So you want to be a cartoonist comprehension answers
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Q2. Read the following passage carefully.
SO, YOU WANT TO BE A CARTOONIST?
What writers struggle to express through numerous newspaper columns, the cartoon manages
in a pointed one-liner. Little wonder then, that the first thing most of us like to see when we
pickup a newspaper is the cartoon. Simple though it may seem, making a cartoon is an art that
requires a combination of hard work, training and a good sense of humour. Cartoonists say that
the cartoons that make us laugh the most are in fact the cartoons that are hardest to make.
Even celebrated cartoonists like R.K.Laxman admit that making a cartoon is not a piece of cake.
Laxman says he has to wait for over six hours, which includes spending a lot of time scanning
newspapers and television channels before any idea strikes him.
So how does one become a cartoonist? Which of us has the talent to make it? How can we
master the rib-tickling strokes and the witty one-liners? How can we make people smile or
laugh? There are few colleges or schools for cartoonists. Most cartoonists come from art
colleges, while some learn the craft on their own. Most established cartoonists are of the view
that no institute can teach you to make a cartoon. "You can pick up the craft, you may learn to
sketch and draw in institutes, but no one can teach anyone how to make a good cartoon," says
Uday Shanker, a cartoonist with Navbharat Times. While basics, like drawing and sketching can
be learnt in an art college, and are important skills, these alone, do not make a good cartoonist.
Because it's a question of one's creativity and sense of humour; two qualities one simply may
not have. The advice established cartoonists give is that just because you can sketch, don't take
it for granted that you will become a cartoonist. Read the questions given below and write the
option you consider the most appropriate in your answer sheet.
(a) What, according to Laxman, is the challenge in creating a good cartoon?
(i) waiting for the right thought (ii) browsing newspapers to emerge. and television.
(iii) getting the right kind of (iv) good drawing and sketching training. skills.
(b) Which of these words BEST describes this passage?
(i) humorous (ii) technical
(iii) challenging (iv) informative
(c) Of the many qualities that cartoonists should have, which of the following is not
referred to directly but can be inferred from the passage?
(i) knowledge of current (ii) knowledge of educational technologies. institutions.
(iii) knowledge of news and (iv) knowledge of different current affairs. languages.
(d) According to the passage, which group of people is of the opinion that one cannot
learn to make a cartoon in institutions?
(i) many struggling writers. (ii) highly creative artists.
(iii) well-respected cartoonist. (iv) all newspaper editors.
(e) "Don't take it for granted that you will become a cartoonist." Choose the option that is
closest in meaning to the sentence.
(i) Don't assume that you will (ii) Don't hope that you will become a cartoonist. become a
cartoonist.
(iii) Don't believe that you will (iv) Don't imagine that you will become a cartoonist. become a
cartoonist.