Answer the following questions :
- What is the dream of Martin Luther King Jr. expressed in the first four lines of the text?
- One day every valley shall be exalted, every hill and mountain shall be made low.' Explain in your own words
- This is the faith that 1 will go back to the south with.” What is the faith of Martin Luther King Jr.?
- What, according to Martin Luther King Jr., will be the use of this faith?
a) The dream of Martin Luther King Jr. that has been expressed in the first four lines of the passage is that a day would come when everyone, irrespective of social status, caste and creed would be equal in receiving justice in society.
b) The quoted line, uttered by Martin Luther King Jr. bears a deep meaning with connection to the pledge for social justice for people of all castes and creeds. Martin Luther King Jr. expressed his passion and sense of justice towards his people through these words.
c) Martin Luther King Jr., expressed the faith that his oppressed and neglected caste along with others facing the same social treatment would gain their freedom. This faith is actually his pledge for liberation.
d) According to Martin Luther King Jr. this faith can usher a beautiful symphony of brotherhood, which can make America a great nation. This can also make America a truly liberated nation.
- The closest meaning of 'study' is-
- Answer the following questions :(a) What abilities does education give us? (b) How can we gain a degree of self-confidence?(c) What is the usefulness of an awareness about ourselves?(d) How can we become productive members of society? (e) Why is education called progressive and liberal?
- Answer the following questions :(a) How could the authoress picture Jerry when he was only four? (b) What is 'integrity'?(c). Why did Jerry refuse to take money when the ax handle broke?(d) What unnecessary gracious things did Jerry do for the authoress?(e) How did Jerry say 'thank you' to the narrator? What do you understand by this kind of expression about Jerry's character?
- Read the passage and answer the questions A and B.The orphanage is high in the Carolina mountains. I was there in the autumn. I wanted quiet, isolation, to do some troublesome writing. I wanted mountain air to blow out the malaria from too long a time in the subtropics. I was homesick too, for the flaming of maples in October, and for corn shocks and pumpkins and black-walnut trees.... I found them all living in a cabin that belonged to the orphanage, half a mile beyond the orphanage farm. When I took the cabin, I asked for a boy or man to come and chop wood for the fireplacE-... I looked up from my typewriter one late afternoon, a little startled. A boy stood at the door and my pointer dog, my companion, was at his side and had not barked to warn mE- The boy was probably twelve years old, but undersized. He wore overalls and a torn shirt, and was barefooted. He said, "I can chop some wood today."....."You? But you're small." "Size don't matter, chopping wood," he said. "Some of the big boys don't chop good. I've been chopping wood at the orphanage a long timE-" "Very well. There's the axE- Go ahead and see what you can do." I went back to work, closing the door.... He began to chop. The blows were rhythmic and steady, and shortly I had forgotten him, the sound no more of an interruption than a consistent rain. I suppose an hour and a half passed and I heard the boy's steps on the cabin stoop... The boy said, "I have to go to supper now," he said. "I can come again tomorrow. " I said, "I'll pay you now for what you've done," thinking I should probably have to insist on an older boy.... We went together back of the cabin. An astonishing amount of solid wood had been cut.... "But you've done as much as a man," I said. "This is a splendid pilE-" I looked at him, actually, for the first timE- His hair was the color of the corn shocks and his eyes, very direct, were like the mountain sky when rain is pending - gray, with a shadowing of that miraculous bluE-... I gave him a quarter. "You may come tomorrow afternoon," I said, "and thank you very much." He looked at me, and at the coin, and seemed to want to speak, but could not, and turned away.... At daylight I was half wakened by the sound of chopping. Again it was so even in texture that I went back to sleep. When I left my bed in the cool morning, the- boy had come and gone, and a stack of kindling was neat against the cabin wall. He came after school in the afternoon and worked until time to return to the orphanagE-
- Man relationship is related to his___
- The word 'cognitive' means -- -?
- The synonym of ‘perhaps’-
- Our social behaviour is described by ____ terms.
- A. Choose the correct answer from the alternatives : The word 'circumstances' means ----
- Answer the following questions :What do you mean by folk music, according to the text?What does folk music reflect?How are mystical songs composed of?What makes the Bhatiyali an important genre?What are the reasons of great variety in folk music
- We spend money ...
- Which is the closest meaning of the word 'stare' according to the passage?
- The word 'launched' in the passage could be replaced
- Answer the following questions :Why do people leave their own countries?Do you think that there have been massive diasporas in Africa?Why is diaspora attracting so much attention?How do the twentieth century Palestinian diasporas draw the attention of the world leaders?Why have the scholars been studying about the diasporas with great interest?
- Where is Kuakata located?
- Read the passage and answer the questions A and B.The time of adolescence is a period of preparation for adulthood during which one experiences several key developments. Besides physical and sexual maturation, these experiences include movement toward social and economic independence, development of identity, the acquisition of skills needed to carry out adult relationships and roles and the capacity for abstract reasoning. While adolescence is a time of tremendous growth and potential, it is also a time of considerable risks during which social contexts exert powerful influences. Many adolescents face pressure to use alcohol, cigarettes, or other drugs and to initiate sexual relationships putting themselves at high risk for intentional and unintentional injuries, unintended pregnancies, and sexually transmitted. infections (STIs), including the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Many also experience a wide range of adjustment and mental health problems. Behaviour patterns that are established during this period such as the use or avoidance of drugs and taking or abstaining from sexual risk can have long-lasting negative and positive effects on future health and well-being. As a result, adults have unique opportunities to influence adolescents. Adolescents are different both from young children and adults. Specifically, adolescents are not fully capable of understanding complex concepts, or the relationship between behaviour and consequences, or the degree of control they have or can have over health decision-making, including that related to sexual behaviour. This inability may make them particularly vulnerable to sexual exploitation and high-risk behaviours. Laws, customs, and practices may also affect adolescents differently than adults. For example, laws and policies often restrict adolescents' access to reproductive health information and services, especially when they are unmarried. In addition, even when services do exist, provider attitudes about adolescents often pose a significant barrier to the use of those services. Adolescents depend on their families, their communities, schools, health services, and their workplaces to learn a wide range of skills that can help them to cope with the pressures they face and make a successful transition from childhood to adulthood. Parents, members of the community, service providers, and social institutions have the responsibility to both promote adolescent development and adjustment and to intervene effectively when problems arisE-
- A. Choose the correct answer from the alternatives : 'The Interpretation of Dreams' is a?
- What does the word 'proletaria' in the passage refer to?
- . We may often find ourselves ---- during dream?
- A. Choose the correct answer from the alternatives :What is the meaning of the word ‘interpretation’ in die passage?
- The word 'marvelled' mentioned in the passage means-
- What does the word 'apartheid' mean in the passage?
- The word 'undergo' indicates --
- The word 'despair' refers to --
- The word 'careful' mentioned in the passage does not mean ---