Read and download CBSE Class 9 English Communicative Question Paper Set J designed as per the latest question paper pattern and Class 9 examination guidelines issued by CBSE, NCERT and KVS. The past year Question Papers for Class 9 English have been provided with solutions which will help students to assess their performance and find out topics in English Class 9 which they need to improve to get better marks in Class 9 exams. After solving these last year papers also refer to solved Sample Papers for Class 9 English available on our website to build strong understanding of the subject
English Question Paper Class 9
Students can refer to the below Class 9 English Question Paper designed to help students understand the pattern of questions that will be asked in Class 9 exams. Please download CBSE Class 9 English Communicative Question Paper Set J
English Class 9 Question Paper
CBSE English Communicative last year question papers for Class 9 CBSE exams for CBSE Students. Based on CBSE and CCE guidelines. The students should practice these Question Papers to gain perfection which will help him to get more marks in CBSE examination. The CBSE releases question papers every year. Some papers are released prior to the CBSE examinations so that students can do practice.Please refer to more CBSE Class IX question papers in other links.
Summative Assessment – I, 2011 - English Communicative - Class - IX - Maximum Marks: 90 - Time : 3 hours
Instructions:
The question paper is divided into four sections.
Section A: Reading 20 marks
Section B: Writing 25 marks
Section C: Grammar 20 marks
Section D: Literature 25 marks
Section A
(Reading – 20 Marks)
Q1. Read the following passage carefully: (10 marks)
1. India sells the largest number of branded drugs in the world, almost 60,000 in all. By volume India is ranked 4th and comprises 8 percent of the global pharma market. This scenario becomes scary given that spurious and substandard drugs are a thriving parallel industry in our country. “When manufacturers sell chalk as life – saving drugs, such criminals should be given the death sentence,” says Dr. P.K. Dave, President of National Academy of Medical Sciences, Delhi and former Director of AIIMS.
2. Self-medication with genuine drugs also has disastrous fallouts. “I‟ve lost count of how many patients come to us, when water crosses head level,” says Dr. Dave. While Dr. Simran Nundy, consultant gastrointestinal surgeon at Delhi‟s Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, observes : ”Patients come to me, after six months of taking antacids, to find they‟re not suffering from indigestion but cancer of the stomach or gastric tract.” Most medical experts say pill name - dropping is common. But besides superficial awareness patients know little about dosage, duration and more importantly, side-effects. In Calcutta, Dr. Krishnangshu Ray, head of Pharmacology at NRS Medical College and Hospital, agrees:” “There‟s a drug culture in our state, where people assume they know which drug to take. This is a dangerous habit, which accounts for at least 15 to 20 percent of complicated cases.”
3. Besides, no drug, not even an over the counter (OTC) medicine is totally safe. Aspirin on an empty stomach may lead to severe gastritis. Even paracetamol, considered the safest painkiller, when taken in high doses or for prolonged periods, can cause liver damage. Then there‟s carelessness. Dr. Gupta observes: “ People take cough suppressant for a cough with sputum, which in fact requires an expectorant. Or, they consume antibiotics without a doctor‟s prescription for viral fever, allergic cold, dry cough, flu or sore throat, which do not require any antibiotic.” Self - medication of antibacterial drugs can be dangerous. Frequent treatment with ciprofloxacin for undiagnosed diarrhoea is one of the most common reasons for emergence of typhoid germs that are resistant to this drug.
4. What makes us such willing pill-swallowers ? Dr. Wishvas Rane, Pune - based health activist, asserts : “ Most viral conditions are selflimiting, 80 percent get cured on their own, this pill-popping attitude is nurtured by pharmaceutical firms.” This is particularly true in our unique pharma-sales culture where pills are available without bills and bills can be obtained without buying pills. Dr. Ashish Sabherwal, Joint Secretary, Indian Medical Association in Delhi, points out: “Patients just want momentary relief and aren‟t willing to get to the root of the problem, so pills are eaten like peanuts.”
5. Another reason for spiralling self-treatment is that general practitioners or GPs, doctors who have shone the torch down our throats from our toothless babyhood to our ailing adulthood, are gradually vanishing.
6. In real life, we patients do not have a family friend and a philosopher - our GP who knew us by blood group, allergies, medical history and emotional upheavals. Hesitant about dashing off to intimidating ENT specialist when we have throat trouble, we just check with the chemist. That could be a dose for disaster.
1. Based on the reading of the passage answer the questions given below. Write the answers in your answer sheet. Remember to number the answers correctly :
(a) Why do people indulge in self-medication ?
(b) Why can self - medication have dangerous results ?
2. Fill in the given blanks with appropriate words from the passage :
No drug not even an (a) ..................... medicine is totally safe. Aspirin on an empty stomach may lead to severe (b) ................ Paracetamol when taken for prolonger periods and in high dosage can cause (c) ................ . Self-medication of antibacterial drugs can be (d) ................
3. Give words from the passage which mean the same as the following :..........................................
Refer to the attached file for CBSE Class IX English Communicative Summative Assessment 1 Question Paper for 2011 - 3
CBSE Class 9 English Communicative Question Paper Set J
We hope you liked the above provided CBSE Class 9 English Communicative Question Paper Set J. To get an understanding of the type of questions which were asked in previous year exams, it is important for Class 9 students to refer to CBSE Class 9 English Communicative Question Paper Set J that we have provided above. Students can download all the Question Papers for Class 9 English which were issued in the exams so that you can practise them and solve all types of questions which have been asked till now. By doing all CBSE Class 9 English Communicative Question Paper Set J PYP (previous year papers) you will understand the regular questions and MCQ questions for Class 9 English which are always asked and learn them so that you can get full marks in those questions. You can download CBSE Class 9 English Previous Year Question Papers and Class 9 English Sample Papers in PDF. You should attempt all the last year question paper for Class 9 and Class 9 English MCQ Test in examination conditions at home and then compare their answers with the solutions provided by our teachers.
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