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questions & answers.
Q1.
Tick (√) the correct answer for the given statements.
- The poet has compared himself to a cloud to show
- he is full of feelings, like a rain-filled cloud.
- he is enjoying, imagining himself soaring up high as a cloud.
- he is all alone and feeling lonely like a cloud in the sky.
- When the poet says the daffodils are continuous as the stars, he means
- there are an endless number of daffodils in the valley.
- the daffodils are far away like the stars.
- a few daffodils are spread across the vast field.
- By stating that the daffodils outdid the waves in dancing, the poet means the daffodils
- responded to nature as well as the waves did.
- surpassed the waves in their happy dance.
- could not keep pace with the waves.
- The poet recalls the memory of the dancing daffodils, especially when he is
- very unhappy.
- in a thoughtful mood.
- in a very disturbed frame of mind.
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Answer:
S A M P L E
answer not shownQ2.
State whether the following sentences are true or false.
- The poet, while wandering, chanced to see orange daffodils.
- The poet felt he saw ten thousand daffodils at a glance.
- The poet felt he could not help but feel happy on seeing the daffodils.
- The poet recalls the daffodils, especially when he sinks into his favourite armchair.
- The poet, being a nature poet, experiences bliss amid nature.
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Answer:
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- false
- true
- true
- false
- true
Q3.
Where did the poet see the daffodils?
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The poet saw the daffodils in a valley beside the lake and beneath the trees.
Q4.
How does the poet describe the ten thousand daffodils dancing happily?
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The poet described the ten thousand daffodils as tossing their heads in a sprightly dance.
Q5.
What represents 'jocund company' to the poet?
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The host of golden daffodils that he saw in a valley beside the lake and beneath the trees while he was wandering alone represented to him as ‘jocund company’.






























































