Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions on it.
The great white shark is at the top of the marine food chain. In the shark family, it is the king, it will eat anything, even other sharks. But as it gets older, bigger and slower, it develops a preference for seals, penguins and carrion, especially dead whales. In locating their food, most sharks use all their senses, including excellent vision. Their sense of smell is incredible and their ears are aided by pressure-sensitive cells along each side of their body. Nothing escapes this eavesdropping system, which is attuned to vibrations in the water. Sharks also have a sixth sense which enables them to detect the weak electrical fields emanating from the beating heart or the swimming muscles of a potential prey. The white shark's most fearsome assets are its huge head, its black eyes, and its razor-sharp, serrated teeth. The circulatory system of the white shark is different from that of most other sharks. Its blood temperature is about three to five degrees Celsius above water temperature; this speeds up digestion and adds to its strength and endurance. It is known that the white shark spits out its wounded prey after an initial, powerful bite. Then it waits for the victim to die before eating it. Why does it use this bite-and-spit strategy? Experts speculate that this is because of its eyes. sockets when a collision is Unlike other sharks, the white shark has no eyelid-like membrane to protect its eyes; rather, it rotates them in their sockets when a collision is imminent. At the moment of impact, the eye is left exposed, perhaps to the flaying claws of a seal. Therefore, for the white shark, a quick mortal strike and release is common behaviour. The public image of sharks has been greatly coloured by the novel Jaws which was turned into a popular movie. Overnight the white shark became evil incarnate. However, it is not a demon craving human flesh. The smell of blood does not drive it into a feeding frenzy as it does certain other sharks. Nevertheless it is a dangerous animal that should be treated with caution and respect (a) How do sharks used their sixth sense? (b) In what significant way is the circulatory system of the white shark different from that of other sharks? (c) What according to the passage. is the probable reason why the white shark waits for its victim to die before eating it? (d)(i) What is the writer's attitude to the white shark? (ii) Quote an expression expression from the passage to support your answer. (e) "At the moment of impact..." (i) What grammatical name is given to this given to this expression as it is used in the passage. (ii) What is its function? (f) "However, it is not a demon craving human flesh." What figure of speech is contained in this expression? (g) For each of the following words. find another word or phrase which means the same and which can replace it as it is used in the passage. (i) preference; (ii) incredible, (iii) emanating: (iv) speculate: (v) mortal: (vi) coloured.
Explanation
(a) They use it to detect electrical fields coming from a prey and the location of a prey. (b) The circulatory system of the white shark is different from that of other sharks because their blood is warmer. (c) The shark waits for its victim to die before eating it because a (thrashing) victim can cause damage to the shark's unprotected eyes. (d)(i) The writer fears the white shark. (ii) The expressions that support my answer are " fearsome assets,..." paragraph 2, "It is a dangerous animal","....treated with caution ..." last paragraph Or (i) The writer admires or respects the white shark. (ii) The expressions that support my answer are "Its eavesdropping system...", "... excellent vision...", "Their sense of smell is incredible ..." paragraph 2 (e)(i) The grammatical name given to the expression is adverbial phrase of time Or The grammatical name of the expression is prepositional phrase. (ii) Its function is that it qualifies or modifies the verb "is left" in the sentence, i.e., it serves as adverb modifying the verb "is left" (f) The figure of speech contained in this expression is metaphor. (g)(i) Preference - liking, taste, desire, fondness (ii) Incredible - Unbelievable, wonderful, excellent, amazing, extraordinary (ii) Emanating - coming, issuing, originating, arising, resulting. (iv) Speculate - think, guess, opine, assume claim (v) Mortal - fatal, deadly, lethal (vi) Coloured - influenced, distorted, prejudiced, affected