NCERT Class 4 Environmental Studies Chapter 23 Pochampalli

NCERT Class 4 Environmental Studies Chapter 23 Pochampalli Solutions to each chapter is provided in the list so that you can easily browse through different chapters NCERT Class 4 Environmental Studies Chapter 23 Pochampalli Notes and select need one. NCERT Class 4 Environmental Studies Chapter 23 Pochampalli Question Answers Download PDF. NCERT Class 4 Environmental Studies Solutions.

NCERT Class 4 Environmental Studies Chapter 23 Pochampalli

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Also, you can read the NCERT book online in these sections Solutions by Expert Teachers as per Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) Book guidelines. NCERT Class 4 Environmental Studies Textual Solutions are part of All Subject Solutions. Here we have given NCERT Class 4 Environmental Studies Textbook Solutions for All Chapters, You can practice these here.

Chapter: 23

WRITE IN YOUR NOTEBOOK

1. Have you ever seen anybody weave something on a loom? What were they weaving and where?

Ans: Yes, I once saw someone weaving on a loom on television. They were making a shawl.

2. The threads of a saree are dyed. Do you know of any other thing that is dyed?

Ans: Dyeing is also used on hair, wool, and cotton threads.

3. If you visit Vani’s village it seems as if the entire village is weaving sarees. Do you know of any other work which many people living in one place do?

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Ans: Yes, pottery is another traditional craft.

4. Do they make some articles?

Ans: Yes, they make various items. Pottery artisans craft earthen pots.

5. Find out the process of making the article? What are the different steps?

Ans: The following is the process of making an earthen pot:

(a) First, collect clay to shape the earthen pot.

(b) Next, prepare a smooth clay dough by removing any air bubbles.

(c) Then, place the clay at the center of the potter’s wheel and shape it as desired.

(d) Once shaped, the earthen pots are left to dry under the sun.

(e) Finally, they are painted or decorated as per preference.

6. Do men and women do different kinds of work to make this article?

Ans: No, men and women do not engage in different types of work to create the article; they simply share and divide the tasks.

7. Do children also contribute in making this article?

Ans: Yes, children also helped their parents in making this article.

FIND OUT AND WRITE

1. Talk to an ironsmith, a carpenter and a potter about the nature of their work.

Ans: (a) An ironsmith works with metal, heating and shaping it to create tools, gates, and other metal items.

(b) A carpenter works with wood, cutting, shaping, and assembling it to make furniture, doors, and windows.

(c) A potter uses clay to make earthen pots, toys, and decorative items by shaping them on a potter’s wheel and then baking them in a kiln.

2. Where did they learn to do their work?

Ans: Most of them learned their work from their elders or by working as apprentices under skilled artisans. 

3. What else did they need to learn to be able to do this work?

Ans: They needed to learn patience, precision, and creativity. 

4. Have they taught this work to anybody in their family, or to anyone else?

Ans: Yes, many of them have taught their children or younger family members.

5. The table below has a list of different kinds of work that people do. Do you know people who do such work? Write their names in the first column. In the next column write from whom have they learnt their work?

Kind of workName of people you know who do this workWhere did they learn this work from?
Cloth weavingPrasad and Vani’s parentsFrom their elders
Cooking
Cycle repair
Flying aeroplanes
Sewing and embroidery
Singing
Making shoes
Flying kites
Farming
Cutting hair

Ans: 

Kind of workName of people you know who do this workWhere did they learn this work from?
Cloth weavingPrasad and Vani’s parentsFrom their elders
CookingMy auntFrom her mother
Cycle repairRamesh, the mechanicLearned by working in a garage
Flying aeroplanesCaptain ArjunLearned in aviation school
Sewing and embroideryMy neighbor, Mrs. SharmaFrom her grandmother
SingingRahul, a music teacherFrom a professional trainer
Making shoesShoemaker near my houseFrom his father
Flying kitesMy cousin, RajLearned from his uncle
FarmingRam Singh, a farmerFrom his family
Cutting hairBarber at the local salonFrom a professional trainer

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