inferred but Statement 2 cannot be
inferred from the
text. b) Statement 1
cannot be
inferred but Statement 2 can
be inferred from the text. c) Both Statement 1 and
Statement 2 can
be inferred
from the text. d) Both
Statement 1
and Statement 2
cannot be
inferred from the text. |
Q11 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
Antarctica
is a doorway to
the
past. Explain. |
ii |
For the narrator, spending two weeks in Antarctica is a challenge not only for
the
body but also the mind. Elaborate. |
iii |
Based
on the chapter, elucidate any three
consequences that global warming will have
on Antarctica. |
iv |
Antarctica
is unlike any other place on Earth. Justify the statement. |
v |
Students on
Ice is a programme that prepares global citizens. Discuss. |
Q13 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
The author of Journey to the end of the Earth is Tishani Doshi who is now a
famous poet and dancer. As the narrator, write a speech discussing the impact of the Students on Ice programme on
your life and writing. You may begin this way: The Making of a Writer Dear audience members, I did not simply take to writing. Many experiences of my life forced
me
to pick up the
pen… |
ii |
Imagine an interview where Green is asked to explain more about his work and
why he decided
to initiate programs for students. Keeping both Green and the interviewer’s perspectives in mind, pen down
this interview. |
Iii |
Imagine
you are the narrator writing to
your parents back home
telling them about your experience in
Antarctica and
how it is similar
to that back home
in some ways. Antarctica 02 August XX |
|
Dear mom It is so different here. I can’t post this letter but I write to capture these amazing
moments I am spending here. Antarctica
is… With love |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q 3 A. i. (b) ii. (d) iii. (d) iv. (c)
B. i. (b) ii. (c) iii. (b) iv. (a) Q 5 i. (c) ii. (d) iii. (b) iv. (c) v. (c) |
L-4 The Enemy
Text-Vistas |
|
Q3 |
Multiple Choice Questions based on an extract. |
A |
The man moaned with
pain in his stupor but he did not awaken. “The best thing that we could do would be to put him back in the sea,” Sadao
said, answering
himself. Now that the bleeding
was stopped
for the
moment he stood up
and
dusted the
sand from his hands. “Yes, undoubtedly that would be best,” Hana said steadily. But she continued
to stare down at the
motionless man. “If we
sheltered a white
man in our house we
should be arrested and if we
turned him over as a
prisoner, he
would certainly die,” Sadao
said. “The kindest thing would
be to put him back into
the sea,” Hana
said. But neither of them moved. They were
staring with curious repulsion upon
the
inert
figure. |
i |
In which of the following options can the underlined words NOT be
replaced with ‘stupor’? a) She hung
up the phone
feeling
as though
she had woken
up from a
slumber. b) The
manager complained
about the employee’s
sluggishness. c) He
seemed to be in a trance when the doctor called
upon him last week.
d) Seeing him in a daze,
the lawyer decided
not to
place him in the witness box. |
ii |
Pick the option that best describes Sadao and Hana
in the passage. a) Sadao: scrupulous
Hana: wary b) Sadao: daring Hana: prudent c) Sadao: prudent
Hana: suspicious d) Sadao: wary Hana: daring |
iii |
Pick the idiom that best describes the situation in which Sadao and Hana were in. a) to be like a
fish out of water
b) like water off a duck’s back
c) to be dead
in the water d) to be
in hot water |
iv |
Choose the
correct option
with reference to
the
two
statements given below. Statement 1: Sadao
and
Hana cared about the soldier but were worried about
the
consequences of being considerate. Statement 2: Sadao
and
Hana wanted to shirk their responsibilities of looking
after an injured
soldier, who
could be
an American. a) Statement 1 is true
but Statement 2 is false. |
|
b) Statement 1 is false but Statement 2 is true.
c) Both Statement 1 and Statement 2
are
true.
d) Both Statement 1 and
Statement 2 are false. |
B |
“I wondered, Your Excellency,” Sadao murmured. “It was certainly very careless of me,” the General
said. “But you understand it
was not lack of patriotism or dereliction
of duty.” He looked anxiously at his doctor. “If the matter should come out you would understand
that, wouldn’t you?” “Certainly, Your Excellency,” Sadao said. He suddenly comprehended
that the General was in the palm of his hand and that as a consequence he himself was perfectly safe. “I swear to your loyalty. Excellency,” he said to the old General, “and to
your zeal
against the enemy.” |
i |
Pick the option
that best describes the word ‘dereliction’ as used in
the passage. 1. evasion 2. deterioration 3. negligence 4. carelessness 5. dilapidation 6. management a) 2, 3 and
6 b) 1, 4 and
5 c) 2, 4 and
6 d) 1, 3 and 4 |
ii |
At the end
of the conversation
with the General, Sadao
felt a) rejuvenated and
guilt-free. b)
conceited
and
egotistic. c) refreshed and self-conscious. d)
relieved and guilt-free. |
iii |
Read the analysis of the General based on the given extract. Choose the option
that fills in
the
given blanks most appropriately: The General
(i) power
but is
(ii) __ of
the
obligations of his job. He is so
(iii) _ with
his health that he forgets to
send the assassins to
kill the prisoner. Due to
his (iv) _ interests, he doesn’t want to expose Sadao and agrees to keep
the prisoner’s
escape a secret. a) (i) fantasizes; (ii) lonely ; (iii) consumed
; (iv) vested
b) (i) relishes; (ii) weary; (iii) self-absorbed
; (iv) selfish c) (i) fancies; (ii) apathetic ; (iii) negligent ; (iv) worthless d) (i) desires; (ii)
concerned ; (iii) indisposed
; (iv) narrow |
|
|
iv |
Pick the option that best matches the idioms with
‘hand’
with their meanings. Idioms
Meanings 1. hand in
glove A) in
the
care of somebody good
and
knowledgeable 2. in good hands B) to reveal
a secret about one’s plans 3. tip
one’s hand C) do
harm to someone
who
has been kind
to you 4. bite
the
hand that feeds you
D) two
or more people
who are in collusion a) 1-A; 2-D;
3-C; 4-B b) 1-B; 2-C; 3-D;
4-A c) 1-D; 2-A;
3-B; 4-C d) 1-C; 2-A; 3-D; 4-B |
Q 5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
i |
“Those scars,” she murmured, lifting her eyes to Sadao. The ‘scars’
DO NOT indicate a) torture
perpetrated
on prisoners of war. b)
superiority of Japan
over America. c) the quest for supremacy in
war. d) the
rumours of torture
often
heard. |
ii |
Pick the quote that best describes the theme of the story. (a) World belongs to humanity, not this leader, that leader or that king or prince or religious leader. World belongs to humanity. (b) You
must not lose
faith in
humanity. Humanity is an ocean; if a
few
drops of the ocean
are dirty, the
ocean does not become dirt. (c) The purpose
of human life is to
serve, and to
show compassion
and
the
will to help others. (d) To deny people
their human
rights is to challenge
their very humanity. |
iii |
‘She did not wish
to be left alone with the white man.’ Why did Hana feel so, despite having studied in
America? This was so
because a) being
Japanese, it wasn’t appropriate to
stay on
with a stranger. b)
America
and
Japan were
not allies in
the ongoing
World War. c) He
was someone she’d recognised from her past in America. |
|
d) her husband had
cautioned
her against the
American. |
Q11 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
Sadao and Hana have a moral
compass
which
urges them to
save the prisoner’s life. Do we
all
need this moral compass? Why? |
ii |
Pearl
Buck depicts the servants in
a
way to
convey a message
about Japanese people
and culture. Support your answer with textual evidence. |
iii |
The author has used ‘blood’ as a symbol in the story. Comment on its impact on
the
reader. |
iv. |
Sadao and Hana look upon their
time in America with disdain due to the prejudice that they were
subjected to. How
does racial prejudice
taint a person’s soul forever? |
Q13 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
You recently watched an interview of one of the doctors who serves for the organisation named ‘Doctors without Borders’. This organisation
serves people in remote corners of the world which are affected by civil strife, poverty and
lack medical
facilities. You were impressed with the dedication, compassion and professional ethics of this doctor. Write an
article for an e-zine
expressing the
need
for more such people in
the
world to serve
selflessly. |
ii |
Imagine Tom reaches home safely. He has fully
recovered and the war has now come to an end. He owes his life to Sadao and Hana and is forever indebted
to them. Years later, he
has been invited
on a radio show as a war hero
where he
recounts his tribulations and
the experience of being
granted
a new life by a Japanese
couple. As Tom, write
down that narration. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3 A. i. (b) ii. (c) iii. (d) iv. (a)
B. i.(d) ii. (d) iii. (b) iv. (c) Q5 i.(b) ii
(c) iii. (b) |
L-5 SHOULD WIZARD
HIT MOMMY
Text-Vistas |
|
Q3 |
Multiple Choice
Questions
based on an extract |
A |
“Over the crick, and there will
be the wizard’s house.” And
that’s the way Roger Skunk went, and
pretty soon
he
came to a little
white house, and he
rapped on the
door.” Jack rapped on
the
window sill, and
under the
covers Jo’s tall
figure clenched in
an infantile thrill. “And then
a tiny little old man
came out, with a long white beard and a pointed
blue hat, and said, “Eh? Whatzis? Whatcher want? You
smell awful.” The wizard’s voice
was one of
Jack’s own favourite effects; he did
it by scrunching up
his face and somehow whining
through his eyes, which
felt for the interval
rheumy. He felt being an
old
man suited
him. |
I |
Choose the
option that tells the
location
of the wizard’s house
when Jack says “over the
crick”. a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
Ii |
Select the option that tells you
about Jack being a great storyteller. 1. Jack knew the right way to the wizard’s house
as if he
had
been there. 2. Jack was commendable
at giving
his story realistic details. 3. Jack’s delivery of speech with sound effects was remarkable. 4. Jack looked
like a really old
man as if he was the
wizard. a) 1, 2 b)
2, 3 c) 3, 4 d) 1, 4 |
iii |
Pick the
option that suitably decodes the wizard’s message when he
says “Eh? Whatzis?
Whatcher want?”. a) What is this?
What can
you want? b) What’s this? What do
you want? c) Who? What can I do? |
|
d) Who are
you? What you want? |
Iv |
What was Jo’s reaction to
Jack’s knock on
the
window? a) She stiffened in
anticipation of something
thrilling. b) She held on
to
the covers tightly and
compressed her lips. c) She
relaxed, knowing
that her father was around
to protect her.
d) She instantly responded in
the
voice
of
another character. |
B |
“All right. He said, ‘But Mommy, all the other little animals run away,’ and she said, ‘I don’t care. You smelled the way a little skunk should have and
I’m going to take you right back
to that wizard,’ and she took an umbrella
and went back with Roger Skunk and
hit that wizard
right over the head.”
“No,” Jo said, and
put her hand out to touch
his lips, yet even in her agitation did not quite dare to stop the source of truth.
Inspiration came to her. “Then
the
wizard hit her on the head
and did not change that little skunk back.” |
I |
Roger Skunk’s mommy was __
and _ _ when
she got to know
the
truth about her son’s aromatic body. Choose
the option to fill in
the
blank correctly. 1. vexed 2. dissatisfied 3. hostile 4. disheartened a) 1, 2 b)
2, 3 c) 3, 4 d) 1, 4 |
Ii |
Choose the
option that appropriately shows a
quote giving
away the message Roger’s mommy wanted
to give Roger. Quote 1 Quote 2 Quote 3 Quote 4 Wanting to
be Growing up
Confidence is the It takes nothing
someone else
is means realizing best makeup
you to
join the crowd.
the
waste of the
a lot of your could
ever wear.
It takes person you are.
friends
aren’t everything to
be really your alone. friends. a) Quote 1 b)
Quote 2 c) Quote
3 d) Quote 4 |
|
|
iii |
Pick the option
listing the reason
Jo wanted to change
her father’s narrative. a) Jo
was getting bored of her father controlling
the
entire narrative. b) Jo
thought of the skunk’s mother as a villain for not letting him make
friends. c) Jo was interrupting her father’s narrative just to
annoy him and
have
fun. d) Jo
liked the wizard
more and so she took pity on
him for getting beaten. |
Iv |
Choose the correct option
with respect to the statements given below.
Statement 1: Jo was adding
bits to
the
story created
by her own imagination. Statement 2: Jack was tired
and felt relaxed since he
didn’t have
to complete the whole
story. a) Statement 1
can be inferred from the extract but Statement 2
cannot be. b) Statement 1
is cannot be
inferred
from the extract but Statement 2 can
be. c) Both Statement 1 and Statement 2
can
be inferred. d) Both
Statement 1
and Statement 2 cannot be inferred. |
Q 5 |
Stand Alone MCQs |
I |
“Daddy.” “What?” “Roger Skunk. You said Roger Fish.” “Yes. Skunk.” The above dialogue
shows Jo to
be _ and her father to
be . Choose the
correct option
to complete the
following
sentence. a)
confused; exhausted b) rude; careless
c) vigilant; hasty d) disrespectful; disinterested |
Ii |
“Jack didn’t like
women when they took anything for granted; he
liked them apprehensive, hanging on
his words.” Choose the option with the correct reference to
the
textual statement given above. a) The
way Jo was looking
out of the window
as if she
was not interested annoyed
Jack. b) The way Clare
was shifting the furniture downstairs was irksome
to |
|
Jack. c) The way Jack was not able to make
Jo sleep on time was making
him
restless. d) The way the
skunk’s mommy in
the story didn’t listen to
his son, irritated Jack. |
Q11 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
I |
“He
was telling her something
true, something she
must know” Why does the narrator make this statement? |
Ii |
Why do you
think both
Jo and Jack want a
different ending each, for Roger Skunk’s story? |
iii |
What is the significance of the “half old tan and half new ivory cage of
moldings, rails and baseboards” appearing at the end of the story? |
Iv |
Wanting Roger Skunk to continue to
smell the way a “little skunk should
smell” has great significance. Explain. |
V |
Discuss Jack’s perception
about gender and
its roles. Cite instances from the text to support
your answer. |
Q13 |
Answer in 150-200 words |
I |
Which of the following
adjective/s can be
used
to
describe
Jack and Jo respectively? Support your answer with
textual
evidence. aggressive, imaginative,
inquisitive,
rigid, timid, proud |
Ii |
How do you think Jack’s storyline
would have been impacted if Jack had accepted Jo’s ending of the story? |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3 A. i. (c) ii. (b) iii. (b) iv. (a) B.
i. (d) ii. (a) iii. (b) iv. (a) Q5 i. (c) ii. (a) |
L-6 On the
Face of It
Text-Vistas |
|
Q3 |
Multiple Choice Questions based on an extract |
A. |
MR LAMB: Look, boy, look.... what do
you see? DERRY: Just....grass and stuff. Weeds. MR LAMB:
Some call them weeds.
If you like, then.... a weed garden, that. There’s fruit and
there are flowers, and trees and herbs. All sorts. But over
there.... weeds. I grow
weeds there. Why is one green, growing
plant called
a weed and another ‘flower’? Where’s the difference. It’s all life.... growing.
Same as you and me. DERRY: We’re not the
same. MR LAMB: I’m old. You’re
young. You’ve got a
burned
face, I’ve got a
tin leg. Not
important. You’re
standing
there.... I’m sitting
here.
Where’s the difference? |
i |
Like the play, the given extract is a study in contrasts. What does Mr. Lamb seek to do
by bringing
up distinctions? a) To explain that weeds are important and should be valued and cared for as
much as flowers. b) To
emphasize
that distinctions are made by man
to serve specific purposes
and uses. c) To highlight that labels are arbitrary and essentially reflect a common life experience. d) To remind Derry that the only difference that matters is that of attitude and experience. |
ii |
How would you
describe Derry’s tone when
he says – “We’re
not the same”? a) angry b) perplexed c) gloomy d) practical |
iii |
Look at the given images of books.
In which of the following are you NOT likely to find Mr.
Lamb’s words as given in
the
extract? |
|
(i) (ii) (iii) (iv)
(v) a) Options (i) and
(iii) b) Options (i) and
(iv) c) Options (ii) and (iv)
d) Options (ii) and (iii) |
iv |
Which of the
following represents Mr. Lamb’s analysis of flowers and weeds? a) Comparison
is an act of violence against the
self. b) If you
have a garden
in your library, everything
will be
complete.
c) One man’s freedom fighter is another man’s terrorist. d) The cosmos is within
us. We are made
of star-stuff. |
B. |
DERRY: What do you
do all day? MR LAMB:
Sit in the sun. Read
books. Ah, you thought it was an empty house, but inside, it’s full. Books and
other things.
Full. DERRY: But there
aren’t any curtains at the
windows. MR LAMB: I’m not fond of curtains. Shutting things out, shutting things in. I like the light and
the
darkness, and
the
windows open, to
hear the wind.
DERRY: Yes. I like
that. When it’s raining, I like to
hear it on
the roof. MR LAMB: So you’re not lost, are you? Not altogether? You do hear things. You
listen. DERRY: They talk about me. Downstairs, When I’m not there. |
i |
According
to Mr. Lamb, what does
the idea of being ‘lost’ signify? a) He who
does not hear what other people say is lost. b) He
who does not appreciate man
and
nature is lost. c) He who
does not pause to reflect on wind
and
rain is lost.
d) He who is closed
off to
nature and its wonders
is lost. |
ii |
Read the following analysis of
Mr. Lamb’s character based on the given extract. Choose the option
that fills in
the
given blanks most appropriately: Mr. Lamb’s (i) and daily activities reflected the values
he lived by and the kind of person he was. His openness, inquisitiveness, and his (ii)
to
nature were embodied in his work and words. Being close to and experiencing (iii) was not only significant to him, but was at the heart of |
|
finding meaning and
(iv) _ in life. a) (i) preferences ; (ii) attunement ; (iii) nature
; (iv) direction b) (ii) choices ; (ii) loyalty ; (iii) the
world ; (iv) hope c) (iii) words ; (ii) attitude
; (iii) gardening
; (iv) worthiness
d) (iv) sermons ; (ii)
proximity ; (iii) life ; (iv) values |
iii |
Choose the option that best describes the sequence of Derry’s emotions in
the
above extract: a) shyness – friendliness
– reluctant acceptance
b) inquisitiveness –
nostalgia
– mild sadness c) curiosity – measured delight – disappointment
d) defiance –
excitement –
grouchy insecurity |
iv |
“You do hear
things.
You listen.”
Choose the
option
that
captures
the difference between
hearing and listening.
hear: listen
:: : _ a) shut in: shut out b) smile: laugh c) act: reflect d) chance: attend |
Q 5. |
Stand-alone
MCQs |
i |
If Derry
were in a library at the beginning
of the play,
which of the following sections of books would he
NOT explore? (i) science
fiction
(ii) fantasy (iii) self-help (iv) non-fiction a) Options (i) and (ii) b) Options (ii) and
(iii) c) Options (iii) and
(iv) d) Options (i) and
(iv) |
ii |
“Ah, but do you care if you never kiss them.” What does Mr. Lamb aim to do
with such a statement? a) Empower
Derry to take charge.
b) Inspire
Derry to have dreams. c) Comfort Derry
by distracting him. d) Question Derry about his desires. |
iii |
Choose the
option that best constitutes a
message from the play: a) People’s attitude should
not stop one
from experiencing
life. b) What people
say has no
bearing upon
how one feels about things. c) People cannot be changed. One
can and should
only change
oneself. |
|
d) One’s opinions cannot be based
on
what people
say behind one’s back. |
iv |
Based on the slogans
and tag lines, for which of the following brands might Mr. Lamb be a suitable
brand ambassador? a) Options (i), (ii), (iii)
b) Options (ii), (iii), (iv) c)
Options (iii), (iv), (v) d) Options (iv), (v), (i) |
Q11 |
Answer in 30-40 words |
i |
‘It is not merely age
but experience that counts.’ With reference to any one example from the text, comment on how Derry
found
Mr. Lamb different from other adults he had encountered. |
ii |
Imagine
that Mr. Lamb had not fallen off the ladder at the end. Recalling
his
conversation with
the
bees, do you
think Derry’s return
might have
changed
him as much
as he had changed Derry?
Elaborate |
iii |
Do you think Derry’s mother is protective of him? Justify your opinion with textual evidence. |
iv |
Why did Derry go back to Mr.
Lamb’s garden even after opposition? |
Q13 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
Derry mentions two kinds of
responses people
often
have to
justify misfortune, one “‘Look
at all those people who are in pain and brave and never cry and never complain and don’t feel
sorry for themselves”; and
secondly, “think of all
those people worse off than
you.” Far from comforting him, these
empty words only agitate
him. In both cases, one’s sense of self is derived from others
and how they live their lives. a) How far might looking at others itself be the cause of suffering? b) In
what way can
people, especially children, be
empowered
to face their
challenges without the
spectre of comparison? |
ii |
Imagine that the encounter with Mr. Lamb marked a turning point in Derry’s life. Many years later, Derry
is invited to
present a
TED Talk on the challenges he faced and overcame. He thinks about the bitterness
he carried earlier |
|
towards people
and
the
world, and
how his attitude changed. He decides to speak about the transformation in his relationship with himself, and
understanding what kindness towards oneself might actually means. He agrees to weave his speech on ‘Not the face of a victim’. As Derry, create the speech draft for the TED
Talk. |
iii |
In today’s world, the mantra for success is considered to be the ability to think out of the box.
At the same time, as in the play, acceptance is difficult for
those
who
are different. As Derry says, “After I’d come home, one person said, “He’d have been better
off
stopping in there.
In
the hospital. He’d
be
better off
with others
like
himself.” How would
you reconcile both these ideas, of a demand
for difference, on
one
hand, and a need to
isolate difference on the other hand? |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q 3 A i – c ; ii –
c ; iii – b ; iv –
c B i – d ; ii –
a ; iii – c ; iv – d Q5 i – b ; ii – a ; iii –
a ; iv – d |
L-7 Evans
Tries
an
O-Level
Text-Vistas |
|
Q3 |
Multiple Choice
Questions based on an extract |
A. |
“They’re not — they don’t honestly think I’m goin’ to
try to — ” “They’re
taking
no chances, Evans. Nobody in his senses would
take any chance with
you.” “Who’s goin’
to listen in?” “I’ll tell you
who’s going to
listen in, laddy. It’s the Governor himself, see? He
don’t trust you
a bloody inch — and nor do I. I’ll be watching you like a hawk, Evans, so keep
your nose
clean. Clear?” He walked towards the door. Evans nodded. He’d already thought of that, and
Number Two Handkerchief was lying ready on
the
bunk — a neatly folded square of off-white
linen. “Just one more thing, Einstein.” “Ya?
Wha’s ‘at?” “Good luck, old son.” |
i |
Which of the following qualities of Jackson do NOT come through in the given extract? a) Soft-hearted
b) Gullible c) Skeptical d) Authoritative |
ii |
“Nobody in
his senses would take any chance with you”.
Why not? a) Jackson
did
not like Evans and was keen
to get rid of him. b) Evans had quite a reputation for escaping
from prisons. c) Evans had been
transferred
to Oxford prison
and
needed
care. d) The
Governor was uneasy about Evans’ German O-Level exams. |
iii |
In the
given extract, “Einstein” is meant as a . a) compliment b) misconception c) taunt d) provocation |
iv |
The above extract employs several
idiomatic expressions.
Which of the following
is not an
idiom? |
|
a) to
not trust an
inch b) to watch like
a hawk
c) to keep nose clean d) to be
ready on the bunk |
B. |
“Perhaps you won’t be
with us next September, Evans.” James Roderick Evans appeared to ponder the Governor’s words deeply. “No. P’r’aps I won’t,” he
said. As the prison van
turned right from Chipping Norton
on to the
Oxford road,
the
hitherto silent prison officer unlocked
the
handcuffs and leaned forward towards the driver, “For Christ’s sake get a move on! It won’t take ‘em long
to find out —’ “Where do
ye suggest we make
for?” asked
the
driver, in
a broad Scots accent. “What about Newbury?” suggested
Evans. |
i |
How would
you
describe Evans in
the above extract? a) solemn
b) cheeky c) anxious d) cheerful |
ii |
A ‘broad accent’
is that which
is a) applied
widely, all over the
world. b) recognised by broadcasters. c) associated with
the
traditional speech of the local people. d) developed over several
years for the
purposes of special communication. |
iii |
Evans suggested Newbury because
_ _ a) the police had already been to Newbury
and would not expect to find him there. b) he was being playful and wanted to crack another joke at the police’s expense. c) he wanted the thrill of another chase and the opportunity to outsmart
authorities. d) he did not want to risk going
to a new place, and opted for something more familiar. |
iv |
Choose the option that completes the given analogy. Silent : Loud
::
Ponder : a) meditate
b) repeat |
|
c) exaggerate d) overlook |
Q 5. |
Stand-alone
MCQs |
i |
Look at
the
statements given below.
Choose
the
option
that
correctly identifies which
statements are
fact and which
are
opinion: a) Fact –
(i) and (iv) ; Opinion
– (ii) and (iii)
b) Fact – (ii) and
(iii) ; Opinion – (i) and
(iv) c) Fact –
(i) and (ii) ; Opinion
– (iii) and
(iv) d) Fact –
(ii) and (iv) ; Opinion
– (i) and (iii) |
ii |
“God Almighty! There’s far more going on
than
I —” “Always will be, sir.” What can
be collected
from the aforesaid conversation
between
the Governor and Evans? a) The
Governor realized that he was likely to lose his job
very soon. b) Evans proved
that criminals are always one
step
ahead of the police. c)
There were always schemes afoot unknown to prison authorities. d) The Governor’s confidence in
his control over the prison
stood
shattered. |
iii |
A trope is a common
device or
theme
used
to describe
situations
or characters in a
story. Given
below are
some typical tropes
found in a prison escape narrative. Choose the option that is NOT a trope used in the story ‘Evans Tries an O- Level’? (i) Prison Changes People - Spending time in prison can change one's personality, for better or for worse. (ii) Master of Disguise -
When a character masquerades as someone
else. (iii) Wardens Are Evil
-
The
prison is
run
by a ruthlessly corrupt administrator. |
|
(iv) The Guards Must Be Crazy - Prison staff make it almost too easy for
prisoners to
escape. (v) Breaking Out the
Boss - Members of a gang
bust their boss out of jail. (vi) Passive
Rescue - A character who rescues someone
from prison
without using aggression or violence
to break them out. (vii) Prison Escape Artist - A character who is known for escaping prison
multiple times. (Source: www.tvtropes.org) a) Options (ii), (iii) and (vi)
b) Options (i), (iii) and (v) c)
Options (ii), (iv) and (v) d) Options (i), (iv) and (vi) |
Q11 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
Would you
say that kindness is a weakness in a law
enforcement officer?
Support your opinion
based on your reading
of the story ‘Evans Tries an O-
Level’. |
ii |
The story is a statement against
rehabilitation of criminals. Do you agree? Justify your stance. |
iii |
Would you call Evans the hero
of the story?
Justify your stance. |
iv |
Comment on
the
general absence of women characters in the story. |
Q13 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
After realizing
that he had been outwitted
once again, the dejected
Governor goes home
that night contemplating his next move. While
on one hand, he worries about the day’s humiliation, on
the
other, he cannot but smile
at the adventure it brought about. He decides to
narrate the day’s events as a
bedtime story to
his children. • Do you think he would
change
the
story in any way? • Keeping in mind that it is a bedtime tale, what more could he add to the story, or take
away from it? • How might he generate sympathy for
the police and prison
authorities? |
ii |
‘The story glosses over the dark
and violent side of prison life and the escape’. Comment on the given statement with reference to your reading of the story. |
iii |
Jackson goes back to his office and sits down to calculate his own role in Evans’ escape. He berates himself, “Stephens is new to this, but I should
have known better…”
And at the same time, he tries to be kind to himself, |
|
“But what more could
I have
done?”. Jackson feels caught between the two voices in his head - the tough prison
officer on
one
hand, and a compassionate person
on the other. Compose Jackson’s
reflections
in his
diary in
the
form
of a dialogue between these two versions of himself. |
Answer key for MCQs |
|
Q3 A i – b ; ii – b ; iii –
c ; iv – d B i – b ; ii – c ; iii – a ; iv –
d Q5 i – b ; ii – c
; iii – b |
Q3 |
Multiple Choice
Questions
based on an extract. |
A |
I cried aloud, shaking my head all the while until I felt the cold blades of the scissors against my neck, and heard
them gnaw off one of my thick braids. Then I lost my
spirit. Since the day I was taken
from my mother I had
suffered extreme
indignities. People
had stared at me. I had been tossed about in the air like a wooden puppet. And now my
long hair was shingled like a coward’s! In my anguish
I moaned for my mother, but no one came to comfort me. Not a soul reasoned quietly with me, as my own mother used to
do; for now I was only one
of many little
animals driven
by a herder. |
i |
‘Then I lost my spirit’. Choose the option that DOES NOT refer to
‘spirit’. 1. resolve 2. energy 3. determination 4. indifference 5. enthusiasm 6. will power a) 1, 2
and 5 b) 2, 4 and
6 c) 1, 3 and
6 d) 3, 4 and 6 |
ii |
Look at the given images of books. Which
of the following conveys the idea of the
extract? (1) (2) (3) (4) a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
iii |
How would you describe the author’s tone when she says, “I was only
one of many
little animals driven
by a herder”? a) austere |
|
b) apathetic
c) dismal d) resentful |
iv |
Choose the
correct option with reference to
the
two
statements given
below. Statement 1: The author had been
subjected
to humiliation
when she was separated from her mother. Statement 2: Nobody was able to
ease her distress and empathise
with her.
a) Statement 1
is true but Statement 2 is false. b) Statement 1 is false but Statement 2 is true. c) Both Statement 1 and
Statement cannot be
inferred from the
passage d) Both Statement 1 and Statement 2
can be inferred
from the
passage. |
B |
When I heard
this, I didn’t want to
laugh any more, I felt terribly sad. How could
they believe
that it was disgusting
if one of us held that package in
his hands, even
though
the vadai had been wrapped first in a banana leaf, and then parcelled in paper? I felt
so provoked and
angry that I wanted
to
touch those
wretched vadais myself
straightaway. Why should we
fetch and carry for these people, I wondered. Such
an important elder of ours goes meekly to the shops to fetch
snacks and hands them reverently, bowing and shrinking, to this fellow who just sits there and stiffs them into
his mouth. The thought of it infuriated me. |
i |
The elder handing snacks reverently, bowing and shrinking to
the
fellow indicates that the ‘fellow’
was 1. condescending. 2. unassuming. 3. submissive. 4. disdainful. 5. aggressive 6. domineering. a) 2, 3 and
6 b) 1, 4 and 5 c) 1, 4 and 6 d)
2, 3
and 4 |
ii |
Pick an idiom that DOES NOT describe how
the
author felt about this incident. a) at the
end of one’s tether b) be
in a black mood c) up
in arms d) throw up
one’s hands |
iii |
Based on
the given context, choose
the option
that illustrates when a person can be provoked, out of the examples given below. |
|
|
1. The
employees organised a peaceful protest outside the firm. |
2. The
manager ill-treated one of
the
employees and
wrongfully
terminated him. |
|
3. The employees wrote a letter of complaint against the
manager. |
4. The director of the
firm scheduled a meeting for reconciliation. |
|||
a) Option
1 b) Option
2 c) Option 3 d)
Option
4 |
||||
iv |
The given extract DOES NOT talk about a) author’s realisation of her misconception. b)
elders
being ill-treated in
her society. c) the haughtiness of the ‘fellow’. d) how the author was enraged. |
|||
Q 5 |
Stand Alone
MCQs |
|||
i |
The chapter ‘We
Too are Human Beings’ is the book named ‘Karukku’
by Bama. a) a preface
to b) the blurb
for c) an
excerpt from d)
the
foreword
of |
|||
ii |
“Among
our people, short hair was worn
by mourners,
and shingled
hair by cowards!” This statement is an example of a) a belief b) an opinion
c) a
myth d) a fallacy |
|||
iii |
In the light of the following statement, choose the option that lists the characteristics of Zitkala-Sa. “No I will
not submit! I will
struggle first!” 1. servile 2. audacious 3. cocky 4. brash 5. resolute 6. gutsy |
|
a) 1, 2 and
5 b) 2, 5 and 6 c) 1, 3 and 5 d) 2, 4 and
6 |
iv |
“At times, people from various political parties would arrive
put up a stage
and harangue
us through their mikes.” In which
of the following
options is the
word ‘harangue’
NOT used correctly? a) The
director would
often harangue
his employees. b) The
professor had no
right to
harangue by the
student. c) The harangue of the student was applauded by the audience. d) As the
man moved closer, he began to harangue
uncontrollably. |
Q11 |
Answer in 30-40
words |
i |
Zitkala-Sa
mentions
the
indignities she
had to
suffer as
a
child. How
do such indignities break the morale
of a child? |
ii |
Bama’s innocence was lost when
she came face to
face with the ugly truth
of racial discrimination. Do you
think children who
have a difficult childhood
become even more resolute
than children
who have a comfortable one? |
iii |
“Where there is oppression, there will be resistance.” Comment on this statement with
reference to the story. |
iv |
Children relish the small pleasures of life just like Bama did when she dawdled along
on her way back
from school, enjoying all the novelties. Elaborate. |
Q 13 |
Answer in 120-150 words |
i |
Imagine your school has organised a panel
discussion on ‘Oppression and Its Evils.’ You are one
of the speakers. As part of your address, you are required
to reflect on the lessons and
ideas from the story, ‘Memories of Childhood’. Draft the address. You may begin like this: Good morning ladies and gentlemen! It is a pleasure to be given an opportunity to speak today. I would like to begin by quoting James Baldwin, ‘Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced.’ Tolerating oppression in any
form is… |
ii |
Imagine Zitkala- Sa and Bama meet each other. They both share their experience of being from marginalised
communities. They reflect on
instances of oppression
they faced and how those instances proved to be the source
of strength to fight against
such oppression. Write
down their discussion
in a creative way, with reference
to their experiences. |
Q3
A. i. (c) ii. (d) iii. (c) iv. (d) B.
i.(c) ii. (d) iii. (b) iv. (b)
Q5
i.(c) ii. (a) iii. (b) iv. (c)
Answer key for MCQs
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