,Board,Class,Subject,ChunkData,Book 0,CBSE,Class10,English,"1 A Letter to God Write the correct order in numbers in the column below Jumbled sentences But it rained heavily and hailstorm thrashed his corn field and all the corn was destroyed. He wrote ‘To God’ on the envelope and posted it. Lencho predicted it will rain and it did. He and his wife were happy. Lencho felt desperate but believed that God would help him. Their corn field was longing for water. The postman and the postmaster laughed at Lencho's letter but were surprised by the faith of the man. 04:21:14 PM He wrote a letter to God asking for a hundred pesos to sow his field again and to survive until the next crop came up. After some days, Lencho went to the post office to receive the money as the postmaster watched him. He immediately went to the counter and asked for a pen and paper, wrote a few lines and posted the letter. Lencho, his wife, and their children lived in a lonely house in a valley. When the postmaster opened the letter, it said “Oh! Thanks for sending the money. But I have received only seventy pesos. Next time you please send the money directly to me. The people at the post office are a bunch of crooks. They have taken the thirty pesos.” He opened the letter and was happy to find the money. He counted and found it was only seventy pesos. The postmaster collected about 70 pesos from his colleagues and sent it to Lencho. Create a graphic description based on the given summary of ‘A Letter to God’. A. Lencho in his corn field. Words and ExprEssions 2 – Class x2 04:21:15 PM B. C. D. 04:21:15 PM Reading CompRehension text i Given below is a story of the tailor who has been known for his skills in cheating and stealing. Read in groups of four or in pairs. You may discuss the events and incidences of the story with your friends and write them in a sequential manner. The Trader and the Tailor Look Up and Understand There was a tailor who was known for beating others in the art of being light-fingered and thievery. A trader swore that even with a hundred attempts, the tailor would not be able to take a coil of thread from him without his knowledge. beguiling cordiality hamper snipping The trader was told that many others, more intelligent than him, had been beaten by the tailor. They said he should not imagine himself so great, for his ego would only give him worse troubles in competition with the tailor. Still, the trader became more competitive and made a wager that the tailor would not be able to rob him of anything. wagered He wagered an Arab horse with those who taunted him. If the tailor failed to steal, then they would have to give him a horse instead. That night, the trader lay awake troubled by the situation and could not sleep a wink. In the morning, he put a piece of satin cloth under his arm and went to the bazaar and entered the shop and saluted the cunning rogue warmly. The tailor sprang up from his seat and welcomed the trader, inquiring about his health with cordiality exceeding even that of the trader, planting in his heart great feelings of affection for him. When the trader heard these songs of sweetness from the tailor, he flung down the piece of silk saying, “Cut this into a coat for me and make it wide below my navel so as not to hamper my legs and tight about it to show off my figure.” The tailor answered, “O! kindly man, I will do you a hundred services,” and accepted the order. He measured the satin and inspected the working surface and all the time chatted away to the trader in idle gossip, about other amirs and of bounties and gifts he had received from them, and about misers and their mean ways, and made the trader laugh with hysterics. During this beguiling talk, he was snipping away with his scissors rapidly, cutting as fast as his lips moved. Words and ExprEssions 2 – Class x4 04:21:15 PM The trader was laughing, the tailor was cutting, the trader closed his eyes in joy, the tailor cut extra pieces, tucking them under his thighs, hidden away from all but God. From his delight at the tailor’s tales, the trader’s former boast went out of his mind. What satin? What boast? What wager? The trader was drunk on the jokes told by the tailor. filching | | incredible | Then the tailor told such an incredible story that the trader fell over on his back with laughter. The tailor swiftly stitched a swatch of the satin to the hem of his underpants while the trader was paying no attention at all, greedily sucking with every guffaw at the jests the tailor told. The tailor continued to tell funnier and funnier tales and jokes until the trader was completely within his power. | swatch unhinged With his eyes shut and his reason vanished, the bewildered and boastful trader was drunk with joy. And the tailor continued to cut, filching yet more of the beautiful cloth, with nothing to stop him now. And yet the trader begged for more. You who becomes the slave of the jest, no story is more laughable than you yourself, think on this at the edge of your grave. How long will you listen to the lies of this world that leave your mind and spirit unhinged? The Universal Tailor will cut and stitch the hems of a hundred travellers, silly as children. Eventually the tailor became bored with the whole story and told the trader that he better leave before another tale was told, “For if I tell another one, the coat will be too tight for you, and you will stop laughing and weep tears of blood.” Rumi (Abridged) Look Up and Understand Did you enjoy the story of ‘The Trader and the Tailor’? The story is summarised below. Read the story again with your friend and complete the paragraph using short sentences with the given hints. Once there was a tailor who was known for (cheat and thievery). He could anyone with his cunning way of deceiving people. A trader challenged that the tailor would not be able to cheat him. He (go) to the tailor with 01-Jul-2019 12:53:56 PM (satin). The tailor (welcome). The trader (please) by the tailor’s praise. He told the tailor to make a coat for him. The tailor (praise) the trader (maximum). The trader (joy). The tailor (recount) funny tales and the trader forgot (bet). The tailor started snipping hide). Eyes of the trader (tears and joy) and yet the trader kept on asking for (stories). At last, the tailor told the trader (weep-blood).",jewe201.pdf 1,CBSE,Class10,English,"Write the correct order in numbers in the column below Jumbled sentences But it rained heavily and hailstorm thrashed his corn field and all the corn was destroyed. He wrote ‘To God’ on the envelope and posted it. Lencho predicted it will rain and it did. He and his wife were happy. Lencho felt desperate but believed that God would help him. Their corn field was longing for water. The postman and the postmaster laughed at Lencho's letter but were surprised by the faith of the man. 04:21:14 PM He wrote a letter to God asking for a hundred pesos to sow his field again and to survive until the next crop came up. After some days, Lencho went to the post office to receive the money as the postmaster watched him. He immediately went to the counter and asked for a pen and paper, wrote a few lines and posted the letter. Lencho, his wife, and their children lived in a lonely house in a valley. When the postmaster opened the letter, it said “Oh! Thanks for sending the money. But I have received only seventy pesos. Next time you please send the money directly to me. The people at the post office are a bunch of crooks. They have taken the thirty pesos.” He opened the letter and was happy to find the money. He counted and found it was only seventy pesos. The postmaster collected about 70 pesos from his colleagues and sent it to Lencho. Create a graphic description based on the given summary of ‘A Letter to God’. A. Lencho in his corn field. Words and ExprEssions 2 – Class x2 04:21:15 PM B. C. D. 04:21:15 PM Reading CompRehension text i Given below is a story of the tailor who has been known for his skills in cheating and stealing. Read in groups of four or in pairs. You may discuss the events and incidences of the story with your friends and write them in a sequential manner. The Trader and the Tailor Look Up and Understand There was a tailor who was known for beating others in the art of being light-fingered and thievery. A trader swore that even with a hundred attempts, the tailor would not be able to take a coil of thread from him without his knowledge. beguiling cordiality hamper snipping The trader was told that many others, more intelligent than him, had been beaten by the tailor. They said he should not imagine himself so great, for his ego would only give him worse troubles in competition with the tailor. Still, the trader became more competitive and made a wager that the tailor would not be able to rob him of anything. wagered He wagered an Arab horse with those who taunted him. If the tailor failed to steal, then they would have to give him a horse instead. That night, the trader lay awake troubled by the situation and could not sleep a wink. In the morning, he put a piece of satin cloth under his arm and went to the bazaar and entered the shop and saluted the cunning rogue warmly. The tailor sprang up from his seat and welcomed the trader, inquiring about his health with cordiality exceeding even that of the trader, planting in his heart great feelings of affection for him. When the trader heard these songs of sweetness from the tailor, he flung down the piece of silk saying, “Cut this into a coat for me and make it wide below my navel so as not to hamper my legs and tight about it to show off my figure.” The tailor answered, “O! kindly man, I will do you a hundred services,” and accepted the order. He measured the satin and inspected the working surface and all the time chatted away to the trader in idle gossip, about other amirs and of bounties and gifts he had received from them, and about misers and their mean ways, and made the trader laugh with hysterics. During this beguiling talk, he was snipping away with his scissors rapidly, cutting as fast as his lips moved. Words and ExprEssions 2 – Class x4 04:21:15 PM The trader was laughing, the tailor was cutting, the trader closed his eyes in joy, the tailor cut extra pieces, tucking them under his thighs, hidden away from all but God. From his delight at the tailor’s tales, the trader’s former boast went out of his mind. What satin? What boast? What wager? The trader was drunk on the jokes told by the tailor. filching | | incredible | Then the tailor told such an incredible story that the trader fell over on his back with laughter. The tailor swiftly stitched a swatch of the satin to the hem of his underpants while the trader was paying no attention at all, greedily sucking with every guffaw at the jests the tailor told. The tailor continued to tell funnier and funnier tales and jokes until the trader was completely within his power. | swatch unhinged With his eyes shut and his reason vanished, the bewildered and boastful trader was drunk with joy. And the tailor continued to cut, filching yet more of the beautiful cloth, with nothing to stop him now. And yet the trader begged for more. You who becomes the slave of the jest, no story is more laughable than you yourself, think on this at the edge of your grave. How long will you listen to the lies of this world that leave your mind and spirit unhinged? The Universal Tailor will cut and stitch the hems of a hundred travellers, silly as children. Eventually the tailor became bored with the whole story and told the trader that he better leave before another tale was told, “For if I tell another one, the coat will be too tight for you, and you will stop laughing and weep tears of blood.”",jewe201.pdf 2,CBSE,Class10,English,"Reading CompRehension text i Given below is a story of the tailor who has been known for his skills in cheating and stealing. Read in groups of four or in pairs. You may discuss the events and incidences of the story with your friends and write them in a sequential manner. The Trader and the Tailor Look Up and Understand There was a tailor who was known for beating others in the art of being light-fingered and thievery. A trader swore that even with a hundred attempts, the tailor would not be able to take a coil of thread from him without his knowledge. beguiling cordiality hamper snipping The trader was told that many others, more intelligent than him, had been beaten by the tailor. They said he should not imagine himself so great, for his ego would only give him worse troubles in competition with the tailor. Still, the trader became more competitive and made a wager that the tailor would not be able to rob him of anything. wagered He wagered an Arab horse with those who taunted him. If the tailor failed to steal, then they would have to give him a horse instead. That night, the trader lay awake troubled by the situation and could not sleep a wink. In the morning, he put a piece of satin cloth under his arm and went to the bazaar and entered the shop and saluted the cunning rogue warmly. The tailor sprang up from his seat and welcomed the trader, inquiring about his health with cordiality exceeding even that of the trader, planting in his heart great feelings of affection for him. When the trader heard these songs of sweetness from the tailor, he flung down the piece of silk saying, “Cut this into a coat for me and make it wide below my navel so as not to hamper my legs and tight about it to show off my figure.” The tailor answered, “O! kindly man, I will do you a hundred services,” and accepted the order. He measured the satin and inspected the working surface and all the time chatted away to the trader in idle gossip, about other amirs and of bounties and gifts he had received from them, and about misers and their mean ways, and made the trader laugh with hysterics. During this beguiling talk, he was snipping away with his scissors rapidly, cutting as fast as his lips moved. Words and ExprEssions 2 – Class x4 04:21:15 PM The trader was laughing, the tailor was cutting, the trader closed his eyes in joy, the tailor cut extra pieces, tucking them under his thighs, hidden away from all but God. From his delight at the tailor’s tales, the trader’s former boast went out of his mind. What satin? What boast? What wager? The trader was drunk on the jokes told by the tailor. filching | | incredible | Then the tailor told such an incredible story that the trader fell over on his back with laughter. The tailor swiftly stitched a swatch of the satin to the hem of his underpants while the trader was paying no attention at all, greedily sucking with every guffaw at the jests the tailor told. The tailor continued to tell funnier and funnier tales and jokes until the trader was completely within his power. | swatch unhinged With his eyes shut and his reason vanished, the bewildered and boastful trader was drunk with joy. And the tailor continued to cut, filching yet more of the beautiful cloth, with nothing to stop him now. And yet the trader begged for more. You who becomes the slave of the jest, no story is more laughable than you yourself, think on this at the edge of your grave. How long will you listen to the lies of this world that leave your mind and spirit unhinged? The Universal Tailor will cut and stitch the hems of a hundred travellers, silly as children. Eventually the tailor became bored with the whole story and told the trader that he better leave before another tale was told, “For if I tell another one, the coat will be too tight for you, and you will stop laughing and weep tears of blood.”Look Up and",jewe201.pdf 3,CBSE,Class10,English,"Rumi (Abridged) Look Up and Understand Did you enjoy the story of ‘The Trader and the Tailor’? The story is summarised below. Read the story again with your friend and complete the paragraph using short sentences with the given hints. Once there was a tailor who was known for (cheat and thievery). He could anyone with his cunning way of deceiving people. A trader challenged that the tailor would not be able to cheat him. He (go) to the tailor with 01-Jul-2019 12:53:56 PM (satin). The tailor (welcome). The trader (please) by the tailor’s praise. He told the tailor to make a coat for him. The tailor (praise) the trader (maximum). The trader (joy). The tailor (recount) funny tales and the trader forgot (bet). The tailor started snipping hide). Eyes of the trader (tears and joy) and yet the trader kept on asking for (stories). At last, the tailor told the trader (weep-blood).Look Up andUnderstand Did you enjoy the story of ‘The Trader and the Tailor’? The story is summarised below. Read the story again with your friend and complete the paragraph using short sentences with the given hints. Once there was a tailor who was known for (cheat and thievery). He could anyone with his cunning way of deceiving people. A trader challenged that the tailor would not be able to cheat him. He (go) to the tailor with 01-Jul-2019 12:53:56 PM (satin). The tailor (welcome). The trader (please) by the tailor’s praise. He told the tailor to make a coat for him. The tailor (praise) the trader (maximum). The trader (joy). The tailor (recount) funny tales and the trader forgot (bet). The tailor started snipping hide). Eyes of the trader (tears and joy) and yet the trader kept on asking for (stories). At last, the tailor told the trader (weep-blood).FUn Facts Using ‘notice’ Thank you for noticing this notice. Your noticing has been noted. VocabULary 1. In this story you have come across a word “light-fingered” which means inclined to steal things. Some such words are given below. Use appropriate words and fill in the blanks. light-headed, light year, light-hearted, light sleeper, light-duty (a) The is a unit of distance used to measure distance in space. (b) The farmer bought a truck to transport their produce, as it uses less diesel. (c) We had a fairly discussion with our colleagues. (d) Rita felt dizzy and after skydiving. (e) He is a, a slightest noise wakes him. Words and ExprEssions 2 – Class x6Using ‘notice’ Thank you for noticing this notice. Your noticing has been noted.VocabULary 1. In this story you have come across a word “light-fingered” which means inclined to steal things. Some such words are given below. Use appropriate words and fill in the blanks. light-headed, light year, light-hearted, light sleeper, light-duty (a) The is a unit of distance used to measure distance in space. (b) The farmer bought a truck to transport their produce, as it uses less diesel. (c) We had a fairly discussion with our colleagues. (d) Rita felt dizzy and after skydiving. (e) He is a, a slightest noise wakes him. Words and ExprEssions 2 – Class x6Grammar 1. You have come across Relative Clauses in the lesson ‘A Letter to God’ A Letter to God’. Read about the relative clauses again. Complete the sentences given below in the table by adding the most suitable clause from the box and make it a relative clause. The first one has been done for you. Fun Facts Fun Facts Wound as Verb and noun The bandage was wound around the wound. contains meaning of words stitches clothes tell lies won the best actor award this year need to fill in the application is a crook help themselves won the nobel prize believe in hard work hit a century is faithful (a) A tailor is a person who stitches clothes. (b) A dictionary is a book (c) The book is about a scientist (d) What is the name of the player (e) I don’t like people (f) What is the name of the actor Proofreading marks Editors have special symbols called proofreading marks to correct language. (g) Students should meet the principal in her office. (h) Friends of the trader thought the tailor and can cheat anyone. (i) Lencho thought God would help him. (j) Those will succeed. (k) God helps those Some are given below. # give space. put a full stop,̂ insert comma insert new word See page nos 167-168 for more such symbols. 02-Jul-2019 03:56:01 PM1. You have come across Relative Clauses in the lesson ‘A Letter to God’ A Letter to God’. Read about the relative clauses again. Complete the sentences given below in the table by adding the most suitable clause from the box and make it a relative clause. The first one has been done for you.Fun Facts",jewe201.pdf 4,CBSE,Class10,English,"Wound as Verb and noun The bandage was wound around the wound. contains meaning of words stitches clothes tell lies won the best actor award this year need to fill in the application is a crook help themselves won the nobel prize believe in hard work hit a century is faithful (a) A tailor is a person who stitches clothes. (b) A dictionary is a book (c) The book is about a scientist (d) What is the name of the player (e) I don’t like people (f) What is the name of the actorProofreading marks Editors have special symbols called proofreading marks to correct language. (g) Students should meet the principal in her office. (h) Friends of the trader thought the tailor and can cheat anyone. (i) Lencho thought God would help him. (j) Those will succeed. (k) God helps those Some are given below. # give space. put a full stop,̂ insert comma insert new word See page nos 167-168 for more such symbols. 02-Jul-2019 03:56:01 PMmarks Editors have special symbols called proofreading marks to correct language. (g) Students should meet the principal in her office. (h) Friends of the trader thought the tailor and can cheat anyone. (i) Lencho thought God would help him. (j) Those will succeed. (k) God helps those Some are given below. # give space. put a full stop,̂ insert comma insert new word See page nos 167-168 for more such symbols. 02-Jul-2019 03:56:01 PM(g) Students should meet the principal in her office. (h) Friends of the trader thought the tailor and can cheat anyone. (i) Lencho thought God would help him.(j) Those will succeed. (k) God helps those Some are given below. # give space. put a full stop,̂ insert comma insert new word See page nos 167-168 for more such symbols. 02-Jul-2019 03:56:01 PMeditinG 1. Suppose Lencho gets a hundred pesos in his envelope. He writes a letter to God expressing his gratitude. However, he has missed a word in each line. Help him with those words so that his letter is complete. Dear God! Thank for Thank you for (a) sending a hundred pesos help. (b) I am very for this kind gesture. (c) You were my only and your (d) help has my faith in you. (e) This money will help me until the crop (f) and I promise to hard in the future. Sincerely yours, LenchoListeninG 1. Here is an interesting story. The story has been told in two ways. Story A has all the odd sentences (1,3,5,) and story B has the even sentences (2,4,6,). Working in pairs, one of you take up Story A and the other take up Story B. The person with Story A will read out the first sentence and the partner (person with story B) will write in the space provided. Then the person with Story B will read sentence two and the partner will write in the space for sentence two. Likewise complete the whole story. Once the story is completed, both of you will read out to each other to check whether you have listened carefully to your partner and written the complete story. Story A The Race Story B The Race 1. 1. Every evening the animals of the Machlipatti used to sit under the banyan tree. Words and ExprEssions 2 – Class x8 | 2. | 2. One day Kho-Kho, the rabbit, was feeling bored. 3. He said, “Let’s run a race!” “Who 3. | will run a race with you? | | 4. | 4. No one can run faster than you,” said Bhalu, the bear, eating a mango. | 5. Choo-Choo, the rat, shouted, “No, he’s not the fastest runner. | “No, he’s not the fastest runner. 5. | 6. | 6. I can run faster than him.” | 7. Everyone laughed at him. | 7. | 8. | 8. Then it was decided to have a race between Kho-Kho and Choo-Choo. | 9. The starting point was the peepul tree and the finishing point was the neem tree. 10. | 10. Coocku, the cock, crowed to start the race. 11. | 11. Kho-Kho and Choo-Choo started | running. 12. | 12. After running half the distance, Kho-Kho looked back but Choo- Choo was nowhere to be seen. | 13. “He must be far behind.” | 13. | 14. | 14. When he was near the finishing point, Choo-Choo jumped over Kho-Kho’s shoulder and touched the neem tree first. | 15. He shouted, “I’ve won the race! I’ve won the race!” | 15. | 16. | 16. Everyone cheered for Choo-Choo. ",jewe201.pdf 5,CBSE,Class10,English,"Norman LittlefordWriting 1. The tailor here is a cheat, but Lencho in the story, ‘A Letter to God’, is naive and simple. He has immense faith in God. How do you distinguish between Lencho and the tailor? What makes them different? Working in pairs, list the actions and qualities of Lencho and the tailor and draw their character sketches. 02-Jul-2019 11:58:27 AM Action: What does the person do? What quality it reveals? Lencho lost all his crops. He is helpless. Prays to God. How does he manage the situation? Does he harm anyone by his action? How do others think of him? What is your judgement of him? He received 70 pesos and he thought 30 pesos had been stolen. Now, write the character sketch of Lencho and the tailor. Lencho The tailor Words and ExprEssions 2 – Class x12 01-Jul-2019 12:54:23 PM 2. Writing a portrait or description of a person Read the following description about two persons, Raavi and Mohini. Raavi Mohini A portrait or a picture of a handsome young man in full sleeves shirt. Raavi is an engineer in a manufacturing firm. He likes to make, fix, and repair things. He loves to watch television and goes to the movies thrice a month. He is congenial and supportive. He does not like to play, but goes for a morning walk everyday. A portrait or a picture of a middle aged lady who is a singer. She studied music and became a playback singer. She likes to be with people and participates in social functions. She loves music and reading books. She is firm and a lady with a purpose. She does not get time to exercise. Now, write a description of any one of the above based on the details given. You may follow the process approach to writing. First, you read the given information in the box and make a list of describable (adjectives) points used for each person, in your own words. Secondly, take the help of these points to develop an outline in sentence form. Thirdly, use the outline and prepare the first draft of the description of the person and then edit the draft. Prepare the final copy after making all changes. The table below gives you ideas on how the Process Approach is helpful for improving your writing. Writing: The Process Approach The processes What do you do? Brainstorming Note down as many ideas as you can about a given topic. Then arrange the ideas in a sequence. | Outlining | Create | an | outline | of | your | writing — | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | which ideas will go first, how will they be supported by evidence, will there be a picture, etc. | Drafting | Write the first draft; here the focus is on | | | | | | the content and not the form. | Revising | Revise the first draft, improve it. Add or | | | | | | delete ideas and improve the language. | Proofreading Proofread the draft with the help of the teacher; here the focus is on the form and not the content. | Final draft | Write the final draft now. | | | | | Raavi / Mohini Words and ExprEssions 2 – Class x14",jewe201.pdf