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‘In order to fix a date, it is necessary to remember what one saw’. Have you experienced this at any time? Describe one such incident and the non-chronological details that helped you remember - English Elective - NCERT

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प्रश्न

‘In order to fix a date, it is necessary to remember what one saw’. Have you experienced this at any time? Describe one such incident and the non-chronological details that helped you remember a particular date.

संक्षेप में उत्तर

उत्तर

I still remember waking up in Kashmir on the 26th of January morning. The city popularly known as the Heaven on earth was under a strict curfew and the military took over the roads. I had my flight that morning from Kashmir to Delhi and the military joined us on our way to the airport. The airlines were so strict that day that they checked our luggage 5 times and did not allow a single handbag into the plane.

The city which captured my heart the day before traumatized me the very next morning. So, it is rightly said that ‘In order to fix a date, it is necessary to remember what one saw.’ Every Republic Day I still recall those memories that provoke me to philosophize life and open my mental process to endless thoughts.

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The Mark on the Wall
  क्या इस प्रश्न या उत्तर में कोई त्रुटि है?
अध्याय 3.2: The Mark on the Wall - Talking about the Text [पृष्ठ १४५]

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एनसीईआरटी English - Kaleidoscope Class 12
अध्याय 3.2 The Mark on the Wall
Talking about the Text | Q 1. | पृष्ठ १४५

संबंधित प्रश्न

What is the string of varied thoughts that the mark on the wall stimulates in the author’s mind?


What change in the depiction of reality does the author foresee for future novelists?


What is the author’s perception of the limitations of knowledge and learning?


Describe the unbroken flow of thoughts and perceptions of the narrator’s mind, using the example of the colonel and the clergy.


An account of reflections is more important than a description of reality according to the author. Why?


Looking back at objects and habits of a bygone era can give one a feeling of phantom-like unreality. What examples does the author give to bring out this idea?


How does the imagery of

(i) the fish

(ii) the tree

used almost poetically by the author, emphasize the idea of stillness of living, breathing thought?


How does the author pin her reflections on a variety of subjects on the ‘mark on the wall’? What does this tell us about the way the human mind functions?


Not seeing the obvious could lead a perceptive mind to reflect upon more philosophical issues. Discuss this with reference to the ‘snail on the wall’.


‘Tablecloths of a different kind were not real tablecloths. Does this sentence embody the idea of blind adherence to rules and tradition? Discuss with reference to ‘Understanding Freedom and Discipline’ by J. Krishnamurti that you’ve already read.


According to the author, nature prompts action as a way of ending thought. Do we tacitly assume that ‘men of action are men who don’t think?


Broadly speaking, there are two kinds of narration: one, where the reader would remain aware of some outside voice telling him/her what’s going on; two, a narration that seeks to reproduce, without the narrator’s intervention, the full spectrum and continuous flow of a character’s mental process. Which of these is exemplified in this essay? Illustrate.


This essay frequently uses the non-periodic or loose sentence structure: the component members are continuous, but so loosely joined, that the sentence could have easily been broken without damage to or break in thought. Locate a few such sentences, and discuss how they contribute to the relaxed and conversational effect of the narration.


(i) Can you say which words are content words in the examples below, and which are function words? All the examples are from the text in this unit.

(ii) Can you name the kind of word (its category as a noun, pronoun, etc.?). A dictionary may help you to do this. You can work in pairs or groups, discussing the reasons for your analysis.

  • Ants carry a blade of straw so feverishly and then leave it.
  • They wanted to leave this house because they wanted to change their style of furniture.
  • I don’t believe it was made by a nail after all; it’s too big, too round, for that.
  • There was a rule for everything.
  • The tree outside the window taps very gently on the pane.

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