English
Tamil Nadu Board of Secondary EducationSSLC (English Medium) Class 10

The second human being that Miranda saw on the island was __________________. - English

Advertisements
Advertisements

Question

The second human being that Miranda saw on the island was __________________.

Options

  • Ariel

  • Prospero

  • Ferdinand

  • Gonzalo

MCQ
Fill in the Blanks

Solution

The second human being that Miranda saw on the island was Ferdinand.

shaalaa.com
Reading Skills
  Is there an error in this question or solution?
Chapter 1.3: The Tempest - Exercise [Page 26]

APPEARS IN

Samacheer Kalvi English Class 10 SSLC TN Board
Chapter 1.3 The Tempest
Exercise | Q A.6 | Page 26

RELATED QUESTIONS

Answer the following question in 150-200 words: 
Why did Anne like her father more than she liked her mother?


How does 'A Kondh Song' substantiate the tribal urge to gain domination over time by conversing with their dead ancestors?


Think and answer in your own words in your notebook.

Why do you think God created worms? What is their ecological importance?


Find out the different processes by which fabrics are made. Find illustrations and write a few lines on each process.


Who said the following, to whom, and when?

“Mighty thy Teacher must be and divine.”


Who said the following, to whom, and when?

“O Holy Master, bless us with thy song !”


Read the events of the story. They are in the wrong order. Put them in the correct order.

1. And it charged straight at the cavalry officers on horseback.
2. And so she flew onto the back of the cow.
3. So everybody panicked and made a  general rush to safety
4. The startled cow charged off in fear
5. She applied brakes, but was thrown off the cycle.
6. Just then she saw a lone cow in the middle of the road.
7. Finally the cow fell into a ditch and dislodged the girl.
8. The girl cried out in delight as she overtook her brother on her cycle.

Choose what the elephant did.


Appa weaves beautiful sarees with______.


Read the passage below:

1. Our history makes it evident that the Indian Plastics Industry made a vigorous beginning in 1957 but it took more than 30 years for it to pervade Indian lifestyles. In 1979, "the market for plastics' was just being seeded by the state-owned Indian Petro-Chemicals and it was only in 1994 that plastic soft drink bottles became a visible source of annoyance.
2. In the same year, people in other cities were concerned about the state of public sanitation and also urged regulatory bodies to ban the production, distribution and use of plastic bags. However, the challenge was greater than it appeared at first.
3.

The massive generation of plastic waste in India is due to rapid urbanisation, spread of retail chains, plastic packaging from grocery to food and vegetable products, to consumer items and cosmetics. The projected high growth rates of GDP and continuing rapid urbanisation suggest that India's trajectory of plastic consumption and plastic waste is likely to increase.

4. According to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report of 2018, India stands among few other countries like France, Mongolia and several African countries that have initiated total or partial nationallevel bans on plastics in their jurisdictions. On World Environment Day in 2018, India vowed to phase out single-use plastics by 2022, which gave a much needed impetus to bring this change
5. In this context, thereafter ten states (Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Meghalaya, Odisha, Rajasthan and Tamil Nadu) are currently sending their collected waste to cement plants for co-processing, twelve other states/UTs are using plastic waste for polymer bitumen road construction and still four other states are using the plastic waste for waste-to-energy plants and oil production. A world of greater possibilities has now opened up to initiate appropriate and concrete actions to build up the necessary institutions and systems before oceans turn, irreversibly into a thin soup of plastic.
6. However there is no one single masterstroke to counter the challenges witnessed by the staggering plastic waste management in the country. The time is now to formulate robust and inclusive National Action Plans and while doing so, the country will establish greater transparency to combat the plastic jeopardy in a more sustainable and holistic way.

Based on your understanding of the passage answer any six out of the seven questions given below:

  1. What does the writer mean by 'visible source of annoyance'?
  2. Why did people demand a ban on plastics?
  3. What created a demand for plastics in India?
  4. With reference to the graph write one conclusion that can be drawn about the production of plastics in 2019 (approximately).
  5. What does the upward trend of the graph indicate?
  6. What does the line, oceans turning 'irreversibly into a thin soup of plastic', suggest?
  7. What step must be taken to combat the challenges of plastic waste management? What will be its impact?

Share
Notifications

Englishहिंदीमराठी


      Forgot password?
Use app×