Question

And afterwards you wait there alone in the arcade for a long while, standing where he stood remembering the soft melodious voice, the shimmer of green eyes. No taller than you No bolder than you. The prodigy, The innocent genius, the great Danny Casey And she saw it all again, last Saturday saw him ghost past the lumbering defenders, heard the fifty thousand catch their breath as he hovered momentarily over the ball, and then the explosion of sound as he struck it crisply into the goal, the sudden thunderous eruption of exultant approbation.

1. What was she remembering about Danny Casey?

2. A Prodigy is a person who is a genius (true/false)

3. the soft melodious voice, the shimmer of green eyes describe________.
i.Danny Casey
ii. Hansie
iii. Derek
iv. Geoff

4. The explosion that could be seen at the stadium was__________.

5.Pick a word from the passage which is similar in meaning to jubiliant

6. The thunderous sound exploded because?
i. The ball was crispy
ii. The ball erupted
iii. The Danney hovered over the ball
iv. The ball was struck into the goal

Answer

1.She was remembering the scene of the arcade.
2.True
3.Danny Casey
4. that of sound
5.Exultant
6.the ball was struck into the goal

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Prussians, returning from drill, sounded under our windows. M. Hamel stood up, very pale, in his chair. I never
saw him look so tall. “My friends,” said he, “I—I—” But something choked him. He could not go on. Then he
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could — “Vive La France!” Then he stopped and leaned his head against the wall, and, without a word, he
made a gesture to us with his hand — “School is dismissed — you may go”.

i. M Hamel looked very pale because ___________
a. he was tired after teaching
b. he had to teach German from the next day.
c. no one thanked him for his service.
d. he was sorrowful.

ii. The teacher appeared ‘tall’. This implies that

(I) M Hamel was proud to be a teacher of French
(II) M Hamel gathered his strength to stop himself from breaking down.

a. option I is correct.
b. option II is correct.
c. Both I & II are correct.
d. II is the explanation of I

iii. The extract brings out the feeling of patriotism in M Hamel. Provide evidence for the fact.

iv. What is the significance of the church bell in the context?

v. The word ‘drill’ as used in the extract means ....
a. a tool
b. teach many times
c exercise, marching
d. make a hole

vi. The teacher could not continue speaking because _________________.

“but the servants knew Shukla as a poor yeoman who pestered their master to help the indigo sharecroppers.
So they let him stay on the grounds with his companion, Gandhi, whom they took to be another peasant. But
Gandhi was not permitted to draw water from the well lest some drops from his bucket pollute the entire
source..”

i) What does “yeoman” mean?
a) Gentleman
b) Illiterate
c) Farmer
d) Landlord

ii) Where does this episode happen?

iii) What does the behavior of the servants show about the social situation?

iv) Why wasn’t Gandhi permitted to draw water from the well?
a) Because there was water scarcity in the place
b) Because they thought Gandhi to be an untouchable
c) Because they didn’t want Gandhi to take any trouble
d) Because Gandhi was against the British

v) Who was Shukla?

vi) “pestered their master....” Who is the master mentioned in these lines?

“All this shows that there was a great deal of national integration long before A.I.R. and Doordarshan began
broadcasting programmes on national integration. This gang of nationally integrated make-up men could turn
any decent-looking person into a hideous crimson hued monster with the help of truck-loads of pancake and
a number of other locally made potions and lotions. Those were the days of mainly indoor shooting, and only
five per cent of the film was shot outdoors.”

1. Pancake was .......................

2. The tone of the narrator in the extract is....
a) serious
b) sad
c) puckish
d) regretful

3. Find the word from the extract which means “extremely ugly”

4. The writer talks about national integration in the Studio because....
a) The staff of make-up department were from different states of India
b) The movies were made on the themes of national integration
c) The staff were patriotic
d) They were influenced by AIR programmes on national integration

5. What does the writer say in this extract about filmmaking of those days?

6. Why did the make-up men turn a decent-looking person into a monster?

” Seeing me sitting at my desk tearing up newspapers day in and day out, most people thought I was doing
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occupation would barge into my cubicle and deliver an extended lecture. The ‘boy’ in the make-up
department had decided I should be enlightened on how great literary talent was being allowed to go waste
in a department fit only for barbers and perverts. Soon I was praying for crowd-shooting all the time.
Nothing short of it could save me from his epics.”

1. The boy in the make-up department was not actually a boy. He was in his........

2. Why did Asokamitran pray for crowd-shooting?
a) it would give him free time to go and see the shooting
b) he would get a role in the movie
c) it would save him from the lecture given by the ‘boy’
d) he would get time to read and write

3. Who was the Boss at Gemini?
a) Vasan
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4. A cubicle is......

5. What did Asokamitran do at the Studio?

6. What was the boy’s extended lecture about?

”They accordingly went back to Gandhi and told him they were ready to follow him into jail. “The battle of
Champaran is won”, he exclaimed. Then he took a piece of paper and divided the group into pairs and put
down the order in which each pair was to court arrest. Several days later, Gandhi received a written
communication from the magistrate informing that the Lieutenant-Governor of the province had ordered the
case to be dropped. Civil disobedience had triumphed, the first time in modern India.”

1. Which quality of Gandhi as a leader is seen in this extract?

2. Who are ‘they’ here?

3. “the Lieutenant-Governor of the province had ordered the case to be dropped”. Which case does it refer to?
a) the case of disobeying the Police Superintendent’s order to quit Champaran
b) the case of staying with a government servant
c) the case of staging an agitation outside the court
d) the case of writing letters of complaint to the British officials

4. “They accordingly went back to Gandhi and told him they were ready to follow him into jail”. What made
them decide so?

5. “The Battle of Champaran is won”. Which of the following statements is ‘True’ about the statement?
Statement-1: Gandhi didn’t mean that the battle of Champaran was actually won but the unity of the people
against injustice was no less a victory.
Statement-2: Gandhi meant that the battle of Champaran was literally won and there was nothing more to do.

6. What does ‘civil disobedience’ mean?
a) the refusal to obey the rules and commands of the government
b) a peaceful way of expressing disapproval against unfair policies
c) aggressive form of protesting against injustice
d) passive form of protest

Then all effort ceased. I relaxed. Even my legs felt limp; and a blackness swept over my brain. It wiped
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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.’

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b. lost consciousness
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iii. The narrator need not any longer make any effort is brought out by
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c. float along
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iv. How was the experience of crossing to oblivion?
v. “the curtain of life fell” –
a. metaphor
b. allegory
c. simile
d. pun

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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. Dennis 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.

(a)How would you describe Denis Brians opinion on interviews? Choose the most appropriate options.

(1)Appeasing
(2)utilitarian
(3)approving
(4)praising

(i)Options (1) and (2)
(ii)options (3) and (4)
(iii)options (2) and (3)
(iv)options (1) and (4)

(b)According to Saul Bellow,interviews are like thumbprints on his windpipe,What emotion might best describe
such an image?

(c)Why does Dennis Brian state that the interviewer occupies a position of power and influence?

(d)The use of the word serviceable implies that interviews are powerful.(True/False)

(e) In which of the following statements has the word ‘unprecedented power” been used appropriately?
(i)Technology now gives the state unprecedented power to monitor the lives of individuala.
(ii)This was interpreted that some unprecedented power has descended at the temple.
(iii)His unprecedented power to create whirlwind for mass destruction made him one of the most fearsome evil
forces
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influence.

(f)Contemporaries means the opposite of:
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(ii)latest
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1. Who walked after dark and why?

2. Why was that place suitable for meeting?

3. Find word in the passage which means stifled

4. Who else knew about this meeting?
a. Jhansie
b. Derek
c. Sophie's mother
d. Sophie's father

5.Danney Casey sat on the wooden bench and talked to Sophie that day.(true/false)

6.From the given passage we understand that Sophie was
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ii. Immature
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iv. All of the above

Savita, a young girl in a drab pink dress, sits alongside an elderly woman, soldering pieces of glass. As her hands move mechanically like the tongs of a machine, I wonder if she knows the sanctity of the bangles she helps make. It symbolises an Indian woman's suhaag, auspiciousness in marriage. It will dawn on her suddenly one day when her head is draped with a red veil, her hands dyed red with henna, and red bangles rolled onto her wrists. She will then become a bride. Like the old woman beside her who became one many years ago. 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!

1. "I know nothing except bangles". Which one of the following best speaks about the character of the old man.
a) (i) Cunning; (ii) wise; (iii) soft; (iv) obedient
b) (i) Intelligent; (ii) irresponsible; (iii)caring; (iv) simple
c) (i) Innocent; (ii)foresight (iii) responsible; iv)caring
d) (i) Impeccable; (ii) honest; (iii) rude; (iv) simple

2. Which option best indicates that the old woman too has sacrificed something in her life for the sake of her family.


(i) The old woman has bangles on her wrist, but she can't see them.
(ii) She has not even enjoyed one full meal in her life time.
(iii)She never supported her husband in bangle making in her life.
(iv)She knows nothing expect making bangles which symbolise an Indian woman's suhaag.

a) (i)&(iv)
b) (ii)&((iii)
c) (iii)&(iv)
d) (i)&(ii)

3. "Ek waqt ser bhar khana bhi nahin khaya", the grand mother says. Her voice indicates that she is
a) Undergoing an emotion of great happiness.
b) Going through an emotion which lacks happiness.
c) Undergoing an emotion of anger and frustration.
d) Experiencing an emotion which reflects her fear and anxiety.

4. Which of these statements is TRUE about the husband of the elderly woman?
a) He says he knows nothing about making bangles in Firozabad.
b) He did not enjoy even one full meal in his entire life for the sake of his family.
c) He says he knows only bangle making and nothing else in his life.
d) All he has done in his life for the sake of his wife is making bangles for her.

5. "I wonder if she knows the sanctity of the bangles she helps make". In this statement, I wonder reflects the author's?

6. Savita, a young girl in a drab pink dress, sits alongside........

“Gandhi told Shukla he had an appointment in Cawnpore and was also committed to go to other parts of
India. Shukla accompanied him everywhere. Then Gandhi returned to his ashram near Ahmedabad. Shukla
followed him to the ashram. For weeks he never left Gandhi’s side. “Fix a date,” he begged. Impressed by
the sharecropper’s tenacity and story Gandhi said, ‘‘I have to be in Calcutta on such-and-such a date. Come
and meet me and take me from there.”

1. What does the word ‘tenacity’ mean?

2. How did Shukla show tenacity?
a) He didn’t obey Gandhi’s requests
b) He kept arguing with Gandhi
c) He followed Gandhi everywhere till Gandhi agreed to accompany him to Champaran
d) He didn’t respect Gandhi’s busy schedule

3. Why did Shukla follow Gandhi?

4. Shukla met Gandhi for the first time at.....
a) Champaran
b) Lucknow
c) Patna
d) Calcutta

5. Which ‘story’ of Shukla does the extract refer to?

6. Shukla was a .....................