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Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Class 10 MCQ


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30 Questions MCQ Test - Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India

Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India for Class 10 2025 is part of Class 10 preparation. The Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India questions and answers have been prepared according to the Class 10 exam syllabus.The Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India MCQs are made for Class 10 2025 Exam. Find important definitions, questions, notes, meanings, examples, exercises, MCQs and online tests for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India below.
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Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 1

Direction: "Our elders are often heard reminiscing nostalgically about those good old Portuguese days, the Portuguese and their famous loaves of bread. Those eaters might have vanished but the makers are still there. We still have amongst us the mixers, the moulders and those who bake the loaves. Those age-old, time-tested furnaces still exist. The fire in these furnaces has not yet been extinguished. The thud and jingle of traditional baker's bamboo, heralding his arrival in the morning, can still be heard in some places. "

Q. The narrator says that the furnaces were 'time-tested' because :

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 1
Time-tested means that the furnaces have been used for a long period and have proved their well-working with passage of time.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 2

Direction: The baker usually collected his bills at the end of the month. Monthly accounts used to be recorded on some wall in pencil. Baking was indeed a profitable profession in the old days. The baker and his family never starved. He, his family and his servants always looked happy and prosperous. Their plump physique was an open testimony to this. Even today, any person with a jackfruit-like physical appearance is easily compared to a baker.

Q. Where did the baker record his accounts?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 2
The line in the passage ‘recorded on some wall in pencil’ tells the answer.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 3

Direction: The baker usually collected his bills at the end of the month. Monthly accounts used to be recorded on some wall in pencil. Baking was indeed a profitable profession in the old days. The baker and his family never starved. He, his family and his servants always looked happy and prosperous. Their plump physique was an open testimony to this. Even today, any person with a jackfruit-like physical appearance is easily compared to a baker.

Q. A baker in Goa can be identified______.

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 3
Plump physique means healthily built. Jackfruit like appearance was associated with bakers. So, both (B) and (C) are correct options.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 4

Direction: The baker usually collected his bills at the end of the month. Monthly accounts used to be recorded on some wall in pencil. Baking was indeed a profitable profession in the old days. The baker and his family never starved. He, his family and his servants always looked happy and prosperous. Their plump physique was an open testimony to this. Even today, any person with a jackfruit-like physical appearance is easily compared to a baker.

Q. Why did the baker and his family never starve?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 4
This was because in the past, the baking profession was counted as a profitable business which gives huge income to the baker.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 5

Direction: The baker usually collected his bills at the end of the month. Monthly accounts used to be recorded on some wall in pencil. Baking was indeed a profitable profession in the old days. The baker and his family never starved. He, his family and his servants always looked happy and prosperous. Their plump physique was an open testimony to this. Even today, any person with a jackfruit-like physical appearance is easily compared to a baker.

Q. Which word in the extract is a synonym of ‘rich’?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 5
Wealthy means rich but has not been used in the passage. Testimony means witness and profitable means something that gives good returns. Prosperous means having lot of wealth, thereby meaning rich.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 6

Direction: The baker usually collected his bills at the end of the month. Monthly accounts used to be recorded on some wall in pencil. Baking was indeed a profitable profession in the old days. The baker and his family never starved. He, his family and his servants always looked happy and prosperous. Their plump physique was an open testimony to this. Even today, any person with a jackfruit-like physical appearance is easily compared to a baker.

Q. The records were maintained________.

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 6
As the baker received payment at the end of the month, so, the records were maintained monthly.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 7

Direction: Coorg, or Kodagu, the smallest district of Karnataka, is home to evergreen rainforests, spices and coffee plantations. Evergreen rainforests cover thirty per cent of this district. During the monsoons, it pours enough to keep many visitors away. The season of joy commences from September and continues till March. The weather is perfect, with some showers thrown in for good measure. The air breathes of invigorating coffee. Coffee estates and colonial bungalows stand tucked under tree canopies in prime corners.

Q. Coorg is a district in _______ .

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 7
It is the smallest district in the Indian state of Karnataka.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 8

Direction: Coorg, or Kodagu, the smallest district of Karnataka, is home to evergreen rainforests, spices and coffee plantations. Evergreen rainforests cover thirty per cent of this district. During the monsoons, it pours enough to keep many visitors away. The season of joy commences from September and continues till March. The weather is perfect, with some showers thrown in for good measure. The air breathes of invigorating coffee. Coffee estates and colonial bungalows stand tucked under tree canopies in prime corners.

Q. Which is the best season in Coorg?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 8
The season of September to March is referred to as the season of joy or the best season.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 9

Direction: Coorg, or Kodagu, the smallest district of Karnataka, is home to evergreen rainforests, spices and coffee plantations. Evergreen rainforests cover thirty per cent of this district. During the monsoons, it pours enough to keep many visitors away. The season of joy commences from September and continues till March. The weather is perfect, with some showers thrown in for good measure. The air breathes of invigorating coffee. Coffee estates and colonial bungalows stand tucked under tree canopies in prime corners.

Q. Which word in the extract means ‘begins’?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 9
Measure means to ascertain size, degree, quantity, etc., of something. Tucked means pushed, folded or turned something to hide it. Canopies are ornamental cloth held up over something. Commences means to start something.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 10

Direction: Coorg, or Kodagu, the smallest district of Karnataka, is home to evergreen rainforests, spices and coffee plantations. Evergreen rainforests cover thirty per cent of this district. During the monsoons, it pours enough to keep many visitors away. The season of joy commences from September and continues till March. The weather is perfect, with some showers thrown in for good measure. The air breathes of invigorating coffee. Coffee estates and colonial bungalows stand tucked under tree canopies in prime corners.

Q. How much of Coorg is covered with rainforest?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 10
According to the passage, around one-third or thirty percent Coorg is covered with rainforests.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 11

Direction: Coorg, or Kodagu, the smallest district of Karnataka, is home to evergreen rainforests, spices and coffee plantations. Evergreen rainforests cover thirty per cent of this district. During the monsoons, it pours enough to keep many visitors away. The season of joy commences from September and continues till March. The weather is perfect, with some showers thrown in for good measure. The air breathes of invigorating coffee. Coffee estates and colonial bungalows stand tucked under tree canopies in prime corners.

Q. Coorg is famous for _________ .

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 11
Out of the given options, Coorg is famous for coffee. Other things for which Coorg is famous for are its rainforests and spices.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 12

Direction: "Tell me another!" scoffed Pranjol.

"We have an Indian legend too. Bodhidharma, an ancient Buddhist ascetic, cut off his eyelids because he felt sleepy during meditations. Ten tea plants grew out of the eyelids. The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk, banished sleep."

"Tea was first drunk in China," Rajvir added, "as far back as 2700 B.C.! In fact, words such as tea, chai and chini are from the Chinese. Tea came to Europe only in the sixteenth century and was drunk more as medicine than as beverage."

Q. The main idea of this extract is

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 12
The extract primarily tells Indian legend about tea and the journey covered by tea for reaching from China to Europe.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 13

Direction: "Tell me another!" scoffed Pranjol.

"We have an Indian legend too. Bodhidharma, an ancient Buddhist ascetic, cut off his eyelids because he felt sleepy during meditations. Ten tea plants grew out of the eyelids. The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk, banished sleep."

"Tea was first drunk in China," Rajvir added, "as far back as 2700 B.C.! In fact, words such as tea, chai and chini are from the Chinese. Tea came to Europe only in the sixteenth century and was drunk more as medicine than as beverage."

Q. Pick the option that includes the tea label information that corresponds to the given sentence. "The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk, banished sleep."

(1) Its calming effects may be attributed to an antioxidant called apigenin, which is found in abundance in chamomile tea. Apigenin binds to specific receptors in your brain that may decrease anxiety and initiate sleep.

(2) It increases levels of a neurotransmitter called gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and improves overall sleep quality by shortening the time it takes to fall asleep and decreasing night-time awakenings.

(3) It interferes with REM sleep, has some unwanted side effects, keeps sleep away and allows the possibility of inducing hours of sleeplessness and increased night-time awakenings.

(4) It alleviates anxious thoughts and soothes the spirit before bedtime. It improves energy levels and helps banish stress and results in a better night's sleep, naturally.

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 13
Options 1, 2, 4 state the fact that tea initiates/ decreases/ results in better night sleep, whereas option 3 states that tea keeps sleep away.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 14

Direction: "Tell me another!" scoffed Pranjol.

"We have an Indian legend too. Bodhidharma, an ancient Buddhist ascetic, cut off his eyelids because he felt sleepy during meditations. Ten tea plants grew out of the eyelids. The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk, banished sleep."

"Tea was first drunk in China," Rajvir added, "as far back as 2700 B.C.! In fact, words such as tea, chai and chini are from the Chinese. Tea came to Europe only in the sixteenth century and was drunk more as medicine than as beverage."

Q. Why do you think Pranjol 'scoffed'?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 14
Scoffed means ridiculed or mocked. So, Pranjol was entertained at what Rajvir shared.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 15

Direction: "Tell me another!" scoffed Pranjol.

"We have an Indian legend too. Bodhidharma, an ancient Buddhist ascetic, cut off his eyelids because he felt sleepy during meditations. Ten tea plants grew out of the eyelids. The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk, banished sleep."

"Tea was first drunk in China," Rajvir added, "as far back as 2700 B.C.! In fact, words such as tea, chai and chini are from the Chinese. Tea came to Europe only in the sixteenth century and was drunk more as medicine than as beverage."

Q. Based on this extract, how do you think Rajvir felt while narrating?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 15
Enthusiastic is when one wants to tell maximum about something in the minimum possible time. Passionate is when someone loves to talk about something.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 16

"Tell me another!" scoffed Pranjol.

"We have an Indian legend too. Bodhidharma, an ancient Buddhist ascetic, cut off his eyelids because he felt sleepy during meditations. Ten tea plants grew out of the eyelids. The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk, banished sleep."

"Tea was first drunk in China," Rajvir added, "as far back as 2700 B.C.! In fact, words such as tea, chai and chini are from the Chinese. Tea came to Europe only in the sixteenth century and was drunk more as medicine than as beverage."

Q. Based on the inference from the extract, which of these is TRUE about tea drinking in the sixteenth century Europe?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 16

In sixteenth-century Europe, tea was consumed mainly as a form of medicine.

During this period:

  • Tea was not a common beverage; it was primarily used for its medicinal properties.
  • It was introduced to Europe after being enjoyed in China for centuries.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 17

Direction: “We have an Indian legend too. Bodhidharma, an ancient Buddhist ascetic, cut off his eyelids because he felt sleepy during meditations. Ten tea plants grew out of the eyelids. The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk banished sleep. “Tea was first drunk in China,” Rajvir added, “as far back as 2700 B.C.! In fact words such as tea, ‘chai’ and ‘chini’ are from Chinese. Tea came to Europe only in the sixteenth century and was drunk more as medicine than as beverage.” The train clattered into Mariani junction. The boys collected their luggage and pushed their way to the crowded platform.

Q. Bodhidharma was a ________ ascetic.

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 17
Bodhidharma, an ancient Buddhist ascetic, cut off his eyelids because he felt sleepy during meditations. Ten tea plants grew out of the eyelids. The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk banished sleep.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 18

Direction: “We have an Indian legend too. Bodhidharma, an ancient Buddhist ascetic, cut off his eyelids because he felt sleepy during meditations. Ten tea plants grew out of the eyelids. The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk banished sleep. “Tea was first drunk in China,” Rajvir added, “as far back as 2700 B.C.! In fact words such as tea, ‘chai’ and ‘chini’ are from Chinese. Tea came to Europe only in the sixteenth century and was drunk more as medicine than as beverage.” The train clattered into Mariani junction. The boys collected their luggage and pushed their way to the crowded platform.

Q. Where was tea first drunk?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 18
Tea was started to be drunk in China and later spread to entire world through Europe.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 19

Direction: “We have an Indian legend too. Bodhidharma, an ancient Buddhist ascetic, cut off his eyelids because he felt sleepy during meditations. Ten tea plants grew out of the eyelids. The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk banished sleep. “Tea was first drunk in China,” Rajvir added, “as far back as 2700 B.C.! In fact words such as tea, ‘chai’ and ‘chini’ are from Chinese. Tea came to Europe only in the sixteenth century and was drunk more as medicine than as beverage.” The train clattered into Mariani junction. The boys collected their luggage and pushed their way to the crowded platform.

Q. What did he cut to prevent feeling sleepy?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 19
The biographical tradition is littered with apocryphal tales about Bodhidharma's life and circumstances. In one version of the story, he is said to have fallen asleep seven years into his nine years of wall-gazing. Becoming angry with himself, he cut off his eyelids to prevent it from happening again.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 20

Direction: “We have an Indian legend too. Bodhidharma, an ancient Buddhist ascetic, cut off his eyelids because he felt sleepy during meditations. Ten tea plants grew out of the eyelids. The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk banished sleep. “Tea was first drunk in China,” Rajvir added, “as far back as 2700 B.C.! In fact words such as tea, ‘chai’ and ‘chini’ are from Chinese. Tea came to Europe only in the sixteenth century and was drunk more as medicine than as beverage.” The train clattered into Mariani junction. The boys collected their luggage and pushed their way to the crowded platform.

Q. When did tea come to Europe?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 20
Prior to 16th century, Europeans were not aware of tea, Even in 16th century, European consumed tea as a medicine and not as a beverage.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 21

Direction: “We have an Indian legend too. Bodhidharma, an ancient Buddhist ascetic, cut off his eyelids because he felt sleepy during meditations. Ten tea plants grew out of the eyelids. The leaves of these plants when put in hot water and drunk banished sleep. “Tea was first drunk in China,” Rajvir added, “as far back as 2700 B.C.! In fact words such as tea, ‘chai’ and ‘chini’ are from Chinese. Tea came to Europe only in the sixteenth century and was drunk more as medicine than as beverage.” The train clattered into Mariani junction. The boys collected their luggage and pushed their way to the crowded platform.

Q. Which word in the extract means ‘a drink’?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 21
Clattered means smashed, Junction means joint or intersection, Legend means famous story or person and Beverage means something that can be drunk.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 22

Direction: "Our elders are often heard reminiscing nostalgically about those good old Portuguese days, the Portuguese and their famous loaves of bread. Those eaters might have vanished but the makers are still there. We still have amongst us the mixers, the moulders and those who bake the loaves. Those age-old, time-tested furnaces still exist. The fire in these furnaces has not yet been extinguished. The thud and jingle of traditional baker's bamboo, heralding his arrival in the morning, can still be heard in some places. "

Q. Pick the idiom that brings out the same meaning of 'reminiscing' as used in the passage.

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 22
Reminiscing, recalling or recollecting old thoughts or memories.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 23

Direction: "Our elders are often heard reminiscing nostalgically about those good old Portuguese days, the Portuguese and their famous loaves of bread. Those eaters might have vanished but the makers are still there. We still have amongst us the mixers, the moulders and those who bake the loaves. Those age-old, time-tested furnaces still exist. The fire in these furnaces has not yet been extinguished. The thud and jingle of traditional baker's bamboo, heralding his arrival in the morning, can still be heard in some places. "

Q. 'Those eaters might have vanished but the makers are still there'. Pick the option that expresses the tone of the narrator.

(1) Elated

(2) Morose

(3) Nostalgic

(4) Hopeful

(5) Sarcastic

(6) Critical

(7) Celebratory

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 23
The narrator is feeling sentimental and yearning (nostalgic) and optimistic and positive (hopeful).
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 24

Direction: "Our elders are often heard reminiscing nostalgically about those good old Portuguese days, the Portuguese and their famous loaves of bread. Those eaters might have vanished but the makers are still there. We still have amongst us the mixers, the moulders and those who bake the loaves. Those age-old, time-tested furnaces still exist. The fire in these furnaces has not yet been extinguished. The thud and jingle of traditional baker's bamboo, heralding his arrival in the morning, can still be heard in some places. "

Q. The 'fire in the furnaces has not yet been extinguished' implies that :

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 24
The fire in the furnaces has not yet been extinguished here refers to that they are still in use at present. It does not mean replacement of fire or strength of furnaces or duration for which furnaces keep burning.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 25

Direction: "Our elders are often heard reminiscing nostalgically about those good old Portuguese days, the Portuguese and their famous loaves of bread. Those eaters might have vanished but the makers are still there. We still have amongst us the mixers, the moulders and those who bake the loaves. Those age-old, time-tested furnaces still exist. The fire in these furnaces has not yet been extinguished. The thud and jingle of traditional baker's bamboo, heralding his arrival in the morning, can still be heard in some places. "

Q. Why do you think the baker came in with 'a thud and a jingle'?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 25
He wanted to attract attention of the people towards the goods which he had brought with himself for selling.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 26

Direction: The baker or bread-seller of those days had a peculiar dress known as the kabai. It was a single piece long frock reaching down to the knees. In our childhood, we saw bakers wearing shirt and trousers which were shorter than full-length ones and longer than half pants. Even today, anyone who wears a half pant which reaches just below the knees invites the comment that he is dressed like a pader!

Q. Choose the answer that lists the correct option about the recording of the baker’s monthly accounts.

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 26

Baker used to write the accounts on a wall. He did not merely keep it in mind or write it on paper or hand.

Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 27

Direction: The baker or bread-seller of those days had a peculiar dress known as the kabai. It was a single piece long frock reaching down to the knees. In our childhood, we saw bakers wearing shirt and trousers which were shorter than full-length ones and longer than half pants. Even today, anyone who wears a half pant which reaches just below the knees invites the comment that he is dressed like a pader!

Q. The statement that is TRUE about payment collection, according to the passage is:

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 27
The baker had to keep an account of purchases made by everyone and he was paid for his services at the end of the month.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 28

Direction: The baker or bread-seller of those days had a peculiar dress known as the kabai. It was a single piece long frock reaching down to the knees. In our childhood, we saw bakers wearing shirt and trousers which were shorter than full-length ones and longer than half pants. Even today, anyone who wears a half pant which reaches just below the knees invites the comment that he is dressed like a pader!

Q. When the writer says, ‘Baking was indeed a profitable profession in the old days’, he means that:

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 28
This means that in the past, the bakers could earn more profits and now-a-days, baking is not as profitable or gainful.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 29

Direction: The baker or bread-seller of those days had a peculiar dress known as the kabai. It was a single piece long frock reaching down to the knees. In our childhood, we saw bakers wearing shirt and trousers which were shorter than full-length ones and longer than half pants. Even today, anyone who wears a half pant which reaches just below the knees invites the comment that he is dressed like a pader!

Q. The extract uses the phrase, ‘invites (the) comments’. Which of the following expressions is INCORRECT with respect to the word ‘invites’?

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 29
The guests, the troubles and the applications can be invited. Prayers are not invited, they are offered.
Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 30

Direction: The baker or bread-seller of those days had a peculiar dress known as the kabai. It was a single piece long frock reaching down to the knees. In our childhood, we saw bakers wearing shirt and trousers which were shorter than full-length ones and longer than half pants. Even today, anyone who wears a half pant which reaches just below the knees invites the comment that he is dressed like a pader!

Q. The kabai was a ‘peculiar’ outfit as it was:

Detailed Solution for Extract Based Questions Test: Glimpses of India - Question 30
The kabai was not a dress in the real sense, but resembled a special or peculiar type of attire which can be used as a dress.
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