Answer e by this paragraph
Answers
1. Caged behind the glass, the most famous dancer in the world can easily be missed in national museum, Delhi. The dancing girl of Mohenjo-daro is that rare artefact that even school children are familiar with. Our school textbooks also communicate the wealth of our 5,000-year heritage of art. You have to be alert to her existence there, amid terracotta animals to rediscover bronze image.
2. Most of us have seen her only photographs or sketches, therefore the impact of actually holding her is magnified a million times over. One discovered that the dancing girl has no feet. She is small, little a little over 10 cm tall-the length of human palm-but she surprises us with the power of great art-the ability to communicate across centuries.
3. A series of bangles- of shell or ivory or thin metal-clothe her left upper arm all the way down to her fingers. A necklace with three pendants bunched together and a few bangles above the elbow and wrist on the right hand display an almost modern art.
4. She speaks of the undaunted, ever hopeful human spirit. She reminds us that it is important to visit museums in our country to experience the impact that a work of art leaves on our senses, to find among all the riches one particular vision of beauty that speaks to us alone.
(a) The dancing girl belongs to
Answer :- Mohenjo-daro
(In paragraph 1, 3rd line)
(b) In the museum she's kept among
Answer :- Terracotta animals
(In the last line of paragraph 1)
(c) Which information is not given in the passage?
Answer :- She cannot be rediscovered as she's bronze
(In paragraph 1)
(d) 'Great Art' has power because
Answer :- it appeals to us despite a passage of time
(Last line in paragraph 2)
(e) The jewellery she wears
Answer :- Neither (i) nor (ii) is correct
(In paragraph 3)
(f) She reminds us
Answer :- Why museums in our country are exciting
(g) The synonym of the word "among" in paragraph 1 is amid.
(h)True
Answer:
1. Caged behind the glass, the most famous dancer in the world can easily be missed in national museum, Delhi. The dancing girl of Mohenjo-daro is that rare artefact that even school children are familiar with. Our school textbooks also communicate the wealth of our 5,000-year heritage of art. You have to be alert to her existence there, amid terracotta animals to rediscover bronze image.
2. Most of us have seen her only photographs or sketches, therefore the impact of actually holding her is magnified a million times over. One discovered that the dancing girl has no feet. She is small, little a little over 10 cm tall-the length of human palm-but she surprises us with the power of great art-the ability to communicate across centuries.
3. A series of bangles- of shell or ivory or thin metal-clothe her left upper arm all the way down to her fingers. A necklace with three pendants bunched together and a few bangles above the elbow and wrist on the right hand display an almost modern art.
4. She speaks of the undaunted, ever hopeful human spirit. She reminds us that it is important to visit museums in our country to experience the impact that a work of art leaves on our senses, to find among all the riches one particular vision of beauty that speaks to us alone.
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Answer:−
(a) The dancing girl belongs to
Answer :- Mohenjo-daro
(In paragraph 1, 3rd line)
(b) In the museum she's kept among
Answer :- Terracotta animals
(In the last line of paragraph 1)
(c) Which information is not given in the passage?
Answer :- She cannot be rediscovered as she's bronze
(In paragraph 1)
(d) 'Great Art' has power because
Answer :- it appeals to us despite a passage of time
(Last line in paragraph 2)
(e) The jewellery she wears
Answer :- Neither (i) nor (ii) is correct
(In paragraph 3)
(f) She reminds us
Answer :- Why museums in our country are exciting
(g) The synonym of the word "among" in paragraph 1 is amid.
(h)True