InterviewSolution
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This section includes InterviewSolutions, each offering curated multiple-choice questions to sharpen your knowledge and support exam preparation. Choose a topic below to get started.
| 1. |
What did Valli find out about the bus journey? How did she find out these details? |
| Answer» Valli found out that the town was six miles from her village. The fare was thirty paise one way. The trip to the town took forty-five minutes. On reaching the town, if she stayed in her seat and paid another thirty paise, she could return home on the same bus. She found out these details by listening carefully to the conversations between her neighbours and the people who regularly used the bus. She also gained information by asking them a few questions. | |
| 2. |
Why does Valli stand up on the seat? What does she see now? |
| Answer» Valli stood up on her seat because her view was cut off by a canvas blind that covered the lower part of her window. She stood up to look over the blind. She saw that the road was very narrow, on one side of which there was the canal and beyond it were palm trees, grassland, distant mountains, and the blue sky. On the other side, there was a deep ditch and many acres of green fields. | |
| 3. |
What kind of a person is Valli? To answer this question, pick out the sentences from the text and fill in the blanks. The words you fill in are the clues to your answer. “You needn’t bother about me. I _____________,” Valli said, turning her face toward the window and staring out. |
| Answer» “You needn’t bother about me. I can take care of myself,” Valli said, turning her face toward the window and staring out. | |
| 4. |
What kind of a person is Valli? To answer this question, pick out the sentences from the text and fill in the blanks. The words you fill in are the clues to your answer. “There’s nobody here ____________,” she said haughtily. “I’ve paid my thirty paise like everyone else.” |
| Answer» “There’s nobody here who’s a child,” she said haughtily. I’ve paid my thirty paise like everyone else.” | |
| 5. |
What kind of a person is Valli? To answer this question, pick out the sentences from the text and fill in the blanks. The words you fill in are the clues to your answer. “Never mind,” she said, “I can ___________. You don’t have to help me. “I’m not a child, I tell you,” she said, _____________. |
| Answer» “Never mind,” she said, “I can get on by myself. You don’t have to help me. “I’m not a child, I tell you,” she said, irritably. | |
| 6. |
The author describes the things that Valii sees from an eight-year-old’s point of view. Can you find evidence from the text for this statement? |
| Answer» The author has described the things that Valli saw from an eight-year-old’s point of view. She was fascinated by a bus. Watching the bus filled with a new set of people each time was a source of unending joy for her. Her strongest desire was to ride the bus. She saved money by cutting on peppermints, toys, and balloons, and even resisting the temptation to ride the merry-go-round at the fair. When the author describes the bus, the points he stresses on are the colour and look of the bus. It was a ‘new bus’, painted a ‘gleaming white’. The overhead bars ‘shone like silver’. The seats were ‘soft and luxurious’. The descriptions that the author gives when Valli looked outside are also typical for an eight-year-old. The ‘blue, blue sky’ and the ‘acres and acres of green fields − green, green, green’ show the enthusiasm of a kid on looking at different colours. Valli clapped her hands in glee on watching a cow run right in front of the bus. She found it so funny that tears came into her eyes. On the other hand, she was overcome with sadness on her way back when she saw the same cow lying dead. It had been a ‘lovable, beautiful creature’ and later it ‘looked so horrible’. The memory of the dead cow haunted her so much that she refused to look outside the window. These are the typical reactions of a young child. | |