Chapter 10: The Banyan Tree


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Chapter 10: The Banyan Tree

Class: VI

Exercise number: 1

Question a

  1. Complete the following sentences.
  2. The old banyan tree "did not belong" to grandfather, but only to the boy, because
    ______________
  3. The small gray squirrel became friendly when
    _________________
  4. When the boy started to bring him pieces of cake and biscuit, the squirrel
    ________________
  5. In the spring, the banyan tree ____________, and
    ______________ would come there.
  6. The banyan tree served the boy as a ____________
    __________________
  7. The young boy spent his afternoons in the tree
    ____________

 

Answer a

  1. The old banyan tree "did not belong" to grandfather, but only to the boy, because at the age of sixty-five the grandfather could not climb it.
  2. The small grey squirrel became friendly when he found that the boy did not arm himself with catapult or air-gun.
  3. When the boy started to bring him pieces of cake and biscuit, the squirrelgrew quite bold and was soon taking morsels from the author’s hand.
  4. In the spring, the banyan tree was full of small red figs, and birds of all kindwould come there.
  5. The banyan tree served the boy as a library.
  6. The young boy spent his afternoons in the tree when it was not too hot.

 

Question b

  1. "It was to be a battle of champions." (8)

(i) What qualities did the two champions have? Pick out words and phrases from the paragraph above this line in the text and write them down.



(ii) What did the cobra and the mongoose do, to show their readiness for the fight?

 

  1. Who were the other two spectators? What did they do? (Did they watch, or did they join in the fight?) (10)

 

  1. Read the descriptions below of what the snake did and what the mongoose did. Arrange their actions in the proper order. (11, 16)

 

 

  1. (i) What happened to the crow in the end? (16)

(ii) What did the myna do finally? (17) Answer:

 

Answer b

1.(i)

Mongoose

Cobra

(a) superb fighter

(a) skilful

(b) clever

(b) experienced

(c) aggressive

(c) swift

(ii) The cobra hissed defiance to show its readiness for the fight, cobra’s forked tongue darting in and out. It raised three of its six feet off the ground and spread its broad, spectacled hood. The bushing of its tail and the standing up of the long hair on its spine showed that the mongoose was also ready for the fight.

 

  1. The crow and the myna were the other two spectators. To watch the outcome they settled on a cactus but they did not just watch. They tried to involve in the fight by hurling themselves at the cobra.


 

  1. (i) In the end, the crow was flung nearly twenty feet across the garden by a blow from the cobra’s snout. The crow fluttered about for a while and then lay still.

(ii) Finally, the myna dropped cautiously to the ground, hopped about, peered into the bushes from a safe distance, and then, with a shrill cry of congratulation, flew away.

 

Question a

  1. The word ‘round’ usually means a kind of shape. What is its meaning in the story?
  2. Find five words in the following paragraph, which are generally associated with trees. But here, they have been used differently. Underline the words. Hari leaves for work at nine every morning. He works in the local branch of the firmof which his uncle is the owner. Hari’s success is really the fruit of his own labour. He is happy, but he has a small problem. The root cause of his problem is a stray dog near his office. The dog welcomes Hari with a loud bark every day.

 

Answer a

  1. In the story the word ‘round’ means the different stagesof the fight between the cobra and the mongoose.
  2. Leaves, branch, fruit, root and bark

 

Question b

The words in the box are all words that describe movement. Use them to fill in the blanks in the sentences below.

dived

gliding

Sprang

darting

whipped…back

delving

  1. When he began to trust me, the squirrel began _________ into my pockets for morsels of cake.
  2. I saw a cobra ___________ out of a clump of cactus.
  3. The snake hissed, his forked tongue ____________ in and out.
  4. When the cobra tried to bite it, the mongoose _____________ aside.
  5. The snake _______________ his head ________________ to strike at the crow.
  6. The birds _______________ at the snake.

 

Answer b

  1. When he began to trust me, the squirrel began delvinginto my pockets for morsels of cake.
  2. I saw a cobra glidingout of a clump of trees.
  3. The snake hissed, his forked tongue dartingin and out.
  4. When the cobra tried to bite it, the mongoose sprangaside.
  5. The snake whippedhis head backto strike at the crow.
  6. The birds divedat the snake.

 

Question c

Find words in the story, which show things striking violently against each other.

  1. The cobra struck the crow, his snout th _ _ _ing against its body. (15)
  2. The crow and the myna c _ ll _ _ _ _ in mid-air. (13)
  3. The birds dived at the snake, but b _ _ _ _ d into each other instead. (14)

 

Answer c

  1. The cobra struck the crow, his snout thuddingagainst its body. (15)
  2. The crow and the myna collidedin mid − air. (13)
  3. The birds dived at the snake, but bumpedinto each other instead. (14)

 

 

Choose would and could to replace the italicised words in the following sentences. Grandfather says, in the old days,

  1. elephants were able to fly in the sky, like clouds. They were also able to change their shapes. They used to fly behind clouds and frighten them. People used to look up at the sky in wonder.
  2. because there was no electricity, he used to get up with the sun, and he used to go to bed with the sun, like the birds.
  3. like the owl, he was able to see quite well in the dark. He was able to tell who was coming by listening to their footsteps.

 

Answer d

Grandfather says, in the old days,

  1. elephants could fly in the sky like clouds. They could change their shapes. They would fly behind clouds and frighten them. People would look up at the sky and wonder.
  2. because there was no electricity, he would get up with the sun, and he would go to bed with the sun, like the birds.
  3. like the owl, he could see quite well in the dark. He could tell who was coming by listening to their footsteps.

 

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