Solutions

AP Board 8th Class English Solutions Chapter 2A Oliver Asks for More

Read the saying given below and answer the questions that follow

1.What does the sentence mean?

ans:Home is the happiest place in the world for all of us. No other place gives us comfort and protection as the home gives us. No other place makes us happy as the home does

2.Do you agree/disagree with the view expressed in it? Why?

ans:Yes, I agree with the view expressed in it. To me, the home is the best place to live in. In our home, we find happiness and comfort as we get the company of our parents and siblings. We must be grateful to god for giving us a chance to live with our parents and siblings in our home. Our parents care for us. They can do all they can to make us happy. We get love and warmth of our family members in our home. The other places may make us happy temporarily but the home is the place where we experience all sorts of happiness

Comprehension

I. Answer the following questions

1.How did Oliver feel when he was told to appear before the live board?

ans:Oliver Twist did not have any clearly defined notion of what a live board was. So, he was rather astonished by this information and was not quite certain whether he ought to laugh or cry. He had no time to think about the matter

2.Why did Oliver tremble and cry in the white-washed room?

ans:Mr. Bumble led Oliver into a large white-washed room where eight or ten fat gentlemen were sitting around a table. Oliver was frightened at the sight of so many gentlemen. This made him tremble. The beadle gave him a tap on his back with his cane when he didnt answer the gentleman question and it made him cry

3."What is that, sir?" inquired poor Oliver. What does that refer to 111?

ans: That refers to orphan

4.What kind of people were the members of the board? Justify your opinion?

ans:The members of the board were very wise and philosophical men. They were unhappy when they came to know that the workhouse was the regular place of public entertainment for the poorer classes. They didnt have any mercy or sympathy towards the poor. They were shocked when they came to know that it was all play and no work in works house. They were of the opinion that the poor should starve quickly outside the workhouse or gradually inside the house. So, they ordered to restrict the food given to the poor. If anyone demanded (or requested) for more, he would be thrown out

5.What main differences do you notice between the children and the master? (Observe the physical appearances, dress, behaviour, etc.) What can you infer from these differences?

ans:The children were very thin. They dressed in rags. They were all very frightened of the board, the beadle and the master. They even didnt have enough food to eat. They had to do some work. The master wore cook uniform. He was fat and healthy. He didnt have any mercy on the children. He was authoritative

6.How do you look at Oliver request, Please, sir, / want some more!? What compelled him to say this?

ans:Oliver Twist and his companions suffered the tortures of slow starvation. They became wild with hunger. A tall boy of them announced that he would eat the boy who slept next to him unless he had enough food to eat. A council was held and it was decided that Oliver should ask the master for more. That evening after they had eaten the served gruel, Oliver went to the master and requested him for more. Thus, the hunger of the tall boy compelled him to say this. His hunger and misery too compelled him to say this

7.What happened to Oliver at the end of the story?

ans:At the end of the story Oliver was ordered into instant confinement. A bill was next morning pasted on the outside of the gate, offering a reward of five pounds to anybody who would take Oliver off the hands of the parish. In other words, five pounds and Oliver Twist were offered to any man or woman who wanted an apprentice to any trade, business or profession

8.Do you find children like Oliver around you? How would you help them to live better?

ans:Yes. I find one or two boys like Oliver around us. I would help them by giving the clothes, the food, the money as much as I can. I would inform the organisations who take care of orphan children

Vocabulary

I. Look at the underlined part in the following sentence

"You have come here to be educated." said the red-faced gentleman. The word red-faced is called a Compound Adjective

The phrase red-faced gentleman is a short form of a gentleman with a red face

1.Pick out the phrases with Compound Adjectives from the story or elsewhere and write how they can be rewritten to express the same meaning?
  • -----------
  • -----------
  • -----------

ans:Phrases with Compound Adjectives and their rewritten form with the same meaning

  • gold-laced cuff : a cuff with gold lace
  • white-washed room: a room that was white-washed
  • one-eyed man: a man with one eye
  • long-legged insect: an insect with long legs
  • fat-bodied woman: a woman with fat body
2.Change the underlined parts in the following paragraph into compound adjectives. Rewrite the paragraph in your notebook?

Sachin Tendulkar is a cricketer who is famous all over the world. He is a batsman playing with right hand. He has many world records to his credit which are mind blowing. Besides all these, he is a person with a kind heart. He works with an NGO (Non-Governmental Organization) based in Mumbai to help more than 200 orphans every year

ans:Sachin Tendulkar is a world-famous cricketer. He is a right-handed batsman. He has many mind-blowing world records to his credit. Besides all these, he is a kind-hearted person. He works with a Mumbai-based NGO (Non-Governmental Organization! to help more than 200 orphans every year

3.Fill in the blanks with appropriate compound adjectives from the box given below?
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    Latha is a --
  • -- girl. She speaks kindly with her classmates. Look at her, she is wearing an --
  • -- dress. She does not like to wear --
  • -- dresses. Dont you think Latha is a --
  • -- girl
ans:
  • soft-spoken
  • old-fashioned
  • brand-new
  • well-mannered

Grammar

I. Look at the following sentence taken from the story. The boy is a fool, said the gentleman in the white waistcoat

As you know, the above underlined expression, can be changed in to a question. How do we change the above statement into a question? By putting the auxiliary verb before the subject the boy

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    Look at some more sentences

    • I understand that he asked for more. Do I understand that he asked for more ?
    • Oliver asks for more. Does Oliver ask for more
    • The boys took their places. Did the boys take their places? These sentences are changed into a question by placing do/does/did at the beginning, such questions are called Yes / No questions. Change the following statements into Yes/No questions.
    • Oliver was frightened at the sight of so many gentlemen. -----------
    • You are an orphan. -----------
    • You say your prayers every night. -----------
    • You will pick oakum tomorrow morning. -----------
    • Mr. Bumble rushed into the room. -----------
    • They can devour the big bowl. -----------
    • Boys have generally excellent appetite. -----------
    ans:
    • Was Oliver frightened at the sight of so many gentlemen
    • Are you an orphan
    • Do you say your prayers every night
    • Will you pick oakum tomorrow morning
    • Did Mr. Bumble rush into the room
    • Can they devour the big bowl
    • Do boys generally have excellent appetite

    II. Read the following sentence taken from the story

    "You were brought up by the parish, werent you?"

    In this sentence werent you? at the end is called a question tag. Question tags are used to get information or confirmation

    The question tags are positive if the statements are negative. And if the statements are positive, questions tags are negative

    These tags are short/contracted form of questions. If the statement has an auxiliary, the tag begins with an auxiliary. In case it does not have an auxiliary, it will begin with do/does/did

    Read the following dialogue to understand the usage of question tags

    Ramu: The weather is good today, isnt it

    Vijay: Indeed, Ramu

    Ramu: How about going out now? Hope youll join me, wont you

    Vijay: Ive got some important work now, I am afraid

    Read the following dialogue that took place at a party. Add suitable question tags to complete it

    Rohit: Hi, Ive met you before, --(1)--

    Suma: No, I dont think so

    Rohit: But your name is Vani, --(2)--

    Suma: No, it Suma! Anyway, glad to meet you

    Rohit: Me too. This is Rohit. The party seems to be really lively, --(3)--

    Suma: Yes, definitely. We enjoy ourselves a lot on such occasions, --(4)--

    Rohit: Yeah, we do

    ans:
    • havent I
    • isnt it
    • doesnt it
    • dont we

    Writing

    I. Anne Frank was a Uttle girl of thirteen. She was as lonely as Oliver Twist. When the German army invaded her country, she had to hide in a small building with her family. She suffered a lot. She recorded her feelings and thoughts in her diary

    Friday, 1st October, 1942

    Just for fun, I am going to tell you each person first wish, when we are allowed to go out again. Mrs. Van says, If I go out, Ill eat cream cakes. Dussel says, If I am let free, Ill run to see my wife Lotje. Mummy says, I will have a cup of coffee. Peter says, I will go to the cinema. I long for so many things. But I long for a home of our own

    • What did Anne write in her diary
    • personal feelings/thoughts/reflections
    • events other than routine
    • future plans
    • Did you notice any variety in the sentences
    • Are all the sentences connected with each other properly
    • After facing the live board, Oliver returned to his bed crying. He sat up to write his diary. Now, imagine you are Oliver Twist. Attempt a diary entry with the above features in mind

    ans:Monday, 12th August, 20xx What a miserable day in my life! Just now I have appeared before the live board. Actually I dont have any idea about a live board.

    Mr. Bumble informed me, Today, you have to appear before the live board forthwith". I was rather surprised. I was not quite certain whether I ought to laugh or cry

    I had no time to think about the matter then. Mr. Bumble told me, "Follow me". So, I followed him into a large white-washed room. There were eight or ten gentlemen sitting round a table.

    A fat gentleman with a very round, red face sat in an arm chair rather higher than the rest. Bumble said, "Bow to the board". I brushed away two or three years that were lingering in my eyes

    I didnt find any board. I only saw a table. So I bowed to that. Whats your name, boy? said the gentleman in the high chair. I was frightened at the sight of so many gentlemen, which made me tremble. As I didnt answer the question, the beadle gave me a tap on my back with his cane and immediately I started crying, the gentleman in the high chair

    I was frightened at the sight of so many gentlemen, which made me tremble. As I didnt answer the question, the beadle gave me a tap on my back with his cane and immediately I started crying. The gentleman in the high chair asked me "Do you know youre an orphan?" I didnt understand his question. So, I asked him What that, sir"? The gentleman in the white waistcoat remarked, "The boy is a fool".

    The red-faced gentleman in the high chair said, You have come here to be educated and taught a useful trade". The gentleman in the white waistcoat added Youll begin to pick oakum tomorrow morning at six oclock". I bowed low and rushed into my room. I sobbed myself to sleep on a rough, hard bed. How disgusting all it is! I dont want to stay here any more. I certainly will leave it. We dont have any independence here. They dont allow us to play, run or jump. Here we are living like slaves. We dont have enough food either.

    They dont show any mercy on us. No, I wont stay here even a minute more. Now itself I shall start

    Oliver Asks for More Summary in English

    Oliver, an orphan boy, was brought to a children home. Mr. Bumble, the beadle, informed Oliver that he had to appear before the board at once

    As he did not have any idea of a live board, he was astonished and was not quite certain whether he ought to laugh or cry

    Mr. Bumble took him into a large white-washed room where eight or ten fat gentlemen were sitting round a table. Mr. Bumble ordered Oliver to bow to the board. Seeing no board but the table, Oliver bowed to the table. He was frightened at the sight of them and trembled

    The beadle tapped on his back with his cane and he cried. The gentleman in the high chair asked Oliver if he knew that he was an orphan. Oliver couldnt understand his question as he had no idea of an orphan

    The gentlemen reminded Oliver that he was brought up by the parish and asked him to pray for them and take care of him like a Christian

    The gentleman in the white waistcoat ordered Oliver to begin to pick oakum the following day morning at six oclock. Oliver made a low bow and hurried away to a large ward sobbing himself to sleep on a rough, hard bed. The members of the board were very wise and philosophical men

    They discovered that the workhouse was the regular place of public entertainment for the poorer classes. They opined that the poor should starve quickly outside the workhouse or gradually inside it

    They decided the inmates of the workhouse would be issued three meals of thin gruel a day, with an onion twice a week. As a result, the number of workhouse inmates got smaller and they shrank in size

    Oliver and his companions suffered the tortures of slow starvation for three months. They became wild with hunger

    One day a tall boy announced that he would eat the boy who slept next to him unless he was given extra gruel. A council was held and it was decided that Oliver should ask the master for more

    That evening the gruel was served and they ate it up. The boys winked at Oliver and nudged him. Oliver advanced to the master and requested him for more gruel. The master got a rage and aimed a blow at Oliver head with the ladle. He reported it to the beadle

    Mr. Bumble, the beadle rushed into the gentlemen room and reported the same. The gentleman in the white waistcoat opined that the boy would be hung. Nobody contradicted his opinion and Oliver was ordered into instant confinement. The following morning a bill was pasted offering five pounds to those who would take Oliver as an apprentice to any trade, business or profession

    About the author

    Charles Dickens (1812-1870) is a well known English novelist. Due to his father imprisonment Charles left school and worked in a shoe factory

    While he was working as a office boy he launched his writing career. His novels Oliver Twist, Great Expectations, Pickwick Papers, Bleak House, A Tale of Two Cities and David Copperfield brought him name all over the world. He went on lecture tours to America and got literary reputation. He focussed on social issues and human ailments in his works

    Oliver Asks for More Glossary

    beadle (n): an official of a church parish (n): a church committee oakum (n): loose fibre obtained by untwisting and picking apart old ropes surly (adj): serious or angry gruel (n): a thin liquid food of oats, rice, etc devoured (v): ate hungrily or quickly appetite (n): the desire to eat, hunger voracious (adj): wanting great quantities of food stupefied (adj): shocked paralyzed (v): became motionless ladle (n): a long handled spoon used to serve liquids countenance (n): a person face or facial expression confinement (n): putting in a prison or a closed room apprentice (n): one who works under a skilled person stride (n): one long step grasped (v): took a firm hold of something cuff (n): the bottom of the leg of a pair of trousers/pants that has been folded over on the outside forthwith (adv): immediately, at once trotted (v): moved forward at a speed that is faster than a walk lingering (v): continuing to exist gruff (adj): deep and rough, and often sounding unfriendly stammered (v): spoke with difficulty sobbed (v): cried noisily taking sudden, sharp breaths starve (v): to suffer or die, because one doesnt have enough food to eat winked (v): closed one eye and opened it again quickly, especially as a private signal to somebody nudged (v): pushed somebody gently with one elbow paralyzed (v): made somebody unable to feel or move all or part of their body faint (adj): that cant be clearly seen, heard or smelt depicted (v): gave an impression of something contradicted (v): said that something that somebody else had said was wrong calling (n): a profession or caree

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