Section 1 R107: Warranty NON CONTINUOUS TEXT
Read and answer the first five questions based on Warranty Text 1 and TEXT 2
Warranty Text 1
Video House
89 ELIZABETH STREET, MELBOURNE CAMERA SHOTS VIDEO HOUSE
3000 89 ELIZABETH STREET
PHONE: 9670 9601 FAX: 9602 5527 MELBOURNE VIC 3000
http://www.camerashots.com.au
CUSTOMER
9670 9601
SARAH BROWN INVOICE 26802 DATE 18/10/99 TIME 12:10
151 GLENLYON STREET ACCOUNT 195927 SALES 24 RAY REG. 16
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION SERIAL No LIST QTY NET TOTAL EX
150214 ROLLY FOTONEX 250 ZOOM 30910963 1 249.08 249.08 X
33844 TRIPOD 1 5.66 5.66 X
Sub-Total 254.74
Transaction . . . . . . . . . Amount . . . Change
Visa/Bank Card $254.74 Total 254.74
Thank you for your business
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On the previous page is the receipt that Sarah received when she bought her new
camera. Below is the warranty card for the camera. Use these documents to answer
the questions which follow.
Warranty TEXT 2
ONE YEAR WARRANTY:(Private Users)
VALID ONLY IN AUSTRALIA
VIDEO HOUSE & COMPANY PTY LTD – ACN 008 458
884
(‘VIDEO HOUSE’) warrants to the initial owner that the
camera is free of any defects in material or workmanship.
This warranty is not transferable.
Video House will service, repair or replace at its election,
and free of charge, any part which is found upon inspection
by Video House to be defective in material or workmanship
during the warranty period(s).
PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY
NO. M 409668
Camera – Model
..........................................................................................
...
Serial No:
Name of Owner: SARAH BROWN
Address: 151 GLENLYON STREET
BRUNSWICK VIC 3057
Date
Purchased:
Purchase
Rubber Stamp of Dealer
[insert facsimile stamp of dealer’s name/logo]
PLEASE NOTE:
Post Immediately – Postage Stamp Necessary
This warranty card should be completed and returned
to Video House within 10 days of purchase.
International Warranty Card issued on request.
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SECTION 1: Warranty
Q1: What is the correct model name for the warranty card?
150214
Rolly Fotonex 250 Zoom Tripod
Rolly Fotonex 250 Zoom ✅
Rolly Zoom
Q2: How long does Sarah have to return the warranty card?
5 days
10 days ✅
15 days
Within a month
Q3: What else did Sarah buy while she was in the store?
A lens
A camera case
A tripod ✅
A charger
Q4: What is another reason (besides politeness) that “Thank you for your
business” is printed on the receipt?
To make customers feel special
To thank them for choosing the camera
To help build customer loyalty ✅
To remind customers of their purchase
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Section 2- R109: A Just Judge CONTINUOUS TEXT
Read and answer the questions from 5-10.
Just Judge Text
Refer to the story A Just Judge, which starts on the next page, to answer the
questions which follow it.
A JUST JUDGE
An Algerian king named Bauakas wanted to find out whether or not it
was true, as he had been told, that in one of his cities lived a just judge
who could instantly discern the truth, and from whom no rogue was ever
able to conceal himself.
Bauakas exchanged clothes with a merchant and went on horseback to
the city where the judge lived.
At the entrance to the city a cripple approached the king and begged alms of him.
Bauakas gave him money and was about to continue on his way, but the
cripple clung to his clothing.
“What do you wish?” asked the king. “Haven’t I given you money?”
“You gave me alms,” said the cripple, “now grant me one favour. Let
me ride with you as far as the city square, otherwise the horses and
camels may trample me.”
Bauakas sat the cripple behind him on the horse and took him as far as
the city square. There he halted his horse, but the cripple refused to
dismount.
“We have arrived at the square, why don’t you get off?” asked Bauakas.
“Why should I?” the beggar replied. “This horse belongs to me. If you
are unwilling to return it, we shall have to go to court.”
Hearing their quarrel, people gathered around them
shouting: “Go to the judge! He will decide between
you!”
Bauakas and the cripple went to the judge. There were others in court,
and the judge called upon each one in turn. Before he came to Bauakas
and the cripple he heard a scholar and a peasant. They had come to court
over a woman: the peasant said she was his wife, and the scholar said
she was his. The judge heard them both, remained silent for a moment,
and then said:
“Leave the woman here with me, and come back tomorrow.”
When they had gone, a butcher and an oil merchant came before the
judge. The butcher was covered with blood, and the oil merchant with oil.
In his hand the butcher held some money, and the oil merchant held onto
the butcher’s hand.
“I was buying oil from this man,” the butcher said, “and when I took
out my purse to pay him, he seized me by the hand and tried to take all
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my money away from me. That is why we have come to you—I holding
onto my purse, and he holding onto my hand. But the money is mine,
and he is a thief.”
Then the oil merchant spoke. “That is not true,” he said. “The butcher
came to me to buy oil, and after I had poured him a full jug, he asked me
to change a gold piece for him. When I took out my money and placed it
on a bench, he seized it and tried to run off. I caught him by the hand, as
you see, and brought him here to you.”
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The judge remained silent for a moment, then said: “Leave the money
here with me, and come back tomorrow.”
When his turn came, Bauakas told what had happened. The judge
listened to him, and then asked the beggar to speak.
“All that he said is untrue,” said the beggar. “He was sitting on the
ground, and as I rode through the city he asked me to let him ride with
me. I sat him on my horse and took him where he wanted to go. But when
we got there he refused to get off and said that the horse was his, which
is not true.”
The judge thought for a moment, then said, “Leave the horse here with
me, and come back tomorrow.”
The following day many people gathered in court to hear the judge’s
decisions. First came the scholar and the peasant.
“Take your wife,” the judge said to the scholar, “and the peasant
shall be given fifty strokes of the lash.”
The scholar took his wife, and the peasant was given his
punishment. Then the judge called the butcher.
“The money is yours,” he said to him. And pointing to the oil merchant
he said: “Give him fifty strokes of the lash.”
He next called Bauakas and the cripple.
“Would you be able to recognise your horse among twenty others?” he
asked Bauakas.
“I would,” he replied.
“And you?” he asked the
cripple. “I would,” said the
cripple.
“Come with me,” the judge said to Bauakas.
They went to the stable. Bauakas instantly pointed out his horse among
the twenty others. Then the judge called the cripple to the stable and told
him to point out the horse. The cripple recognised the horse and pointed to
it. The judge then returned to his seat.
“Take the horse, it is yours,” he said to Bauakas. “Give the beggar fifty
strokes of the lash.”
When the judge left the court and went home, Bauakas followed him.
“What do you want?” asked the judge. “Are you not satisfied with my
decision?” “I am satisfied,” said Bauakas. “But I should like to learn
how you knew that the
woman was the wife of the scholar, that the money belonged to the
butcher, and that the horse was mine and not the beggar’s.”
“This is how I knew about the woman: in the morning I sent for her and
said: ‘Please fill my inkwell.’ She took the inkwell, washed it quickly and
deftly, and filled it with ink; therefore it was work she was accustomed to.
If she had been the wife of the peasant she would not have known how to
do it. This showed me that the scholar was telling the truth.
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“And this is how I knew about the money: I put it into a cup full of water,
and in the morning I looked to see if any oil had risen to the surface. If the
money had belonged
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to the oil merchant it would have been soiled by his oily hands.
There was no oil on the water; therefore, the butcher was telling
the truth.
“It was more difficult to find out about the horse. The cripple
recognised it among twenty others, even as you did. However, I
did not take you both to the stable to see which of you knew the
horse, but to see which of you the horse knew. When you
approached it, it turned its head and stretched its neck toward
you; but when the cripple touched it, it laid back its ears and
lifted one hoof. Therefore I knew that you were the horse’s real
master.”
Then Bauakas said to the judge: “I am not a merchant, but King
Bauakas, I came here in order to see if what is said of you is true.
I see now that you are a wise judge. Ask whatever you wish of
me, and you shall have it as reward.”
“I need no reward,” replied the judge. “I am content that my king has
praised me.”
Q1: What is the correct model name for the warranty card?
150214
Rolly Fotonex 250 Zoom Tripod
Rolly Fotonex 250 Zoom ✅
Rolly Zoom
Q2: How long does Sarah have to return the warranty card?
5 days
10 days ✅
15 days
Within a month
Q3: What else did Sarah buy while she was in the store?
A lens
A camera case
A tripod ✅
A charger
Q4: What is another reason (besides politeness) that “Thank you for your
business” is printed on the receipt?
To make customers feel special
To thank them for choosing the camera
To help build customer loyalty ✅
To remind customers of their purchase
SECTION 2: A Just Judge
Q5: Why didn’t Bauakas want to be recognised?
To test if he would be obeyed as an ordinary person
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To play a trick on the judge
To appear as a merchant in a trial
To see the judge’s true actions without influence ✅
Q6: How did the judge know that the woman was the wife of the scholar?
By how she looked
By their court behavior
By her reaction to each man
By testing her skills ✅
Q7: Do you think it was fair to give the same punishment for all crimes?
No, some crimes were more serious than others
No, different situations need different responses
Yes, all involved stealing and lying ✅
Yes, all cases had a clear villain
Q8: What is this story mainly about?
Major crimes
Wise justice ✅
A clever king
A trickster
Q9a: What is a similarity between law in your country and in the story?
Everyone is heard in court ✅
People wear robes
Police bring criminals
There are punishments
Q9b: What is one difference between law in your country and in the story
(apart from punishment)?
Judges are appointed by the king
No jury or lawyers ✅
Trials are outdoors
All decisions involve animals
Q10: Which best describes this story?
A travel story
A tragedy
A comedy
A folk tale ✅
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1. Other than extreme cold, what could be another reason butterflies
and moths are not found in Antarctica?
o Answer: Lack of vegetation and nectar-producing plants that are
essential for their survival and reproduction.
2. Mention any four ways in which a butterfly can be distinguished
from a moth.
o Answer:
1. Butterflies are active during the day (diurnal); moths are usually
nocturnal.
2. Butterflies have clubbed antennae; moths have feathery or
filamentous antennae.
3. Butterflies usually fold wings vertically; moths spread wings flat
when at rest.
4. Butterfly bodies are slender and smooth; moth bodies are thick
and furry.
3. Why do butterflies perch on flowers?
o Answer: To suck nectar for nourishment using their proboscis.
📘 READING UNIT 7
1. Difference between production of company Z in 1998 and company Y
in 1996?
o Answer: 3) 2,00000 tons
2. Which company/companies have the maximum average paper
production?
o Answer: 3) X & Z
3. Suggest three ways to spread awareness about saving paper.
o Answer:
1. Promote the use of digital receipts and documents.
2. Organize campaigns and workshops on environmental
conservation.
3. Encourage recycling and reuse of paper in schools and offices.
4. Ways a company can show excellence and enhance business:
o Answer:
1. Maintain consistent quality of products or services.
2. Adopt eco-friendly practices and innovations.
3. Provide excellent customer service and feedback support.
4. Focus on employee well-being and professional development.
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