{"id":14485,"date":"2023-09-02T16:42:38","date_gmt":"2023-09-02T11:12:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.cbselabs.com\/?page_id=14485"},"modified":"2023-09-05T10:17:13","modified_gmt":"2023-09-05T04:47:13","slug":"ncert-solutions-for-class-9-english-literature-reader-villa-for-sale","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.cbselabs.com\/ncert-solutions-for-class-9-english-literature-reader-villa-for-sale\/","title":{"rendered":"NCERT Solutions for Class 9 English Literature Chapter 13 Villa for Sale"},"content":{"rendered":"

NCERT Solutions for Class 9 English Literature Chapter 13 Villa for Sale are part of NCERT Solutions for Class 9 English Literature Reader<\/a>. Here we have given NCERT Solutions for Class 9 English Literature Reader Chapter 13 Villa for Sale.<\/p>\n

NCERT Solutions for Class 9 English Literature Reader Chapter 13 Villa for Sale<\/h2>\n

Textbook Questions Solved<\/strong><\/p>\n

Question 1.
\nIf you could buy your dream house today what are some specific features you would want for your house? Write them in the bubbles below:
\n\"NCERT
\nAnswer:
\n\"NCERT<\/p>\n

Question 2.
\nDiscuss with your partner the similarities and dissimilarities in your dream house.
\nAnswer:
\nFor self-attempt.<\/p>\n

Question 3.
\nSee page textbook on page 95.
\nAnswer:
\nFor self-attempt.<\/p>\n

Question 4.
\nCopy and complete the following paragraph about the theme of the play using the clues given in the box below. Remember that there are more clues than required.
\nsell, buying, house, enthusiastic, comes, 200 thousand francs, taking, favour, get, sleeps, money, 300 thousand francs, unhappy, his in-laws, walks in, strikes, keep
\nJuliette, the owner of a Villa, wants to 1.<\/span> it as she is in need of 2.<\/span> Moreover, she is not in 3.<\/span> of the house. Jeanne and Gaston, a couple, visit her with the aim of 4.<\/span> the villa. While Jeanne is 5.<\/span> high ceiling good surroundings about buying, Gaston detests the idea as he does not want his 6<\/span>. in that house. Also, he finds the asking price of 7.<\/span> to be expensive. When Jeanne and Juliette go around the house another customer 8.<\/span> and starts talking to Gaston 9.<\/span> him to be Juliette\u2019s husband. Gaston 1o.<\/span> a deal with the customer by which he is able to give 11.<\/span> to the owner and 12.<\/span>
\nhimself.
\nAnswer:
\n1. sell
\n2. money
\n3. favour
\n4. buying
\n5. enthusiastic
\n6. in-laws
\n7. 200 thousand francs
\n8. walks in
\n9. taking
\n10. strikes
\n11. two hundred thousand francs
\n12. keep<\/p>\n

Question 5.
\nAnswer the following questions briefly:
\n(a) Why does Jeanne want to buy a villa?
\n(b) Why is Gaston not interested in buying the villa in the beginning?
\n(c) Mrs. A1 Smith makes many statements about the French. Pick out any two and explain them.
\n(d) Juliette says \u201c now I have only one thought that is to get the wretched place off my hands. I would sacrifice it at any price.\u201d Does she stick to her words? Why\/ Why not?
\n(e) Who is better in business\u2014Juliette or Gaston? Why?
\n(f) Do you like\/dislike Gaston? Give your reasons.
\nAnswer:
\n(a) Jeanne wants to buy a villa for her old parents.<\/p>\n

(b) Gaston is not interested in buying the villa in the beginning. He is very clear that his wife Jeanne is not buying the villa for themselves. She wants to put her father and mother in it. Her parents would take possession of it every year from April to September. They would also bring all her sister\u2019s children with them. Therefore, he starts finding fault with the villa and its excessive price.<\/p>\n

(c) Mrs. A1 Smith makes many statements about the French. She asks Gaston to consult his wife before making a deal. Gaston replies that he need not consult her. Mrs. A1 Smith considers Gaston an \u2018exception\u2019. She comments, \u201cFrenchmen usually have to consult about ten people before they get a move on.\u201d Her next comment is that \u201cthe French think about the past all the time while Americans always think about the future. She also mocks at the funny way of the Frenchmen while doing business deals.<\/p>\n

(d) Juliette tells her maid that she wants \u201cof get the wretched place off\u2019 her hands. She is ready to sacrifice it at any price. But she doesn\u2019t stick to her words. She demands two hundred and fifty thousand francs. Gaston finds it \u201cdecidedly excessive\u201d. Then she tells him that she can\u2019t let it go for less than two hundred thousand francs. She is interested in making a bargain. She accepts two hundred thousand francs when the final deal is made.<\/p>\n

(e) Gaston is definitely better in business. Juliette is also a hard bargainer. She pretends that she is going to sell the wretched place at any price. But she makes a bargain at two hundred thousand francs. She thinks that she is outsmarting Gaston. But Gaston proves more than her. He outsmarts both\u2014Juliette and Mrs. A1 Smith. He buys the house in two hundred thousand and sells it for three thousands francs to Mrs. A1 Smith. In the bargain he saves a cool hundred thousand francs.<\/p>\n

(f) It is rather difficult to dislike Gaston. He is a man of this world with the vices and virtues of a worldly-wise businessman. He is not interested in buying the villa : He knows that his wife is simply trying to put up her father and mother in it. What is more, all the children of his wife\u2019s sister will live with them. However, he changes his stand in the end. He realises that he can earn one hundred thousand francs by outwitting both Mrs. A1 Smith and Juliette.<\/p>\n

Question 6.
\nRead the following extracts and answer the questions that follow by choosing the correct options:
\n(A) But the sign has been hanging on the gate for over a month now and I am beginning to be afraid that the day I bought it was when I was the real fool.
\n(a) Why is Juliette disappointed?
\n(i) She is unable to get a role of cook in the films.
\n(ii) Her maid is leaving as she has got a role in the films.
\n(iii) She is unable to find a suitable buyer for her villa.
\n(iv) Gaston is offering a very low price for the villa.
\nAnswer:
\n(iii) She is unable to find a suitable buyer for her villa.<\/p>\n

(b) Why does she call herself a fool?
\n(i) She has decided to sell her villa.
\n(ii) There are no buyers for the villa.
\n(iii) She had bought the villa for more than it was worth.
\n(iv) The villa was too close to the film studios.
\nAnswer:
\n(i) She has decided to sell her villa.<\/p>\n

(B) \u2018But your parents would take possession of it, every year from the beginning of spring until the end of September. What\u2019s more, they would bring the whole tribe of your sister\u2019s children with them.\u2019
\n(a) What does Gaston mean by \u2018take possession\u2019?
\n(i) Her parents would stay with them for a long time.
\n(ii) Juliette\u2019s sister has many children.
\n(iii) Gaston does not like children.
\n(iv) Juliette\u2019s sister\u2019s children are badly behaved.
\nAnswer:
\n(a) (i) Her parents would stay with them for a long time.<\/p>\n

(C) \u2018While you were upstairs, I have been thinking a lot about your Papa and Mamma. \u2019
\n(a) What is the discrepancy between what Gaston said earlier and what he says now?
\n(i) Earlier he did not want Jeanne\u2019s parents to stay with them but now he is showing concern for them.
\n(ii) Earlier he wanted Jeanne\u2019s parents to stay with them but now he does not want them to come over.
\n(iii) Earlier he wanted to buy a house for them but now he wants them to come and stay in their villa.
\n(iv) Earlier he stayed in Jeanne\u2019s parents\u2019 villa but now he wants them to stay with him and Jeanne\u2019s.
\nAnswer:
\n(i) Earlier he did not want Jeanne\u2019s parents to stay with them but now he is showing concern for them.<\/p>\n

(b) What does the above statement reveal about Gaston\u2019s character?
\n(i) He is selfish.
\n(ii) He is an opportunist.
\n(iii) He is a caring person.
\n(iv) He is a hypocrite.
\nAnswer:
\n(ii) He is an opportunist.<\/p>\n

Question 7.
\nSelect words from the box to describe the characters in the play as revealed by the following lines. You may take the words from the box given on the next page:<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
<\/td>\nLines from the play<\/strong><\/td>\nSpeaker<\/strong><\/td>\nQuality revealed<\/strong><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(a)<\/td>\nOne hundred thousand francs if necessary and that\u2019s only twice what it cost me.<\/td>\n<\/td>\ngreedy<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(b)<\/td>\nIf you don\u2019t want the house, tell me so at once and we \u2019ll say no more about it.<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(c)<\/td>\nNo! I am very fond of your family, but not quite so fond as that.<\/td>\nGaston<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(d)<\/td>\nQuite so. I have, but you haven\u2019t.<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(e)<\/td>\nI have never cared such a damned little about anybody\u2019s opinion.<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(f)<\/td>\nOn the principle of people who like children and haven\u2019t any can always go and live near a school.<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(g)<\/td>\nThe garden is not very large, but you see, it is surrounded by other gardens.<\/td>\nJuliette<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(h)<\/td>\nI will be philanthropic and let you have it for two hundred thousand.<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(i)<\/td>\nI have been thinking a lot about your Papa and Mamma. You see, I am really unselfish.<\/td>\n<\/td>\nclever<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n

\"NCERT
\nAnswer:<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
<\/td>\nLines from the play<\/strong><\/td>\nSpeaker<\/strong><\/td>\nQuality revealed<\/strong><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(a)<\/td>\nOne hundred thousand francs if necessary and that\u2019s only twice what it cost me.<\/td>\nJuliette<\/td>\ngreedy<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(b)<\/td>\nIf you don\u2019t want the house, tell me so at once and we \u2019ll say no more about it.<\/td>\nJeanne<\/td>\ncritical<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(c)<\/td>\nNo! I am very fond of your family, but not quite so fond as that.<\/td>\nGaston<\/td>\ndisapproving<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(d)<\/td>\nQuite so. I have, but you haven\u2019t.<\/td>\nGaston<\/td>\ndomineering<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(e)<\/td>\n1 have never cared such a damned little about anybody’s opinion.<\/td>\nGaston<\/td>\noverbearing\/ haughty<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(f)<\/td>\nOn the principle of people who like children and haven\u2019t any can always go and live near a school.<\/td>\nGaston<\/td>\nwitty<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(g)<\/td>\nThe garden is not very large, but you see, it is surrounded by other gardens.<\/td>\nJuliette<\/td>\ncunning<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(h)<\/td>\nI will be philanthropic and let you have it for two hundred thousand.<\/td>\nJuliette<\/td>\nboastful<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
(i)<\/td>\nI have been thinking a lot about your Papa and Mamma. You see, I am really unselfish.<\/td>\nGaston<\/td>\nclever<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n

Listening Task<\/strong>
\nQuestion 8.
\nListen carefully to the description of a Villa on sale. Based on the information, draw the sketch of the Villa being described.
\nAnswer:
\nFor self-attempt.<\/p>\n

Question 9.
\nYou are Jeanne. After coming home you realise that the villa was not actually bought and your husband has fooled both you and the landlady of the villa. You are filled with rage, disgust and helplessness because of your husband\u2019s betrayal. Write your feelings in the form of a diary entry.
\nAnswer:
\nNogent-sur-Mame. 20th July, 20XX.
\nAll my dreams have ended in smoke. My husband, Mr. Gaston, has fooled both of us, me and the landlady of the villa. It is too much. There\u2019s a limit to everything. Mr. Gaston\u2019s main concern is money. He knows it that I wanted to buy the villa not only for ourselves but also for my parents. The cunning Mr. Gaston went on finding faults with the villa only not to buy it. Then suddenly comes the change. I was surprised how he got ready to buy the villa in two hundred thousand. He had rejected it just a while ago. He was not ready to pay more than sixty thousand. I was oveijoyed when he finally made the deal. I thought that the villa had been bought for us and my parents. Little did I know that Mr. Gaston was befooling all, myself, Juliette and Mrs. A1 Smith. He had earned a neat one hundred thousand francs in the …bargain. But I have lost both\u2014the villa and my husband\u2019s confidence.<\/p>\n

Question 10.
\nNow dramatise the play. Form groups of eight to ten students. Within each group, you will need to choose<\/p>\n