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Two Stories About Flying

Question
CBSEENEN10000530

What did the young seagull do when he was hungry?

Solution

The young seagull wanted attention of his parents. He stepped slowly out to the brink of the ledge, and stood on one leg with the other leg hidden under his wing. He pretended to be falling asleep so that they take notice of him.

Some More Questions From Two Stories About Flying Chapter

Q1. Read the following extract and answer the questions given below:

The young seagull was alone on his ledge. His two brothers and his sister had already flown away the day before. He had been afraid to fly with them. Somehow when he had taken a little run forward to the brink of the ledge and attempted to flap his wings he became afraid. The great expanse of sea stretched down beneath, and it was such a long way down — miles down. He felt certain that his wings would never support him; so he bent his head and ran away back to the little hole under the ledge where he slept at night.

  1. Who had already flown away the day before?
  2. Who had become afraid and why?
  3. Find the word from the text that means 'sure'.
  4. What did he do when he thought that his wings would never support him?



Q2. Read the following extract and answer the questions given below:

Even when each of his brothers and his little sister, whose wings were far shorter than his own, ran to the brink, flapped their wings, and flew away, he failed to muster up courage to take that plunge which appeared to him so desperate. His father and mother had come around calling to him shrilly, upbraiding him, threatening to let him starve on his ledge unless he flew away. But for the life of him he could not move.
  1. Who is 'he' in the passage?
  2. In what ways the seagull's siblings were different from him?
  3. Why did he fail to muster up courage to take the plunge?
  4. How did his parents react?
  5. Find the word in the text that means ' desperate'.

Q3. Read the following extract and answer the questions given below :

The day before, all day long, he had watched his parents flying about with his brothers and sister, perfecting them in the art of flight, teaching them how to skim the waves and how to dive for fish. He had, in fact, seen his older brother catch his first herring and devour it, standing on a rock, while his parents circled around raising a proud cackle.

  1. What did he watch all day long?
  2. What did his parents teach his brothers and sisters?
  3. Find the word in the tyext that means 'surround'.

Q4. Read the following extract and answer the questions given below :

“Ga, ga, ga,” he cried begging her to bring him some food. “Gaw-col-ah,” she screamed back derisively. But he kept calling plaintively, and after a minute or so he uttered a joyful scream. His mother had picked up a piece of the fish and was flying across to him with it.

  1. Who cries, “Ga, ga, ga,”? Why?
  2. What made him utter a joyful scream?
  3. Find the word in the text that means 'ridiculously'.

Why was the young seagull alone on his ledge?

What was the young seagull afraid of?

Why was the young seagull afraid of flying?

How was the young seagull different from his brothers and sister?

What did the seagull do when his brothers and sister flapped their wings and flew away?

How did the young seagull's father and mother react on his fear of flying?