CBSE · NCERT · Class 10 English · Chapter 18

NCERT Solutions: Class 10 English Chapter 18 - Footprints without Feet: The Book That Saved the Earth

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Chapter-wise NCERT intext questions and exercise answers for Footprints without Feet: The Book That Saved the Earth, grounded in the official textbook.

Questions are taken verbatim from the NCERT textbook; answers were grounded against the chapter's content during generation. Items needing review are marked.
Sections in this chapter
READ AND FIND OUT (Page 1) 2READ AND FIND OUT (Page 3) 1Think about it 4
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1READ AND FIND OUT (Page 1)2 questions
Q.•Why was the twentieth century called the ‘Era of the Book’?v
Solution

The Historian gives this catalogue in her opening speech.

Answer:

It was called the ‘Era of the Book’ because books existed on every subject and were central to life. They taught people how, when, where and why to do things; they also illustrated, educated, punctuated and decorated.

Q.•Who tried to invade the earth in the twenty-first century?v
Solution

The Historian introduces the attempted Martian invasion of 2040.

Answer:

The Martians, led by the arrogant ruler Think-Tank, tried to invade Earth in the twenty-first century.

2READ AND FIND OUT (Page 3)1 questions
Q.•What guesses are made by Think–Tank about the books found on earth?v
Solution

The sequence of guesses produces the play’s satire of authority without knowledge.

Answer:

Think-Tank first declares that books are sandwiches because their covers resemble slices of bread. When the crew cannot eat them, Noodle tactfully suggests they may be communication devices; Think-Tank then claims they are used for ear communication. After the crew opens them, he revises the theory again and calls the printed marks a code to be read. Each confident guess is wrong, and Noodle quietly guides him toward the truth.

3Think about it4 questions
Q.1Noodle avoids offending Think-Tank but at the same time he corrects his mistakes. How does he manage to do that?v
Solution

His repeated formula of humble suggestion and Think-Tank’s appropriation demonstrates the method.

Answer:

Noodle presents every correction as a small piece of information that Think-Tank himself has inspired. He begins deferentially—‘Forgive me, your Cleverness’—and says the idea has merely entered his insignificant mind. Think-Tank then adopts the suggestion and announces it as his own discovery. By using praise, questions and indirect hints rather than blunt contradiction, Noodle protects the ruler’s vanity while steering the mission toward a more accurate understanding of books.

Q.2If you were in Noodle’s place, how would you handle Think-Tank’s mistakes?v
Solution

Sample response adapting Noodle’s tact while adding evidence-based verification.

Answer:

I would remain respectful but make the evidence explicit. I would ask the crew to test each claim, report what the object actually does and offer the correction as a way to protect the mission. For example, instead of saying that the ‘sandwich’ idea is foolish, I would note that the object cannot be eaten, contains repeated symbols and therefore probably stores information. This approach reduces defensiveness while ensuring that decisions are based on observation rather than authority.

Q.3Do you think books are being replaced by the electronic media? Can we do away with books altogether?v
Solution

Sample response connects the play’s respect for books with present media choices.

Answer:

Electronic media now performs many functions once served mainly by printed books: it distributes text quickly, supports search, audio and video, and stores large libraries. That changes the form of reading, but does not remove the need for books as sustained, organised records of knowledge and imagination. Printed books also work without power, are easy to preserve and reduce distraction; digital books improve access and portability. We should not do away with books altogether. The two forms can complement each other, with the choice depending on purpose and access.

Q.4Why are books referred to as a man’s best companion? Which is your favourite book and why? Write a paragraph about that book.v
Solution

The first part answers the general claim; the second supplies a model personal paragraph.

Answer:

Books are called a person’s best companion because they offer knowledge, imagination and reflection whenever a reader turns to them; they can instruct without humiliating and remain available across time. A model choice is The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank. It is memorable because Anne records fear, conflict, hope and self-examination while living in hiding. Her precise, candid voice turns a vast historical tragedy into an intimate human experience and shows how writing can preserve courage and identity even under persecution.