7th Class English(jasmine) - Chapter-5 A Funny Man All Question With Answer
↓ Question & Answer ↓
1. The poet says that she had never heard such an amusing song.
Answer:
True (Stanza 5: “You never heard in all your life such a funny feeling sound”)
2. The funny man was quite ill- mannered.
Answer:
False (Stanza 2: “His manners were polite”)
3. The funny man wore two hats on his feet.
Answer:
True (Stanza 6: “why do you wear two hats upon your feet?”)
4. The funny man hopped on his head to reach home.
Answer:
True (Stanza 6: “hopped home on his head”)
5. The funny man gave a rose to the poet.
Answer:
False (Stanza 3: “He offered a currant bun, not a rose”)
6. The funny man smiled at the poet.
Answer:
True (Stanza 2: “He raised the shoe and smiled at me”)
1. a small seedless raisin – C_R _ _ _T
2. moved unsteadily – S _ _ GG _ _ _ D
Answer:
1. CURRANT
2. STAGGERED
1. The tone of the poem is ___________ because ___________.
2. The rhyme scheme of the poem is ___________; and it gives a ___________ quality to the poem.
3. The poet has frequently repeated the word ‘funny’ in order to ___________
Answer:
1. The tone of the poem is light-hearted/ humorous because the man’s absurd actions create comedy.
2. The rhyme scheme of the poem is AABB; and it gives a musical /playful quality to the poem.
3. The poet has frequently repeated the word ‘funny’ in order to emphasise the man’s ridiculous, silly behaviour.
4. Find the correct option given below
Who moved back in an unusual way against the wall?
a) the funny kind man
b) the poet's friend
c) the poet himself
Answer:
a) the funny kind man
Answer:
Several real-world examples mirror the funny man’s behaviour:
1. Circus clowns, who wear exaggerated costumes and do silly performances.
2. Street performers who juggle unusual objects or do balancing acts.
3. Comedians who use absurd props and illogical actions in their routines
4. Children’s entertainers who wear clothes backwards or shoes on hands for laughs.
5. Performance artists who create surreal, nonsensical acts to surprise audiences.
6. Minie artists who pretend invisible objects are real in humorous ways.
All these examples involve playful rule-breaking and unexpected behaviour designed to create laughter and amusement, just like the funny man in the poem.