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Curriculum-aligned learning paths for students in Classes 6-12.

CBSE
Class 11
English
Woven Words
Felling of the Banyan Tree
Question Bank

Question Bank - Felling of the...

Practice Hub

Question Bank: Felling of the Banyan Tree

The chapter discusses the emotional impact of cutting down a significant banyan tree and highlights themes of loss and the relationship between humans and nature.

Structured practice

Question Bank - Felling of the Banyan Tree

Q1.

What does the poet imply when he refers to trees as 'sacred'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050538
View explanation
Q2.

Which of the following lines expresses the poet's horror towards the destruction of the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050539
View explanation
Q3.

What do the 'rings of two hundred years' signify in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050540
View explanation
Q4.

Why does the poet describe the activity of felling the banyan tree as a 'massacre'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050541
View explanation
Q5.

What does the contrast between 'Baroda' and 'Bombay' signify in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050542
View explanation
Q6.

What might the term 'raw mythology' refer to in the context of the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050543
View explanation
Q7.

How does the poet feel about the felling of the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050544
View explanation
Q8.

What action followed the cutting of the tree's branches?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050545
View explanation
Q9.

What literary technique is used in the phrase 'whose roots lay deeper than all our lives'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050546
View explanation
Q10.

The description of the banyan tree is mainly characterized by which of the following?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050547
View explanation
Q11.

What was the fate of the surrounding houses in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050548
View explanation
Q12.

Which emotion is NOT conveyed by the poet regarding the felling of the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050549
View explanation
Q13.

How is the act of felling the banyan tree framed in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050550
View explanation
Q14.

What does the poet seem to lament about the future in relation to the urban environment?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050551
View explanation
Q15.

What does the poet's grandmother imply about trees?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050552
View explanation
Q16.

Which tree stood out as a significant symbol in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050553
View explanation
Q17.

How does the poet describe the act of cutting down the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050554
View explanation
Q18.

What is implied by the phrase 'roots lay deeper than our lives'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050555
View explanation
Q19.

What emotions are expressed by the poet while observing the cutting of the tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050556
View explanation
Q20.

What does the trunk’s 'circumference of fifty feet' suggest about the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050557
View explanation
Q21.

What effect did the felling of the tree have on local wildlife?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050558
View explanation
Q22.

Why does the poet use the term 'raw mythology'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050559
View explanation
Q23.

What does the poet imply about urban spaces like Bombay in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050560
View explanation
Q24.

What is the primary theme of the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050561
View explanation
Q25.

Which literary device is predominantly used in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050562
View explanation
Q26.

What does the act of felling trees symbolize in a broader context?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050563
View explanation
Q27.

What role do trees play in the community described in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050564
View explanation
Q28.

How does the poet's father represent a divergence in attitudes towards nature?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050565
View explanation
Q29.

What imagery does the poet use to describe the felling of the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050566
View explanation
Q30.

How does the phrase 'seethes in one's dreams' relate to the theme of memory?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050567
View explanation
Q31.

What does the poet's grandmother believe about trees?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050582
View explanation
Q32.

What was the height of the banyan tree compared to the house?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050583
View explanation
Q33.

What does the term 'scraggy' refer to in the context of the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050584
View explanation
Q34.

How many men were involved in chopping down the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050585
View explanation
Q35.

What does the poet imply by stating 'the great tree revealed its rings of two hundred years'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050586
View explanation
Q36.

Which emotion does the poet primarily express towards the felling of the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050587
View explanation
Q37.

What contemporary concern does the poem echo?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050588
View explanation
Q38.

Why is the banyan tree described as 'standing like a problem'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050589
View explanation
Q39.

What do the 'aerial roots' of the banyan tree symbolize?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050590
View explanation
Q40.

Which line conveys a sense of inevitability in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050591
View explanation
Q41.

What does the phrase 'grows and seethes in one’s dreams' imply about the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050592
View explanation
Q42.

What does the poet mean by 'raw mythology' in the context of the tree's felling?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050593
View explanation
Q43.

In what mood does the poet describe the act of the banyan tree's destruction?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050594
View explanation
Q44.

What aspect of human behavior is reflected in the line 'whose roots lay deeper than our lives'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050595
View explanation
Q45.

What does the term 'scraggy' refer to in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050596
View explanation
Q46.

How does the poem portray the idea of nature's sacredness?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050597
View explanation
Q47.

What emotion does the speaker express towards the felling of the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050598
View explanation
Q48.

What is the significance of the banyan tree's size?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050599
View explanation
Q49.

Which of the following best describes the father's attitude towards the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050600
View explanation
Q50.

What do the 'rings of two hundred years' reveal?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050601
View explanation
Q51.

Why does the speaker describe the process of felling as 'slaughter'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050602
View explanation
Q52.

What theme does the poem primarily explore?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050603
View explanation
Q53.

What do the 'aerial roots' symbolize in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050604
View explanation
Q54.

How does the poem depict the relationship between nature and urbanization?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050605
View explanation
Q55.

What does the use of 'mythology' imply in the context of the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050606
View explanation
Q56.

What does the phrase 'grows and seethes in one’s dreams' suggest?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050607
View explanation
Q57.

In what way does the felling of the tree reflect human behavior?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050608
View explanation
Q58.

What larger societal issue is hinted at through the act of deforestation in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050609
View explanation
Q59.

How does the poem suggest a connection between past and present?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050610
View explanation
Q60.

What does the term 'massacred' imply about the act of felling?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050611
View explanation
Q61.

What does the term 'scraggy' most closely mean in the context of the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050612
View explanation
Q62.

How does the poet express his attitude towards the felling of trees?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050613
View explanation
Q63.

What significance do the roots of the banyan tree hold in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050614
View explanation
Q64.

What does the line 'whose roots lay deeper than our lives' imply about human existence?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050615
View explanation
Q65.

Which contemporary concern is predominantly echoed in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050616
View explanation
Q66.

How does the phrase 'grows and seethes in one’s dreams' contribute to the overall meaning of the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050617
View explanation
Q67.

What does the reference to 'raw mythology' signify in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050618
View explanation
Q68.

What emotional response does the felling of the banyan tree evoke in the poet?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050619
View explanation
Q69.

In the poem, what role does the grandmother’s saying play?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050620
View explanation
Q70.

Which literary device is predominantly used when describing the banyan tree's roots?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050621
View explanation
Q71.

What does the poet imply with the line 'trees are sacred my grandmother used to say'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050622
View explanation
Q72.

Why do the poet’s dreams about the banyan tree matter?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050623
View explanation
Q73.

What might the felling of the banyan tree represent on a larger scale?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050624
View explanation
Q74.

What imagery does the poet utilize to describe the tree's roots?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050625
View explanation
Q75.

What does the phrase 'trees are sacred' suggest about the poet's values?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050626
View explanation
Q76.

What were the effects of cutting down the banyan tree as described in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050627
View explanation
Q77.

How does the poet depict the act of felling the banyan tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050628
View explanation
Q78.

What can be inferred from the line 'whose roots lay deeper than our lives'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050629
View explanation
Q79.

What emotional response does the poet express towards tree felling?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050630
View explanation
Q80.

Why does the poet refer to the tree's age as 'a raw mythology'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050631
View explanation
Q81.

What role does the father's action play in the felling of the tree?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050632
View explanation
Q82.

How does the poet's childhood experience influence his perspective on nature?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050633
View explanation
Q83.

What is the significance of describing the tree as 'three times as tall as our house'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050634
View explanation
Q84.

What does the term 'massacred' imply in the context of tree felling?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050635
View explanation
Q85.

What does the poet mean by stating 'Where there are no trees except the one that grows in dreams'?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050636
View explanation
Q86.

In what way does the act of tree felling serve as a metaphor in the poem?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050637
View explanation
Q87.

What effect does the imagery of 'aerial roots' have on the poem's theme?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050638
View explanation
Q88.

How does the poet's use of the word 'seethes' contribute to the poem's meaning?

Single Answer MCQ
Q-00050639
View explanation
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