- Honours 1st Year.
- Department of English.
- Subject: Reading Skills.
- Suggestions (Part – A, Part – B, Part - C) With Answer.
- উত্তরসহ পাবেন নিচের পিডিএফ ফাইলে.

- Sonnet - 18; (V.V.I)
- The Good Morrow; (V.V.I)
- Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard ; (V.V.I)
- I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud; (V.V.I)
- To Autumn; (V.V.I)
- To Daffodils; (V.I)
- How Do I Love Thee?; (V.V.I)
- Because I Could Not Stop for Death; (V.I)
- The Piano; (V.I)
- Where the Mind is Without Fear?; (V.V.I)
- Pike; (V.I)
- Delight in Disorder;
- Aunt Jennifer's Tigers;
- When You are Old;
- No Second Troy;
- Ozymandias;
- Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening;
- To His Coy Mistress;
- Dover Beach;
- She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways.
- London - 1802.
At a scientific meeting where he described what happened, Professor Röntgen called this new ray "the Unknown", the X-ray. Doctors quickly saw how this could be used, and soon there were X-ray machines in all the big hospitals. At first the doctors did not understand how powerful the rays were and many of them were injured, losing a finger or an arm through exposure to X-rays when they were using the machines. The most obvious use for this discovery was to enable doctors and surgeons to see exactly how a bone was fractured. Other uses came later. It was found that these rays could be used to destroy cancer cells, just as they destroyed the healthy cells of the doctors who first used the machines. Methods were found later by which ulcers in the stomach could be located, and the lungs could be X-rayed to show if there was any tuberculosis present. "Mass X-ray" units are sent round to factories and detect early signs of trouble in the lungs. Unfortunately Professor Röntgen, whose discovery did so much for medical science, did not die an honoured man. Malicious people spread the story that he had stolen his discovery from a laboratory assistant who worked for him. He died, poor and neglected in 1923. (From Britain in the Modern World, The Twentieth Century by EN Nash and AM Newth)
1. Answer any ten questions from the following: 1x10-10
(b) What was he doing on 8 November 19857
(d) What objects did he place between the lamp and the paper?
(e) Did the Professor die with honour?
(f) penetrate
(g) destroy
(h) surprised
Find suitable words to complete the sentences:
(j) She held up her hand for Change the following sentences as directed:
(k) When the plate was developed, there was a picture of bones of her hand. (Compound)
(l) He asked her wife to hold her hand between the lamp and a photographic plate. (Interrogative)
(m) Malicious people spread the story. (Passive)
Answer:
(a) Professor Rontgen worked at the University of Wurzburg in Germany.
(c) When he switched on the current, he saw little dancing lights on the table.
(d) Between the lamp and the paper, he placed variety of objects like a book, a pack of cards, a piece of wood and a doorkey.
(g) destroy = demolish: The warriors destroyed their enemies.
(i) X-ray machines are used in all big hospitals.
(k) The plate was developed and there was a picture of bones of her hand.
(m) The story was spread by the malicious people.
Read the given passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:
Is it possible to persuade mankind to live without war? War is an ancient institution which has existed for at least six thousand years. It was always wicked and usually foolish, but in the past the human race managed to live with it. Modern ingenuity has changed this. Either Man will abolish war, or war will abolish Man. For the present, it is nuclear weapons that cause the gravest danger, but bacteriological or chemical weapons may, before long, offer an even greater threat. If we succeed in abolishing nuclear weapons, our work will not be done. It will never be done until we have succeeded in abolishing war. To do this, we need to persuade mankind to look upon international questions in a new way, not as contests of force, in which the victory goes to the side which is most skilful in massacre, but by arbitration in accordance with agreed principles of law. It is not easy to change age-old mental habits, but this is what
must be attempted. There are those who say that the adoption of this or that ideology would prevent war. I believe this to be a profound error. All ideologies are based upon dogmatic assertions which are, at best, doubtful, and at worst, totally false. Their adherents believe in the so fanatically that they are willing to go to war in support of them. The movement of world opinion during the past two years has been very largely such as we can welcome. It has become commonplace that nuclear war must be avoided. Of course very difficult problems remain in the international sphere, but the spirit i which they are being approached is a better one than it was some years ago. It has begun to be thought, even by the powerful men who decide whether we shall live or die, that negotiations should reach agreements even if both sides do not find these agreements wholly satisfactory. It has begun to be understood that the important conflic nowadays is not between East and West, but between Man and the H-bomb.
(From Science and Religion by Bertrand Russell)
1. Answer any ten questions from the following: 1x10-10
(a) How long has war existed?
(c) How can war be stopped?
(d) What is the problem of ideologies? talang at
Write down meaning of the following words in English and make your own sentences with them:
(f) ingenuity
(g) adherent
(h) conflict
Find suitable words to complete the sentences:
(j) Chemicals weapons can be more dangerous---------- nuclear weapons.
Change the following sentences as directed:
(c) War can be stopped through arbitration in accordance with agreed principles of law.
(d) Ideologies are based upon dogmatic assertions which are doubtful and false.
(e) The important conflict nowadays is the conflict between Man and H-bomb.
(h) conflict clash: There is a fierce conflict between the two families.
(j) Chemicals weapons can be more dangerous than nuclear weapons.
(l) I believe that it is a profound error.
(m) We must avoid nuclear war.
Thesuspicion and it is as yet only a suspicion, though a growing one that smoking has something to do with cancer of the lung rests on several kinds of evidence.
First, though death rates from most kinds of cancer have fallen in the past twenty years or so, deaths from cancer of the lung have apparently increased, and increased quite alarmingly, particularly in men, in the same period. I say apparently because some of the re ported increase may be due to better diagnosis some of it, but in most people's opinion there has been a considerable real increase.
This increase is said to have coincided with and roughly paralleled an increased consumption of cigarettes which, of course, proves nothing in itself. The increase has probably also coincided with an increased use of refrigerators and consumption of ice cream. A further step in the argument is that in Iceland, where there has until recently been little cigarette smoking, the same increase in cancer of the lung has not occurred.
A year or two ago some workers in America and in this country started enquiring into the smoking habits of a large number of people suffering from cancer of the lung, and a large number of other people as nearly as possible exactly similar in every respect except that they were suffering from
something else. Both the American and the English workers found the same thing. They found that a history of heavy smoking-twenty or more cigarettes a day over twenty years was much commoner in the group suffering from cancer of the lung than in the group suffering from other illnesses.
That is the position. There is a strong suspicion that heavy cigarette smoking over a long period does increase your chances of getting this illness. It does not, of course, mean that anyone neces sarily will get it do not have sleepless nights thinking because you have smoked a few or even a great number of cigarettes in your time, you are bound to get this illness, because that certainly is not true.
On July 20, 1969, Apollo 11's lunar landing module Eagle touched down on the moon's surface. Neil Armstrong became the first human to walk on the moon. The Americans had finally achieved a major victory in the Space Race. After 5 more lunar landings rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union ended. In the 1970s, the Americans and the Soviets started working together on space missions.
(h) What happened during Apollo 13's mission?
"wantonness"=a
"thrown"=b
"distraction"=b
"there"=c
"stomacher"=c
"thereby"=d
"confusedly"=d
"note"=e
"petticoat"=e
"tie"=f
"civility"=f
"art"=g
"part"=g
Then,the last word of the 3rd line is "thrown" and last word of the 4th line is "distraction".Those words have same sound. So we will mark it " b".
Again,the last word of the 5th, 6th line's are "there" "stomacher".Both also same sound. So we can mark it "c".Then last word of the 7th line is " thereby" and the last word of the 8th is "confusedly" .These also have a same sound.So we can mark it "d". Further,last word of the 9th and 10th are same sound.So we can mark it "e".Again,last words of the 11th and 12th line's are " tie", "civility".
The tone of the poem is light and playful. In the poem, the poet finds beauty into disorder.The dress of his beloved is carelessly put on her shoulders.He describes is in this way that a lace is waywardly put on deep red stomacher.
Its a lyric poem because there are a lyrical quality into the whole poem.The main element of a lyric poem is impulsiveness stirred by a certain event.Here the poet finds pleasure into his beloved wearing dress.Though is was not wearing orderly but it looks very beautiful and attracts the poet's mind.The poet describes it by his own experience and feelings.So its a lyric poem.
*" Delight and Disorder".
Into a fine distraction ;
An erring lace,within here and there".
Kindles in clothes a wantonness.
A lawn about the shoulders thrown
Into a fire distraction";
And "Mighty" means his unlimited power.