Read the following passages carefully and mark out the correct answers from among the alternatives given below each question in every passage:
The load was very heavy for the old camel. He tried his best to carry it as far as the next village. There his master would be able to get another camel to carry this heavy load. But he was so tired and exhausted that he could not go any further. His master took off the load from the camel’s back and put it on the back of another camel and went his way. A tiger was passing by at this time. He had been hurt by the tusk of an elephant. As the tiger was in pain, he found it difficult to walk.
So he lay down by the side of the camel. The camel began licking the tiger’s wound with his long tongue and offered him food that his master had left behind. In a few days, the tiger and the camel recovered. As the tiger was very hungry the old camel told him to kill him and eat his meat. The tiger could not think of killing his friend.
At that time a deer came running towards them. A hunter had shot at him with an arrow. He lay down by the side of the tiger. He told the tiger to kill him and eat his flesh as he did not want the wicked hunter to take him away. The tiger did as he was told. Just then the hunter came on the spot. The angry tiger jumped on him and killed him also. Another young deer was in the bag that the hunter was carrying. The tiger set it free. The tiger and the camel lived happily ever after in the forest.
Q1: The camel began to lick the tiger’s wound because of the
(a) tiger was in pain
(b) tiger was tired
(c) tiger could not walk
(d) the camel was hungry
(e) camel’s tongue is long
Ans: (a)
Sol: The passage states, "As the tiger was in pain, he found it difficult to walk. So he lay down by the side of the camel. The camel began licking the tiger’s wound with his long tongue." This clearly indicates that the camel began to lick the tiger’s wound because the tiger was in pain.
Q2: How many living beings in all are mentioned in the passage?
(a) Nine
(b) Eight
(c) Seven
(d) Six
(e) Five
Ans: (d)
Sol: The living beings mentioned are: 1. Old camel, 2. Master, 3. Another camel, 4. Tiger, 5. Deer shot by the hunter, 6. Another young deer in the hunter’s bag. Thus, there are six living beings mentioned in the passage.
Q3: What did the tiger do the dying deer?
(a) He ate his flesh
(b) He killed him
(c) He killed him and ate his flesh
(d) He set him free
(e) He licked his wounds
Ans: (c)
Sol: The passage states, "He told the tiger to kill him and eat his flesh... The tiger did as he was told." This indicates that the tiger killed the deer and ate his flesh.
Q4: All of the following were either exhausted or wounded or killed except the
(a) deer which lay near the camel
(b) tiger
(c) old camel
(d) elephant
(e) hunter
Ans: (d)
Sol: The passage mentions that the old camel was exhausted, the tiger was in pain, the deer was wounded and later killed, and the hunter was killed by the tiger. The elephant is only mentioned as having hurt the tiger but is not described as being exhausted, wounded, or killed.
Q5: The tiger refused to eat the camel because of all of the following except that the camel had
(a) become his friend
(b) offered him food
(c) licked his wound
(d) become old
(e) None of these
Ans: (d)
Sol: The passage does not mention the camel’s age as a reason the tiger refused to eat him. The tiger refused to eat the camel because the camel had become his friend, offered him food, and licked his wound.
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