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    Hafiz Ashfaq Ahmed 0300-9461951

    There is no royal road to making a prcis. It is an intellectual exercise. We can only achieve

    success in prcis writing if we can fully enter into the spirit of the given passage.

    AVOID THE FOLLOWING.

    (i) Avoid comments of your own and other irrelevancies.

    (ii) Avoid borrowing phrases and sentences from the original.(iii) Avoid emphasizing the wrong points.

    (iv) Avoid exceeding the prescribed length by more than five words.

    (v) Avoid bad style. See that your sentences do not lack unity.(vi) Avoid colloquial expressions.

    As a rule a prcis should be in Indirect Speech. Great care must be taken to avoid lapsing into

    Direct Speech.

    The summary should be in the Third Person. The first person must be changed into third

    person.

    EXAMPLES:

    (i) I say, first we have despised literature. What do we, as a nation, care about books? I

    say, we have despised Science. I say we have despised Art.

    PRECIS: The writer said that they had despised literature, science and art.

    The prcis should be generally made in the past tense unless the original passage expressessome universal truth in which case the present tense must be used.

    (ii) War is a great calamity. It is worse than famine or plague. It settles nothing but unsettleseverything.

    PRECIS: Waris more destructive than epidemics and starvation.

    (iii) I never found a woman who was so generous in her gifts and who loved to entertain so

    many guests in her home.

    PRECIS: I never found so hospitable a woman.

    THE PRECIS OF A PARAGRAPH

    In attempting the precis of a paragraph the following plan may be of some assistance.

    (i) Read the passage carefully two or three times or more till the meaning is wellunderstood.

    (ii) Note down the central idea or the main topic. Often the main idea of the passage can be

    expressed in a phrase: this phrase will make the title of the passage.(iii) Make an out line summary of the passage dividing it into main topics and sub topics if

    possible.

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    Hafiz Ashfaq Ahmed 0300-9461951(iv) Write off in plain businesslike English a continuous summary linking up the topics and

    sub topics already written down. Pay as much attention to grammar and style as in any

    composition.

    EXAMPLE:

    I often wish that this phrase applied science had never been invented. For it suggests that

    there is a sort of scientific knowledge of direct practical use which can be studied apart from another sort of scientific knowledge, which is of no practical utility, and which is termed as pure

    science. But there is no more complete fallacy than this. What people call applied science is

    nothing but the application of pure science to particular classes of problems. It consists of

    deductions from those general principles, established by reasoning and observation, whichconstitute pure science. No one can safely make these deductions until he has a firm grasp of

    the principles, and he can obtain that grasp only by personal experience of the operations of

    observation and of reasoning on which they were founded. (T.H.Huxley)

    PRECIS: Application science is not a separate and independent branch of science. It is

    nothing more than application of the laws and principles of pure science to specific problemsfor specific results. It may, therefore, be called the practical use of pure science for more

    specific purpose.

    (First Group) 2003

    Properly speaking, the cave men were the human beings who lived before the most important

    of the early inventions on which a stable civilization can be based: farming or the regular

    cultivation of edible plant; the domestication of hoofed animals; pottery ---- and perhaps with itthe revolutionary technique of grinding, polishing, and boring stone tools so as to make them

    almost as efficient as the later tools of metal. The cave men did not farm, they were hunters and

    fishermen, and their women collected wild fruit, vegetables, and grain. They lived lives ratherlike those of the American plains Indians before the introduction of the horse. They did not

    domesticate animals or at best only one animal, our oldest friend dog. They lived largely on

    animals; they thought about animals constantly; but they were hunters, so they treated even thehorse as something to be stampeded over a cliff and then eaten. They knew something about

    clay and how it hardens in the fire, but so for we have found no real clay dishes or containers

    among their remains. We find it difficult to imagine life without the peaceful cornfields, the

    quiet cattle, and the dishes from which we eat and drink, yet for most of mans existence on theearth these things were unknown and undreamed of. Settled farming began somewhere about

    7000 years ago, in the new Stone Age; that seems like a long time ago, but it is only about 200

    generations from our own time.

    Questions:

    i. Make a prcis of the passage. 16

    ii. Who were the cave men? 03iii. What are the basic elements of a stable civilization? 03

    iv. What did the cave men eat to live? 03

    (Second Group) 2003

    It is one of lifes choicest blessings to have a few sincere friends. This is not as easy as it may

    seem. For to attract friends, one must oneself be attractive. For this, the first thing necessary isto have trustful nature. Confidence alone begets confidence. One must open ones heart to a

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    Hafiz Ashfaq Ahmed 0300-9461951friend, holding back nothing. Secrecy is the poison that always destroys lasting friendship andso one must have no secret from a real friend. Secondly, one must be tolerant and forbearing.

    No man is all good, and if one is always fault finding, it will produce a feeling of natural

    irritation. This leads to estrangement. It is only when friendship is tested by the trials of lifethat faults may be pointed without creating ill- will. Thirdly, there can be no true or lasting

    friendship between men of unequal status or worth. Real friendship is possible between equals.

    There must be no intention on one side or the other to make friendship a matter of gain orconvenience. But real friendship is a very rare thing in the world. There are many people who

    seem to be incapable of it. Suspicious natures, and those who are credulous are easily

    influenced by reports and whispers can never make good friends.

    Questions:

    i. Make a prcis of the passage. 16

    ii. What were conditions of good friendship? 03iii. What are the causes that destroy friendship? 03

    iv. What type of people are incapable of friendship? 03

    (First Group) 2004

    Fortunately, however, the growth of industrialism has coincided in the West with the growth of

    democracy. It is possible now, if the population of the world does not increase too fast, for onemans labour to produce much more than is needed to provide a bare subsistence for himselfand his family. Given an intelligent democracy not misled by some dogmatic creed, this

    possibility will be used to raise the standard of life. It has been so used, to a limited extent, in

    Britain and America and would have been so used more effectively but for war. Its use in

    raising the standard of life has depended mainly upon three things: democracy, trade unionism,and birth control. All three of course, have incurred hostility from the rich. If these three things

    can be extended to the rest of the world as it becomes industrialized, and if the dangers of great

    wars can be eliminated, poverty can be abolished throughout the whole world, and excessivehours of labour will no longer be necessary anywhere, but without these three things,

    industrialism will create a regime like that in which the Pharaohs built the pyramids. In

    particular, if world population continues to increase at the present rate, the abolition of povertyand excessive work will be totally impossible.

    Questions:

    i. What connection does the writer show between industrialism and democracy? 02ii. How can the standard of life be raised? 02

    iii. How can poverty be abolished? 02

    iv. What will be the impact of increase in population at the present rate? 02v. Suggest a suitable title for the passage. 02

    vi. Make a prcis of the passage. 15

    (Second Group) 2004Real beauty is as much an affair of the inner as of shape, of colour, of surface texture. The jar

    may be empty or tenanted by spiders, full of honey or stinking slime it makes no difference

    to its beauty or ugliness. But a woman is alive, and her beauty is therefore not skin deep. Thesurface of the human vessel is affected by the nature of its spiritual contents. I have seen

    women who, by the standards of a connoisseur of porcelain, were ravishingly lovely. Their

    shape, their colour, their surface texture were perfect. And yet they were not beautiful. For thelovely vase was either empty or filled with some corruption. Spiritual emptiness or ugliness

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    Hafiz Ashfaq Ahmed 0300-9461951shows through. And conversely, there is an interior light that can transfigure forms that the pureaesthetician would regard as imperfect or downright ugly. There are numerous forms of

    psychological ugliness. There is an ugliness of stupidity, for example, of unawareness

    (distressingly common among pretty women), an ugliness also of greed, of lasciviousness, ofavarice. All the deadly sins, indeed, have their own peculiar negation of beauty. On the pretty

    faces of those especially who are trying to have a continuous good time, one sees very often a

    kind of bored sullenness that ruins all their charm.

    Questions:

    i. What does real beauty signify? 02

    ii. Where does the beauty of a porcelain jar lie? 02iii. Differentiate between inner beauty and outer beauty? 02

    iv. Point out some forms of psychological ugliness. 02

    v. Suggest a suitable title for the passage. 02vi. Make a prcis of the passage. 15

    (First Group) 2005

    A person who is aware of(Second Group) 2005

    Ought women to have

    (First Group) 2006

    When the time for a general

    (Second Group) 2006

    Great progress has been made by America in the field of mechanization. It is spending lavishly

    on labour-saving machines. Efficient organization of highly mechanized system has resulted in

    maximum productivity in America. With mass production, the amenities of life are available toalmost every citizen. On the contrary Europe subordinates the use of machines to human

    happiness and welfare. It encourages mans reliance on his own faculties and realizes the

    dangers inherent in the American scheme. However great the advantages of mechanization, it

    crushes the creative faculty of man and makes a machine out of him. His individual liberty andpersonality suffer an irretrievable loss. In his moments of leisure the worker finds it difficult to

    turn his hands to creative work because the machine made goods do not inspire him in the

    direction of refinement. These goods also lose their fascination because mass production hasgiven a set back to the individuality of the articles produced. The European, therefore, contend

    that it is better to sacrifice a few material comforts than crush the aesthetic and spiritual urge in

    the individual which large-scale mechanization is doing in America.

    Questions:

    i. Suggest a suitable title for the passage. 02

    ii. What is the result of progress in the field of mechanization in America? 02iii. How has it affected the citizens? 02

    iv. What is the case in Europe? 02

    v. Why do Europeans sacrifice a few material comforts? 02vi. Make a summary of the passage. 15

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    Hafiz Ashfaq Ahmed 0300-9461951(First Group) 2007

    Pakistanies are sometimes treated as suspects as they enter Saudi Arabia. The procedures forsearch and investigation are aggressive, and naturally, time-consuming may be a humiliating

    experience for a self respecting Pakistani. Lately, another trend is developing which can hurt as

    still more as injury is being added to insult. Quite a few Saudis are now unwilling to employPakistanis as they used to do in the seventies. One main reason cited is the incidence of drug-

    trafficking (business) through expatriate Pakistanis who, at times, collaborate with drug-

    traffickers. Thus, the channel of employment for our labour in Saudi Arabia is drying up, partly

    owing to our failing as people.Pakistan is a victim as drugs produced in Afghanistan pass through our territory. It cannot be

    denied that drugs are produced in Pakistan, but the government is trying to curtail their

    production. However, with an estimated indigenous (native) population of just over threemillion addicts the local production of drugs does not appear enough to meet the home

    demand, thus, having started as a producer of heroine in 1979, thanks to the transfer of such

    technology by a western adventurer, it is now the major consumer. However, in the westerncountries, the treatment meted out to Pakistani nationals is humiliating.

    Questions:

    i. Why is the treatment humiliating for Pakistanis on entering Saudi Arabia?

    02

    ii. What is the main reason for the reduction of employment opportunities in Saudi Arabia?

    02iii. How much is Pakistan responsible for drug-trafficking? 02

    iv. Who is technologically responsible for the production of heroine in Pakistan? 02

    v. Suggest a suitable title for the passage. 02vi. Make a prcis of the passage.

    15

    (Second Group) 2007

    One of the main objectives of Imam Khomeinis foreign and domestic policy was thepropagation of the humanitarian principles of Islam. The Islamic Republic of Iran took a bold

    stand on the basis of this objective. Iran explained this stand at every international forum. The

    divine commands that have shaped the Iranian policies are perhaps common to every majorreligion.

    The revered Imam tried to associate the masses in his own and other Muslim countries with his

    own and other Muslim countries with his objective. He addressed them directly, had a silent

    dialogue of the heart with them even when he could not meet them personally. The people inalmost all the Muslim countries and even in others whether they were inhabited by Muslims or

    followers of other faiths, listened to his speeches and talks attentively and devotedly. Thus

    instead of appealing to the unpopular and reactionary governments of the day, he establisheddurable and lasting contacts with the common people and their true representatives.

    The great leader demanded the common peoples presence, through their representatives, at

    important meetings and participation in his decision-making. In this way he wanted to ensurethe achievement of the aims of the Islamic Revolution. This policy was instantly successful in

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    Hafiz Ashfaq Ahmed 0300-9461951winning the support of the Muslim masses even in the countries that were being ruled over bythe so called representatives.

    Questions:

    i. Explain the main objectives of Imam Khomeini. 02

    ii. What was his mode of achievement toward his goal? 02

    iii. How can we call The Iranian Revolution a peoples revolution? 02iv. Comment on the success of The Iranian Revolution. 02

    v. Suggest a suitable title for the passage. 02

    vi. Make a prcis of the passage. 15

    (First Group) 2008

    It is common in our day, as it has been in many other periods of the worlds history to suppose

    that those among us who are wise have seen through all the enthusiasms of earlier times and

    have become aware that there is nothing left to live for. The men who hold this view aregenuinely unhappy but they are proud of their unhappiness which they attribute to the nature of

    the universe and consider to the only rational attitude for an enlightened man. Their pride ontheir unhappiness makes people suspicious of its genuineness: they think that the man whoenjoys being miserable is not miserable. This view is too simple; undoubtedly there is some

    slight compensation in the feeling of superiority and insight which these sufferers have, but it is

    not sufficient to make up for the loss of simple pleasure. I do not myself think that there is

    myself think that there is any superiority rationality in being unhappy. The wise men will be ashappy as circumstances permit and if he finds the contemplation of the universe painful beyond

    a point, he will contemplate something instead. I am persuaded that those who quite sincerely

    attribute their sorrows to their views about the universe are putting the cart before the horse;the truth is that they are unhappy for some reasons of which they are not aware.

    Questions:i. Suggest a suitable title for the passage. 02

    ii. What is common with the wise today to suppose? 02

    iii. What is the result of pride on unhappiness? 02

    iv. How can a wise man be happy? 02v. Explain the meaning of the following words:

    vi. (a) Enthusiasm (b) Conteplation 02

    vii. Make a summary of the passage. 15

    (Second Group) 2008

    Space travel is by far the most expensive type of exploration ever undertaken by man. The vast

    expenditure of money and human effort now being devoted to projects for putting man intospace might well be applied to ends more practically useful and more conducive to human

    happiness. It is a strange world in which tens of millions of pounds are spent to give one man a

    ride round the earth at thousand miles an hour, while beneath him in his orbit live millions forwhom life is a daily struggle to win a few coins to buy their daily struggle. The money and

    effort that go into the development and construction of a single type of space-rocket would

    more than suffice to rid several countries of such scourge as malaria or typhoid fever, to nameonly two of the diseases that medical science has conquered but which still persist in the world

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    Hafiz Ashfaq Ahmed 0300-9461951simply because not enough money and effort are devoted to their eradication. Why should thericher countries of the world be pouring their resources into space when poverty and disease on

    the earth are crying out for relief? One could give a cynical answer to this question and assert

    that mans expensive adventures into space are merely the by-products of the struggle betweengreat powers for prestige and possible military advantage.

    Questions:

    i. Why is it a strange world? 02

    ii. Why do malaria and typhoid still exist in the world? 02

    iii. Why is man pouring his resources into space? 02

    iv. Explain the meaning of the following words:(a) Scourge (b) Eradication 02

    v. Suggest a suitable title for the passage. 02

    vi. Make a prcis of the passage. 15

    (First Group) 2009

    Advertising is essentially the art of communication. As such, its origin can be traced right backto the origin of species. Advertising Colouration is a familiar biological phrase denoting the

    colours developed by certain animals to make them stand out against their natural background.It is the direct opposite of camouflage. There is always a message in these colours, such askeep away, mind your step, darling wont you care for a dance? while camouflage is

    tricky and timed, advertising is honest, confidant, and forthright, as far as the world of nature

    goes. In human life, advertising through the mouth must have begun with the beginning of

    commerce. The tradition is still kept alive by hawkers and street vendors in our towns andvillages. As regards advertising through the written word there is archeological evidence that it

    was being practiced at least 3,000 years ago. An advertisement offering a gold coin as a reward

    to anyone tracing out a run away slave was unearthed in the ruins of Thebes and is computed tobe as old as the third millennium B.C. it was the prototype of our lost and found classified

    and that was painted on a wall.

    Questions:

    i. What is advertising? 02

    ii. Where does the phrase advertising colouration mean? 02

    iii. What is the difference between camouflage and advertising? 02iv. When did verbal and written advertising begin in human life? 02

    v. Suggest a suitable title for the passage. 02

    vi. Make a prcis of the passage. 15

    (Second Group) 2009

    (Repetition see First group 2004)

    (1)

    The tyrannical regimes of several dictators like Stalin, Mussolini and Hitler form a very

    important part of our world history. Why dont we learn from this? Why dont we stop the

    continuing debate between the supremacy of despotism over democracy or vice versa?Democracy has attracted support since the time of ancient Greek because it represents an ideal

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    Hafiz Ashfaq Ahmed 0300-9461951of justice as well as a form of government. The ideal and practice of democracy are inseparablylinked because rulers subjected to voter approval are more likely to treat the voters justly.

    Many of us may say that the ideal of justice and equality is easier said than done. I admit that

    our own country reflects this but we still have the right to choose in election. All we need is theability to face up to our rights and demand our rights fearlessly. In my opinion we lack this

    fearlessness. In short we lack true patriotism.

    Our Holy Prophet (PBUH) also encouraged the concept of democracy and all of the fourcaliphs following him based system of their government and administration on this form of

    government. But what about a country in which ruling party is a despot? What if it turns out to

    be fascist then what choices are the citizens of the country left with? If the natural rights of life,

    liberty and property are not guaranteed, the people have the right to overthrow the government.

    Questions:

    a. What was the Greek ideal of democracy? 02b. Why do we have ineffective democracy in Pakistan? 02

    c. What was the practice of the Holy Prophet (PBUH) and the four caliphs in this connection?

    02d. Make a prcis of the passage and suggest a suitable title to it. 09

    (2)

    Once we have found the habit of looking within, listening to ourselves and responding to our

    own impulses and feelings we shall not let ourselves be so easily the victim of uncontrollable

    emotions and effects; the inner life, instead of being either a gaping void or a ghoulish

    nightmare, will be open to cultivation and in both personal conduct and in art will bring us intomore fruitful and loving relations with other men, whose hidden depths will flow through the

    symbols of art into our own. At this point we can nourish life again more intensely from the

    outside too, opening our minds to every touch and sight and sound, instead of anaesthetizingourselves continually to much that goes on around us, because it has become so meaningless,

    so unrelated to our inner needs. With such self discipline, we shall in time, control the tempo

    and rhythm of our days; control the quantity of stimuli that impinge on us; control our attentionso that the things we do shall reflect our purposes and values, as human beings not the

    extraneous purposes and values of the machine.

    Questions:

    a. How can we control our emotions? 02

    b. How can we cultivate loving relations with other men?

    02c. What is meant by the phrase the extraneous purpose and values of the machine? 02

    d. Make a prcis of the passage and suggest a suitable title to it.

    09

    (3)

    Travelling is the best means of acquiring sound knowledge.

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