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CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme Question Paper-Bhutia



CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme
Question Paper-Bhutia



  • Subject : Bhutia
  • Time allowed : 3 hours
  • Maximum Marks : 80

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CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme Question Paper-Limboo



CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme
Question Paper-Limboo



  • Subject : Limboo
  • Time allowed : 3 hours
  • Maximum Marks : 80

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CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme Question Paper-Lepcha



CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme
Question Paper-Lepcha



  • Subject :Lepcha
  • Time allowed : 3 hours
  • Maximum Marks : 80

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CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme Question Paper-Information and communication technology



CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme
Question Paper-Information and communication technology



Subject :Information and communication technology

Time allowed : 2.30 hours

Maximum Marks : 40

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(Download) CBSE: Class XII Biology Question Paper - 2019



Question Papers For Board Examinations 2019

Class – XII

Subject – Biology



  • Subject :- Biology
  • Class : XII
  • Year : 2019

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CBSE FAQ:Process regarding payment of fees by candidates for Admission 

CBSE



CBSE FAQ:Process regarding payment of fees by candidates for Admission 



Q.1 What is mode of submission of applications for admission to the Secondary School and Senior School Certificate examinations by a Regular student?

Ans. A Regular student’s application form for the examinations to be conducted by the Board, in the form of List of Candi

(Download) CBSE: Class XII Physics Question Paper - 2019



Question Papers For Board Examinations 2019

Class – XII

Subject – Physics



  • Subject :- Physics
  • Class : XII
  • Year : 2019

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(Download) CBSE: Class XII Mathematics Question Paper - 2019


Question Papers For Board Examinations 2019

Class – XII

Subject – Mathematics


  • Subject :- Mathematics
  • Class : XII
  • Year : 2019

General Instructions : 

(i) All questions are compulsory.
(ii) The question paper consists of 29 questions divided into four sections A, B, C and D. Section A comprises of 4 questions of one mark each, Section B comprises of 8 questions of  two marks  each, Section C comprises of 11 questions of four marks each and Section D comprises of 6 questions of  six marks each.  
(iii) All questions in Section A are to be answered in one word, one sentence or as per the exact requirement of the question.  
(iv) There is no overall choice. However, internal choice has been provided in  1 question of Section A, 3 questions of Section B, 3 questions of Section C and  3 questions of Section D. You have to attempt only one of the alternatives in all such questions. 
(v) Use of calculators is not permitted. You may ask for logarithmic tables, if required. 

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(Download) CBSE: Class XII English Core Question Paper - 2019


Question Papers For Board Examinations 2019

Class – XII

Subject – English (Core)


Subject :- English (Core)

Class : XII

Year : 2019

General Instructions :

(i) This paper is divided into three Sections : A, B and C. All the sections are compulsory.
(ii) Separate instructions are given with each section and question, wherever necessary. Read these instructions very carefully and follow them faithfully.
 (iii) Do not exceed the prescribed word limit while answering the questions. 

SECTION – A
 (Reading) 30

1. Read the passage given below : 20

1. All of Earth’s oceans share one thing in common: plastic pollution. Discarded plastic bags, cups, and bottles make their way into the sea. Today, it seems that no part of the ocean is safe from plastic trash. In recent years, oceanographers have searched in vain for a pristine marine environment. They have found plastic everywhere they have looked. “It is a common global problem, we can’t point to a single habitat or location with no plastic.”

2. Plastic harms wildlife and introduces dangerous chemicals into marine ecosystems — communities of organisms interacting with their surroundings. Once plastic enters the environment, it lasts a long time. Scientists are working to prevent plastic pollution from entering the sea.

3. When people litter, or when trash is not properly disposed of, things like plastic bags, bottles, straws, foam beverage cups get carried to the sea by winds and waterways. About 80 percent of ocean plastic originates on land. The rest comes from marine industries such as shipping and fishing.

4. In 2015, engineer Jenna Jambeck at the University of Georgia and other esearchers calculated that at least 8 million tons of plastic trash is swept into the ocean from coasts every year. That’s the equivalent of a full garbage truck of lastic being dumped into the sea every minute. If current trends in plastic production and disposal continue, that figure will double by 2025. A report published by the World Economic Forum last year predicts that by 2050, ocean plastic will outweigh all the fish in the sea.

5. In today’s world, plastic is everywhere. It’s found in shoes, clothing, household items, electronics, and more. There are different types of plastics, but one thing they all have in common is that they’re made of polymers – large molecules made up of repeating units. Their chemical structure gives them a lot of advantages : they’re cheap and easy to manufacture, lightweight, water-resistant, durable, and can be moulded into nearly any shape.

6. Unfortunately, some of the properties that make plastics great for consumer goods also make them a problem pollutant. Plastic’s durability comes in part from the fact that unlike paper or wood, it doesn’t biodegrade, or break down naturally. Instead it just fragments, or breaks into tiny pieces over time. These tiny pieces, known as microplastic, can potentially stick around for hundreds or perhaps even thousands of years.

7. Another problem with plastics is the other chemicals they contain, like dyes and flame retardants. When plastic isn’t disposed of properly, these additives end up in the environment. Plastic also tends to absorb harmful chemicals from its surroundings. “It’s like a sponge for persistent organic pollutants.” These longlasting, toxic substances include pesticides and industrial chemicals. If plastic absorbs the chemicals, and marine organisms eat the plastic, they may be exposed to higher concentrations of these contaminants.

8. One of the biggest impacts of plastic pollution is its effect on sea life. Seals, sea turtles, and even whales can become entangled in plastic netting. They can starve to death if the plastic restricts their ability to move or eat. Or the plastic can cut into the animals’ skin, causing wounds that develop severe infections.

9. Sea turtles eat plastic bags and soda-can rings, which resemble jellyfish, their favourite food. Seabirds eat bottle caps or chunks of foam cups. Plastic pieces may make an animal feel full, so it doesn’t eat enough real food to get the nutrients it needs. Plastic can also block an animal’s digestive system, making it unable to eat.

10. Plastic and its associated pollutants can even make it into our own food supply. Scientists recently examined fish and shell-fish bought at markets in California and Indonesia. They found plastic in the guts of more than a quarter of samples purchased at both locations. In organisms that people eat whole, such as sardines and oysters, that means we’re eating plastic too. In larger fish, chemicals from plastic may seep into their muscles and other tissues that people consume. 

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(E-Book) CBSE Board Class 12th Papers PDF : English

Click Here To Download Full Paper I

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(Download) CBSE: Class XII English Elective Question Paper - 2019


Question Papers For Board Examinations 2019

Class – XII

Subject – English (Elective)


Subject :- English (Elective)

Class : XII

Year : 2019

(i) Question Nos. 1 – 4 are compulsory.
(ii) Attempt either question no. 8 or 9.
(iii) Your answers should be to the point. Stick to the given word limit.

SECTION A
(Reading) 20

1. (A) Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow : 10

1 Mano Majra is a tiny place. It has only three brick buildings,one of which is the home of the money-lender, Lala Ram Lal. The other two are the Sikh temple and the mosque. The three brick buildings enclose a triangular area with a large peepul tree in the middle. The rest of the village is a group of flat-roofed mud huts and low-walled courtyards, which open into narrow lanes that spread out from the centre. Soon the lanes turn into footpaths and get lost in the surrounding fields. At the western end of the village there is a pond ringed round by keekar trees. There are only about seventy families in Mano Majra, and Lala Ram Lal’s is the only Hindu family. The others are Sikhs or Muslims, about equal in number. The Sikhs own all the land around the village; the Muslims are tenants and share the tilling with the owners. There are a few families of sweepers whose religion is uncertain. But there is
one object that all Mano Majrans — even Lal Ram Lal — worship. This is a three-foot slab of sandstone that stands upright under a keekar tree beside the pond. It is the local deity, the ‘deo’ which all the villagers — Hindu, Sikh, Muslim or pseudo-Christian — visit secretly, whenever they are in special need of blessing

2 Although Mano Majra is said to be on the banks of the Sutlej River, it is actually half a mile away from it. In India villages cannot afford to be too close to the banks of rivers. Rivers change their moods with seasons and later their course without warning. The Sutlej is the largest river in the Punjab. After the monsoon its waters rise and spread across its vast sandy bed, touching high up the mud embankments on either side. It becomes an expanse of muddy turbulence more than a mile in breadth. When the flood subsides, the river breaks up into a thousand shallow streams that wind sluggishly between little marshy islands. About a mile north of Mano Majra the Sutlej is spanned by a railroad bridge. On the eastern end the embankment extends all the way to the village railroad station.

3 Mano Majra has always been known for its railway station. Since the bridge has only one track, the station has several sidings where less important trains can wait, to make way for the more important ones.

4 A small colony of shopkeepers and hawkers has grown up around the station to supply travellers with food, betel leaves, cigarettes, tea, biscuits and sweetmeats. This gives the station an appearance of constant activity and its staff a somewhat exaggerated sense of importance. Actually the station-master himself sells tickets through the pigeon-hole in  his office, collects them at the exit besides the door, and sends and receives messages over the telegraph ticker on his table. When there are people to notice him, he comes out on the  platform and waves a green flag for trains which do not stop. His only assistant manipulates the levers in the glass cabin on the platform, which control the signals on either side and helps shunting engines by changing hand points on the tracks to get them on to the sidings. In the evenings, he lights the long line of lamps, on the platform. He takes heavy
aluminium lamps to the signals and sticks them in the clamps behind the red and green glass. In the mornings, he brings them back and puts out the lights on the platform.

5 Not many trains stops at Mano Majra. Express trains do not stop at all. Of the many slow passenger trains, only two, one from Delhi to Lahore in the mornings and the other from Lahore to Delhi in the evenings, are scheduled to stop for a few minutes. The others stop only when they are held up. The only regular customers are the goods trains. Although Mano Majra seldom has any goods to send or receive, its station sidings are usually occupied by long rows of wagons. Each passing goods train spends hours shedding wagons and collecting others. After dark, when the countryside is steeped in silence, the whistling and puffing of engines, the banging of buffers, and the clanking of iron couplings can be heard all through the night.

  • (a) Name any two brick buildings in Mano Majra. 1
  • (b) Where are the keekar trees growing ? 1
  • (c) What type of trains stop at Mano Majra ? 1
  • (d) Which common object of worship is visited by all the villagers ? 1
  • (e) Why did people not build their houses on the banks of the rivers ? 1
  • (f) What do the shopkeepers around the railways station sell to the travellers ? 1
  • (g) What additional job did the station master perform in addition to selling tickets and sending and receiving messages over the telegraph ticker ? 1 
  • (h) What breaks the silence of the village at night ? 1
  • (i) Find the word from the passage which means the opposite of ‘broad’ (para 1). 1
  • (j) Find the word from the passage which means the same as ‘lazily’ (para 2). 1

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(E-Book) CBSE Board Class 12th Papers PDF : English

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(Download) CBSE: Class XII Hindi Core Question Paper - 2019


Question Papers For Board Examinations 2019

Class – XII

Subject – Hindi (Core)


Subject :- हिन्दी (केन्द्रिक)

Class : XII

Year : 2019

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(E-Book) CBSE Board Class 12th Papers PDF : Hindi

Click Here To Download Full Paper I

Click Here To Download Full Paper II

Click Here To Download Full Paper III

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CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme Question Paper-Foundation of information technology



CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme
Question Paper-Foundation of information technology



Subject :Foundation of information technology

Time allowed : 3 hours

Maximum Marks : 70

Time allowed : 3 hours Maximum Marks : 70

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CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme Question Paper,Urdu



CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme
Question Paper Urdu



CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : Urdu

Subject :Urdu

Time allowed : 3 hours

Maximum Marks : 70

Time allowed : 3 hours Maximum Marks : 70

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CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme Question Paper,Home Science



CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme
Question Paper Home Science



CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : Home Science

Subject :Home Science

Time allowed : 3 hours

Maximum Marks : 70

Time allowed : 3 hours Maximum Marks : 70

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CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme Question Paper, Sanskrit



CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme

Question Paper (Sanskrit)



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CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme Question Paper, Social Science

 


CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme

Question Paper (Social Science)


CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 :  Social Science

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CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme Question Paper, Science


CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 : All India Scheme

Question Paper Science


CBSE Class-10 Exam 2019 :  Science

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