Class 07 English Chapter 03 HomeScikness Answer Key
Class 07 English Chapter 03 HomeScikness Answer Key
Learning outcomes
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
●● relate to the childhood trick played by the speaker.
●● relate how the author looks back at himself and the people with fondness and humour.
●● identify the narrative as a grown-up’s humorous take on a childhood incident.
●● analyse the speaker’s character and his level of confidence at different times.
●● identify the autobiographical elements in the story.
●● explain the importance of the supporting characters and their role in the development of the story.
●● identify adjective clauses and use them in sentences.
●● make sentences using adjective-noun collocations.
●● write semi-formal letters.
Pre-reading
●● Have you ever been to boarding schools or hostels, or know someone who has been to one?
●● How would you feel if you were in one? Why would you feel this way?
●● Do children enjoy playing pranks or some trick or other on people? Is this fun? Why?
●● Do you think you know what is best for you or do you take the advice of elders? Why?
●● What is an autobiography?
[Note: An autobiography is the true story of one’s own life. It is written in the first person and includes
important events in the author’s life. In an autobiography, the author remains the main character and
the narrative is related from the author’s perspective, expressing their own ideas or feelings about
happenings and the people who have played a role in the story of their life.]
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The conversations between the boy and the Point of View is restricted to that of the child
Nanny and Dr Dunbar bring alive the interaction narrator.
between the child and the two adults in authority
Theme: Stick it out!
who also serve as mentors. The episode with the
Nanny highlights the humour in the narrative. The
Post-reading
Discussion:
In what way did each of the characters help the speaker achieve his goal.
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Formal
Dear Dr Dunbar,
I write to thank you sir, for your kind help and advice. I was trying to fool the Matron and the doctor
and have realised that I should not try such tricks again.
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Yours sincerely,
Roald Dahl
(Your name)
Semi-formal
Dear Dr Dunbar,
Hope you are keeping well.
I write to thank you for your help and advice. I realise that it was wrong to hoodwink the Matron and
doctor here. I promise never to try such tricks again.
Thank you very much for helping me stay at home for three days. I told Mother why I had pretended
to be ill and how you helped me get over my homesickness. She asked me never to resort to pretence,
ever.
I can’t thank you enough for your advice on handling painful situations bravely. I know now that I can
face any challenge that crosses my path.
It’s fun being back in school! And I find I am quite happy making friends and settling down. I guess you
have cured me of my homesickness once and for all.
Yours sincerely
Roald
(Your name)
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HOMESICKNESSVOCABULARY
Match the words in the columns to form adjective noun-collocations. Make sentences with the
collocations in the space given.
1. regular a. voyage
2. flat b. joy
3. private c. exercise
4. immense d. life
5. maiden e. tyre
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You have just returned from Delhi, where you stayed with a friend’s uncle for a few days.
Write a letter, thanking him for having you at his place and for taking you around.
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HOMESICKNESS
Answer Key to the grammar worksheet
Free response
HOMESICKNESS
Answers:
a. Dr Dunbar is being talked about in the sentence.
b. He suspected that the speaker was putting up an act of suffering from appendicitis.
c. He wanted to confirm with the speaker whether his suspicion was right and asked him if he was
faking it.
d. The speaker could not deny it and asked the doctor how he came to know that he was faking it.
2. Answer in brief.
a. How did the speaker’s sister get her appendicitis removed?
The speaker’s sister did not go to any hospital and got operated under bright lights with gowned
nurses standing around. The surgery was done at home by the local doctor and his anesthetist.
The doctor arrived with a bag of instruments and operated upon her on the most convenient
table available at home.
b. Why was the speaker’s mother summoned by the headmaster?
The speaker convinced the Matron and the resident doctor into believing that he was suffering
from appendicitis. When they examined him, he yelled whenever they touched the spot where
the speaker felt the appendix would be. Both the doctor and the Matron must have felt it safer to
send the speaker home rather than risk an appendectomy at school.
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HOMESICKNESS
1. In paras 1, 3 and 4, the writer makes it sound as if he is speaking directly to the reader by addressing
the reader directly as ‘you’ (‘You don’t know...’, ‘You will probably think...’, ‘You might...’). He uses
this style of writing to make it feel as if he is telling the reader an anecdote; as if he is chatting or
conversing with the reader personally.
2. In the second part of para 9 it is the voice of a grown-up talking about the past. The second part says
‘which was her stock reply whenever she did not know the answer’. This is not how the writer, as a
child, felt about his Nanny. He came to understand this only when he grew up.
3. No, the writer does not admit directly that in his childhood the Matron was a scary figure.
He expresses it with the single word ‘even’ (‘I did not even feel frightened...’). It tells us that normally,
he did feel frightened of the Matron, and was proud to be unafraid of her on this occasion.
4. The description that the writer exaggerates in para 25 is ‘I let out a cry that rattled the windowpanes.’
This is an exaggeration as he cannot possibly have cried so loudly. He exaggerates this description
because he is trying to tell us how loud he sounded to himself, how loud he tried to cry and to add to
the comic effect.
5. The words used by the writer in paras 35-41 to describe how he was speaking and acting are ‘blurted
out’, ‘kept silent’, ‘nodded miserably’ and ‘asked him, trembling’. These words tell us that he was
alarmed that Dr Dunbar had seen through his act; he was nervous about how Dr Dunbar would react;
and that he wanted to go home.
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Words in Use
A. 2. f, iv 3. b, vi 4. c, iii 5. a, ii 6. e, i
B. Sample answers:
2. He had a bright idea of faking appendicitis.
3. He had paid close attention to the symptoms when his sister had appendicitis.
4. It was common knowledge that Matron was a trained nurse.
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Writing
Sample answer:
Dear Dr Dunbar,
I write to thank you for helping me that day in Cardiff. I may have got into great trouble with the school if
they had found out that I was faking my illness.
Thank you also, for explaining to me why I need to be braver and more patient. I will try to keep in mind
everything you said. I understand that I cannot do something like that again.
Now that I am back in school, I do not find it so awful. Since I could be with my mother for a few days,
I feel less homesick. I write to her regularly. I told her what had really happened. I am beginning to take
part in the school games and I have also made a few friends. I hope to see you when I go home in the
holidays.
Yours sincerely,
Roald
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