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प्रश्न
Answer the following in about 40-50 words:
Who are paders and why are they friends of children?
उत्तर
Goa's village bakers, known as paders, sell their bakery products. The children in these villages are particularly fond of them as they bring bread bangles and loaves every morning. While the loaves are sold to households, the children enjoy freely munching on the delicious bread bangles.
APPEARS IN
संबंधित प्रश्न
What are the elders in Goa nostalgic about?
Is bread-making still popular in Goa? How do you know?
What is the baker called?
When would the baker come everyday? Why did the children run to meet him?
What did the bakers wear: (i) in the Portuguese days? (ii) when the author was young?
Who invites the comment − “he is dressed like a pader”? Why?
Where were the monthly accounts of the baker recorded?
What does a ‘jackfruit-like appearance’ mean?
Which of these statements are correct?
(i) The pader was an important person in the village in old times.
(ii) Paders still exist in Goan villages.
(iii) The paders went away with the Portuguese.
(iv) The paders continue to wear a single-piece long frock.
(v) Bread and cakes were an integral part of Goan life in the old days.
(vi) Traditional bread-baking is still a very profitable business.
(vii) Paders and their families starve in the present times.
Is bread an important part of Goan life? How do you know this?
Tick the right answer. What is the tone of the author when he say the following?
The thud and the jingle of the traditional baker’s bamboo can still be heard in some places. (nostalgic, hopeful, sad)
Tick the right answer. What is the tone of the author when he say the following?
I still recall the typical fragrance of those loaves. (nostalgic, hopeful, naughty)
Tick the right answer. What is the tone of the author when he say the following?
Cakes and bolinhas are a must for Christmas as well as other festivals. (sad, hopeful, matter-of-fact)
What does the writer recall about his childhood in Goa?
How is the Goan baker still an important part of the life of a Goan village?