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Novel old Man and The Sea

Novel old Man and The Sea (MCQs Questions For Online Exam)

1.      Santiago tell Manolin how sharks beat him.

2.      Pedrico is looking after the skiff and the gear.

3.      According to boy they searched the old man with coast guard and with planes.

4.      The ocean is very big and a skiff is small and hard to see.

5.      After tiller he lunged the shark with the splintered butt.

6.      In the night sharks hit the carcass as someone might pick up crumbs from the table.

7.      It is easy when you are beaten.

8.      What is the meanings of idiom above board? a person who has super qualities over others

9.      What is the meanings of all ears? to hear with full attention

10.  What is the meanings of apple of discord? cause of tension between two or more parties

11.  eat about the bush? to treat a topic

12.  Up the road, in his shack, the old man was sleepingagain.

13.  The old man was dreaming about lions.

14.  Our determination gives us the real success

15.  To achieving something is not the success

16.  The only thing which stay till the end with the old man was hope and struggle.

17.  That afternoon there was a party of tourist

18.  Looking down in the water among the empty bear cans and dead barracudas

19.  A woman saw the long white spine with a huge tail

20.  The east wind blew a heavy steady sea outside the entrance to the harbour

21.  The woman asked about the backbone from waiter

22.  The waiter told her that‟s just a garbage

23.  I didn‟t know sharks had such handsome beautifully formed tails

24.  DiMaggio was Santiago‟s favorite baseball player

25.  He even wanted to be as great an expert in his profession as DiMaggio.

26.  He dreamed about the lions moving on the sea shore of Africa.

27.  Santiago continuous supply of food in the form of tunas, shrimps, dolphin.

28.  Outwardly Santiago defeated.

29.  The thing which the old man not leave was his struggle.

30.  The boy went out the door and down the worn coral rock.

31.  Manoline symbolizes the hope and determination.

32.  Bring any of the papers of the time that I was gone.

33.  You must get well fast for there is much that I can learn.

34.  Manoline bring stuff for his hands.

35.  Don‟t forget to tell Pedrico the head is his.

36.  As per philosophy Santiago is successful.

37.  Santiago symbolizes the man of the living world.

38.  I‟ll bring the luck with me

39.  We must get a good killing lance and always have it on board.

40.  You can make the blade from as spring leaf from an old Ford.

41.  We can grind it in Guanabacoa.

42.  It should be sharp and not tempered so it will break.

43.  Sharks symbolizes hostile forces of nature.

44.  Hemingway treated the sea as a living thing.

45.  Marlin the fish represents the goals, aims and fruit of life.

46.  The novel “The Old Man and the Sea” is based on continuous struggle.

47.  Tragedy of the novel is because of the great suffer of hero.

48.  The novel describes the great bravery and heroism of a Cuban fisherman

49.  What is the meanings of at a snail‟s pace? to work or walk very slowly

50.  What is the meanings of apple pie order? to be in arranged form

51.  What is the meanings of at sixes and sevens? to be in confusion

52.  What is the meanings of bad blood? to be angry with other

53.  What is the meanings of bark up the wrong tree? to criticize Mr. X in place of Mr. Y

54.  What is the meanings of b

55.  Who taught Manoline the art of fishing?Santiago.

56.  I‟ll get another knife and have the spring ground.

57.  You get your hands well old man.

58.                       In the night I spat something strange and felt something in my chest was broken.

59.  Who measured the marlin‟s length? fisherman

60.  What helps the fisherman measured marlin from nose to tail? His skeleton.

61.  He poured some coffee in a glass.

62.  It was then he knew the depth of his tiredness.

63.  He had to sit down three times before he reached his shack.

64.  The fisherman measured the skeleton with a length of line.

65.  Marlin was eighteen feet from nose to tail.

66.  I better get the sack and put it over my shoulders.

67.  You violated your luck when you went too far outside.

68.  Santiago would like to buy luck if there‟s any place they sell it.

69.  Luck is a thing that comes in many forms.

70.  He saw the reflected glare of the lights of the city at what must have been around

71.  ten o’clock night.

72.  What can a man do against them in the dark without weapon?

73.  He jerked the tiller free from the rudder.

74.  He heard the tiller break and he lunged at the shark.

75.  I am too far to the east ward.

76.  I live in a good town.

77.  The fish had been ruined too badly.

78.  I have been chopped the bill off to fight them with, he thought.

79.  There was no knife and hatchet to chopped them.

80.  I‟ll fight until I die.

81.  I have all those prayers I promised if I caught the fish.

82.  After galanos shovelnose had come like a pig.

83.  I am too old to club sharks to death.

84.  I will try as long as I have the two oars, short club and the tiller.

85.  The sharks did not hit him again until just before sunset.

86.  He felt rubbery solidity as the club came down.

87.  The sun had gone down while he had been in the fight with the sharks.

88.  It will be dark soon and I should see the glow of Havana.

89.  Galanos were hateful, bad smelling, scavengers as well as killers sharks.

90.  Galanos didn‟t come as the Mako had come.

91.  After Knife and harpoon he punched the sharks.

92.  The old man stabbed the shark in his left eye.

93.  I wish it were a dream and that I had never hooked him.

94.  I wish I had a stone for the knife.

95.  The fish now made a trail for all sharks as wide as a highway through the sea.

96.  I must not deceive myself too much.

97.  It was firm and juicy, like meat, but it was not red.

98.  There was no way to keep its scent out of water.

99.  The old man looked ahead of him but he could see no sails, hull and smoke of any ship.

100.                      People use compass to fin d route and directions in the sea.

101.                      Galanos were two sharks.

102.                      He identified Galanos as shovel-nosed sharks by the brown.

103.                      He did not have a radio.

104.                      He kept on thinking about sin.

105.                 The other fishermen keep radio with themselves

106.                 You did not kill the fish only to keep alive and sell for food.

107.                 You killed him for pride and because you are a fisherman.

108.                 If you love him, it is not a sin to kill him.

109.                 He is not a scavenger nor just a moving appetite as some    sharks are.

110.                      Fishing kills me exactly as if keeps me

111.                      alive.

112.                      I was only better armed.

113.                      My hands were as great a handicap as the bone spurs.

114.                      I stepped on him when swimming and paralyzed the lower leg.

115.                      Every minute now you are closer to home.

116.                      He reached the inner part of the current.

117.                      I can lash my knife to the butt of one of the oars.

118.                      You were born to be a fishermen.

119.                      Down we sail like brothers.

120.                      If I were towing him behind there would be no question.

121.                      Make shark‟s belly was silver.

122.                      I had never hooked the fish and was alone in bed on the newspapers.

123.                      A man can be destroyed but not defeated.

124.                      The bad time is coming and I do not even have the harpoon.

125.                      The dentuso is cruel and able and strong and intelligent.

126.                      His hands were mushy now and he could only see well in flashes.

127.                      He put it against the fish‟s agony.

128.                      He lifted the harpoon as high as he could and drove it down withal his strength.

129.                      I have killed this fish which is my brother and now I must do the slave work.

130.                      He hooked a patch of yellow Gulf weed with the gaff.

131.                      There were more than a dozen of them and they jumped and kicked like sand fleas.

132.                      Dark water of the true gulf is the greater healer that is there.

133.                      Galanos was the second fin.

134.                      He had rigged his harpoon long.

135.                      You are going to have to die anyway.

136.                      His mouth was too dry to speak but he could not reach for the water.

137.                      You‟re good forever.

138.                      Come on and kill me. I do not care who kills who.

139.                      Keep your head clear and know how to suffer like a man.

140.                      The fish righted himself and swam off again.

141.                      He took about forty pounds.

142.                      But man is not made for defeated.

143.                      Sail on this course and take it when it comes.

144.                      DiMaggio would have liked the way I hit him in the brain.

145.                      San Pedro was a fisherman as was the father.

146.                      Everything kills everything else in some way

147.                      Shark‟s eight rows of teeth were slanted inward.

148.                      Shark‟s teeth were like man’s fingers.

149.                      Scent made shark to come toward boat.

150.                      Santiago named the first shark Dentuso.

151.                      He hit on first shark‟s head.

152.                      With which thing he hit the first shark? Harpoon.

153.                      Three quarters of his body was clear above the water.

154.                      He is my fortune, he thought.

155.                      He is over fifteen hundred pounds the way he is, he thought.

156.                      If he dresses out two-thirds of that at thirty cents a pound.

157.                      The great DiMaggio would be proud of me today.

158.                      I had no bone spurs.

159.                      He did not need a compass to tell him where the southwest was.

160.                      He needed trade wind and drawing of the sail to find the direction.

161.                      All I must do is keep the head clean.

162.                      He took two turns of the harpoon line around the bitt in the bow.

163.                      Keep my head dear.

164.                      I have killed this fish which is my brother.

165.                      I must prepare the nooses and the rope to lash him.

166.                      Even if we were two and swamped her to lead him.

167.                      This skiff would never hold him.

168.                      They were each over three feet long.

169.                      They lashed their whole bodies like eel.

170.                      He was sue that in two turns more he would have a chance to get the harpoon.

171.                      I must not try for the head. I must get the heart.

172.                      He held on the great fish all the strain that he could.

173.                      He saw the fish was on his back with his silver belly up.

174.                      The sea was discoloring with the blood from his heart.

175.                      It was more than a mile deep.

176.                      A man is never lost at sea and it is a long island.

177.                      He saw fish first as a dark shadow.

178.                      Santiago couldn‟t believe in Marlin‟s length.

179.                      Marlin came to the surface only thirty yards away.

180.                      The man saw marlin‟s tail out of water.

181.                      It was higher than a big scythe blade.

182.                      The old man could see the fish‟s eye and the two gray sucking fish that swain around him.

183.                      The jumps were necessary for him to take air.

184.                      I must told his pain where it is.

185.                      His pain could drive him mad.

186.                      He‟ll be up soon and I can last.

187.                      It was a great temptation to rest in the bow.

188.                      I‟m tiered than I have ever been.

189.                      I‟ll just steer south and west.

190.                      It is too late to try for strength.

191.                      You‟re stupid he told himself.

192.                      Let him begin to circle and let the fight come.

193.                      The strain will shorten his circle each time.

194.                      I must convinced him and then I must kill him.

195.                      He was not afraid of the black spot.

196.                      He had felt dizzy and faint and that had worried him.

197.                      I will say a hundred our fathers and a hundred Hail Marys.

198.                      God Knows he had enough chances to learn.

199.                      He didn‟t do so badly in the night.

200.                      He has only cramped once.

201.                      If he cramps again let the line cut him off.

202.                      He was not being clear-headed.

203.                      He thought he should chew some more of the dolphin.

204.                      It better to be light-headed than to lose your strength from nausea.

205.                      Was he frightened by something in the night?

206.                      May be he suddenly felt fear.

207.                      The fish seemed so fearless.

208.                      He was afraid that it might nauseate him.

209.                      He is headed almost east.

210.                      And pain doesn‟t matter to a man.

211.                      Why was it born with two good hands?

212.                      It was my fault in not training properly.

213.                      He got his head up from the wood.

214.                      He was on his knees and then he rose slowly to his feet.

215.                      He was ceding line but more slowly all the time.

216.                      He jumped more than a dozen times.

217.                      He cannot go deep to die.

218.                      He will start circling soon.

219.                      Could it have been hunger that made him desperate?

220.                      So now let us take it.

221.                      Make him pay for the line.

222.                      He couldn‟t see the fish’s jumps.

223.                      The speed of the line was cutting his hand.

224.                      He had always known his would happen.

225.                      He was making the fish earn each inch of it.

226.                      The boat moved into the tunnel of clouds.

227.                      He woke with the jerk of his right fist.

228.                      He had no feeling of his left hand.

229.                      The coils of line were feeding smoothly.

230.                      The fish jumped making a bursting of the ocean.

231.                      His face was in the cut slice of dolphin.

232.                      What couldn‟t made him move cut slice of dolphin.

233.                      This is what we waited for.

234.                      His head rested on his hand.

235.                      He began to dream of a long yellow beach.

236.                      He saw the first of the lions come down onto it in the early dark.

237.                      He rested his chin on the woods of the bows.

238.                      If there would be more lions and he was happy.

239.                      The moon had been up for a long time but he slept.

240.                      The fish pulled on steadily.

241.                      Even if I sleep twenty minutes or half an hour it‟s good.

242.                      He lay forward climbing himself against the line.

243.                      He didn‟t dream of lions.

244.                      A vast school of porpoises that stretched for eight ten miles.

245.                      They would leap high into the air.

246.                      They had made hole into the water when they leaped.

247.                      He dreamed he was in the village on his bed.

248.                      I have chewed it all well and I am not nauseated.

249.                      The sky was clouding over the east.

250.                      He were moving into a great canyon of clouds.

251.                      The wind had dropped.

252.                      There will be a bad weather in three or four days.

253.                      Rig now to get some sleep.

254.                      But he is used to punishment.

255.                      What an excellent fish dolphin is to eat cooked.

256.                      What a miserable fish raw.

257.                      I will never go in a boat again without salt and limes.

258.                      I would have splashed water on the bow all day and drying.

259.                      The splashed water would make salt.

260.                      I didn‟t hook the dolphin until almost sunset.

261.                      It was the lack of preparation.

262.                      He slid the carcass.

263.                      He looked to see if there was any swirl in the water.

264.                      He turned then and placed the two flying fish.

265.                      He worked his way slowly back to the bow.

266.                      His back was bent with the weight of line.

267.                      Nothing the speed of water against hand.

268.                      Particles of phosphorus floated off.

269.                      Under the stars and with the night colder all the time he ate half of one of the dolphin fillets.

270.                      He must pull until he dies.

271.                      He pushed the blade of his knife into his head

272.                      He drew him out from under the stern

273.                      Scooping him clean and pulling the clean gills clear.

274.                      There were two flying fish inside.

275.                      They sank leaving a trail of phosphorescence in the water.

276.                      The dolphin was leprous gray-white in the starlight.

277.                      If you do not sleep you might become unclear in the head.

278.                      I am as clear as the stars.

279.                      Stars are my brothers.

280.                      The sun, the moon and the ocean sleeps on certain days when there is no current and a flat calm.

281.                      Go back and prepare the dolphin.

282.                      It is dangerous to rig the oars as a drag if you must sleep.

283.                      I could go without sleeping.

284.                      I am glad we do not have to try to kill the stars.

285.                      Imagine if each day a man must try to kill the moon.

286.                      It is enough to live on the sea and kill our truebrothers.

287.                      It has its perilsanditsmerits.

288.                      Before I move back to the stern to do the work and make the decision.

289.                      The oars are a good trick.

290.                      It has reached the time to play for safety.

291.                      But with one lurch he could break it.

292.                      True gold in the last of the sun.

293.                      He pulled the dolphin with his left hand.

294.                      I‟ll lash the two oars.

295.                      I have eaten the whole bonito.

296.                      He called dolphin Dorado.

297.                      It becomes dark quickly after the sun sets in September.

298.                      He didn‟t know the name of Rigel.

299.                      They had gone to work at the Havana coal company.

300.                      Who won the hand game? Santiago.

301.                      There had been a return match in the

302.                      spring.

303.                      There were purple spots on the dolphins.

304.                      The dolphin looks green.

305.                      They passed a great island of Sargasso.

306.                      His small line was taken by dolphin.

307.                      I had never a bone spur.

308.                      Where did Santiago play a hand game?

309.                      Casablanca.

310.                      With whom he had played the hand game? Negro.

311.                      Negro was the strongest man on the docks.

312.                      The hand game had gone one day and one night.

313.                      They change the referees every four hours.

314.                      The hand game started on Sunday morning and ended on Monday morning.

315.                      Flying fish is excellent to eat raw.

316.                      I told the boy I was a strange old man.

317.                      He never thought about past when he was doing it.

318.                      I could sleep and dream about the lions.

319.                      The fish is swimming in the water with his purple pectoral fins.

320.                      Not in the absolute dark, but almost as a cat sees.

321.                      He knew that the Yankees of New York were playing the Tigers of Detroit.

322.                      There was a small sea rising with the wind coming up from the east.

323.                      I will say ten our father and ten Hail Marys that I should catch this fish.

324.                      I promise to make a pilgrimage to the Virgin of Cobre if I catch him.

325.                      He commenced to say his prayers mechanically.

326.                      Hail Marys are easier to say than „Our Fathers‟, he thought.

327.                      Blessed art thou among women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus, Holy Mary and the Mother of God.

328.                      To whom the old man say to pray for the death of the fish? Blessed Virgin.

329.                      I don‟t think I can get anything but a dolphin here.

330.                      The strips on the sides of marlin showed wide and light lavender.

331.                      His sword was as long as a baseball bat.

332.                      Marlin was tapered like a rapier.

333.                      The old man saw the great scythe-blade of his tail.

334.                      He is two feet longer than the skiff.

335.                      The old man caught two of thousand pounds size fishes in his life.

336.                      There are three things that are brothers.

337.                      The weather of hurricane months is the best of all the year.

338.                      If there is a hurricane you always see the signs of it in the sky for days ahead.

339.                      I hate cramp the old man thought.

340.                      He thought of a cramp as a clamber.

341.                      He saw the line slanting slowly upward.

342.                      The surface of the ocean bulged ahead of the boat and the fish.

343.                      The fish came out unendingly.

344.                      His head and back was dark purple.

345.                      There is no sense in being anything but practical.

346.                      I do not know whether the sun will rot.

347.                      The fish is calm and steady.

348.                      You can let the cord go.

349.                      God help me to have the cramp go.

350.                      I must improvise to his because of his great size.

351.                      The fight of the wild ducks etching themselves against the sky over the water.

352.                      I will not have the failure of strength.

353.                      It was only a lineburn that had cut his flesh.

354.                      They are wedge shaped strips.

355.                      When he had cut the six strips he spread them out on the wood of the bow.

356.                      Eat the bonito now.

357.                      Cramped hand was almost as skiff as rigor mortis.

358.                      I was lucky to get him instead of dolphin.

359.                      During the night two porpoises came around the boat.

360.                      I will have lost two hundreds fathoms of good Catalan cardel,hooks and leaders.

361.                      186-I‟ll stay with you until I am dead.

362.                      The slant of the line showed that he was swimming at a lesser depth.

363.                      I have enough line to handle him.

364.                      There was yellow weeds on the line.

365.                      A small bird came toward the skiff from the north.

366.                      It was a warbler and flying very low over the water.

367.                      The fish moved steadily.

368.                      It was noon when I hooked him.

369.                      Tried not to think but only to endure.

370.                      I can always come in on the glow from Havana.

371.                      I have no cramps and I feel strong.

372.                      He knew the current must be carrying them to the eastward.

373.                      No one should be alone in their old age.

374.                      Come up easy and let me put the harpoon into you.

375.                      The old man couldn‟t raise him after gaining a yard of line.

376.                      It began to make a slow hissing sound in the water.

377.                      The boat began to move slowly off towards the north-west.

378.                      Due to tiredness black spot appeared before his eyes.

379.                      The old man continued handle the fish until it came on the surface only thirty

380.                      yarns away from the boat.

381.                      The old man hits the marlin with harpoon.

382.                      A harder pull when a sardine’s head must have been more difficult to break.

383.                      He waited with the line between his thumb and finger.

384.                      Christ knows he can‟t have gone.

385.                      Unrolling off the first of the two reserve coils.

386.                      He has it sideways in his mouth.

387.                      If you said a good thing it might not happen.

388.                      He thought of him moving away in the darkness with the tuna.

389.                      Eat it so that the point of the hook goes into your heart.

390.                      The myriad flecks of the plankton were annulled now by the high sun.

391.                      The old man saw only deep prisms in the blue water.

392.                      The fishermen called the fish of that species tuna.

393.                      The sun was hot, the old man felt it on back of his neck.

394.                      The sweat trickle down his back as he rowed.

395.                      Today is eighty-five days and I should fish the day well.

396.                      Hundred fathoms down a marlin was eating the sardines.

397.                      Radios are to bring them the baseball.

398.                      Now is no time to think of baseball.

399.                      Everything that shows on the surface today travels very fast and to the north-east.

400.                      He couldn‟t see the green of shore.

401.                      He could see the top of blue hills.

402.                      The top of blue hills showed white.

403.                      The light made prisms in the water.

404.                      He aloud many times since there was no one that they could annoy.

405.                      The rich have radios to talk to them in their boats.

406.                      For truly big fish he had made himself strong in Sep and Oct.

407.                      He also drank a cup of shark liver oil ach day.

408.                      Shark liver oil was good against all colds and eyes.

409.                      What did the most of the fishermen hated? Shark liver oil.

410.                      He saw the blue back of the fish and the gold of his sides.

411.                      The old man hit him on the head for kindness and kicked him.

412.                      He‟ll make a beautiful bait.

413.                      What was the falsest thing in the sea? Iridescentbubbles.

414.                      What was eating the iridescent bubbles? Sea turtles.

415.                      The old man loved green turtles and hawk birds with elegance and speed.

416.                      He had gone in turtle boats for many years.

417.                      A turtle’s heart beat for hours after he has been cut up and butchered.

418.                      The old man resembles himself with turtle.

419.                      He ate whiteeggs to give himself strength.

420.                      He ate them all through May to be strong in September and October.

421.                      What did the Old man saw because of a man-of-war bird? Dolphin.

422.                      The water was a dark blue now, so dark that it was almost purple.

423.                      Plankton meant fish.

424.                      The tiny fish that were colored like the trailing filaments.

425.                      The small shade, the bubble made it drifted.

426.                      They were immune to its poison.

427.                      Poisonings from the agua mala came quickly.

428.                      Forth fathoms were down in the blue.

429.                      The boy had given him fresh tunas or albacores.

430.                      Each line was looped onto a green-shaped stick.

431.                      Each line had forty fathom coils.

432.                      They were at sixty fathoms when the fishermen thought they were at a hundred.

433.                      Only I have no luck anymore.

434.                      The sun was two hours higher now and it didn‟t hurt his eyes so much to look at the East.

435.                      Ernest Miller Hemingway was born in 21 July 1899.

436.                      Many of his works are considered classics of American Literature.

437.                      Ernest Hemingway was novelist, short story writer and sports man.

438.                      What term had a strong influence on 20th Century fiction? Iceberg theory.

439.                      Hemingway was born in the month of July.

440.                      The birthplace of Ernest Hemingway was Oak Park, Illinois.

441.                      His Novel “The Sun Also Rises” was his pen work in 1926.

442.                      In 1929 he wrote A Farewell to Arms.

443.                      When his best work “For Whom the Bell Tolls” did became published? 1940.

444.                      His dashing machismo was almost as famous as his writing.

445.                      He lived in Paris, Cuba and Key West.

446.                      He served as a war correspondent in WW2 and SpanishCivilWar.

447.                      Hemingway is sometimes called by his familiar nickname papa.

448.                      His birthdate is sometimes listen in error as 1898.

449.                      Hemingway marry Hadley Richardson in 1921.

450.                      He divorced Hadley Richardson in 1927.

451.                      He marry to Pauline Pfeiffer in 1927.

452.                      He divorced Pauline Pfeiffer in 1940.

453.                      Hemingway marry Martha Gellhorn in 1940.

454.                      He divorced Martha Gellhorn in 1945.

455.                      Hemingway marry Mary Weish Hemingway in 1946.

456.                      In 1930s he made permanent residence in Key West.

457.                      In 1940s and 1950s he made residence in Cuba.

458.                      “Death in the Afternoon” is his nonfiction work.

459.                      The Old Man and the Sea was much regret for those who are of the view that story is nothing.

460.                      In „The Old Man and the Sea‟ the real success continuous struggle.

461.                      Hemingway produced most of his work between Mid-1920s and Mid-1950s.

462.                      He won Nobel Prize in Literature.

463.                      When he won Nobel Prize in Literature? 1954.

464.                      He published seven Novels.

465.                      He had six short story collections.

466.                      He had three nonfiction works.

467.                      Three of his Novels published posthumously.

468.                      His four Short story collection were published posthumously.

469.                      His three nonfiction work were published posthumously.

470.                      Hemingway was residing in Oak Park.

471.                      After his High School he was reporter for the Kansas City Star.

472.                      Hemingway best known as famous manly author of For Whom the Bell Tolls.

473.                      Hemingway is one of the 20th Century‟s writer.

474.                      He was the famous American Writer.

475.                      He was enlisted as Ambulancedriver in World War 1.

476.                      When he was enlisted as an ambulance driver? World War 1.

477.                      When he wounded and return to home? In1918.

478.                      Which experiences formed the basis of his Novels? Wartime.

479.                      Of which novel his wartime experiences formed the basis? AFarewell of Arms.

480.                      When Hemingway married for the first time? 1921.

481.                      Who was the first of his four wives? Hadley Richardson.

482.                      Hemingway was the secondchild.

483.                      Hemingway was the first son born to Clarence and Grace.

484.                      He wrote draft of The Old Man and the Sea in eight weeks.

485.                      What made him the international celebrity? The Old Man and the Sea.

486.                      He won Pulitzer Prize in 1952.

487.                      The New York Times wrote in 1926 of Hemingway‟s first novel.

488.                      When Hemingway did ended his own life? 2 July 1961.

489.                      When the Novel “The Old Man and the Sea” did was published? 1952.

490.                      The Novel “The Old Man and the Sea” is based on Hemingway’s Philosophy.

491.                      When Hemingway was awarded the Nobel Prize? 1954.

492.                      “The Old Man and the Sea” is a play of Philosophy.

493.                      The name which represents the Old Man in the Play is Santiago.

494.                      The “Old Man and the Sea” is the pen work of: Earnest Hemingw

495.                      For how long days the Old Man had gone for Sharks

496.                      A Man Can Be Destroyed but Not Defeated” is the philosophy by Hemingway.

497.                      On which day Santiago catches a big fish? EightySix.

498.                      For how many days the boy had been with the Old man? Forty.

499.                      The boy‟s parents think the Old Man is a: Salao.

500.                      What‟s the meaning of “Salao?” Unlucky Person.

501.                      How many fishes Manolin caught in the first week in another boat? Three fishes.

502.                      What did the OLD Man‟s sail looks like? Permanent Defeat.

503.                      Which thing was still not old in the Old Man? His Eyes.

504.                      The Old Man‟s eyes show hope and struggle.

505.                      Where the fishermen carry their fishes? Havana.

506.                      What did sea represents in the play? LivingBeing.

507.                      What are the hostile forces of nature? Sharks.

508.                      What deprived the Old man of the fruit of his long efforts? Sharks.

509.                      What defeated the Old Man outwardly? Sharks.

510.                      From which direction the wind came and make feel pleasant and sunny on the terrace? North.

511.                      When the wind was in the east, the smell came across the harbour because of

512.                      Shark factory.

513.                      Manolin was of how many years old when Santiago took him in a boat? Five years.

514.                      What were the needless temptation to leave in a boat? Gaff and Harpoon.

515.                       

 


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