ENGLISH-B (New Syllabus)
Total Time: 3 Hours 15 minutes [Full Marks: 80]
Instructions to the Candidates
1. Special credit will be given for answers which are brief and to the point.
2. Marks will be deducted for spelling mistakes, untidiness and bad handwriting.
3. Figures in the margin indicate full marks for the questions.
PART-A (Marks: 60)
1. Answer any two of the following questions, each in about 100 words: [6×2=12]
(a) How was the wounded man revived and nursed? Why did he ask for forgiveness of the Tsar? What did the Tsar do when he had gained the man for a friend? [2+2+2]
(b) “I’m tired of people telling me I have a pretty face.”
– Who said this, to whom and when? What did the person spoken to reply? [1+1+2+2]
(c) “…the girl got up and began to collect her things.”
– Who is the girl? When did she get up? Why did she get up to collect her things? What had the speaker thought about the brief meeting he had with the girl? [1+1+1+3]
(d) “I normally ate with my mother.”
– Who ate with his mother? Name his mother. Where did he eat with his mother? What did he eat with his mother? [1+1+1+3]
(e) “All the answers being different, the Tsar agreed with none of them.”
– What were the questions to which the Tsar got different answers? Whom did the Tsar decide to consult when he was not satisfied? Where did the person live whom the Tsar decided to consult? What was he famous for? [3+1+1+1]
2. Answer any two of the following questions, each in about 100 words: [6 x 2 = 12]
(a) How does Keats show that the ‘poetry of earth’ is never dead? [6]
(b) “And every fair from fair sometime declines”
– From which poem is the line quoted? Who is the poet? Briefly explain the meaning of the quoted line. How does the poet promise to make his friend’s beauty live forever? [1+1+2+2]
(c) “His smile Is like an infant’s…”
Whose ‘smile’ is being referred to here? Explain the comparison in the given line. How does Nature take care of him? [1+3+2]
(d) “In his side there are two red holes”
Who is the person referred to here? What do the ‘two red holes’ signify? What attitude of the poet to war is reflected here? [1+2+3]
(e) “So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.”
-What does the poet mean by ‘this’? Who is ‘thee’ being referred to? How does the poet think that ‘this’ will give life to ‘thee’? [1+1+4]
3. Answer any one of the following questions in about 100 words: [6×1=6]
(a) “I’m the most unhappy of men!”
– Who said this? Why did he say so? How did the speaker get rid of his unhappiness? [1+3+2]
(b) Give a brief sketch of the character of Lomov in the play ‘The Proposal’. [6]
(c) “Why are you so formal in your get-up?”
Who is the speaker? Who is being spoken to? What led the speaker to make this comment? [1+1+4]
OR
“We’ve had the land for nearly three hundred years…”
Who is the speaker? Who is spoken to? What is referred to as ‘the land’? What do you know of ‘the land’ from their conversation? [1+1+1+3]
OR
(a) Why does the queen decide on a death sentence for Charandas Chor? [6]
(b) “There’s been a theft in this village.”
– Who says this and to whom? What was stolen? Why was the person spoken to interrogated? What
deal did the person offer? [2+1+1+2]
(c) “You have stolen her heart”
– Who is the speaker? Why does the speaker say so? Whose heart is ‘stolen’ and how? What does the person spoken to think? [1+1+2+2]
4. (a) Do as directed : [1×6=6]
(i) The most important thing in the world was science. (Change into positive degree)
(ii) I don’t intend to give up what I have. (Use the underlined word as a noun and rewrite)
(iii) The door was open. (Turn into a negative sentence)
(iv) The hermit was digging the ground. (Change the voice)
(v) My father could convey complex spiritual concepts. (Change the voice)
(vi) As soon as she left the train, she would forget our brief encounter. (Turn into a negative sentence)
OR
The Tsar said, “I come to you, wise man, for an answer to my questions.” (Change into indirect speech)
(b) Fill in the blanks with appropriate articles and/or prepositions: [1/2 x 6 =3]
When my father came out _____ the mosque after the prayers, people of different religions would be sitting outside, waiting _____ him. Many of them offered bowls of water _____ my father, who would dip his fingertips _____ them and say _____ prayer. This water then carried home _____ invalids.
OR
Fill in the blanks with appropriate articles and/or prepositions:
The Tsar turned round and saw _____ bearded man come running _____ _____ the wood. The man held his hands pressed _____ his stomach and blood was flowing _____ _____ them.
(c) Correct the error in the following sentence by replacing the underlined word with the right one from the options given below : [1×1=1]
His answers filled me with a strange energy and enthusiastic.
[Options: enthuse/enthusiastically/enthusiasm ]
OR
Few girls can resist flattering.
[Options: flatter/ flattery / flatterer]
5. Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow:
Sometimes it is hard to believe that I’ve been up here in the hills all these years – fifty summers and monsoons and winters and Himalayan springs (there is no real spring in the plains) – because when I look to the time of my first coming here, it seems like yesterday.
That probably sums it all up. Time passes, and yet it doesn’t pass; people come and go, the mountains remain. Mountains are permanent things. They are stubborn, they refuse to move. You can blast holes out of them for their mineral wealth; or strip them of their trees and foliage, or dam their streams and divert their currents; or make tunnels and roads and bridges; but no matter how hard they try, humans cannot actually get rid of the mountains. That’s what I like about them; they are here to stay.
I like to think that I have become a part of this mountain, this particular range, and that by living here for so long, I am able to claim a relationship with the trees, wildflowers, even the rocks that are an integral part of it. Yesterday, at twilight, when I passed beneath the oak leaves which formed a roof over me. I felt that I was a part of the forest. I put out my hand and touched the bark of an old tree, and as I turned away, its leaves brushed against my face, as if to acknowledge me.
(a) State whether the following statements are True or False. Write ‘T’ for True and ‘F’ for False statements. (You need not write the sentences, write ‘T’ or ‘F’ only) [1×4=4]
(i) The oak leaves formed a roof over the author.
(ii) The author does not like the fact that mountains are permanent things.
(iii) The author means to say that he has lived through all the seasons in the mountains.
(iv) Humans cannot live without the mountains.
(b) Answer each of the following questions in about 30 words: [2×3=6]
(i) What can man do to mountains?
(ii) What does the author claim a relationship with?
(iii) Why is it hard to believe for the author that he has lived in the hills for fifty years?
6. (a) Write a report on a campaign on ‘Educate the Girl Child’ organised by your school. Mention the role of both students and teachers, the purpose of this campaign, participation, response and so on. The report will be published in your school magazine. (Word limit: 150 words) [2+8=10]
OR
(b) Write a letter to the Editor of an English Daily about the unhealthy food items sold in and around your school, affecting the health of the students. (Word limit: 150 words) [2+8=10]
OR
(c) Write a letter to the headmaster/headmistress of your school requesting him/her to make more variety of books available in the library. (Word limit: 150 words) [2+8=10]
OR
(d) Write a précis of the following paragraph. Add a suitable title: [2+8=10]
Charlie Chaplin once said, “In this age of scientific inventions, we think too much, we feel too little.” Science boosts up the modern craze for material prosperity. It has revolutionized our lives. It has made life more comfortable with various amenities. It is undoubtedly the driving force behind any human excellence. But it kills the soul of a man. Our skills and habits are changed by science. Excessive mechanization brings unhappiness because human faculties are slighted. A person starts believing that machines will do all for him, and this tendency becomes fatal in this high-tech world. But none can doubt that science has helped us to discover the hidden truth in nature. Can we ever imagine the modern age without computers, lasers antibiotics, biotechnology or different electronic gadgets? That is why it is said that science gives knowledge and power but not wisdom.
PART-B (Marks: 20)
Multiple Choice Type Questions (MCQ) & Short
Answer Type Questions (SAQ) of 1 mark
Marks Awarded | ||
…………………………………………Signature of the invigilator | MCQ=______________ SAQ = | ………………………………………. Signature of the Examiner |
Total = | Awarded marks must be posted in the cage provided on the First page of the main Answer Script of the Candidate |
Instructions to the Candidates:
1. The candidates are required to write his/her Full Name, Roll Number and Registration Number on the Question-cum-Answer Booklet according to the Admit Card issued by the Council (If it is wrongly written, the Question-cum-Answer Booklet may be rejected). It is compulsory for the examinee to get the Question-cum-Answer Booklet signed by the invigilator in the space provided.
2. A box is provided at the right side against each question of MCQ. You must write the correct choice (a, b, c or d) in this box. For SAQ of 1 mark, the answer is to be written in the specific given space against each question, not anywhere else.
3. After completion of the examination this Question-cum-Answer Booklet must be tied securely with the main Answer-script.
1. Complete each of the following sentences, choosing the correct option from the alternatives provided: [1×4=4]
(i) The narrator had the compartment to himself up to-
(a) Saharanpur (b) Dehradun
(c) Rohana (d) Mussoorie. -☐
OR
The girl in the train compartment thought the narrator to be-
(a) gallant (b) serious
(c) gallant and serious (d) pretentious. -☐
(ii) Abdul Kalam’s father would convey complex spiritual concepts in simple, down-to-earth-
(a) Arabic (b) Urdu
(c) Tamil (d) Telugu. -☐
(iii) Kalam’s ancestral house was built in-
(a) mid 19th century (b) late 19th century
(c) early 19th century. (d) early 20th century -☐
(iv) The wounded man was actually-
(a) enemy of the hermit (b) enemy of the Tsar
(c) friend of the Tsar (d) disciple of the hermit. -☐
2. Answer any four of the following questions, each in a complete sentence: [1×4=4]
(i) Who was the priest of the Rameswaram temple?
Ans.
(ii) How did the girl describe the narrator?
Ans.
(iii) Why did the Tsar put on a simple cloth before meeting the hermit?
Ans.
(iv) What does Kalam’s father say about the importance of prayer?
Ans.
(v) Whom did the narrator of ‘The Eyes Have It’ think to be formidable creatures?
Ans.
(vi) Where was the girl in the story ‘The Eyes Have It’ getting off?
Ans.
(vii) What, according to the hermit, is the most important thing to do?
Ans.
(viii) What was the hermit doing when the Tsar came to take leave of him?
Ans.
(ix) What did Abdul Kalam’s father use to avoid?
Ans.
3. Complete each of the following sentences, choosing the correct option from the alternatives provided: [1×4=4]
(i) The marks of wound of the soldier are-
(a) on his head (b) in his side
(c) on his chest (d) in his leg. -☐
OR
The darling buds are shaken by rough winds in-
(a) March (b) April
(d) June. (c) May -☐
(ii) Nature is pleaded to keep the soldier-
(a) pleasant (b) warm
(c) asleep (d) peaceful -☐
(iii) Nature’s changing course is-
(a) dimmed (b)temperate
(c) untrimmed (d)lovely -☐
(iv) Being tired, the Grasshopper rests beneath-
(a) green hedge (b) bushes
(c) pleasant weed (d) grassy hills. -☐
4. Answer any four of the following questions, each in a complete sentence: [1×4=4]
(i) From where is the shrill song of the cricket heard in ‘The Poetry of Earth’?
Ans.
(ii) What does the ‘eye of heaven’ refer to?
Ans.
(iii) How long will the young man be remembered in Shakespeare’s Sonnet No. 18?
Ans.
(iv) Why is the soldier pale?
Ans.
(v) Where does the soldier lie stretched?
Ans.
(vi) Where does the stream leave ‘long strands of silver’?
Ans.
(vii) What shall death not brag about in Shakespeare’s poem?
Ans.
(viii) Where do the birds hide when they are ‘faint with the hot sun’?
Ans.
(ix) What kind of a poem is ‘Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day’?
Ans.
5. Complete each of the following sentences, choosing the correct option from the alternatives provided : [1×4=4]
(i) The worst of Lomov’s physical problems is-
(a) the way he sleeps (b) his palpitations
(c) his limp. (d) never to steal -☐
(ii) Chubukov said that Lomov’s younger aunt had run away with-
(a) a hunter (b) a drunkard
(c) a count (d) an architect. -☐
(iii) Lomov went to his neighbour, Chubukov’s house-
(a) to borrow money (b) to settle a dispute
(c) to give a marriage proposal (d) to complain. -☐
(iv) Lomov’s aunt’s name is-
(a) Natalya Stepanova (b) Natasha Vassilevitch
(c) Nastasya Mihailovna (d) Natalya Mihailovna. -☐
OR
(i) The woman made her ornaments from-
(a) Jalgaon (b) Bhatgaon
(c) Raigarh (d) Nandgaon. -☐
(ii) The queen gave five coins to the guru for teaching Charandas-
(a) never to sing
(b) never to get drunk
(c)never to steal
(d) never to tell a lie. -☐
(iii) The name of the gambler was-
(a) Chait Ram (b) Ramlal
(c) Uday Ram.(d) Ramcharan -☐
(iv) The minister first inaugurates-
(a) a cycle shop (b) a ration shop
(c) a cloth shop.(d) a shoe shop -☐
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