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? Section A

The document outlines key literary components and common topics across various texts, including poems, stories, and essays, focusing on themes like resilience, domestic violence, identity, and social class. It also covers essential communication skills such as listening, speaking, and writing, along with important grammar topics. Additionally, it highlights frequently asked questions related to these subjects.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views2 pages

? Section A

The document outlines key literary components and common topics across various texts, including poems, stories, and essays, focusing on themes like resilience, domestic violence, identity, and social class. It also covers essential communication skills such as listening, speaking, and writing, along with important grammar topics. Additionally, it highlights frequently asked questions related to these subjects.

Uploaded by

eimrglck
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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📘 SECTION A: Literary Component (Common Topics Repeated in All

PDFs)

1. Poem: "If" by Rudyard Kipling

 What is the central message of the poem "If"?


 Qualities of an ideal/resilient human being according to Kipling.
 Structure, values, and moral teachings in the poem.

2. Poem: "Another Woman" by Imtiaz Dharker

 Theme of domestic violence, dowry, and women's suffering.


 Economic struggle and emotional pain of the woman.

3. Story: "Laburnum for My Head" by Temsula Ao

 Symbolism of the laburnum tree.


 Identity, cultural heritage, and narrative style.

4. Story: "The Doll’s House" by Katherine Mansfield

 Social class distinctions and treatment of the Kelveys.


 Symbolism of the doll's house.

5. Essay: "How It Feels to Be Colored Me" by Zora Neale Hurston

 Hurston's view of racial identity, confidence, and self-acceptance.

6. Essay: "How I Became a Public Speaker" by G.B. Shaw

 Shaw’s transformation from nervous to confident speaker.

📙 SECTION B: Workbook, Grammar, and Communication (Common


Questions)

1. Listening Skills

 Difference between active vs passive listening.


 Non-verbal cues like nodding, eye contact.

2. Speaking Skills

 Giving directions clearly.


 Asking for and giving information.
3. Writing

 Diary writing (First day at college / emotional experience).


 Refutation paragraph (arguing against a statement).

4. Grammar Topics

These are repeated in all PDFs and considered 90–100% sure topics:

 Tenses
 Direct–Indirect Speech
 Active–Passive Voice
 Homonyms/Homophones/One-word Substitutes
 Prefix/Suffix/Word Formation/Antonyms/Synonyms
 Scientific Vocabulary/Jargon

✅ Top Repeated Questions Summary

Category Repeated Across All PDFs


“If” by Kipling – Central Message & Ideal Qualities ✅
“Another Woman” – Suffering & Dowry ✅
“Laburnum for My Head” – Symbolism ✅
“The Doll’s House” – Class Distinctions ✅
“How it Feels to be Colored Me” – Identity ✅
“How I Became a Public Speaker” – Transformation ✅
Diary Writing & Refutation ✅
Grammar Topics (Tense, Speech, etc.) ✅
Active/Passive Listening, Non-verbal cues ✅

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