Candidate
must not
                                                                                         whte on
                                                                                       this nangln.
                                          Time : 3 Hours
                                         Fun Marks : 250
                          Thefiguresintherighi-handmn:rginindiea;terrunrks.
                                       Ausu)er all questions.
      1. Write an essay (of 800-1000 words) on any one of the following
         topics :                                                    80
         /a/ Lessons learnt from the Pandemic
         ¢/ Women in Politics
         /c/ Child la.bour : causes and remedies
         /d/ The menace of cybercrime
      2. /a/   Frame sentences with the following idioms :                    4x5=20
                /I./ do without
               /{z./ few and far between
               (iii) come off
               /{u/ leave out
                /u/ fall through
         ¢/    Fill in the gaps with appropriate prepositions          2x5±10
                /../ , They have done away                      the system.
               /I.1./ We arrived just                       time to watch her
                    80.
               /it.I./ A good citizen should adhere
                     rules.
               ¢LJ/ Alas! we are done
               /u/ The patient has now come                            his senses.
         /c/   Give the antonyms of the following words :                          5
                /]'' Accept
               /ii' Resolute
               (iti) A`now
               ftu) Former
               /I,/ Meek
/48                                                                                       [ P.T.O.
      /d/ Turn the following into indirect speech :        5 Candidate
           /I./ The old man said to his son, "Do you know our
                                                              must not
               neighbours?"                                   whte on
                                                                                 thl8 -.gh.
             /il/ iJohn said, "I saw her once."
            /t.Z€/ The teacher said, "Silence is more powerful than
                words.„
             /I.LJ/ The mother said to her daughter, "Remember, you have a
                 son.„
             /I;/ The Army-General said to the soldiers, "Be on the
                 alert.„
      /e/    Rewrite the sentences according to the instructions given in
            brackets :                                                  2x5=10
              /t./ He is rich but poor in health.               (Use `despite|
             /{€/ The stairs were so steep that I could not climb them.
                                                                   (Use tool
             /t.jj/ Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.
                                               (Turn into a simple sentence)
             /iz// One should abstain from drinking.
                                                     (Turn into passive voice)
             /u/ He is the bravest man in the locality.
                                              (Use the comparative degree)
      "      Supply the missing words :                               2x5=10
              /i/ It was raining cats and
             /i!/ You should not run to and
             /{jt./ He left no stone
             ¢.Lt/ Prices are rising by leaps and
             /LJ/ Books lay scattered at sixes and
      (g)     Oonect the eITors ..                                  2xl0=20
              /i./ The president as well as the secretary have objected.
             /rty The gold is a precious metal.
             /1.£i./ A dog lives how many years?
             /I.LJ/ We rarely see an one-rupee coin.
             /LJ/ Who will look over the orphan?
             /Lrf/ He cannot hear you unless you do not speak loudly.
            /zw.t) Listen his advice.
            /Lrft.t./ We are awaiting for his arrival.
             /ir/ Ram said that he has won.
              /x/ One should know his limits.
/48                                             2
         pr/    Make sentences with the following pairs of words to indicate         Candidate
               the difference in meaning :                           4x5=20          must not
               /1./   Dead; Deadly                                                   whte on
               /I.i/ F`irm; Farm
                                                                                  tble -r8in.
               /I.jz/ Ring; Wring
               /i.L;/ List; Least
               /u/ Stick; Steak
      3. Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow :
                                                                             35
              For someone who never heard English at home, who began
         learning the language only at the age of eleven, and whose
         Matriculation marks were so mediocre, Gandhi's prose was
         surprisingly clear and direct. Noteworthy is his passing chastisement
         of colonial rule (for promoting the sale and consumption of alcohol)
         and his praise of the way of life of the shepherd. There were
         communities of pastoralists in Kathiawar, who came after every
         monsoon to graze their flocks in the large gatJcher, or pastureland,
         that lay outside most towns in the region. Gandhi would have seen
         them here, and also met them during fairs and festivals, when
         shepherds came peddling their wares. It may also be that he was
         influenced by the current of romantic anti-industrialism present
         in the thought of Henry Salt, and of friends of Salt like Edward
         Carpenter, who, like William Wordsworth and John Ruskin before
         them, believed that the farmer and shepherd represented a purer,
         more natural way of life as compared to the businessman or factory
         worker.
              Now that he was in print, the novice writer wanted more. The
         series on Indian vegetarians was followed by three articles on Indian
         festivals. The first series was then reprised for a different journal, in
         a long essay on The Foods of India' which ended with the hope that
         the time will come when the great difference now existing between
         the food habits of meat-eating in England and grain-eating in India
         will disappear, and with it some other differences which, in some
         quarters, mar the unity of sympathy that ought to exist between the
         two couritries'. `In the future', thought this Indian visitor to Endand,
         twe shall tend towards unity of custom, and also unity of hearts'.
         /a/    What does the author find very surprising about Gandhi's
               command over English?                                   7
         ¢/    How did Gandhi come to know about the way of life of the
               shepherd?                                              7
         /c/ Who influenced Gandhi's idea about pastoral life?           7
         /c!/ What was so praiseworthy about that life?                  7
         /e/ Write in your own words about the future envisaged in Gandhi's
              essay on The Foods of India.                               7
/48                                           3                                         I P.T.O.
    4. Make a prfecis of the following passage (about 410 words). You need   Candidate
       not add a title.                                                 35   must not
            Indeed this contradiction haunts most contemporary                ndte ®n
       playwrighting and theatre in India. Even to arrive at the heart of thl® margin.
       one's own mythology, the whter has to follow signposts planted by
       the West, a paradoxical situation for a culture in which the earliest
       erdaut play was written in AD 200! The explanation lies in the fact
       that what is called Modern Indian Theatre' was started by a group
       of people who adopted `cultural amnesia' as a deliberate strategy. It
       originated in the second half of the nineteenth century in three
       cities, Bombay, Calcutta and Madras. None of these seaports built
       by the British for their maritime trade had an Indian past of its
       own, a history independent of the British. These places had
       developed an Indian middle class that in all outward respects aspired
       to qook' like its British counterpart. The social values of this class
       were shaped by the English education it had received and by the
       need to work with the British in trade and administration.
            Inevitably the theatre it created imitated the British theatre of
       the times, as presented by visiting troupes from England. Several
       new concepts were introduced, two of which altered the nature of
       Indian theatre. One was the separation of the audience from the
       stage by the proscenium, underscoring the fact that what was being
       presented was a spectacle free of any ritualistic associations and
       which therefore expected no direct participation by the audience in
       it; and the other was the idea of pure entertainment, whose success
       would be measured entirely in terms of immediate financial returns
       and the run of the play.
            Until the nineteenth century, the audience had never been
       expected to pay to see a show. Theatre had depended upon
       patronage-f kings, ministers, local feudatories, or temples. With
       the myth-based storyline already familiar to the audience, the shape
       and success Of a performance depended on how the actors improvised
       with the given narrative' material each time they came on stage.
       Actors did not rehearse a play so much as train for particular kinds
       of roles, a system still followed today in folk and traditional treatre
       forms. The principle here is the same as in North Indian classical
       music, where the musician ains to reveal unexpected delights even
       within the strictly regulated contours of a raga, by continual
       improvisation. It is the variability, the unpredictable potential of
       each performance that is its attraction. the audience accepts the
       risk.
                                  ***
CSM-2/22                                 4                      PPP24/3|092)-86o0