Dares Salaam to Nairobi By Ford Prefect Questions & Answers

Hi Everyone!! This article will share Dares Salaam to Nairobi By Ford Prefect Questions & Answers.

In my previous posts, I have shared the questions and answers of Where Tigers Swim, Gaining Victory and The Sea Buck Thorn – Nature’s Miracle Fruit so, you can check these posts as well.

Dares Salaam to Nairobi By Ford Prefect Questions & Answers

Question 1: Choose the correct option:

1. The Africans were fighting in World War II against

(a) Scotland
(b) Germany
(c) France

2. The author was on a ________ journey from Dares Salaam to Nairobi.

(a) road
(b) railway
(c) water

3. On the first day, the author saw astonishing number of _________.

(a) tigers
(b) giraffes
(c) elephants

4. The road northwards through Tanganyika was

(a) narrow
(b) wide
(c) rough  

5. What tribe has been described in the extract?

(a) Ahoms
(b) Masai
(c) Gonds

Question 2: Fill in the blanks.

1. They gave me the shivers.
2. Frequent and always wonderful sight was the astonishing number of giraffe that I passed on the first day.
3. The six strong men chanted louder and pulled harder.
4. My headlamps were very dim.
5. A car is a good protection against almost any wild animal.

Question 3: Write True or False for the following statements:

1. A frequent and always wonderful sight was the astonishing number of giraffe that I passed on the last day – False
2. I never lost my fear of snakes all the time I was in the tropics – True
3. I thanked Perfect and set off on the 800-mile journey from Dares Salaam Nairobi to enlist in the RAF – False
4. They are better off than me, I told myself, and a good deal wiser – True
5. My headlamps were very fast – False

Question 4: What was the ‘magnanimous gesture’ shown by the Shell company?

Answer: The Shell company told the narrator that they would continue to pay his salary into the bank wherever he might happen to be in the world, and for as long as the war lasted and he remained alive. This was the magnanimous gesture the narrator is talking about.

Question 5: Describe the narrator’s encounter with the giraffes. Why did he call them ‘tame’?

Answer: The narrator is overwhelmed to see the astonishing number of giraffe, nibbling green leaves from the tops of acacia trees. He found them to be tamed as they were friendly and never ran away on seeing him. Instead, they wave their long necks. When the narrator shouted Hello! Giraffe! hello, they would incline their heads slightly and stare down at her.

Question 6: Describe the cobra that the narrator met along the way. How did he react to it?

Answer: Moving on narrow path, the narrator saw a very large thick greenish-brown cobra gliding slowly over the ruts in the road about 30 yards ahead of him. It was seven or eight feet long and was holding its flat spoon-shaped head six inches up in the air. The narrator immediately stopped his car. He was so frightened that he quickly reversed his car and waited till the fearsome cobra disappeared into the under growth.

Question 7: How does the narrator describe the elephant family he saw passing by?

Answer: Once the narrator saw an elephant family. He could feel a great sense of peace and serenity surrounding the massive, slow moving, gentle beasts. Their skin hung loose over their bodies like suits they had inherited from larger ancestors. They were vegetarians and did not hunt or kill for their survival but no other wild beast would ever dare to threaten them.

Question 8: What did the narrator do after it became dark in the jungle?

Answer: Once while passing through a thick jungle, the sun went down suddenly and soon it became dark all round. The headlamps of his car were dim, so he parked it just off the roads in a scrubby patch of thorn trees and sat in the car which was a good protection against almost all wild animals. He ate his sandwich, then wound up the two windows, got to back seat and curled up and went to sleep.

Question 9: Give two examples where the narrator contrasts the peace in the animal world with the war and unrest in his own.

Answer: While watching the elephant family leading life of contentment, the narrator feels that they are better off and wiser than him. He was on his way to either kill the Germans or to be killed by them where as those elephants had no thought of murder in their mind.

He envies the giraffe group who was able to walk care free and freely while he could not have such a peaceful and comfortable life.

Question 10: Who were the various African people the narrator met during his journey?

Answer: During his journey, the narrator met a few Africans like six strong native men who helped him and his car cross the swiftly running river. An ancient and toothless black man, some Masai tribesmen carrying spears and speaking a different language.

So, these were Dares Salaam to Nairobi By Ford Prefect Questions & Answers.

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