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Thursday, July 16, 2020

The cop and the Anthem 2



Prose section
The Cop and the Anthem
Extract No 02
Activities with Expected answers



Page No.  29/30
  [Lines, “where’s the man……down the streets”]

Read the first activity, read the extract and do all the activities that follow:


A1. Who said to whom.             (02)
Write down who said to whom and rewrite the sentences.
a) “Where’s the man that done that?” ………The police officer said to the nearby people.
b) “Don’t you think that I might have had something to do with it?” Soapy said to the police officer.
c) “And don’t keep a gentleman waiting,” ……soapy said to the waiters
d) “No cop for you,”………………The waiters said to soapy.

“Where’s the man that done that?” inquired the officer agitatedly.
“Don’t you think that I might have had something to do it?” said Soapy, with a friendly tone, as one greets good fortune. 
The policeman refused to accept Soapy even as a clue. Men who smash windows do not remain to chat with police. They take to their heels. The policeman saw a man half-way down the block running to catch a car. With drawn Club he joined in the pursuit. Soapy, with disgust in his heart, drifted along, twice unsuccessful.
On the  opposite side of the street was a restaurant of no great pretensions. It catered to large appetites and modest purses. Its crockery and atmosphere were thick; its soup and napery thin. Into this place Soapy betook himself without challenge. At a table he sat and consumed beefsteak, flack jacks, doughnuts and pie. And then he told the waiter the fact that the minutes coin and himself were total stranger.
“Now, get busy and call a cop”, said Soapy. “And don’t keep a gentleman waiting.
“No cop for you,” said the waiter, with a voice like butter cakes and an eye like in the Manhattan cocktail. “Hey, Con!”
Neatly upon his left ear on the callous pavement two waiter pitched Soapy. He arose, joint by joint, as Carpenter’s rule opens, and dusted his clothes. Arrest seemed now but an elusive dream. The Island seemed very far away. A policeman who stood before a drugstore two doors away laughed and walked down the street.

A1.True or False:.                       (02)

a) The policeman arrested Soapy.

b) Soapy told the waiter the fact that he didn't have a penny.

c) The waiter called the cop to arrest Soapy.

d) Soapy thought that getting arrested seems to be very easy.

Practice Activity for students

A2. Describe :                     (02)
Describe the features of the Restaurant as mentioned in the extract in the light of the statement, “It Catered to large appetites and modest purses.”

The Restaurant was a restaurant of no great pretension. The crockery and the table clothes and Napkins seem to be ordinary. It serves in quantity and not in quality still it is affordable to common And poor people because they can get unlimited food in limited/reasonable amount or money.


A2. Give reasons :                     (02)
The policeman did not arrest soapy because ………

The PoliceMan thought that Men who smash windows do not remain to chat with police. They take to their Heels.They disappear from the place.At the same time, the policeman saw a man half-way down the block running to catch a car. With drawn Club he joined in the pursuit. 

A2 Infer/Interpret:

Infer and interpret the statement,"Don't you think that I might have had something to do about it? 

Write in your own words.

A3. Conclusion :            (02)

Find out the conclusion from the statement,” I picked it up this morning in a Restaurant if you recognise yours, why I hope you will,” in context with the above extract.

Practice Activity for students.


A4. Personal Response :             (02)

  Share  your and the owner’s reaction when you/ other person pick somebody else's/your belongings by mistake in about Fifty words.



A5. Language study :           (02)

i) ‘where’s the man that done that?’ inquired the officer.

(Rewrite in Reported speech)
The officer asked/inquired where the man was that done that.


ii) The police man saw a man half way down.
( Frame a wh question)
What did the police man see?

iii) Men who smash windows do not remain to chat with the police.

( Make a Simple Sentence)

Men smashing windows do not remain to chat with the police.



A6. Vocabulary :                    (02)

Find out words from the extract which mean the following.
a) Table clothes/Napkins = Napery
b) To cause to go = Betook
c) Ate = consumed
d) policeman = cop


Activities prepared by
Tushar jaisinha Bagwe
K.J SOMAIYA COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND COMMERCE VIDYAVIHAR, MUMBAI 77

E Mail ID tushar@somaiya.edu




























Monday, July 13, 2020

The cop and the Anthem 1















Prose Section
Lesson No 3.
The cop and the Anthem
 Extract No . 01 
Activities with expected answers

Page No. 28/29  [Lines, “ Soapy left……brass buttons”]

Read the extract and do all the activities that follow:

A1. Web                     (02)

Complete the web by writing down what soapy had planned to order in Cafe. 


 1 2 3
 456

Note:This is a practice Activity for students.

Soapy left his bench and strolled out of the square and across the level sea of asphalt, where Broadway and Fifth Avenue flow together. Up Broadway he turned, and stopped at a luxurious cafe.
Soapy had confidence in himself From the lowest button of his vest upward. He was shaven, and his coat was trim and his neat, black bow had been presented to him by a lady missionary on Thanksgiving Day. If only he could reach a table restaurant unsuspected, Success would be this. The portion of him that would raise no doubts in the waiter’s mind. A roasted mallard duck, thought, Soapy, would be about the thing with a bottle of wine and then some cheese, a cup of coffee and a cigar. One dollar for the cigar would be enough. The total would not be so high as to call forth ant extreme of revenge from the cafe management; and yet the meat would leave him filled and happy for the journey to his winter Island.
But as Soapy set foot inside the restaurant door, the head-waiter’s eye fell upon his tattered trousers and Decadent shoes. Strong and ready hands turned him about and conveyed him in silence and haste of the menaced Mallard.
Soapy turned off Broadway. It seemed that his route to the covered island was not to be an easy one. Some other way of entering the limbo must be devised.
At a corner of Sixth Avenue electric lights and cunningly displayed wares behind plate-glass made a shop window attractive. Soapy took a stone and dashed it through the glass. People came running round the corner, a policeman in the lead. Soapy stood still with his hands in his Pockets, and smiled at the sight of brass buttons.

 A2. Give reasons :                     (02)
Soapy failed in his first attempt in the cafe because ……………………

  Soapy set foot inside the restaurant door, the head-waiter’s eye fell upon his tattered trousers
and Decadent shoes. The waiters conveyed him that he won’t be allowed to enter into the cafe due to his financial condition as well as his appearance.


A3. Find out :                     (02)
Find out the attempts made by soapy with a desire that he would be caught by police and sent to Prison.

Firstly soapy tried to enter into a cafe even if he had no money. Secondly, when he came at the corner of the sixth avenue electric lights and beautifully decorated shop, he took a stone and smashed and Dashed  it through the glass with an intention that the nearby police would catch him.


A4. Personal Response :             (02)

Imagine you are a manager of hotel,a poor hungry boy come in
the hotel,consume the food and he isunable to pay the Bill.
Share your Views how, you will handle the
situation in fifty words.


A5. Language study :.                 (02)

i) He stopped at a luxurious cafe.
(Frame a “wh question” to get the underlined part as an Answer)
Where did he stop?

ii) As soapy set foot inside the restaurant door, the head-waiter’s eye fell upon his tattered Trousers and decadent shoes.

( Rewrite using ,’ As soon as”/No sooner. Than”)
As soon as soapy set foot inside the Restaurant door, the head-waiter’s eye fell upon his Tattered  trousers and decadent shoes.

No sooner did soapy set foot inside the Restaurant door than the head-waiter’s eye fell upon his  tattered trousers and decadent shoes.


A6. Vocabulary :.                      ( 02)

Find out words from the extract which mean the following :
a) Notice = eyes fell upon
b) Hurriedly = haste to
c) Menaced = troubled
d) Cunningly = very wisely.

A6. Vocabulary:.                           (02)

Find out words from the Extract which means Jail or Prison.

Photo with Noble Laureate Dr.Kailash Satyarthi at INCSC Mumbai.





















Activities prepared by

Tushar jaisinha Bagwe

K.J SOMAIYA COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND COMMERCE VIDYAVIHAR MUMBAI 77

E Mail ID: 
tushar@somaiya.edu
tushar8bagwe@gmail.com

Thursday, July 9, 2020

On saying please 6



Prose Section
On saying please
Activities with Expected answers




Extract No. 06 
Page no. 18/19 
  [ Lines,” I have missed……………to the mind”]

Read the first activity, read the extract and do all the activities that follow:
A1. Summarise :                  ( 02)
Select two most appropriate sentences that summarise the extract.
a) Civility cannot be enforced by law.
b) Polite behaviour can be a better revenge in day to day life.
c) The extract deals with the humorous incidents in public.
d) Post war situations are mentioned in the extract.

I have missed him from my bus route of late; but I hope that only means that he has carried his Sunshine on to another road. It cannot be too widely diffused in a rather drab world. And I make no apologies for writing a panegyric on an unknown bus conductor. If Wordsworth could gather  Lessons of wisdom from the poor leech gatherer ‘on the lonely moor,’ I see no reason why lesser  people should not take lessons in conduct from one who shows how a very modest calling may be dignified by good temper and kindly feeling. 
It is a matter of general agreement that he war has had a chilling effects upon those little every day civilities of behaviour that sweeten the general air We must get those civilities back if we are to make life kindly and tolerable for each other. We cannot get them back by invoking the law. The policeman is a necessary symbol and the law is a  necessary institution for a society that is still somewhat lower than the angels. But the law can only protect us against material attack. Nor will the lift man’s way of meeting moral affront by physical violence help us to restore the civilities. I suggest to him, that he would have had a more subtle and effective revenge if he had treated the gentleman who would not say ‘Please’ with elaborate politeness. He would have had the victory, not only over the boor, but over himself, and that is the victory that counts. The polite man may lose the material advantage, but he always has the spiritual victory. I commend to the lift-man a story of Chesterfield. In his time the London streets were without the pavements of today and the man who ‘took the wall’ had the driest footing. ‘I never give the wall to a scoundrel,’ said a man who met Chesterfield one day in the street. ‘I always do’, said Chesterfield, Stepping  with a bow into the road. I hope the lift man will agree that his revenge was much sweeter than if he  had flung the fellow into the mud.
A2. Give reasons :                     (02)
According to the Narrator the victory over himself is more important in the case of the lift man Because…………………….
A3. Interpret :                     (02)
Interpret the statement,” Restoring the civilities is very effective than imposing law.”
A4. Personal Response :            (02)
“Manners maketh man,” Elaborate the idea in your own words in about fifty words.
A5. Language study :             (02)
i) We must get these civilities back.
(Replace the Modal auxiliary by another showing,” Advice/suggestion”)
We should get these civilities back.
ii) We cannot get them back by invoking the law.
(Rewrite the sentence using,” be able to”)
We are not able to/are unable to get them back by invoking the law.
iii) The polite man may lose the material advantage, but he always has the spiritual Victory.
( Rewrite using ,” Though/Although….”)
Though/ Although The polite man may lose the material advantage he always has the Spiritual  victory.

A6 Vocabulary:.                            (02)
Find out words from the extract which mean the following.
a) To spread =     diffused               
b) Dull or not attractive = drab
c) Very clever = subtle
d) praised or appreciated= commend


Activities prepared by
Tushar jaisinha Bagwe
K.J. SOMAIYA COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND COMMERCE VIDYAVIHAR EAST 
MUMBAI 77
E Mail Id tushar@somaiya.edu











__________________________________________________________________

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

On saying please 5






Prose Section
On saying please
 Extract No. 05
Activities with expected answers
Page no 16/17   [ Lines,” A few days……………sound investment”]
Read  the extract and do all the activities that follow:

A1. True or false :                    (2)
i) The writer’s toe was crushed under the feet of a traveller in train.  (F)
ii) The polite manner of the traveller made the writer feel comfortable. (T)
iii) The writer always used to follow him due to his courteous behaviour. (T)
iv) The writer believed that the journey with the person was a lesson of discourtesy. (F)

A few days after, my most sensitive toe was trampled on rather heavily as I sat reading on the top of a bus. I looked up with some anger and more agony, and saw my friend of the cheerful countenance. ‘Sorry, sir’, he said. ‘I know these are heavy boots. Got’em because  my own feet get trod on so much, and now I’m treading on other people’s. Hope I didn’t hurt you, sir,’ He had hurt me but he was so nice about it that I assured him he hadn’t. After this I began to observe him whenever I boarded his bus, and found a curious pleasure in the constant good nature of his bearing. He seemed to have an inexhaustible fund of patience and a gift for making his passengers comfortable. I noticed that if it was raining he would run up the stairs to give someone the tip that there was ‘room inside’. With old people he was as considerate as a son, and with children as solicitous as a father. He had evidently a peculiarly warm place in his heart for young people, and always indulged in some merry jest with them. If he had a blind man on board it wasn’t enough to set him down safely on the pavement. He would call to Bill in front to wait while he took him across the road or round the corner or otherwise safely on his way. In short, I found that he irradiated such an atmosphere of good temper and kindliness that a journey with him was a lesson in natural courtesy and good manners.
What struck me particularly was the ease with which he got through his work. If bad manners are infectious, so also are good manners. If we encounter incivility most of us are apt to become uncivil, but it is an unusually uncouth person who can be disagreeable with sunny people. It is with manners as with the weather. ‘Nothing clears up my spirits like a fine day’, said Keats, and a cheerful person descends on even the gloomiest of us with something of the benediction of a fine day. And so it was always fine weather on the polite conductor’s bus, and his own civility, his conciliatory address and good humoured bearing infected his passengers. In lightening their spirits he lightened his own task. His gaiety was not a wasteful luxury, but a sound investment.


A2. Find out :                   (02)
Find out the expressions that create a sense of humour in the extract.

He said. ‘I know these are heavy boots. Got’em because my own feet get trod on so much, and now I’m treading on other people’s. Hope I didn’t hurt you, sir,’ He had hurt me but he was so nice about it that I assured him he hadn’t.

A3. Complete :                  (02)
Complete the table by writing down situations and behaviour of the person in various Situations.
No situations(S)          behaviour( b)

1
Writers toe was crushed down under feet(s)

The traveller behaved very politely and apologised.(b)

2
On the staircases(s)

The man used to run on staircases and give them tip that there is Room inside (b)

3
With old people(s).

He was as considerate as a son(b)

4
With children(S).

He was as solicitous as a father (b)

5
With young people (S)

He used to behave warmly always indulged in some merry jest.(b)

6
With blind people (s)

Take care to help them cross the road safely.(b)


A4. Personal Response :            (02)
“ Good manners are infectious,” share your views on the opinion expressed by the writer .  Justify your answer with suitable examples
In Fifty words.

A5. Language study :.          (02)
i) He had hurt me but he was so nice about it.

(Rewrite the sentence beginning with,” Though…”)

Though he had hurt me he was so nice about it.

ii) He would run up the stairs.

(Rewrite the sentence using “used to”)

He used to run up the stairs

A6. Vocabulary :                   ( 02)

Find out words from the extract which mean the following.
a) Expression = countenance
b) Put down = treading
c) Caring and loving = solicitous 
d) Involved in = indulged in


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Note: Activities are prepared keeping in mind students from different mediums. Kindly choose the most appropriate one according to their understanding.


Activities prepared by

TUSHAR J BAGWE

K J SOMAIYA COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND COMMERCE VIDYAVIHAR EAST MUMBAI 77

E Mail IDs:

tushar@somaiya.edu

tushar8bagwe@gmail.com

jaisinghtushar 812@gmail.co

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Monday, June 29, 2020

Poem 2.4 Have you Earned your tomorrow

Unit 2.4  Have you Earned your Tomorrow         
By Edgar Guest











 

























Is anybody happier because you passed his way?
Does anyone remember that you spoke to him today?
This day is almost over, and its toiling time is through;
Is there anyone to utter now a kindly word of you?

Did you give a cheerful greeting to the friend who came along?
Or a churlish sort of “Howdy” and then vanish in the throng?
Were you selfish pure and simple as you rushed along the way,
Or is someone mighty grateful for a deed you did today?

Can you say tonight, in parting with the days that’s slipping fast,
That you helped a single brother of the many that you passed?
Is a single heart rejoicing over what you did or said
Does a man whose hopes were fading now with courage look ahead?

Did you waste the day, or lose it, was it well or sorely spent?
Did you leave a trail of kindness or a scar of discontent?
As you close your eyes in slumber do you think that God would say,
You have earned one more tomorrow by the work you did today?

- Edgar Guest



Toiling Time- time spent in hard physical work.
Churlish - rude
Howdy - an informal friendly greeting
throng - crowd,large number of people
Sorely - uselessly
Slumber - sleep


PARAPHRASE OF THE POEM
Have you earned your tomorrow by Edgar Guest is a four stanza poem that is separated into sets of four lines, or quatrains. Guest chose to confirm these quatrains to a consistent rhyme scheme. The lines follow the pattern of a a, b b, c c, d d, e e, f f. Immediately noteworthy is the repetition of the –ay’ sound that appears in the first, second and fourth stanzas. It has been used repetitively in order to make a new impact. Both elements of the poem constantly press on the reader’s mind.
As a reader will immediately notice upon beginning,” Have you earned your tomorrow” that the text is marked by questions directed at the reader. Each stanza contains at least two, sometimes three questions which probe at a one’s treatment of others. For example, the second stanza inquires into friendly greetings and kind actions while the third is concerned with helping others and giving hope. The speaker’s words are piercing, leaving no room for interpretation. Any reader who considers them even briefly, will be challenged to analyse their own goodness.
“Have you earned your tomorrow”, by Edgar Guest presents a number of probing questions to a reader about how they spend their days.
The poem begins with the speaker asking a reader if they did everything to improve the day of another human being. He continues on to ask if the reader greeted their friends cheerfully or if Instead they passed them by,” churlish(ly).It is the end of the day and time is running out to guarantee one’s actions are approved by God.

In the second half of the poem the speaker enquires into the reader’s actions further.
He hopes that everyone does what they can to bring hope and courage to those who do not
Have it in the poem concludes with the speaker reminding the reader that it is up to God whether or not, you have a tomorrow. Therefore, one should consider their actions care for if they want the next day.

Stanza One :
In the first stanza, the speaker begins with a question of all the questions to come this one is the most direct. It gets off to the heart of what Guest’s speaker is concerned with. He asks if today, ‘Your’ referring to the reader, made anyone’s day better. He speaks abstractly about ‘him’ the reader might have passed and helped or made happier. The speaker purposely does not define what this means. It is up for interpretation as it could mean any number of things.
This question is followed by a second then later a third. The second asks the reader if there was anyone, “You spoke to” today who remembers,” you” Again this question could mean anything.
The most important parts of these two questions are the emphasis on unprompted kindness and the fact that it is now the end of the day. The hours are running out for,’ You” to make a positive impact .The speaker emphasises this by asking if there is “anyone’ to utter now a kindly word of you? 

Stanza Two :
The second stanza begins with another question. Here, the speaker asks if anytime during the day” you” greeted a friend “cheerfully”. Now the kindness is moving inward. The speaker is also concerned with how” you” Treat those known to “you” as well.
In the next lines he presents the opposite, and pushes the reader on their own selfish tendencies rather than a cheerful, heartfelt, “hello” the speaker asks if “you’ were,” churlish’ or rude. This would Also be marked by one’s quick disappearance into the, ‘crowd” and a rushing off to another task. It is clear the speaker feels distaste at the idea of treating a friend in this way. He says very clearly that it is a “Pure(ly)’ “selfish’ way to be. As if he is hoping for the opposite response, he asks, “or” did “you’ act .

Stanza Three :
The third stanza begins with a longer question, probing into any help the reader might have given to a “single brother”. It is enough for the speaker if” you’ were kind to one person out of many “that you pass” An action like this would be sufficient to have “earned your tomorrow”
It is important to note how this way of thinking is connected to a number of different religions and their dependence on “good deeds”. This is backed up by Guest’s tendency to connect his themes to Christianity. In fact, God comes into a play in the fourth stanza as one is forced to contend with how they lived.
In the second half of the third stanza, the speaker uses courage and cowardice as tools to improve or worsen someone’s life. He asks if there is one “single heart” that is now “rejoicing’ due to “your’ actions. Ideally, he would like there to be” a man’ with improved hopes and reinvigorated courage to look ahead.

Stanza Four :
In the fourth stanza, the speaker states that any day not spent, at least in part, improving the lives of others is wasted. It is “lost’ if it was “sorely’ or ‘ badly’ spent on the other hand, if it was well….spent’ there will be a trail of kindness making one’s  path through the day. The last lines tells the reader(if they are unsure how their day was spent)that they can’ lose’ their “eyes’ in slumber’ and think about what God would have to say to them.
If after considering the response of God,  a reader feels as if they’ve done well, then tomorrow is assured, otherwise, God might look kindly on the actions or inactions of the day and tomorrow might not come.








































Read the given extract and do all the activities that follow it:

A1. True or False :                 (02)
State whether the following statements are true or false.
a) The poet asks the reader whether he/she is kind to others or not. (T)
b) The poet expects that we should be rude and ungrateful to the people around us. (F)
c) The Poet believes that one should always help others and bring a smile on their
faces. (T)
d) If you are good to others ,God will be angry with you that you earned your day by being good the people. (F)


A1. Complete :                             (02)
Complete the sentences by choosing the information given in the extract.
1) The toiling time is over in the stanza means………….
a) Time spent in hard physical work
b) Happy and prosperous time ends.
c) Cooking time is over.
d) The time to party  its over

2) The poet expects the readers to be …………… with the people around them.
a) Cheerful and not rude.
b) Funny and humorous.
c) Rude and arrogant
d) Angry and upset.

3) The poet expects the reader to be …………………………. to one and all.
a) Helpful         b)    jealous      c)    arrogant       d)    irritating.

4) If you are good to others, God would surely say ……………………..
a) You have earned one more tomorrow.
b) You have wasted your life.
c) You are hopeless and useless.
d) You have no right to live in this world.


A2. Elaborate :                             (02)
“As you close your eyes in slumber do you think that God would say, you have earned one more tomorrow by the work you did today. 
Elaborate the idea expressed in these lines.

The speaker states that if you do not want to help others or being rude to people the day is “Lost” or badly spent. On the other hand it was “well spent” if there will be a trail of kindness “Making one’s path through the day. The lines tell the reader that they can close their eyes in slumber and think about what and God would have to say them.
If after considering the response of God, a reader feels as if they’ve done well, then tomorrow is assured.

A2. Find out :                             (02)
Find out the expressions/phrases which denote,” going away” from the extract.

The expressions are
“time is through”,  “vanish in the throng’,  “slipping fast”,  “many that you have passed”,  “Hopes were fading”,  ‘sorely spent” etc.



A3. Personal Response :             (02)
“Courtesy costs nothing but pays everything’ Share your views with suitable examples in Fifty words.



A3. Personal Response :             (02)
“Goodness always wins” share your views on this with suitable examples in about Fifty words.




A3. Personal Response :            (02)

 Moral and ethical virtues are the most preferred values in life.Justify your answer with suitable examples in Fifty words.



A3. Personal Response :            (02)

God help those who help themselves as well as others share your views on this in about Fifty words.



A4. Poetic Devices :                   (02)

“Is anybody happier because you passed his way?

Name and explain the figure of speech used in the above line.
The figure of speech used here is an example of an interrogation because the poet is asking the question to the readers.



A4. Poetic Devices :                     (02)

This day is almost over and its toiling time is through.
Identify the figure of speech used in the above line.
The figure of speech used here is called as an ALLITERATION because the initial sound / letter “t’’ is repeated in a pleasant manner.


A4. Poetic Devices:.                    (02)

Identify an example of Synecdoche from the poem.

The example of Synecdoche is

1." Is a single heart rejoicing over what you did or said
( The word heart which is a part of human body represents the whole i.e person)




A4. Poetic Devices :                   (02)

Complete the table
Complete the table by writing down the examples/lines of the figure of speech mentioned in the extract.
NO
            POETIC DEVICE

                                                   LINES

   01    ALLITERATION.      ............
1)This day is almost over,and it's toiling time is through (The initial sound/ Letter 't' is repeated)
2) Or a Churlish sort of " Howdy"and then vanish in the throng.
3) Does a man whose hopes were fading now with courage look ahead?

    02   INTERROGATION. ..............

The examples of interrogation are
there in first second and fourth stanzas line numbers 1,2 and 4

In the  third Stanza  second and fourth line.



A4. Poetic Devices :                     (02)

Complete the table.
Note down the Rhyme scheme used in the poem and also note down the Rhyming pair of words and complete the activity.
  Stanza
Rhyme scheme
Rhyming pair of words

Stanza one
a    a   b      b
Way-today, through-you

Stanza two
C     c      d     d
Along-throng, way-today

Stanza three
e      e     f      f
Fast-passed, said-

Stanza four
g     g      h     h
Spent-content, say-today













A5. Poetic creativity :             (02)

Compose two to four lines on your own on , "Good deeds”


( This is a practice Activity )


A5. Poetic Creativity:.                (02)

Is anything happier because you passed his way?
Does anyone remember that you spoke to him today?
This day is almost over, and is toiling time is through
Is there  anyone to utter now a kindly word of you?

Replace the underlined (second and fourth)lines by composing your own.


A5. Poetic Creativity :            (02)

Can you say tonight, in parting with the day that slipping fast
That you helped a single brother of the many that you passed,

Replace the underlined words/phrases and make use of your own words/phrases and create new lines.


Activities prepared by

TUSHAR J BAGWE
K J SOMAIYA COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND COMMERCE VIDYAVIHAR EAST MUMBAI 77

Mobile 9820928141
E Mail ID : tushar@somaiya.edu









Sunday, June 28, 2020

On saying please 4



Prose Section
On saying please
Extract No. 04
Activities with expected answers




Page no. 16/17  
 [ Lines, “It is ……………given me.”]
Read  the extract and do all the activities that follow:

A1. Rearrange :                            (02)
Following sentences are jumbled up rearrange them as per their occurrence in the extract.
a) The account was settled by the narrator
b) The narrator found a shilling in the corner of his pocket.
c) The narrator had left home without money.
d) The narrator told the conductor honestly that he did not have a penny
(Correct order is ....... c),  d),  b),  a) )
It is not, therefore, with any feeling of unfriendliness to conductors as a class that I pay a tribute to a particular member of that class. I first became conscious of his existence one day when I jumped on to a bus and found that I had left home without any money in my pocket. Everyone has had the experience and knows the feeling, the mixed feeling, which the discovery arouses. You are annoyed because you look like a fool at the best and like a knave at the worst. You would not be at all surprised if the conductor eyed you coldly as much as to say, ‘Yes I know that stale old trick. Now then, off you get.’ And even if the conductor is a good fellow and lets you down easily, you are faced with the necessity of going back and the inconvenience, perhaps, of missing your train or your engagement.
Having searched my pockets in vain for stray coppers, and having found I was utterly penniless, I told the conductor with as honest a face as I could assume that I couldn’t pay the fare, and must go back for money. ‘Oh, you needn’t get off: that’s all right’, said he. ‘All right’, said I, ‘but I haven’t a copper on me.’ ‘Oh I’ll book you through, he replied. ‘Where d’ye want to go ?’ and he handled his bundle of tickets with the air of a man who was prepared to give me a ticket for anywhere from the Bank to Hong Kong. I said it was very kind of him, and told him where I wanted to go, and as he gave me the ticket I said, ‘But where shall I send the fare?’ ‘Oh, you’ll see me some day all right’, he said cheerfully, as he turned to go. And then, luckily, my fingers, still wandering in the corners of my pockets lighted on a shilling and the account was squared. But that fact did not lessen the glow of pleasure which so good-natured an action had given me.

A2. Describe :                    (02)
Describe the feelings of the narrator when he realised that he was travelling without money.

There was a mixed and awkward feeling. The writer felt angry as he looked like a fool. He thought
The conductor would humiliate him by saying that it was an old trick of the ticketless passenger.

A3. Find out and give reasons :(02)
“I pay tribute to a particular member of that class. Find out which particular member of class the writer is talking about with reasons.
The writer is talking about the conductor of the bus. Despite of the fact that the writer was travelling without money the conductor did not shout at him and didn’t tell the writer to get down from the bus. He was very polite with the writer and handled the situation very calmly and quietly.

A4. Personal Response :            (02)

Share if you have similar kind of experience like the narrator had as mentioned in the extract.

A5. Language study :.                 (02)
i) I pay tribute to a particular member of that class.

(Rewrite using,” Present perfect continuous Tense”).
(Choose the correct answer from the options and rewrite it.)

1)I have been paying tribute to a particular member of that class.
2) I have paid tribute to a particular member of that class.
3) I had paid to a particular member of that class.
4) I will pay tribute to a particular member of that class.

ii) I couldn’t pay the fare.  ( Use, “be able to”)
I was not able to pay the fare. OR I was unable to pay the fare.

iii) It was very kind of him.  (Make it Exclamatory)
How kind it was of him!

iv) He gave me the ticket.
( Frame a ,”wh- question” to get the underlined part as an answer)

(Write your answer using the given clue.)

What ....... he ......... me?

v) I said,” But where shall I send the fare?” (Rewrite in Reported speech)

I asked/inquired but where I would send the fare.

A6. Vocabulary :                    (02)                    
Find Antonyms of the following words from the extract.
a) Friendly x Unfriendly
b) unconscious   x conscious
c) Convenience x Inconvenience
d) unlucky x lucky



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Note: Activities are prepared keeping in mind students from different mediums. Kindly choose the most appropriate one according to their understanding.


Activities prepared by

TUSHAR J BAGWE

K J SOMAIYA COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND COMMERCE VIDYAVIHAR EAST MUMBAI 77

E Mail IDs:

tushar@somaiya.edu

tushar8bagwe@gmail.com

jaisinghtushar 812@gmail.com



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Thursday, June 25, 2020

On saying please 3

Prose section Unit 1.2 
On saying please
Extract No. 03
Activities with expected answers





















Page no. 15/16   [ Lines, “ But Though ……………service”]

Read the extract and do all the activities that follow:

A1. True or False :                     (02)
State whether the following statements are True or False.
a) Being civil is utmost important. (T)
b) We should acknowledge a service.  (T)
c) Commands can be used in day to day life to deal with people.  (F)
d) Courtesies help the machine of life to run sweetly.  (T)

But though we are bound to endorse the verdict against the lift-man most people will have certain sympathy with him. While it is true that there is no law that compels us to say ‘Please’, there is a social practice much older and much more sacred than any law which enjoins us to be civil. And the first requirement of civility is that we should acknowledge a service. ‘Please’ and ‘Thank you’ are the small change with which we pay our way as social beings. They are the little courtesies by which we keep the machine of life oiled and running sweetly. They put our intercourse upon the basis of a friendly cooperation an easy give and take, instead of on the basis of superiors dictating to inferiors. It is a very vulgar mind that would wish to command where he can have the service for asking, and have it with willingness and good feeling instead of resentment.
I should like to ‘feature’ in this connection my friend, the polite conductor. By this discriminating title, I do not intend to suggest a rebuke to conductors generally. On the contrary, I am disposed to think that there are few classes of men who come through the ordeal of a very trying calling better than bus conductors do. Here and there you will meet an unpleasant specimen who regards the passengers as his natural enemies - as creatures whose chief purpose  on the bus is to cheat him, and who can only be kept reasonably honest by a  loud voice and an aggressive manner.  But this type is rare - rarer than it used to be. I fancy the public owes much to the Underground Railway Company, which also runs the buses, for insisting on a certain standard of civility in its servants and taking care that that standard is observed. In doing this it not only makes things pleasant for the travelling public, but performs an important social service.

A2. Describe :                     (02)
Describe the impact of good temper and kindliness on the society in the light of the good-mannered conductor.
The conductor in this extract is very polite with the narrator ……………. (Practice Activity)

A2. Explain :                     (02)
Explain what can be the basis of our day to day communication.
Friendly cooperation and easy give and take, instead of on the basis of superiors dictating to inferiors. It is a very vulgar mind that would wish to command where he can have the service for asking, and have it with willingness and good feeling instead of resentment(anger)

A4. Personal Response :             (02)
"The first requirement of civility Is that we should acknowledge a service.” share your thoughts on this in about Fifty words.

A5. Language study                     (02)

i) Though we are bound to endorse the verdict against the lift-man most people will have certain sympathy with him.

(Rewrite the sentence using” but’ conjunction)
We are bound to endorse the verdict against the lift-man but most people will have certain Sympathy with him.

ii) We should acknowledge a service.

(Replace the modal by another showing ,”obligation / Compulsion)

Select your answer from the options
a) We can acknowledge a service.
b) We will acknowledge a science.
C) We must/ought to acknowledge a service.
d) We might acknowledge a service.

iii) It is a very vulgar mind that would wish to command.
(Make it Exclamatory)
Select your answer from the options.

a)How vulgar mind it is that would wish to command.
b)What a vulgar mind it is that would wish to command!
c) it is really a vulgar mind that would wish to command.
d) A vulgar mind would not wish to command.

iv) You will meet an unpleasant specimen.
(Make it less definite)

You may/might meet an unpleasant specimen.

A6. Vocabulary :                           (02)
Find out words from the extract which mean the following.
a) Communication or conversation = intercourse
b) Suffering = ordeal
c) Anger = Resentment
d) To speak angrily = Rebuke

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Note: Activities are prepared keeping in mind students from different mediums. Kindly choose the most appropriate one according to their understanding.


Activities prepared by

TUSHAR J BAGWE

K J SOMAIYA COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND COMMERCE VIDYAVIHAR EAST MUMBAI 77

E Mail IDs:

tushar@somaiya.edu

tushar8bagwe@gmail.com

jaisinghtushar 812@gmail.com

110970.bagwe@mahaeschool.co.in

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Tuesday, June 23, 2020

On saying please 2



Prose section 
On Saying Please
Extract No 02 
Activities with Expected answers


Page no. 15   [ Lines, “This does not………..moods and manners”]

Read the extract and do all the activities that follow:

A1. True or False :                  (02)
i) It is more painful if someone hurts our self-respect. (T)
ii) Bad manners can cause much damage which is irreparable. (T)
iii) Law can control our private manners. (F)
iv) Court could control our social manners and moods. (F)

This does not mean that the damages are negligible. It is probable that the lift-man was much more acutely hurt by what he regarded as a slur upon his social standing than he would have been if he had a kick on the shins, for which he could have got a legal redress. The pain of a kick on the shins soon passes away but the pain of a wound to our self-respect or our vanity may poison a whole day. I can imagine that lift-man, denied the relief of throwing the author  of his wound out of the lift, brooding over the insult by the hour, and visiting it on his wife in the evening as the only way of restoring his equilibrium. For there are few things more catching than bad temper and bad manners. When Sir Anthony Absolute bullied Captain Absolute, the latter went out and bullied his man, Fag, whereupon Fag went out downstairs and kicked the page-boy. Probably the man who said ‘Top’ to the lift man was really only getting back on his employer who had not said ‘Good morning’ to him because he himself had been henpecked at breakfast by his wife, to whom the cook had been insolent because the housemaid had ‘answered her back’. We infect the world with our ill humours. Bad manners probably do more to poison the stream of the general life than all the crimes in the calendar. For one wife who gets a black eye from an otherwise good natured husband there are a hundred who live a life of martyrdom under the shadow of a morose temper. But all the same the law cannot become the guardian of our private manners. No Decalogue could cover the vast area of offences and no court could administer a law which governed our social civilities, our speech, the tilt of our eyebrows and all our moods and manners.

A2. Explain/Elaborate :   (02)

The pain of a kick on the shins soon passes away but the pain of a wound to our self-respect or our vanity may poison a whole day.

The statement is self-explanatory. The writer wants to convey that physical assault can heal with Passage of time but an injury to our self-respect cannot be healed easily. It may poison our day or Life because it is an insult or humiliation.

A3. Give Reasons :                 (02)
it is not possible for the law to become the guardian of our private manners ……….

Law is reasonable and clear. It can guide us in our daily life. Discourtesy is not a legal offence.
Social mannerisms, etiquettes, politeness are expected nobilities and courtesies. We  cannot compel somebody to say Thank you and please every now and then.

A4. Personal Response :           (02)
“Courtesy costs nothing but pays everything,” Share your views on this. Justify your  answer with suitable examples in Fifty words.

A5. Language study :.             (02)

i) We infect the world with our ill-humours.
(Rewrite the sentence beginning with,” The world…….”)

The world is infected by us with our ill-humours.

ii) The law cannot become the guardian of our private manners.

(Frame a Rhetorical question)
Can the law become the guardian of our private manners?

iii) No Decalogue could cover the vast area.  (Make it affirmative)

Decalogue could not cover the vast area.

A6. Vocabulary :                   (02)
Find out words from the extract which mean.
a) Remedy = Redress 
b) very rude = insolent
c) Bad name or Reputation = Black eye
d) A man who is controlled by his wife=henpecked.

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Note: Activities are prepared keeping in mind students from different mediums. Kindly choose the most appropriate one according to their understanding.


Activities prepared by

TUSHAR J BAGWE

K J SOMAIYA COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND COMMERCE VIDYAVIHAR EAST MUMBAI 77

E Mail IDs:

tushar@somaiya.edu

tushar8bagwe@gmail.com

jaisinghtushar 812@gmail.com

110970.bagwe@mahaeschool.co.in

Facebook page


https://www.facebook.com/Plustwolevel/




















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