The Hundred Dresses I (5. The Hundred Dresses - I) CBSE class 10 English - First Flight Chapter 5. The Hundred Dresses - I summary with detailed explanation of the lesson The Hundred Dresses I along with meanings of difficult words. Given here is the complete explanation of the lesson, along with summary, explanation and questions and answers of each topic of lesson 5. The Hundred Dresses - I.
Thinking About Language
II. The Narrative Voice
This story is in the 'third person' that is, the narrator is not a participant in the story. But the narrator often seems to tell the story from the point of view of one of the characteristics in the story. For example, look at the italicised words in theis sentence
Thank goodness, she did not live up on Boggins Heights or have a funny name.
Whose thoughts do the words 'Thank goodness' express? Maddie's, who is grateful that although she is poor, she is yet not as poor as Wanda, or as 'different'. (So she does not get teased, she is thankful about that.)
1. Here are two other sentences from the story. Can you say whose point of view the italicised words express?
(i) But on Wednesday, Peggy and Maddie, who sat down front with other children who got good marks and who didn’t track in a whole lot of mud, did notice that Wanda wasn’t there.
(ii) Wands Petronski. Most of the children in Room Thirteen didn’t have names like that. They had names easy to say, like Thomas, Smith or Allen.
2. Can you find other such sentences in the story? You can do this after you read the second part of the story as well.
Oral Comprehension Check [Page-65]
Oral Comprehension Check [Page-67]
Oral Comprehension Check [Page-70]
1. Why didn’t Maddie ask Peggie to stop teasing Wanda? What was she afraid of? |
2. Who did Maddie think would win the drawing contest? Why? |
3. Who won the drawing contest? What had the winner drawn? |
Thinking About The Text
Thinking About Language