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Revised Result of the All India Pre-Medical/Pre-Dental Entrance Final Examination 2012

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In compliance with the orders of the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India in IA No.35 of 2012 dated 7.6.2012 in WP No.443 of 1992, regarding the AIPMT online counseling, the Central Board of Secondary Education has revised the result of the All India Pre-Medical/Pre-Dental Entrance Final Examination-2012. As per the new scheme for online counseling approved by the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India, a total of five times of seats available for allotment or all qualified candidates, whichever is less will be given chance to participate in online counseling. Accordingly, the details of the candidates selected in the merit/wait list on the basis of the score of final stage examination are given as under:-

Revised Result of the All India Pre Medical/Pre Dental Entrance Final Examination 2012

The candidates can access their result on www.aipmt.nic.in , www.cbse.nic.in and www.cbseresults.nic.in. Candidates have qualified under various categories on the basis of the category he/she was eligible for appearing in the final stage examination.

The details of the online counseling are available on DGHS website www.mohfw.nic.in. The allotment of seats to the candidates in Medical Colleges will be made by the Directorate General of Health Services, Ministry of Health and family Welfare, Govt. of India according to the counseling category rank.

Rank letters of successful candidates will be uploaded on the website www.aipmt.nic.in shortly. The candidates are also advised to remain in touch with CBSE website www.aipmt.nic.in and www.cbse.nic.in and website of Ministry of Health and Family Welfare – www.mohfw.nic.in till completion of online counseling.

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CBSE Application For Obtaining Photocopy Of The Evaluated Answer Book Of Main Exam 2012

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RULES & MODALITIES FOR APPLYING FOR OBTAINING PHOTOCOPY OF THE EVALUATED ANSWER BOOK(S)

1 The subject(s) in which the photocopy of the evaluated Answer-book(s) is/are being requested for should be selected carefully by the candidate.
2 Request for obtaining photocopy of the evaluated answer-book(s) should be made online only at the CBSE’s website www.cbse.nic.in between 31st to 38th day from the date of declaration of result of the Main Exam held in March/April. Accordingly the dates for submission of online applications will be 23rd June to 30th June, 2012 for class X and 27th June to 4th July, 2012 for class XII. The online facility will be available from 10:00A.M. on the day of opening and 5.00P.M. on the closing day.
3 After filling up the application form, a confirmation page will be generated through the website. The confirmation page along with the requisite enclosures and fee should reach the Board’s Regional Office concerned (list enclosed) on or before 45th day from the date of declaration of result on the Board’s website.
4 The confirmation page of the application form is to be submitted by the candidate duly filled up with the required undertaking strictly in his/her own hand writing and under his/her own signature and not by anyone else on his/her behalf. The signature should correspond with that on the Admit Card. The confirmation page of the application may either be handed over in the Regional Office or sent through post within the stipulated period as per requisite information/instructions mentioned therein.
5 The confirmation page of the application form should be accompanied by:-
i) A Fee of Rs. 500/- per subject in the form of Demand Draft favouring Secretary, CBSE payable at the Regional Office concerned.
ii) Undertaking in the space provided in the confirmation Page that he/she would not question the evaluation done by the Examiner.
iii) Photocopy of his/her Admit Card
6 Application submitted on behalf of the candidate as also incomplete application will be summarily rejected without any further reference.
7 The Regional Office concerned will endeavour to send photocopy of the Answer-book within 30 days from the date of receipt of acceptance of the confirmation page alongwith enclosures and fee in the office of the Board. The photocopy of the evaluated answer book would be provided after blocking all information relating to the identity of the Examiner/Evaluators/any other official associated with the examination process and marks in respect of Class X. The photocopy of the evaluated answer book will be sent by speed post only.
8 If a candidate finds any error in totalling of marks/grade(s) or finds that any answer has not been evaluated in the photo copy of the answer book, then he/she should communicate in writing to the Regional Office concerned immediately so as to reach the Regional Office not later than a period of 10 days from the date of receipt of the copy of the evaluated Answer-book.
9 Board does not have provision of revaluation of the answer book or supplementary answer book(s) hence any request for the same will not be entertained by the Board. However mistake(s), if any, as mentioned at para 8 above shall be looked into, and corrected, if required.
10 The photocopy of the evaluated answer book shall not be given to any institution or school for display, commercial purpose or to print media.
11 The decision of the competent Authority of the Board on the marks/grades awarded shall be final and binding on the candidate.
12 In the case of Secondary School Examination (class X) the photocopy of the evaluated answerbook would be provided to such Candidates who have appeared under Board Based Category only.

<< I Agree, Proceed >>

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CBSE Class IX Formative Assessment English Course

NCERT Class VIII Maths Chapter 6 Squares and Square Roots

NCERT Solutions for Class 10th English: Chapter 5 – The Hundred Dresses – I

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NCERT Solutions for Class 10th English: Chapter 5 – The Hundred Dresses – I

National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) Book for Class 10th
Subject: English
Chapter: Chapter 5 – The Hundred Dresses – I

Class 10th NCERT English Text Book Chapter 5  The Hundred Dresses – I is given below.

Oral Comprehension Check
Question 1:
Where in the classroom does Wanda sit and why?
Answer: Wanda sat in the seat next to the last seat, in the last row, in Room Thirteen. She
sat in the corner of the room where the rough boys who did not get good marks sat. It was also the place where there was the most scuffling of feet, most roars of laughter when anything funny was said, and most mud and dirt on the floor.

Question 2: Where does Wanda live? What kind of a place do you think it is?
Answer: Wanda lived at Boggins Heights. It seems that it was a place far away from the school and also, where there was a lot of dry mud, thereby indicating that it was not a very rich locality.

Question 3: When and why do Peggy and Maddie notice Wanda’s absence?
Answer: Peggie and Maddie noticed Wanda’s absence after three days, i.e., on Wednesday. They finally noticed her absence because Wanda had got them late for school. They had waited for her in order to have some fun, but she did not turn up.

Question 4: What do you think “to have fun with her” means?
Answer: In this context, ‘to have fun with her’ means that Peggy and Maddie would have made fun of Wanda and teased her for their own pleasure.
~

Oral Comprehension Check
Question 1:
In what way was Wanda different from the other children?
Answer: Wanda was different from other children. She did not have any friends. She came to school alone and went home alone. She always wore a faded blue dress that did not fit her properly. Unlike other children, she did not talk to anybody.

Question 2: Did Wanda have a hundred dresses? Why do you think she said she did?
Answer: No, she did not have a hundred dresses because she was poor and wore the same faded dress to school everyday. Probably, it was a child’s fantasy to possess a hundred dresses—a child who had only one dress to wear for school. The other children used to make fun of her poverty, and would have laughed at her whatever she might have said. This could have been the reason for her exaggerating everything.

Question 3: Why is Maddie embarrassed by the questions Peggy asks Wanda? Is she also like Wanda, or is she different?
Answer: Maddie was embarrassed by the questions Peggy asked Wanda because she was poor herself. She usually wore old clothes, which were handed down by someone else. She did not feel sorry for Wanda. She was worried that perhaps later, everyone would start teasing her too. She thought she was different from Wanda in the sense that she would never claim that she had a hundred dresses. She was not as poor as Wanda. Yet she was afraid that the others might mock her too.
~

Thinking About the Text
Question 1:
How is Wanda seen as different by the other girls? How do they treat her?
Answer: Wanda was different from other girls. She did not have any friends. She came to school alone and went home alone. She always wore a faded blue dress that did not fit her properly. Unlike others, she did not talk to anybody. The other girls teased her and had fun with her. They would surround her, and Peggy would ask how many
dresses she had. Wanda would reply that she had a hundred and they would continue teasing her. Then, they would let her go. Before she could go very far, they would burst into laughter. They kept asking her how many hats she had, or shoes, etc. All of them mocked her and made fun of her.

Question 2: How does Wanda feel about the dresses game? Why does she say that she has a hundred dresses?
Answer: Wanda did not show any feelings regarding the dresses game. It is most likely that she was deeply hurt. It could have been one of the reasons why her family left the place and moved to the city. Probably, it was a child’s fantasy to possess a hundred dresses—a child who had only one dress to wear for school. The other children used to make fun of her poverty, and would have laughed at her whatever she might have said. This could have been the reason for her exaggerating everything.

Question 3: Why does Maddie stand by and not do anything? How is she different from Peggy? (Was Peggy’s friendship important to Maddie? Why? Which lines in the text tell you this?)
Answer:Maddie always stood by and never did anything as she was afraid that if she did, she would be the next target of the children. She herself was poor and therefore, felt that if she spoke against the others, they would target her next. Unlike her, Peggy was a rich girl. This was also the reason why Maddie could think from Wanda’s point of view, but Peggy could not. Maddie was Peggy’s best friend. It seemed as if she was in awe of Peggy. She admired her quite a lot as she said that Peggy was the most liked girl in the room and that she drew better than anyone else. She did not have the courage to go against her. Some of the lines from the text which show that Peggy’s friendship was important to Maddie are as follows.
(i) Peggy, who had thought up this game, and Maddie, her inseparable friend, were always the last to leave.
(ii) She was Peggy’s best friend, and Peggy was the best-liked girl in the whole room.
(iii) Peggy could not possibly do anything that was really wrong, she thought.
(iv) Oh, Maddie was sure Peggy would win.

Question 4: What does Miss Mason think of Wanda’s drawings? What do the children think of them? How do you know?
Answer:Miss Mason said that Room Thirteen should be proud of Wanda as she had drawn one hundred designs of dresses, all of which were beautiful and different. She told the students that in the opinion of the judges, any one of the drawings was worthy of winning the prize. She was very happy to announce Wanda as the winner. As Wanda was absent that day, Miss Mason hoped that she would be back the next day. She then asked the entire class to look at Wanda’s exquisite drawings. The children also admired the drawings. Everybody stopped and whistled or murmured admiringly. After Miss Mason had announced that Wanda was the winner, they burst into applause, and even the boys were glad to have a chance to stamp on the floor and whistle. Also, just as Peggy and Maddie entered the room, they stopped
short and gasped. Later they recognized the designs as those which Wanda had described to them. And in the end, Peggy exclaimed, “…and I thought I could draw.” This shows that she also realized how good Wanda’s drawings were.
~

Oral Comprehension Check
Question 1:
Why didn’t Maddie ask Peggie to stop teasing Wanda? What was she afraid of?
Answer: Maddie tried to tell Peggy to stop teasing Wanda by writing a note to her. She knew she would never have the courage to speak to Peggy about this matter. As she was writing the note, she pictured herself in the school yard as a new target for Peggy and the girls. She thought Peggy might ask her where she got the dress she had on and she would have to say that it was one of Peggy’s old ones. This was what she was afraid of. Consequently, she ended up tearing the note.

Question 2: Who did Maddie think would win the drawing contest? Why?
Answer: Maddie thought that Peggy would win the drawing contest because Peggy drew better than anyone else. She could copy a picture in a magazine, or some film star’s face so well that one could tell who it was.

Question 3: Who won the drawing contest? What had the winner drawn?
Answer: Wanda won the drawing contest. She had drawn a hundred dresses, which were dazzling with colours, and had brilliant and lavish designs. They were all drawn on great sheets of wrapping paper. They were all different from each other and all beautiful. The judges said that any one of the drawings was worthy of winning the
prize.
~

Thinking About Language
Question 1:
Combine the following to make sentences like those above.
1. This is the bus (what kind of bus?) It goes to Agra. (use which or that)
2. I would like to buy (a) shirt (which shirt?). (The) shirt is in the shop window. (use which or that)
3. You must break your fast at a particular time (when?). You see the moon in the sky. (use when)
4. Find a word (what kind of word?). It begins with the letter Z. (use which or that).
5. Now find a person (what kind of person). His or her name begins with the letter Z.(use whose)
6. Then go to a place (what place?). There are no people whose name begins with Z in that place. (use where)
Answer: 1. This is the bus which goes to Agra.
2.I would like to buy the shirt that is in the shop window.
3. You must break your fast when you see the moon in the sky.
4. Find a word which begins with the letter Z.
5. Now find a person whose name begins with the letter Z.
6. Then go to a place where there are no people whose name begins with Z.

Question 2: 1. Can you say whose point of view the italicised words express?
(i) But on Wednesday, Peggy and Maddie, who sat down front with other children who got good marks and who didn’t track in a whole lot of mud, did notice that Wanda wasn’t there.
(ii) Wands Petronski. Most of the children in Room Thirteen didn’t have names like that. They had names easy to say, like Thomas, Smith or Allen.
Answer:1.
(i) In the given sentence, the italicised words express the point of view of Peggy and Maddie.
(ii) In the given sentence, the italicised words express the point of view of the narrator.

Question 3: Look at this sentence. The italicised adverb expresses an opinion or point of view.
Obviously, the only dress Wanda had was the blue one she wore every day. (This was obvious to the speaker.)
Other such adverbs are apparently, evidently, surprisingly, possibly, hopefully, incredibly, luckily. Use these words appropriately in the blanks in the sentences below. (You may use a word more then once and more than one word may be
appropriate for a given blank.)
1. ____________ , he finished his work on time.
2. ____________ , it will not rain on the day of the match.
3. _____________, he had been stealing money from his employer.
4. Television is ___________ to blame for the increase in violence in society.
5. The children will _____________ learn from their mistakes.
6. I can’t ________________ lend you that much money.
7. The thief had _____________ been watching the house for many days.
8. The thief ______________ escaped by bribing the jailor.
9. _________________ , no one had suggested this before.
10. The water was ________________ hot.
Answer: 1. Surprisingly , he finished his work on time.
2. Hopefully , it will not rain on the day of the match.
3. Evidently , he had been stealing money from his employer.
4. Television is evidently to blame for the increase in violence in society.
5. The children will hopefully learn from their mistakes.
6. I can’t possibly lend you that much money.
7. The thief had apparently been watching the house for many days.
8. The thief possibly escaped by bribing the jailor.
9. Surprisingly , no one had suggested this before.
10. The water was incredibly hot.

Click Here to view All Chapters Solutions for Class 10th English

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NCERT Class VIII Maths Chapter 5 Data Handling

KVPY 2013 Result

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KVPY 2013 Result

The provisional list of students who have qualified in the Aptitude Test and eligible to be called for interview based on the performance in the KVPY Aptitude Test held on October 27, 2013 is published herewith.

The cut off marks for different streams are as under:

  • Stream SA- 53 marks out of 100
    SA SC/ST – 41 marks out of 100
    SA PWD(Person with disability) – 41 marks out of 100
  • Stream SB- 40 marks out of 100
    SB SC/ST -30 marks out of 100
    SB PWD(Person with disability) – 27 marks out of 100
  • Stream SX- 46 marks out of 100
    SX SC/ST – 35 marks out of 100
    SX PWD (Person with disability) – 35 marks out of 100

For re-evaluation of OMR answer sheet, the student has to pay a fee of Rs. 1000/- in the form of a Demand Draft drawn in favour of Registrar, IISc, Bangalore-12 payable at Bangalore with a covering letter indicating the stream, application/seat number on or before 1st January 2014. Requests after the deadline of January 1, 2014 will not be entertained.


Results of the Aptitude Test held on 27th October 2013

The following students are short listed for KVPY-2013 subject to verification. They will be informed about their interview dates, time, place on or before 10.01.2014.

KVPY 2013 Result

Click Here for KVPY 2013 Complete Information

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  • KVPY Result 2013
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NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom

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NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom

National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) Book for Class VII
Subject: English
Chapter: Chapter 4 – The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom

Class VII NCERT English Text Book Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom is given below

NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom

Before you read

This is a story about an honest and hardworking old couple and their pet dog. The neighbours are troublesome, and the dog dies a sad death. The spirit of the dog gives solace and support to his master in unexpected ways.

 

The Ashes That Made Trees Bloom
I

 

NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloomn the good old days of the daimios, there lived an old couple whose only

pet was a little dog. NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom Having no children, they loved it as though it were a baby. The old dame made it a cushion of blue crape, and at mealtime Muko—for that was its name—would sit on it as snug as any cat. The kind people fed the pet with tidbits of fish from their own chopsticks, and all the boiled rice it wanted.
Thus treated, the dumb creature loved its protectors like a being with a soul.

The old man, being a rice farmer, went daily with hoe or spade into the fields, working hard from morning until O Tento Sama (as the sun is called) had gone down behind the hills. Every day the dog followed him to work, never once harming the white heron that walked in the footsteps of the old man to pick up the worms.

For the old fellow was patient and kind to everything that had life, and often turned up a sod on purpose to give food to the birds.
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom
One day the dog came running to him, putting his paws against his legs and motioning with his head to some spot behind. The old man at first thought his pet was only playing and did not mind it. But the dog kept on whining and running to and fro for some minutes. Then the old man followed the dog a few yards to a place where the animal began a lively scratching.

Thinking it was possibly a buried bone or bit of fish, the old man struck his hoe in the earth,

when, lo! a pile of gold gleamed before him.
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom

NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom
Thus in an hour the old couple were made rich. The good souls bought a piece of land, made a feast for their friends, and gave plentifully to their poor neighbours. As for the dog, they petted him till they nearly smothered him with kindness.

Now in the same village there lived a wicked old man and his wife, not a bit sensitive and kind, who had always kicked and scolded all dogs whenever any passed their house. Hearing of their neighbours’ good luck, they coaxed the dog into their garden and set before him bits of fish and other dainties, hoping he would find treasure for them. But the dog, being afraid of the cruel pair, would neither eat nor move.

Then they dragged him out of doors, taking a spade and hoe with them. No sooner had the dog got near a pine tree growing in the garden than he began to paw and scratch the ground, as if a mighty treasure lay beneath.

“Quick, wife, hand me the spade and hoe!” cried the greedy old fool, as he danced with joy.

Then the covetous old fellow, with a spade, and the old crone, with a hoe, began to dig; but there was nothing but a dead kitten, the smell of which made them drop their tools and shut their noses. Furious at the dog, the old man kicked and beat him to death, and the old woman finished the work by nearly chopping off his head with the sharp hoe. They then flung him into the hole and heaped the earth over his carcass.

The owner of the dog heard of the death of his pet and, mourning for him as if he had been his own child, went at night under the pine tree. He set up some bamboo tubes in the ground, such as are used before tombs, in which he put fresh flowers. Then he laid a cup of water and a tray of food on the grave and burned several costly sticks of incense. He mourned a great while over his pet, calling him many dear names, as if he were alive.
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom

That night the spirit of the dog appeared to him in a dream and said, “Cut down the pine tree over my grave, and make from it a mortar for your rice pastry and a mill for your bean sauce.”
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom

So the old man chopped down the tree and cut out of the middle of the trunk a section about two feet long. With great labour, partly by fire, partly by the chisel, he scraped out a hollow place as big as a small bowl. He then made a longhandled hammer of wood, such as is used for pounding rice. When New Year’s time drew near, he wished to make some rice pastry. When the rice was all boiled, granny put it into the mortar, the old man lifted his hammer to pound the mass into dough, and the blows fell heavy and fast till the pastry was all ready for baking. Suddenly the whole mass turned into a heap of gold coins.

When the old woman took the hand-mill, and filling it with beans began to grind, the gold dropped like rain. Meanwhile the envious neighbour peeped in at the window when the boiled beans were being ground.

“Goody me!” cried the old hag, as she saw each dripping of sauce turning into yellow gold, until in a few minutes the tub under the mill was full of a shining mass of gold.

So the old couple were rich again. The next day the stingy and wicked neighbour came and borrowed the mortar and magic mill. They filled one with boiled rice and the other with beans. Then the old man began to pound and the woman to grind. But at the first blow and turn, the pastry and sauce turned into a foul mass of worms. Still more angry at this, they chopped the mill into pieces, to use as firewood.
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom

1. Why did the neighbours kill the dog?

2. Mark the right item.

(i) The old farmer and his wife loved the dog
(a) because it helped them in their day-to-day work.
(b) as if it was their own baby.
(c) as they were kind to all living beings.
(ii) When the old couple became rich, they
(a) gave the dog better food.
(b) invited their greedy neighbours to a feast.
(c) lived comfortably and were generous towards their poor neighbours.
(iii) The greedy couple borrowed the mill and the mortar to make
(a) rice pastry and bean sauce.
(b) magic ash to win rewards.
(c) a pile of gold.

 

II

Not long after that, the good old man dreamed again, and the spirit of the dog spoke to him, telling him how the wicked people had burned the mill made from the pine tree. “Take the ashes of the mill, sprinkle them on the withered trees, and they will bloom again,” said the dog-spirit.

The old man awoke and went at once to his wicked neighbour’s house, where he found the miserable old pair sitting at the edge of their square fireplace, in the middle of the floor, smoking and spinning. From time to time they warmed their hands and feet with the blaze from some bits of the mill, while behind them lay a pile of the broken pieces.
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom
The good old man humbly asked for the ashes. Though the covetous couple turned up their noses at him and scolded him as if he were a thief, they let him fill his basket with the ashes.

On coming home, the old man took his wife into the garden. It being winter, their favourite cherry tree was bare. He sprinkled a pinch of ashes on it, and, lo! it sprouted blossoms until it became a cloud of pink blooms which perfumed the air. The news of this filled the village, and everyone ran out to see the wonder.

The covetous couple also heard the story, and, gathering up the remaining ashes of the mill, kept them to make withered trees blossom.

The kind old man, hearing that his lord, the daimio, was to pass along the high road near the
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom
village, set out to see him, taking his basket of ashes. As the train approached, he climbed up into an old withered cherry tree that stood by the wayside.

Now, in the days of the daimios, it was the custom, when their lord passed by, for all the loyal people to shut up their high windows. They even pasted them fast with a slip of paper, so as not to commit the impertinence of looking down on his lordship. All the people along the road would fall upon their hands and knees and remain prostrate until the procession passed by.

The train drew near. One tall, competent man marched ahead, crying out to the people by the way, “Get down on your knees! Get down on your knees!” And every one kneeled down while the procession was passing.

Suddenly the leader of the van caught sight of the aged man up in the tree. He was about to call out to him in an angry   one, but, seeing he was such an old fellow, he pretended not to notice him and passed him by. So, when the daimio’s palanquin drew near, the old man, taking a pinch of ashes from his basket, scattered it over the tree.

In a moment it burst into blossom. The delighted daimio ordered the train to be stopped and got out to see the wonder. Calling the old man to him, he thanked him and ordered presents of silk robes, sponge-cake, fans and other rewards to be given him. He even invited him to his castle.

So the old man went gleefully home to share his joy with his dear old wife.
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom
But when the greedy neighbour heard of it, he took some of the magic ashes and went out on the highway. There he waited until a daimio’s train came along and, instead of kneeling down like the crowd, he climbed a withered cherry tree.

When the daimio himself was almost directly under him, he threw a handful of ashes over the tree, which did not change a particle. The wind blew the fine dust in the noses and eyes of the daimio and  is wife. Such sneezing and choking! It spoiled all the pomp and dignity of the procession. The man whose business it was to cry, “Get down on your knees,” seized the old fool by the collar, dragged him from the tree, and tumbled him and his ash-basket into the ditch by the road. Then, beating him soundly, he left him for dead.

Thus the wicked old man died in the mud, but the kind friend of the dog dwelt in peace and plenty,
and both he and his wife lived to a green old age.

WILLIAM ELLIOT GRIFFIS
[a Japanese tale]

 

 

 

 

 

NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom

Answer the following questions.

1. The old farmer is a kind person. What evidence of his kindness do you find in the first two paragraphs.

2. What did the dog do to lead the farmer to the hidden gold?

3. (i) How did the spirit of the dog help the farmer first?
(ii) How did it help him next?

4. Why did the daimio reward the farmer but punish his neighbour for the same act?

NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom

1. Read the following conversation.
RAVI : What are you doing?
MRIDU : I’m reading a book.
RAVI : Who wrote it?
MRIDU : Ruskin Bond.
RAVI : Where did you find it?
MRIDU : In the library.

Notice that ‘what’, ‘who’, ‘where’, are question words. Questions that require information begin with question words. Some other question words are ‘when’, ‘why’, ‘where’, ‘which’ and ‘how’.

Remember that

  • What asks about actions, things, etc.
  • Who asks about people.
  • Which asks about people or things.
  • Where asks about place.
  • When asks about time.
  • Why asks about reason or purpose.
  • How asks about means, manner or degree.
  • Whose asks about possessions.

Read the following paragraph and frame questions on the italicised phrases.

Anil is in school. I am in school too. Anil is sitting in the left row. He is reading a book. Anil’s friend is sitting in the second row. He is sharpening his pencil. The teacher is writing on the blackboard. Children are writing in their copybooks. Some children are looking out of the window.
(i) ________________________________________________
(ii)________________________________________________
(iii)________________________________________________
(iv)________________________________________________
(v)_________________________________________________
(vi)________________________________________________
(vii)________________________________________________

2. Write appropriate question words in the blank spaces in the following dialogue.

NEHA : ___________did you get this book?
SHEELA : Yesterday morning.
NEHA : _____________is your sister crying?
SHEELA : Because she has lost her doll.
NEHA : ___________room is this, yours or hers?
SHEELA : It’s ours.
NEHA : ____________do you go to school?
SHEELA : We walk to school. It is near by.

3. Fill in the blanks with the words given in the box.
how,  what,  when,  where,  which

(i) My friend lost his chemistry book. Now he doesn’t know _____to do and ________to look for it.

(ii) There are so many toys in the shops. Neena can’t decide __________one to buy.

(iii) You don’t know the way to my school. Ask the policeman _________to get there.

(iv) You should decide soon _________to start building your house.

(v) Do you know to __________ride a bicycle? I don’t remember _________and I _____________learnt it.

(vi) “You should know ________to talk and _______________to keep your mouth shut,” the teacher advised Anil.

4. Add im- or in- to each of the following words and use them in place of the italicised words in the sentences given below.
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom

(i) The project appears very difficult at first sight but it can be completed if we work very hard.

(ii) He lacks competence. That’s why he can’t keep any job for more than a year.

(iii) “Don’t lose patience. Your letter will come one day,” the postman told me.

(iv) That’s not a proper remark to make under the circumstances.

(v) He appears to be without sensitivity. In fact, he is very emotional.

5. Read the following sentences.

It was a cold morning and stars still glowed in the sky. An old man was walking along the road.

The words in italics are articles. ‘A’ and ‘an’ are indefinite articles and ‘the’ is the definite article. ‘A’ is used before a singular countable noun. ‘An’ is used before a word that begins with a vowel.

  • a boy
  • an actor
  • a mango
  • an apple
  • a university
  • an hour

Use a, an or the in the blanks.

There was once__________ play which became very successful. ___________famous actor was acting in it. In __________play his role was that of _______aristocrat who had been imprisoned in _________castle for twenty years. In __________last act of _________play someone would come on _____________stage with __________letter which he would hand over to prisoner. Even though ______________aristocrat was not expected to read letter at each performance, he always insisted that _______________letter be written out from beginning to end.

6. Encircle the correct article.

NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom
A : Would you like (a/an/the) apple or (a/an/the) banana?
B : I’d like (a/an/the) apple, please.
A : Take (a/an/the) red one in (a/an/the) fruit bowl.
You may take (a/an/the) orange also, if you like.
B : Which one?
A : (A/An/The) one beside (a/an/the) banana.
NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom
1. Do you remember an anecdote or a story about a greedy or jealous person and the unhappy result of his/her action? Narrate the story to others in your class.
Here is one for you to read.

Seeing an old man planting a fig tree, the king asked why he was doing this. The man replied that he might live to eat the fruit, and, even if he did not, his son would enjoy the figs.

“Well,” said the king, “if you do live to eat the fruit of this tree, please let me know.” The man promised to do so, and sure enough, before too long, the tree grew and bore fruit. Packing some fine figs in a basket, the old man set out for the palace to meet the king.

The king accepted the gift and gave orders that the old man’s basket be filled with gold.

Now, next door to the old man, there lived a greedy old man jealous of his neighbour’s good fortune. He also packed some figs in a basket and took them to the palace in the hope of getting gold.

The king, on learning the man’s motive, ordered him to stand in the compound and had him pelted with figs. The old man returned home and told his wife the sad story. She consoled him by saying, “You should be thankful that our neighbour did not grow coconuts.”

2. Put each of the following in the correct order. Then use them appropriately to fill the blanks in the paragraph that follows. Use correct punctuation marks.

  • English and Hindi/both/in/he writes
  • and only/a few short stories/many books in English/ in Hindi
  • is/my Hindi/than my English/much better

Ravi Kant is a writer, and_____________________. Of course, he is much happier writing in English than in Hindi. He has written_______________________ . I find his books a little hard to understand______________.

3. Are you fond of reading stories? Did you read one last month? If not, read one or two and then write a paragraph about the story. Use the following hints.

  • title of the story
  • name of author
  • how many characters
  • which one you liked
  • some details of the story
  • main point(s) as you understand it

Tell your friends why they should also read it.

Thought What?
I thought a thought.
But the thought I thought wasn’t the thought
I thought I thought.

Chivvy

Ask yourself as well as your partner: Do you like to be always told what to do or not to do?

Do grown-ups do this, in your experience?

When Michael was five years old, his mother took him to a nearby school for admission. The teacher asked, “What does your mother call you at home, child?” “Michael Don’t,” came the confident reply.

Note: To chivvy is to nag, “to continuously urge someone to do something, often in an annoying way”, according to the dictionary.

Read the poem now.

Grown-ups say things like:
Speak up
Don’t talk with your mouth full
Don’t stare
Don’t point
Don’t pick your nose

Sit up
Say please
Less noise
Shut the door behind you
Don’t drag your feet
Haven’t you got a hankie ?
Take your hands out of
your pockets
Pull your socks up
Stand up straight
Say thank you
Don’t interrupt
No one thinks you’re funny
Take your elbows off the table

Can’t you make your own
mind up about anything ?

MICHAEL ROSEN

NCERT Class VII English Chapter 4 The Ashes that Made Trees Bloom
1. Discuss these questions in small groups before you answer them.

(i) When is a grown-up likely to say this?
Don’t talk with your mouth full.

(ii) When are you likely to be told this?
Say thank you.

(iii) When do you think an adult would say this?
No one thinks you are funny.

2. The last two lines of the poem are not prohibitions or instructions. What is the adult now asking the child to do? Do you think the poet is suggesting that this is unreasonable? Why?

3. Why do you think grown-ups say the kind of things mentioned in the poem? Is it important that they teach children good manners, and how to behave in public?

4. If you had to make some rules for grown-ups to follow, what would you say? Make at least five such rules. Arrange the lines as in a poem.

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Anshuman Mohapatra topper of CBSE Bhubaneswar Region

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Mathematics-100, Chemistry-100, Physical Education-100, Physics-99 and English-95. These were the dream marks scored by Anshuman Mohapatra of city-based Mother’s Public School, making him the topper in CBSE Class-XII in Bhubaneswar region and 2nd in the Eastern Zone of CBSE. He secured a total 594 out of 600 with a whopping 98.8 per cent marks.

CBSE CLASS XII TOPPERS 2012

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How to prepare for KVPY Interview?

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How to prepare for KVPY Interview?

How to prepare for KVPY Interview?

The KVPY 2013 results have been announced and the students selected for KVPY 2013 interview have started preparing for the next step. Here you will be given some guidance on how to prepare for KVPY interview.

Questions asked in KVPY Interview:

Broadly the questions are asked on educational topics, personal information, general knowledge and aptitude.

The first question is invariably expected to be “Tell me about yourself“. When faced with this question, the candidate needs to give a brief yet accurate answer that would throw some light upon the personal details, interests and aptitude. The interviewer wishes to know that apart from the brilliant score in KVPY exam, what else is the student like.

Tell us about your family and friends.”
Here the interviewer wants to get an insight on the family background, the candidate’s social skills and general one to one behaviour. Again, the candidate is advised to be brief and prepared to answer well.

What are your hobbies?
When you are asked such a question in KVPY interview, your answer is expected to be good and to the point. This answer could shape the rest of the interview. For example if you say you like to participate in quiz competitions, you will be asked next the competitions you have been in, how your experience was, what quizzing is like and so on. If you answer something general like “I like to watch TV”, mention that you like watching “Nat Geo” or “Travel and Living” to know new things or explore new places. But, do not exaggerate or lie at any point in the interview. The interviewers are very experienced and can see through when a student gives false information.

Now these were just the introductory questions. Being a technical interview, you will definitely be asked academic questions. They want to see your response and analysis as a person with scientific bent of mind. For example “Suppose there is an oxygen cylinder in a laboratory and there are two high voltage electrodes near it. What will happen if current passes through these electrodes?

Considering you have come this far and got selected for the interview, your aptitude must be good enough to answer it correctly. However, remember that confidence is the key. You might be great while solving the toughest problems on pen and paper, but you must be confident enough to do so in the interview too.

If you have any questions, ask in comments below. Best of luck!

In the interview also technical questions are asked. Please download the pdfs and upload them on Aglasem at schools.

Interview Questions

Click Here for KVPY 2013 Complete Information

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KVPY Interview Questions asked on Mathematics

KVPY Interview Questions asked on Chemistry

KVPY Interview Questions asked on Physics

KVPY Interview Questions asked on Biology

Class 12 Maths Notes: Determinants – Properties of Determinants

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Property -1

If rows be changed into columns and columns into the rows, the determinant remains unaltered.

Property -2

If any two row (or columns) of a determinant are interchanged, the resulting determinant is the negative of the original determinant.

Remark: If any line of a determinant D be passed over ‘m’ parallel lines, the resulting  determinant D¢ is equal to (-1)m D

Class 12 Maths Notes: Determinants   Properties of Determinants

Property -3

If two rows (or two columns) in a determinant have corresponding entries that are equal (or proportional), the value of determinant is equal to zero.

Property –4

If each of the entries of one row (or columns) of a determinant is multiplied by a nonzero constant k, then the determinant gets multiplied by k.

Property-5

If each entry in a row (or column) of a determinant is written as the sum of two or more terms then the determinant can be written as the sum of two or more determinants.

Property-6

If to each element of a line (row or column) of a determinant be added the equimutiples of the corresponding elements of one or more parallel lines, the determinant remains unaltered

Class 12 Maths Notes: Determinants   Properties of Determinants

Property –7

If each entry in any row (or any column) of determinant is zero, then the value of determinant is equal to zero.

Property-8

If a determinant D vanishes for x = a, then (x-a) is a factor of D, In other words, if two      rows (or two columns) become identical for x = a. then (x- a) is a factor of D.

Class 12 Maths Notes: Determinants   Properties of Determinants

Note: 

In general, if r rows (or r columns) become identical when a is substituted for x, then
(x-a) r-1 is a factor of D.

 

Property -9

 

If in a determinant (of order three or more) the elements in all the rows (columns) are in A.P. with same or different common difference, the value of the determinant is zero.

Remarks:

  • It is important to know that all the properties applicable to rows are also equally applicable to columns but independently
  • Whenever rows are disturbed by applications of properties of determinants, at least one of the row shall remain in original shape. In other words all the rows shall not be disturbed at a time.
  • It is always desirable to try to bring in as many zeros as possible in any row ( or column) and then expand the determinant with respect to that row (column). Mere expansion from the outset should be avoided as far as possible.
    Class 12 Maths Notes: Determinants   Properties of Determinants
    Where Ci ( i = 1,2, 3 ) are the columns and Rj ( j=1,2,3) are the rows of the determinant.
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CBSE Class 11 Maths Notes: Sequences & Series – Sequence and Progression

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SEQUENCE

A succession of numbers formed according to some definite rule is called a sequence. For example 1, 3, 5, 7,9 ……. is a sequence, here each term of the sequence can be obtained by adding 2 to the preceding term.

Types of Sequence

There are two types of sequence.

  1. Finite sequence
  2. Infinite sequence

a sequence is said to be a finite or infinite according as it has finite or infinite number of terms.

Series 

If {fn} be a sequence then an expression of the form f1 + f2 + …… + fn is called series. In other word a series is the sum of the terms of the sequence.

PROGRESSION

If the terms of a sequence are written under specific condition then the sequence is called progression. There are three types of progressions.

  1. Arithmetic Progression
  2. Geometric Progression
  3. Harmonic Progression
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ICSE 2014 Exam Time Table for Class X

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ICSE 2014 Exam Time Table for Class X

INDIAN CERTIFICATE OF SECONDARY EDUCATION EXAMINATION, MARCH 2014 TIMETABLE

DAY & DATE TIME SUBJECT DURATION
Monday March 3 11.00 a.m. English Language — ENGLISH Paper 1 2 hrs.
Wednesday March 5 11.00 a.m. Literature in English — ENGLISH Paper 2 2 hrs.
Thursday March 6 11.00 a.m. (Group ll Elective)

French / Computer Science / Agricultural Science

Technical Drawing

2 hrs.

3 hrs.

Friday March 7 11.00 a.m. History & Civics – H.C.G. – Paper 1 2 hrs.
Saturday March 8 09.00 a.m. Art Paper I (Still Life) 3 hrs.
Monday March 10 11.00 a.m. Mathematics 2% hrs.
Wednesday March 12 11.00 a.m. Geography – H.C.G. – Paper 2 2 hrs.
Friday March 14 11.00 a.m (Group III-Elective)

Carnatic Music, Commercial Applications, Computer

Applications, Cookery, Drama, Economic Applications,

Environmental Applications, Fashion Designing, French, German, Hindustani Music, Home Science, Indian Dance, Physical Education, Portuguese, Spanish, Western Music, Yoga

Technical Drawing Applications

2 hrs.

3 hrs.

Saturday March 15 09.00 a.m. Art Paper ll (Nature Drawing/ Painting) 3 hrs.
Tuesday March 18 11.00 a.m Physics – SCIENCE Paper 1 2 hrs.
Thursday March 20 11.00 a.m. Chemistry – SCIENCE Paper 2 2 hrs.
Friday March 21 11.00 a.m. Environmental Science (Group ll Elective) 2 hrs.
Saturday March 22 09.00 a.m. Art Paper III (Original Composition) 3 hrs.
Monday March 24 11.00 a.m. Second Languages:

Ao-Naga, Assamese, Bengali, Dzongkha, Garo, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Khasi, Lepcha, Mizo, Malayalam, Manipuri, Marathi, Nepali, Oriya, Sanskrit, Tamil, Tangkhul, Telugu, Urdu

Modern Foreign Languages:

Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Japanese, Kiswahili,

Korean, Modern Armenian, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Thai, Tibetan

3 hrs.

3 hrs.

Tuesday March 25 11.00 a.m Economics (Group ll Elective) 2 hrs.
Wednesday March 26 11.00 a.m Biology – SCIENCE Paper 3 2 hrs.
Thursday March 27 11.00 a.m. Punjabi 3 hrs.
Friday March 28 11.00 a.m. Commercial Studies (Group ll Elective) 2 hrs.
Saturday March 29 09.00 a.m. Art Paper IV (Applied Art) 3 hrs.

Note:

  1. In addition to the time indicated on the Timetable for writing the paper, 15 minutes time is given for reading the question paper.
  2. The question paper may be distributed to candidates at 10:45 a.m. to enable them to start writing at 11:00 a.m.

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ISC 2014 Exam Time Table for Class XII

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ICSE 2014 Exam Time Table for Class XII

INDIAN SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION, YEAR 2014
TIMETABLE

Day & Date Time Subject/Paper Duration
Monday, February 10 9.00 A.M. Art Per 1 3 hrs.
Tuesday, February 11 9.00 A.M. Physics Paper 2 (Practical) 3 hrs.
Wednesday, February 12 9.00 A.M. Indian Music Hindustani Paper 2 (Practical) Western Music Paper 2 (Practical) 20 minutes for each candidate
28 minutes for each candidate
Thursday, February 13 9.00 A.M. Chemistry Paper 2 (Practical) 3 hrs.
Friday, February 14 9.00 A .M . Home Science Per 2 (Practical) – Planning Session 1 hr.
Monday, February 17 9.00 A.M. Biology Per 2 (Practical) 3 hrs.
Tuesday, February 18 9.00 A.M. Home Science Per 2 (Practical) – Examination Session Biotechnology Paper 2 (Practical) 3 hrs.
3 hrs.
Thursday, February 20 9.00 A.M. Computer Science Per 2 (Practical) Planning Session

Examination Session

Fashion Designing Per 2 (Practical)

3 hrs.
3 hrs.
Friday, February 21 2.00 P.M. Indian/Foreign Languages CI assi cal Languages 3 hrs.
Tuesday, February 25 2.00 P.M. English Paper 1 3 hrs.
Wednesday, February 26 2.00 P.M. Physical Education Paper 1 (Theory) 3 hrs.
Friday, February 28 2.00 P.M. Environmental Science Paper 1(Theory) 3 hrs.
Monday, March 3 2.00 P.M. English Paper 2 3 hrs.
Wednesday, March 5 2.00 P.M. Psychology 3 hrs.
Friday, March 7 2.00 P.M. Economics 3 hrs.
Saturday, March 8 2.00 P.M. Indian M usic – Hindustani Per 1 (Theory) Western Music Paper 1 (Theory) 3 hrs.
3 hrs.
Monday, M arch 10 9.00 A.M. Art Per 2 3 hrs.
Tuesday , M arch 11 2.00 P.M. Mathematics 3 hrs.
Wednesday, March 12 2.00 P.M. Sociology 3 hrs.
Friday, March 14 2.00 P.M. Physics Paper 1 (Theory) 3 hrs.
Saturday, March 15 2.00 P.M. Literature in English 3 hrs.
Tuesday, March 18 2.00 P.M. Accounts 3 hrs.
Thursday, March 20 2.00 P.M. Biology Per 1 (Theory) 3 hrs.
Friday, March 21 2.00 P.M. Political Science 3 hrs.
Monday, M arch 24 9.00 A.M. Art Per 3 3 hrs.
Tuesday, March 25 2.00 P.M. Commerce

Electricity & Electronics

3 hrs.
3 hrs.
Thursday, M arch 27 2.00 P.M. Chemistry Paper 1 (Theory) 3 hrs.
Friday, March 28 2.00 P.M. Busi ness Studies 3 hrs.
Tuesday, April 1 2.00 P.M. Computer Science Per 1 (Theory) Fashion Designing Per 1 (Theory) 3 hrs.
3 hrs.
Wednesday, April 2 2.00 P.M. Geography

Biotechnology Paper 1 (Theory)

3 hrs.
3 hrs.
Thursday, April 3 9.00 A.M. Art Per 4 3 hrs.
Friday, April 4 2.00 P.M. Home Science Per 1 (Theory) Geom. & Mechanical Drawing Geom. & Building Drawing 3 hrs.
3 hrs.
3 hrs.
Saturday, April 5 9.00 A.M. Art Paper 5 3 hrs.
Monday, April 7 2.00 P.M. History 3 hrs.

(Click Here for Class X Time Table)

Note:

  1. In addition to the time indicated on the timetable for writing the paper, 15 minutes time is given for reading the question paper.
  2. The Question Papers for practical examinations may be distributed to the candidates at 8.45 A.M. to enable them to start writing at 9.00 A.M.
  3. The Question Papers for theory examinations may be distributed to the candidates at 1.45 P.M. to enable them to start writing at 2.00 P.M.
  4. Practical Examination of Physical Education Paper 2 may be held on any convenient day after10th February 2014.

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NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

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NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) Book for Class VIII
Subject: English
Chapter: Chapter 2 – The Tsunami

Class VIII NCERT English Text Book Chapter 2 The Tsunami is given below.

Before you read

Look at the map of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands given here.

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

Now read the sentences  below. Rewrite the incorrect onesm  after correcting the mistakes.

1. Katchall is an island.

2. It is part of the Andaman group of islands.

3. Nancowry is an island in the Nicobar group.

4. Katchall and Nancowry are more than a hundred miles apart. (Hint: the scale of the map is given.)

5. The Andaman and Nicobar Islands are to the west of India.

6. The Nicobar Islands are to the north of the Andaman Islands.

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

A tsunami is a very large and powerful wave caused by earthquakes under the sea. On 26 December 2004, a tsunami hit Thailand and parts of India such as the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and the Tamil Nadu coast. Here are some stories of courage and survival.

Did animals sense that a tsunami was coming? Some stories suggest that they did.

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

I

These stories are all from the Andaman and Nicobar archipelago.

Ignesious was the manager of a cooperative society in Katchall. His wife woke him up at  6 a.m. because she felt an earthquake. Ignesious carefully took his television set off its  table and put it down on the ground so that it would not fall and break. Then the family  rushed out of the house.

When the tremors stopped, they saw the sea rising. In the chaos and confusion, two of  his children caught hold of the hands of their mother’s father and mother’s brother, and rushed in the opposite direction. He never saw them again. His wife was also swept away.  Only the three other children who came with him were saved.

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

Sanjeev was a policeman, serving in the Katchall island of the  Nicobar group of islands. He somehow managed to save himself,  his wife and his baby daughter from the waves. But then he heard  cries for help from the wife of John, the guesthouse cook. Sanjeev jumped into the water to rescue her, but they were both swept away.

Thirteen year-old Meghna was swept away along with her parents and seventy-seven  other people. She spent two days floating in the sea, holding on to a wooden door. Eleven times she saw relief helicopters overhead, but they did not see her. She was  brought to the shore by a wave, and was found walking on the seashore in a daze.

Almas Javed was ten years old. She was a student of Carmel Convent in Port Blair where  her father had a petrol pump. Her mother Rahila’s home was in Nancowry island. The  family had gone there to celebrate Christmas.

When the tremors came early in the morning, the family was sleeping. Almas’s father  saw the sea water recede. He understood that the water would come rushing back with great force. He woke everyone up and tried to rush them to a safer place.

As they ran, her grandfather was hit on the head by something and he fell down. Her  father rushed to help him. Then came the first giant wave that swept both of them away.

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

Almas’s mother and aunts stood clinging to  the leaves of a coconut  tree, calling out to her.  A wave uprooted the  tree, and they too were washed away.

Almas saw a log of wood floating. She  climbed on to it. Then she fainted. When she woke up, she was in a

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

hospital in Kamorta. From there she was brought to Port Blair.

The little girl does not want to talk about the incident with anyone. She is still  traumatised.

Comprehension Check

Say whether the following are true or false.

1. Ignesious lost his wife, two children, his father-in-law, and his brother-in-law in the tsunami.

2. Sanjeev made it to safety after the tsunami.

3. Meghna was saved by a relief helicopter.

4. Almas’s father realised that a tsunami was going to hit the island.

5. Her mother and aunts were washed away with the tree that they were holding on to.

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

II

Tilly Smith (a British school girl) was able to save many lives when the tsunami  struck Phuket beach in Thailand. Though she has won a number of awards, her  parents have not allowed their daughter to be interviewed on television and  made into a heroine. Why do you think they took that decision?

 

Now here is a story from Thailand.

The Smith family from South-East England were celebrating Christmas at a beach resort in southern Thailand. Tilly Smith was a ten-year-old schoolgirl; her sister was seven years old. Their parents were Penny and Colin Smith.

It was 26 December 2004. Deadly tsunami waves were already on their way. They had been triggered by a massive earthquake off northern Sumatra earlier that morning.

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

“The water was swelling and kept coming in,” Penny Smith remembered. “The beach was getting smaller and smaller. I didn’t know what was happening.”

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

But Tilly Smith sensed that something was wrong. Her mind kept  going back to a geography lesson she had taken in England just  two weeks before she flew out to Thailand with her family.

Tilly saw the sea slowly rise, and start to foam, bubble and form  whirlpools. She remembered that she had seen this in class in a  video of a tsunami that had hit the Hawaiian islands in 1946. Her  geography teacher had shown her class the video, and told them  that tsunamis can be caused by earthquakes, volcanoes and landslides.

Tilly started to scream at her family to get off the beach. “She talked about an  earthquake under the sea. She got more and more hysterical,” said her mother Penny. “I  didn’t know what a tsunami was. But seeing my daughter so frightened, I thought   mething serious must be going on.”

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

Tilly’s parents took her and her sister away from the beach, to the swimming pool at the hotel.  A number of other tourists also left the beach with them. “Then it was as if the entire sea had  come out after them. I was screaming, ‘Run!’”

The family took refuge in the third floor of the hotel. The building withstood the surge of  three tsunami waves. If they had stayed on the beach, they would not have been alive.

The Smiths later met other tourists who had lost entire families. Thanks to Tilly and her  geography lesson, they had been forewarned. Tilly went back to her school in England and told her classmates her terrifying tale.

Comprehension Check

Answer the following in a phrase or sentence.

1. Why did Tilly’s family come to Thailand?

2. What were the warning signs that both Tilly and her mother saw?

3. Do you think Tilly’s mother was alarmed by them?

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

4. Where had Tilly seen the sea behaving in the same strange fashion?

 

5. Where did the Smith family and the others on the beach go to escape from the tsunami?

6. How do you think her geography teacher felt when he heard about what Tilly had done in Phuket?

III

Look carefully at the picture of the boy and his dog, and try to describe the things  that you see, using just words and phrases.

Either the teacher or one of the  students can write down the words and phrases on the blackboard.

This is how you can start —
calm, blue sea …. ruined huts………

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

Before the giant waves slammed into the coast in India and Sri Lanka, wild and domestic  animals seemed to know what was about to happen.

They fled to safety. According to eyewitness accounts, elephants screamed  and an for higher ground; dogs refused to go   outdoors;

 and zoo animals rushed into their shelters and could not be enticed to come back out.

Many people believe that animals possess a sixth sense and know when the earth is going  to shake.

Some experts believe that animals’ more acute hearing helps them to hear or feel  the earth’s vibration. They can sense an approaching disaster long before humans realise
what’s going on.

NCERT Class VIII English Chapter 2 The Tsunami

We cannot be sure whether animals have a sixth sense or not. But the fact is that the giant  waves that rolled through the Indian Ocean killed more than 150,000 people in a dozen  countries; but not many animals have been reported dead.

Along India’s Cuddalore coast, where thousands of people perished, buffaloes, goats and  dogs were found unharmed. The Yala National Park in Sri Lanka is home to a variety of  animals including elephants, leopards, and 130 species of birds. Sixty visitors were washed
away from the Patanangala beach inside the park; but no animal carcasses were found,  except for two water buffaloes. About an hour before the tsunami hit, people at Yala National Park had observed three elephants running away from the Patanangala beach.

A Sri Lankan gentleman who lives on the coast near Galle said his two dogs would not go  for their daily run on the beach. “They are usually excited to go on this outing,” he said.  But on that day they refused to go, and most probably saved his life.

Comprehension check

Answer using a phrase or a sentence.

1. In the tsunami 150,000 people died. How many animals died?

2. How many people and animals died in Yala National Park?

3. What do people say about the elephants of Yala National Park?

4. What did the dogs in Galle do?

Working With the Text

Discuss the following questions in class. Then write your own answers.

1. When he felt the earthquake, do you think Ignesious immediately worried about a tsunami? Give reasons for  your answer. Which sentence in the text tells you that the Ignesious family did not have any time to discuss and
plan their course of action after the tsunami struck?

2. Which words in the list below describe Sanjeev, in your opinion? (Look up the dictionary for words that you are not sure of.)

cheerful          ambitious            brash               brave             careless        heroic              

 selfless          heartless           humorous

Use words from the list to complete the three sentences below.

(i) I don’t know if Sanjeev was cheerful, ___________ or ___________.

(ii) I think that he was very brave,___________ and___________.

(iii) Sanjeev was not heartless, ___________or___________.

3. How are Meghna and Almas’s stories similar?

4. What are the different ways in which Tilly’s parents could have reacted to her behaviour? What would you have done if you were in their place?

5. If Tilly’s award was to be shared, who do you think she should share it with — her parents or her geography teacher?

6. What are the two different ideas about why so few animals were killed in the tsunami? Which idea do you find more believable?

Working with Language

1. Go through Part-I carefully, and make a list of as many words as you can find that indicate movement of  different kinds. (There is one word that occurs repeatedly — count how many times!) Put them into three categories.

fast movement slow movement neither slow nor fast Can you explain why there are many words in one column and not in the others?

2. Fill in the blanks in the sentences below (the verbs given in brackets will give you a clue).

(i) The earth trembled, but not many people felt the _________. (tremble)

(ii) When the zoo was flooded, there was a lot of _________ and many animals escaped into the countryside. (confuse)

(iii) We heard with _________ that the lion had been recaptured. (relieve)

(iv) The zookeeper was stuck in a tree and his _________ was filmed by the TV crew. (rescue)

(v) There was much _________ in the village when the snake charmer came visiting. (excite)

3. Study the sentences in the columns A and B.

A B
Meghna was swept away. The waves swept Meghna away.
Almas’s grandfather was hit on thehead. Something hit Almas’s grandfather onthe head.
Sixty visitors were washed away. The waves washed away sixty visitors.
No animal carcasses were found. People did not find any animal carcasses.

Compare the sentences in A to the ones in B. Who is the ‘doer’ of the action in every case? Is the ‘doer’ mentioned in A, or in B?

Notice the verbs in A: ‘was swept away’, ‘was hit’, ‘were washed away’, ‘were found’. They are in the passive  form. The sentences are in the Passive Voice. In these sentences, the focus is not on the person who does the action.

In B, the ‘doer’ of the action is named. The verbs are in the active form. The sentences are in the Active Voice.

Say whether the following sentences are in the Active or the Passive voice. Write A or P after each sentence as shown in the first sentence.

(i) Someone stole my bicycle. __A__

(ii) The tyres were deflated by the traffic police. _______________

(iii) I found it last night in a ditch near my house. _______________

(iv) It had been thrown there. _______________

(v) My father gave it to the mechanic. _______________

(vi) The mechanic repaired it for me. _______________

Speaking and Writing

1. Suppose you are one of the volunteers who went to the Andaman and Nicobar Islands for relief work after the  tsunami. You work in the relief camps, distributing food, water and medicine among the victims. You listen to  the various stories of bravery of ordinary people even as they fight against odds to bring about some semblance  of normalcy in their lives. You admire their grit and determination. Write a diary entry.

You may start in this way.
31 December, 2004

The killer tsunami struck these islands five days ago. But the victims are being brought in even now. Each one has a story to tell…

2. The story shows how a little girl saved the lives of many tourists when a tsunami struck the beach, thanks to  the geography lesson that she had learnt at school. She remembered the visuals of a tsunami and warned her parents.

Do you remember any incident when something that you learnt in the classroom helped you in some way outside the classroom? Write your experiences in a paragraph of about 90–100 words or narrate it to the whole class like an anecdote.

Katchall is one of the largest islands in the central group. It is about 61 sq miles in area. It is slightly hilly at the centre, but otherwise remarkably flat.

Betty at the Party

‘When I was at the party,’ Said Betty, aged just four, ‘A little girl fell off her chair Right down upon the floor; And  all the other little girls Began to laugh, but me – I didn’t laugh a single bit’, Said Betty seriously.

‘Why not?’– her mother asked her, Full of delight to find That Betty – bless her little heart! – Had been so  sweetly kind. ‘Why didn’t you laugh, my darling? Or don’t you like to tell?’ ‘I didn’t laugh,’ said Betty, ‘Because it was I that fell.’

Geography Lession

Can you imagine what your city would look like if you saw it from ten thousand feet above the ground? Neatly  planned and perfect in proportion like a geometric design, it would strike you as something very different from  what it actually is while you are in the thick of it.

Here is a poet’s description of just such a view of the city, and some questions that come to his mind.

When the jet sprang into the sky, it was clear why the city had developed the way it had, seeing it scaled six  inches to the mile. There seemed an inevitability about what on ground had looked haphazard, unplanned and without style

When the jet sprang into the sky. When the jet reached ten thousand feet,  it was clear why the country had  cities where the rivers ran and why the valleys were populated. The logic of geography — that land and water  attracted man — was clearly delineated

When the jet reached ten thousand feet. When the jet rose six miles high, it was clear the earth was round and  that it had more sea than land.

But it was difficult to understand that the men on the earth found causes to hate each other, to build walls across  cities and to kill. From that height, it was not clear why.

ZULFIKAR GHOSE

Glossary

inevitable: that cannot be avoided
haphazard: without plan or order
delineated: shown

Working with the Poem

1. Find three or four phrases in stanzas one and two which are likely to occur in a geography lesson.

2. Seen from the window of an aeroplane, the city appears

(i) as haphazard as on ground.

(ii) as neat as a map.

(iii) as developed as necessary.

Mark the right answer.

3. Which of the following statements are examples of “the logic of geography”?

(i) There are cities where there are rivers.

(ii) Cities appear as they are not from six miles above the ground.

(iii) It is easy to understand why valleys are populated.

(iv) It is difficult to understand why humans hate and kill one another.

(v) The earth is round, and it has more sea than land.

4. Mention two things that are

(i) clear from the height.

(ii) not clear from the height.

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