MCQ Chapter 2.1 English Balbharati Class 7 Maharashtra Board MCQ For All Chapters – Balbharati English Class 7From a Railway Carriage 1. How does the poet describe the movement of the train?Slow and smoothSwift and energeticUneven and bumpyQuiet and peacefulQuestion 1 of 202. What is meant by "All through the meadows, the horses and cattle"?The train is running through a cityThe poet sees horses and cattle in the fieldsThe train is carrying animalsThe animals are moving along with the trainQuestion 2 of 203. What is the poetic form of From a Railway Carriage?SonnetFree verseRhymed coupletsLimerickQuestion 3 of 204. Why are the sights described as "gone for ever"?The train moves too fast for them to be seen againThe poet forgets what he sawThe train erases the landscapeThe sights are imaginaryQuestion 4 of 205. What kind of rhythm does the poem have?Slow and steadyFast and livelySad and melancholicIrregular and confusingQuestion 5 of 206. What does "And there is the green for stringing the daisies" mean?A garden filled with flowersA place where children string daisy chainsA forest where daisies growA marketplace selling flowersQuestion 6 of 207. What happens to the cart in the poem?It stops by the railway trackIt runs away in the roadIt gets stuck in the mudIt is loaded onto the trainQuestion 7 of 208. What does "Lumping along with man and load" describe?The train’s movementA cart carrying a man and goodsA group of workersThe train driver’s journeyQuestion 8 of 209. How does the poem conclude?With the train stoppingWith the poet reaching his destinationWith sights disappearing quicklyWith passengers getting off the trainQuestion 9 of 2010. What is the tone of the poem?Excited and livelyGloomy and sadScary and darkMysterious and uncertainQuestion 10 of 2011. What does "Each a glimpse and gone for ever!" suggest about the train journey?The journey is slow and relaxingThe sights are seen briefly and disappear quicklyThe poet is not interested in the sightsThe train keeps stopping at every stationQuestion 11 of 2012. How does the poet create a sense of speed in the poem?By using long and detailed descriptionsBy using short, rhythmic lines and fast-paced wordsBy describing the train moving slowlyBy writing in a calm and peaceful toneQuestion 12 of 2013. What does the phrase "Bridges and houses, hedges and ditches" depict?Different obstacles the train facesVarious sights seen from the trainParts of the railway trackBuildings in a cityQuestion 13 of 2014. Which figure of speech is used in "faster than fairies, faster than witches"?SimileMetaphorPersonificationHyperboleQuestion 14 of 2015. What happens to the mill in the poem?It is abandonedIt is destroyedIt is seen briefly from the trainIt is the train’s destinationQuestion 15 of 2016. What effect do the repeated phrases “Here is...” and “And here...” create?They slow down the poem’s paceThey emphasize the continuous movement of the trainThey describe the poet’s emotionsThey highlight the poet’s thoughtsQuestion 16 of 2017. What does the poet suggest by mentioning "And here is a mill and there is a river"?The train is moving through a cityThe train is traveling through the countrysideThe train is stopping at different stationsThe poet is imagining the sceneryQuestion 17 of 2018. What does "charging along" mean in the poem?Moving at a slow paceMoving forward with great speed and forceStopping frequentlyMoving without directionQuestion 18 of 2019. What feeling does the poet convey through the poem?BoredomExcitement and admirationFear and nervousnessLonelinessQuestion 19 of 2020. What lesson can be drawn from From a Railway Carriage?Traveling is tiring and exhaustingNature and movement create a sense of joy and wonderTrains are the best mode of transportLong journeys are boringQuestion 20 of 20 Loading...
Leave a Reply