1. Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow:
Su means number and Doku mean single. The game of Sudoku has many similarities with the game of life. Sudoku is a puzzle game designed for a single player, much like a crossword puzzle. The puzzle itself is nothing more than a grid of little boxes called “cells”. They are stacked nine high and nine wide, making 81 cells total.
The roots of the Sudoku puzzle are in Switzerland. Leonhard Euler created “carre Latin” in the 18th century which is similar to a Sudoku puzzle. The first real Sudoku was published in 1979 and was invented by Howard Gams, an American architect. The real world wide popularity started in Japan in 1986 after it was published and given the name Sudoku by Nikoli.
In life, too, you start with a given set of notions and then work from thereon. In Sudoku, you need to follow a set of rules to build up the grid, filling each row, column, and box with numbers ranging from one to nine, so much like in a life where you have to go on your way without hurting anyone else. Respect every number (person), and things would be fine.
While playing, you never think of the end (the result); you just keep working on the numbers and the final result (fruits of action) comes on its own. Extremely difficult puzzles may take hours. Similarly, to achieve desired results in life may take years. The game of Sudoku and the game of life are best played in calm but in a focused state.
Everything has to go together in a Sudoku grid: the rows, columns and squares. Exactly as in life. Your duties towards your family, teachers, society, and country all go on simultaneously. In Sudoku, the arrangement of the given numbers is symmetrical. This is instructive in life, on how to maintain steadfast faith, poise, and equanimity despite situations when everything turns topsy- turvy.
There is a subtle difference between the two as well. Make a mistake and you can erase it and begin all over again in Sudoku. Not so in life. You can learn a lesson through it, and avoid making the same mistake in the future.
(a) What is Sudoku?
(b) How has the writer compared the numbers in Sudoku to life?
(c) What is the similarity between Sudoku and Life?
(d) How do we achieve the desired result?
(e) What is meant by ’instructive ’ and ‘equanimity’? (Part 4)
Answers
(a)
Sudoku is a puzzle game designed for a single player, much like a crossword puzzle.
(b)
The writer has compared as that if make a mistake in numbering sudoku we can erase it but if make a mistake in life we can not correct it
(c)
as in Sudoku, we need to follow a set of rules to build up the grid, filling each row, column, and box with numbers ranging from one to nine, so much like in a life where we have to go on your way without hurting anyone else. Respect every number (person), and things would be fine.
(d)
We can achieve the desired result by hardwirking and not commiting the same mistakes again and again and also we should learn from the mistakes.
(e) instructive- useful & informative
equanimity- being calm espacially in a difficult situation
Answer:
same the answer given
Explanation:
in the a above below the passage