We’re Not Afraid to Die... If We Can All be Together
How did the narrator hurt himself on January 2?
Wavewalker was capsizing. Her masts had fallen. Huge waves struck the boat upright. The narrator grabbed the guard rails and sailed through the air into Wavewalker’s main boom Waves tossed him around the deck like a rag doll. His left ribs cracked and his mouth was filled with blood and broken teeth.
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Describe the shifts in the narration of the events as indicated in the three sections of the text. Give a subtitle to each section.
What difference did you notice between the reaction of the adults and the children when faced with danger?
How does the story suggest that optimism helps to endure “the direst stress”?
What lessons do we learn from such hazardous experiences when we are face-to-face with death?
Why do you think people undertake such adventurous expeditions in spite of the risks involved?
The following words used in the text as ship terminology are also commonly used in another sense. In what contexts would you use the other meaning?
knot |
stern |
boom |
hatch |
anchor |
The following three compound words end in-ship. What does each of them mean?
airship |
flagship |
lightship |
The following are the meanings listed in the dictionary against the phrase ‘take on’. In which meaning is it used in the third paragraph of the account:
take on sth: to begin to have a particular quality or appearance ; to assume sth
take sb on: to employ sb ; to engage sb
to accept sb as one’s opponent in a game, contest or conflict
take sb / sth on: to decide to do sth ; to allow sth/sb to enter e.g. a bus, plane or ship ; to take sth/sb on board
Given on the next page is a picture of a yacht. Label the parts of the yacht using the terms given in the box.
bow |
cabin |
rudder |
cockpit |
stern |
boom |
mainsail |
mast |
Here is some information downloaded from the Internet on lle Amsterdam. You can view images of the isle if you go online.
Location |
South Indian Ocean, between southernmost parts of Australia and South Africa |
Latitude and longitude |
37 92 S, 77 67 E |
Sovereignty |
France |
Political status notes |
Part of French Southern and Antarctic Lands |
Population |
35 |
Census notes |
Meteorological station staff |
Land area in square kilometres |
86 |
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