Page 1
Unit
8
L e t ’ s b eg i n ‘Kathmandu’ is an excerpt from the travelogue Heaven Lake written by
Vikram Seth. The travelogue is an account of his travel from China, Tibet
and Kathmandu to India. Vikram Seth beautifully describes the natural
landscape, cultural richness and diversity among people from region to
region.
Do you know?
A river in New Zealand has become the first in the world
to be recognised as a living entity with the legal status of a
person after a 170-year battle by the local Maori people.
The nation’s parliament passed a bill to allow Whanganui
River— known by the Maoris as Te Awa Tupua— to represent
its own interests and advocate on its own behalf.
This is a unique judgement for sustaining the health and
well-being of the river.
(Source: Adapted from The Guardian International Edition,
16 March 2017)
1. Collect information on similar judgements being
taken in the context of river Ganga, and discuss
in class.
2. Talk about the condition of Bagmati river in
Kathmandu written by Vikram Seth.
Unit 8.indd 112 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Page 2
Unit
8
L e t ’ s b eg i n ‘Kathmandu’ is an excerpt from the travelogue Heaven Lake written by
Vikram Seth. The travelogue is an account of his travel from China, Tibet
and Kathmandu to India. Vikram Seth beautifully describes the natural
landscape, cultural richness and diversity among people from region to
region.
Do you know?
A river in New Zealand has become the first in the world
to be recognised as a living entity with the legal status of a
person after a 170-year battle by the local Maori people.
The nation’s parliament passed a bill to allow Whanganui
River— known by the Maoris as Te Awa Tupua— to represent
its own interests and advocate on its own behalf.
This is a unique judgement for sustaining the health and
well-being of the river.
(Source: Adapted from The Guardian International Edition,
16 March 2017)
1. Collect information on similar judgements being
taken in the context of river Ganga, and discuss
in class.
2. Talk about the condition of Bagmati river in
Kathmandu written by Vikram Seth.
Unit 8.indd 112 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Unit 8 113
Reading Comp Rehension Read the following passage and answer the questions that
follow.
Text I
When we think of tourism, we think primarily of people who
are visiting a particular place for sightseeing, visiting friends
and relatives, taking a vacation, and having a good time. They
may spend their leisure time engaging in various sports,
sunbathing, talking, singing, taking rides, touring, reading
or simply enjoying further. We may include in our definition
of tourism people who are participating in a convention,
a business conference, or some other kind of business or
professional activity. Those who are taking a study tour under
an expert guide or doing some kind of scientific research or
study are also doing tourism. These visitors use all forms of
transportation from hiking in a wilderness park to flying in
a jet to an exciting city. Transportation can include taking a
chairlift up a Colorado mountainside or standing at the rail
of a cruise ship looking across the blue Caribbean. Whether
people travel by one of these means or by car, motor coach
camper, train, motorbike or bicycle, they are taking a trip
and thus are engaging in tourism.
(Adapted from Tourism: Principles, Practices, Philosophies by
Charles R. Goeldner and J.R. Brent Ritchie, p. 4)
1. Tourism is about taking a tour
(a) to a place under an expert guide
(b) for hiking in remote places
(c) for visiting a place for sightseeing
(d) All of the above
2. By ‘hiking in wilderness’ the author means
(a) taking a long distance walk in abandoned areas
(b) walk in the forest areas
(c) marathon in uninhabited areas
(d) sprinting in abandoned, uninhabited areas
3. A cruise ship is
(a) a large ship that carries people on voyages of
pleasure.
Costs an arm and a leg
Very expensive
It’s a piece of cake
It’s easy
Fun fact
chairlift: a series of chairs
hanging from a moving
cable, for carrying people up
and down a mountain
Unit 8.indd 113 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Page 3
Unit
8
L e t ’ s b eg i n ‘Kathmandu’ is an excerpt from the travelogue Heaven Lake written by
Vikram Seth. The travelogue is an account of his travel from China, Tibet
and Kathmandu to India. Vikram Seth beautifully describes the natural
landscape, cultural richness and diversity among people from region to
region.
Do you know?
A river in New Zealand has become the first in the world
to be recognised as a living entity with the legal status of a
person after a 170-year battle by the local Maori people.
The nation’s parliament passed a bill to allow Whanganui
River— known by the Maoris as Te Awa Tupua— to represent
its own interests and advocate on its own behalf.
This is a unique judgement for sustaining the health and
well-being of the river.
(Source: Adapted from The Guardian International Edition,
16 March 2017)
1. Collect information on similar judgements being
taken in the context of river Ganga, and discuss
in class.
2. Talk about the condition of Bagmati river in
Kathmandu written by Vikram Seth.
Unit 8.indd 112 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Unit 8 113
Reading Comp Rehension Read the following passage and answer the questions that
follow.
Text I
When we think of tourism, we think primarily of people who
are visiting a particular place for sightseeing, visiting friends
and relatives, taking a vacation, and having a good time. They
may spend their leisure time engaging in various sports,
sunbathing, talking, singing, taking rides, touring, reading
or simply enjoying further. We may include in our definition
of tourism people who are participating in a convention,
a business conference, or some other kind of business or
professional activity. Those who are taking a study tour under
an expert guide or doing some kind of scientific research or
study are also doing tourism. These visitors use all forms of
transportation from hiking in a wilderness park to flying in
a jet to an exciting city. Transportation can include taking a
chairlift up a Colorado mountainside or standing at the rail
of a cruise ship looking across the blue Caribbean. Whether
people travel by one of these means or by car, motor coach
camper, train, motorbike or bicycle, they are taking a trip
and thus are engaging in tourism.
(Adapted from Tourism: Principles, Practices, Philosophies by
Charles R. Goeldner and J.R. Brent Ritchie, p. 4)
1. Tourism is about taking a tour
(a) to a place under an expert guide
(b) for hiking in remote places
(c) for visiting a place for sightseeing
(d) All of the above
2. By ‘hiking in wilderness’ the author means
(a) taking a long distance walk in abandoned areas
(b) walk in the forest areas
(c) marathon in uninhabited areas
(d) sprinting in abandoned, uninhabited areas
3. A cruise ship is
(a) a large ship that carries people on voyages of
pleasure.
Costs an arm and a leg
Very expensive
It’s a piece of cake
It’s easy
Fun fact
chairlift: a series of chairs
hanging from a moving
cable, for carrying people up
and down a mountain
Unit 8.indd 113 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Words and Expr Essions 1 114
(b) a big ship that carries people and goods on special
mission.
(c) a large watercraft for carrying passengers from one
point to another.
(d) a large ship that carries mail, goods and first aid
facilities.
4. What all activities do tourists engage in?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
5. What are the forms of transportation tourists use for
visiting places?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
Read the excerpt and answer the following questions.
Text II
Following is an excerpt from the travelogue, The Innocents
Abroad by Mark Twain.
A little after noon on that distinguished Saturday
I reached the ship and went on board. All was bustle
and confusion. The pier was crowded with carriages and
men; passengers were arriving and hurrying on board;
the vessel’s decks were encumbered with trunks and
valises; groups of excursionists, arrayed in unattractive
traveling costumes, were moping about in a drizzling
rain and looking as droopy and woebegone as so many
molting chickens. The gallant flag was up, but it was
under the spell, too, and hung limp and disheartened by
the mast. Altogether, it was the bluest, bluest spectacle!
pier: a long structure built
in the sea and joined to the
land at one end
woebegone: very sad or
miserable
Spelling errors
It’s “commitment”, not
“comittment”.
It’s “independence”, not
“Independance”.
Fun fact
Unit 8.indd 114 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Page 4
Unit
8
L e t ’ s b eg i n ‘Kathmandu’ is an excerpt from the travelogue Heaven Lake written by
Vikram Seth. The travelogue is an account of his travel from China, Tibet
and Kathmandu to India. Vikram Seth beautifully describes the natural
landscape, cultural richness and diversity among people from region to
region.
Do you know?
A river in New Zealand has become the first in the world
to be recognised as a living entity with the legal status of a
person after a 170-year battle by the local Maori people.
The nation’s parliament passed a bill to allow Whanganui
River— known by the Maoris as Te Awa Tupua— to represent
its own interests and advocate on its own behalf.
This is a unique judgement for sustaining the health and
well-being of the river.
(Source: Adapted from The Guardian International Edition,
16 March 2017)
1. Collect information on similar judgements being
taken in the context of river Ganga, and discuss
in class.
2. Talk about the condition of Bagmati river in
Kathmandu written by Vikram Seth.
Unit 8.indd 112 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Unit 8 113
Reading Comp Rehension Read the following passage and answer the questions that
follow.
Text I
When we think of tourism, we think primarily of people who
are visiting a particular place for sightseeing, visiting friends
and relatives, taking a vacation, and having a good time. They
may spend their leisure time engaging in various sports,
sunbathing, talking, singing, taking rides, touring, reading
or simply enjoying further. We may include in our definition
of tourism people who are participating in a convention,
a business conference, or some other kind of business or
professional activity. Those who are taking a study tour under
an expert guide or doing some kind of scientific research or
study are also doing tourism. These visitors use all forms of
transportation from hiking in a wilderness park to flying in
a jet to an exciting city. Transportation can include taking a
chairlift up a Colorado mountainside or standing at the rail
of a cruise ship looking across the blue Caribbean. Whether
people travel by one of these means or by car, motor coach
camper, train, motorbike or bicycle, they are taking a trip
and thus are engaging in tourism.
(Adapted from Tourism: Principles, Practices, Philosophies by
Charles R. Goeldner and J.R. Brent Ritchie, p. 4)
1. Tourism is about taking a tour
(a) to a place under an expert guide
(b) for hiking in remote places
(c) for visiting a place for sightseeing
(d) All of the above
2. By ‘hiking in wilderness’ the author means
(a) taking a long distance walk in abandoned areas
(b) walk in the forest areas
(c) marathon in uninhabited areas
(d) sprinting in abandoned, uninhabited areas
3. A cruise ship is
(a) a large ship that carries people on voyages of
pleasure.
Costs an arm and a leg
Very expensive
It’s a piece of cake
It’s easy
Fun fact
chairlift: a series of chairs
hanging from a moving
cable, for carrying people up
and down a mountain
Unit 8.indd 113 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Words and Expr Essions 1 114
(b) a big ship that carries people and goods on special
mission.
(c) a large watercraft for carrying passengers from one
point to another.
(d) a large ship that carries mail, goods and first aid
facilities.
4. What all activities do tourists engage in?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
5. What are the forms of transportation tourists use for
visiting places?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
Read the excerpt and answer the following questions.
Text II
Following is an excerpt from the travelogue, The Innocents
Abroad by Mark Twain.
A little after noon on that distinguished Saturday
I reached the ship and went on board. All was bustle
and confusion. The pier was crowded with carriages and
men; passengers were arriving and hurrying on board;
the vessel’s decks were encumbered with trunks and
valises; groups of excursionists, arrayed in unattractive
traveling costumes, were moping about in a drizzling
rain and looking as droopy and woebegone as so many
molting chickens. The gallant flag was up, but it was
under the spell, too, and hung limp and disheartened by
the mast. Altogether, it was the bluest, bluest spectacle!
pier: a long structure built
in the sea and joined to the
land at one end
woebegone: very sad or
miserable
Spelling errors
It’s “commitment”, not
“comittment”.
It’s “independence”, not
“Independance”.
Fun fact
Unit 8.indd 114 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Unit 8 114 115
It was a pleasure excursion—there was no gainsaying
that, because the program said so—it was so nominated
in the bond—but it surely hadn’t the general aspect
of one.
1. Why is Saturday described as that distinguished
Saturday?
(a) because the much awaited Saturday has come
when the voyage has to start.
(b) because Saturday was a holiday.
(c) because it is on Saturday that people were allowed
to board the ship.
(d) because it is in the afternoon on Saturday that ship
would start the voyage.
2. Who are excursionists?
(a) They are the research students.
(b) They are pilgrims.
(c) They are musicians.
(d) They are tourists on a leisure trip.
3. What was the mood of the people on the ship?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
4. What was the author looking forward to?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
You can’t judge a book by
its cover
Don’t base your opinion of
something (or someone) on
the way it looks.
Fun fact
Hit the nail on
the head
Get something exactly right
Fun fact
Do something at the
drop of a hat
Do something without having
planned beforehand
Fun fact
Unit 8.indd 115 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Page 5
Unit
8
L e t ’ s b eg i n ‘Kathmandu’ is an excerpt from the travelogue Heaven Lake written by
Vikram Seth. The travelogue is an account of his travel from China, Tibet
and Kathmandu to India. Vikram Seth beautifully describes the natural
landscape, cultural richness and diversity among people from region to
region.
Do you know?
A river in New Zealand has become the first in the world
to be recognised as a living entity with the legal status of a
person after a 170-year battle by the local Maori people.
The nation’s parliament passed a bill to allow Whanganui
River— known by the Maoris as Te Awa Tupua— to represent
its own interests and advocate on its own behalf.
This is a unique judgement for sustaining the health and
well-being of the river.
(Source: Adapted from The Guardian International Edition,
16 March 2017)
1. Collect information on similar judgements being
taken in the context of river Ganga, and discuss
in class.
2. Talk about the condition of Bagmati river in
Kathmandu written by Vikram Seth.
Unit 8.indd 112 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Unit 8 113
Reading Comp Rehension Read the following passage and answer the questions that
follow.
Text I
When we think of tourism, we think primarily of people who
are visiting a particular place for sightseeing, visiting friends
and relatives, taking a vacation, and having a good time. They
may spend their leisure time engaging in various sports,
sunbathing, talking, singing, taking rides, touring, reading
or simply enjoying further. We may include in our definition
of tourism people who are participating in a convention,
a business conference, or some other kind of business or
professional activity. Those who are taking a study tour under
an expert guide or doing some kind of scientific research or
study are also doing tourism. These visitors use all forms of
transportation from hiking in a wilderness park to flying in
a jet to an exciting city. Transportation can include taking a
chairlift up a Colorado mountainside or standing at the rail
of a cruise ship looking across the blue Caribbean. Whether
people travel by one of these means or by car, motor coach
camper, train, motorbike or bicycle, they are taking a trip
and thus are engaging in tourism.
(Adapted from Tourism: Principles, Practices, Philosophies by
Charles R. Goeldner and J.R. Brent Ritchie, p. 4)
1. Tourism is about taking a tour
(a) to a place under an expert guide
(b) for hiking in remote places
(c) for visiting a place for sightseeing
(d) All of the above
2. By ‘hiking in wilderness’ the author means
(a) taking a long distance walk in abandoned areas
(b) walk in the forest areas
(c) marathon in uninhabited areas
(d) sprinting in abandoned, uninhabited areas
3. A cruise ship is
(a) a large ship that carries people on voyages of
pleasure.
Costs an arm and a leg
Very expensive
It’s a piece of cake
It’s easy
Fun fact
chairlift: a series of chairs
hanging from a moving
cable, for carrying people up
and down a mountain
Unit 8.indd 113 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Words and Expr Essions 1 114
(b) a big ship that carries people and goods on special
mission.
(c) a large watercraft for carrying passengers from one
point to another.
(d) a large ship that carries mail, goods and first aid
facilities.
4. What all activities do tourists engage in?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
5. What are the forms of transportation tourists use for
visiting places?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
Read the excerpt and answer the following questions.
Text II
Following is an excerpt from the travelogue, The Innocents
Abroad by Mark Twain.
A little after noon on that distinguished Saturday
I reached the ship and went on board. All was bustle
and confusion. The pier was crowded with carriages and
men; passengers were arriving and hurrying on board;
the vessel’s decks were encumbered with trunks and
valises; groups of excursionists, arrayed in unattractive
traveling costumes, were moping about in a drizzling
rain and looking as droopy and woebegone as so many
molting chickens. The gallant flag was up, but it was
under the spell, too, and hung limp and disheartened by
the mast. Altogether, it was the bluest, bluest spectacle!
pier: a long structure built
in the sea and joined to the
land at one end
woebegone: very sad or
miserable
Spelling errors
It’s “commitment”, not
“comittment”.
It’s “independence”, not
“Independance”.
Fun fact
Unit 8.indd 114 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Unit 8 114 115
It was a pleasure excursion—there was no gainsaying
that, because the program said so—it was so nominated
in the bond—but it surely hadn’t the general aspect
of one.
1. Why is Saturday described as that distinguished
Saturday?
(a) because the much awaited Saturday has come
when the voyage has to start.
(b) because Saturday was a holiday.
(c) because it is on Saturday that people were allowed
to board the ship.
(d) because it is in the afternoon on Saturday that ship
would start the voyage.
2. Who are excursionists?
(a) They are the research students.
(b) They are pilgrims.
(c) They are musicians.
(d) They are tourists on a leisure trip.
3. What was the mood of the people on the ship?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
4. What was the author looking forward to?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
You can’t judge a book by
its cover
Don’t base your opinion of
something (or someone) on
the way it looks.
Fun fact
Hit the nail on
the head
Get something exactly right
Fun fact
Do something at the
drop of a hat
Do something without having
planned beforehand
Fun fact
Unit 8.indd 115 20-02-2023 09:28:31
2024-25
Words and Expr Essions 1 116
5. Match the words/phrases in Column A with pictures in
Column B.
Column A Column B
Pier
deck
carriage
valise
mast
Unit 8.indd 116 20-02-2023 09:28:33
2024-25
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