English, asked by chauhanakshat301, 3 months ago

please help me out
David Moss lived with his family in the last house in Jubliee Row. Their house was like all the

others, but their garden was something quite out of the ordinary; it ran straight back for the first twenty

yards, like all the other gardens; then, when the others stopped, this took a sudden turn to the right

and, in another minute, it reached an unexpected destination. When the other gardens ended in a

hedge, a fence, or a stretch of wire-netting, the Moss's garden was brought to a stop only by the softly

flowing waters of the River Say.

'No, Becky, no' said Mrs Moss. 'You must never play by the river alone. David only goes on to

the landing stage because he's older; if he falls in, he can swim.

The landing stage was over-grandly named, for nothing and nobody had ever landed there; it

had been made by Mr Moss only so that he could more easily fill his water can from the river.

Q1. How was one boundary of the Moss's garden different from those of their neighbours? (2)

Q2. What formed the end boundaries of the gardens?

Q3. Which words tell us that the River Say was not a turbulent, hurrying river?
Q4. Why wasn't David forbidden?

Q5. Why was the landing stage ‘over grandly named’?

Q6. Why had Mr. Moss built it?

Q7. Find words or phrases that mean:

(a) identical

(b) unlike the others

(c) ended​

Answers

Answered by jaiswalsandhya44
0

Answer:

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