This MCQ module is based on: From the Diary of Anne Frank
From the Diary of Anne Frank
Before You Read — Activity: Types of Personal Records
People record their experiences in many different ways. Before reading Anne Frank's diary, understand these forms of personal writing — then try to match the entries from the NCERT 'Before You Read' section.
Match the Entry — Which type is it?
(ii) "10:30 a.m. Went to office of Director..." — Log (formal, timed, official)
(iii) "The ride to Ooty was uneventful..." — Journal (travel record, detailed observations)
(iv) "This is how Raj Kapoor found me..." — Memoir (personal history, retrospective, famous person)
Vocabulary Warm-Up
From the Diary of Anne Frank
Putting thoughts into a diary was, Anne admitted, a peculiar experience for someone like her — not simply because she had never written anything of the kind before, but also because she was certain that neither she nor anyone else would ever find the scattered reflections of a thirteen-year-old schoolgirl the least bit interesting. Still, she felt a pressing need to write — to get a great many things off her chest.
She had thought of the saying "Paper has more patience than people" on one of those grey afternoons when she sat at home, chin in hands, feeling bored and drained — wondering whether to go out or stay in. She eventually stayed, brooding. Paper, she decided, really did have more patience. And since she was not planning to let anyone else read this stiff-backed notebook grandly called a 'diary' — unless she found a real friend someday — it probably wouldn't matter what she wrote. Personification
This brought her back to the question that had prompted her to keep a diary in the first place: she didn't have a true friend. Not in the real sense. No one would believe that a thirteen-year-old could be completely alone in the world — and in one sense, she wasn't. She had loving parents, a sixteen-year-old sister, and about thirty people she could loosely call friends. She had a family, affectionate aunts, and a comfortable home. On the surface, she appeared to have everything. Yet she lacked the one thing that mattered most: a single real friend. Irony
When she was with her friends, all she wanted was to enjoy herself. She couldn't bring herself to discuss anything deeper than everyday concerns. They never seemed to grow any closer — and perhaps, she admitted, the fault lay partly with her. Either way, that was simply how things were, and they seemed unlikely to change. That was why she had begun the diary. To give form to this long-awaited companion she had imagined, she didn't want to record bare facts the way most people might — she wanted the diary to be a true friend, and she would call this friend 'Kitty'. Symbolism
Oral Comprehension Check — Section 1
Ans 2: Anne starts the diary because she lacks a true, close friend — someone she can confide in completely. The diary fills this emotional gap. She decides to treat it as that missing friend and calls it 'Kitty'.
Ans 3: Paper, unlike people, asks no questions, passes no judgements, and never tires of listening — it has more patience. Anne could write anything to the diary without fear of being misunderstood, judged, or having confidences broken.
Since nobody would make sense of what she wrote to Kitty without some context, she felt compelled — however reluctantly — to provide a brief sketch of her life. Her father, the most wonderful father she had ever seen, had not married her mother until he was thirty-six; her mother had been twenty-five. Her sister Margot was born in Frankfurt in 1926; Anne herself on 12 June 1929. She had lived in Frankfurt until she was four. When her father emigrated to Holland in 1933, her mother followed in September, while the two girls were sent to stay with their grandmother in Aachen. Margot went to Holland in December; Anne followed in February — she liked to say she had been plunked down on the table as a birthday present for Margot. Imagery
She began at the Montessori nursery school and stayed until she was six, after which she entered the first form of primary school. In the sixth form her teacher was Mrs Kuperus, the headmistress, and by the time they said farewell at the end of that year, both Anne and her teacher were in tears. In the summer of 1941, Grandma fell ill and required an operation, so Anne's birthday passed with little celebration. Grandma died in January 1942. No one would ever know how often Anne thought of her, or how much she still loved her. The 1942 birthday celebration had been intended to make up for the quiet one the previous year; Grandma's candle was lit alongside the others. The four of them were still together, and that brought her to the present — 20 June 1942, and the solemn beginning of her diary.
Oral Comprehension Check — Section 2
Ans 2: The lines "No one will ever know how often I think of her and still love her" and the detail that Grandma's candle was lit along with the others at the 1942 birthday celebration reveal deep, continuing love. Anne keeps her grandmother's memory alive deliberately and tenderly.
The whole class was quaking in its boots. The cause, naturally, was the upcoming teachers' meeting to decide who would be promoted to the next year and who would not. Half the class was making bets. Anne and G.N. were laughing at the two boys behind them — C.N. and Jacques — who had staked their entire holiday savings on the outcome. Imagery From morning to night it was nothing but "You'll pass!" "No, I won't!" "Yes, you will!" — back and forth. Even G.'s pleading looks and Anne's sharp outbursts couldn't quiet them. In her opinion, at least a quarter of the class deserved to be kept back — but teachers, she declared, were the most unpredictable creatures on earth. Irony
Anne herself wasn't particularly worried about her friends or herself. They'd all manage, she was sure — except perhaps for maths. Anyway, there was nothing to do but wait, and they kept encouraging each other not to despair. She got along reasonably well with all nine of her teachers. Mr Keesing, the elderly maths teacher everyone called an 'old fogey', had long been irritated by Anne's tendency to talk in class. After repeated warnings, he assigned her extra homework: an essay on the subject 'A Chatterbox'. She noted the title in her notebook, tucked it away, and tried — for a while — to keep quiet. Irony
That evening, after finishing the rest of her work, she began to think about the essay while chewing her pen. Anyone could ramble on and leave wide spaces between words — the trick was to produce a convincing argument for the necessity of talking. And then an idea struck her. She wrote the three required pages and felt thoroughly pleased with the result. She had argued that talking was a schoolgirl's natural trait; that she would do her best to keep it in check; but that she could never cure herself of the habit, since her mother talked just as much — if not more — and that inherited traits were simply beyond one's control. Irony
Mr Keesing had a good laugh at her arguments — but when she proceeded to talk her way through the very next lesson, he assigned her a second essay: 'An Incorrigible Chatterbox'. She handed that in too, and two whole lessons passed without complaint. In the third lesson, however, he finally lost patience. "Anne Frank, as punishment for talking in class, write an essay entitled — 'Quack, Quack, Quack, Said Mistress Chatterbox'!" The class roared. Anne had to laugh too, though she had nearly exhausted her ingenuity on the chatterbox theme. She needed something fresh. Her friend Sanne, who was good at poetry, offered to help her write the whole essay in verse — and Anne leapt at the idea. Mr Keesing was clearly trying to embarrass her; she would make sure the joke landed on him instead. Irony
The poem she produced was, she thought, rather beautiful. It told the story of a mother duck and a father swan with three baby ducklings who were bitten to death by the father because they quacked too much. Fortunately, Mr Keesing took the joke in exactly the right spirit. He read the poem aloud — first to Anne's class, then to several others — adding his own commentary as he went. Since then, Anne had been permitted to talk, and no further extra homework had been assigned. On the contrary, Mr Keesing was always making jokes these days. Yours, Anne. Irony
Oral Comprehension Check — Section 3
Ans 2: Anne argued that talking was a natural trait for students, especially for her — since her mother talked just as much. She further claimed that inherited traits cannot be cured, making her talkativeness biologically inevitable and therefore beyond her control.
Ans 3: Anne's comic poem — about baby ducks bitten to death for quacking too much — was so delightful that Mr Keesing read it to several classes. It showed Anne's wit and creativity. Impressed (and outmanoeuvred), he allowed her to talk freely and stopped assigning extra homework.
Theme Web — From the Diary of Anne Frank
Extract-Based Questions (Literature CBQ)
Word Power — Key Vocabulary
Grammar Workshop — Compound Words & Phrasal Verbs
Anne's diary is rich in compound words and phrasal verbs. Understanding these is key for Class 10 board grammar questions.
Match the Compound Word with its Meaning:
Thinking About the Text — Comprehension Exercises
Writing Craft — Diary Writing
Thursday, 12 June
Dear Diary,
Got my Science paper back today. Forty-three out of fifty. Can't decide if I should be pleased or annoyed — I knew the answer to Q7 perfectly and wrote it backwards. Amma will say "at least you passed." She always does. Rohit got forty-eight and looked unbearably smug about it the entire lunch break.
The good thing about today: it rained. Properly rained, not the tired drizzle we've been getting. By 4 o'clock the field was completely flooded and we all stood by the classroom window watching a crow try to stay dry under a leaf. It didn't work.
I wonder sometimes if crows know how ridiculous they look. Probably not. That's why they seem so dignified.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is From the Diary of Anne Frank — 1 about in NCERT English?
From the Diary of Anne Frank — 1 is a lesson from the NCERT English textbook that covers important literary and language concepts. The lesson includes vocabulary, literary devices, comprehension exercises, and writing tasks aligned to the CBSE curriculum.
What vocabulary is important in From the Diary of Anne Frank — 1?
Key vocabulary words from From the Diary of Anne Frank — 1 are highlighted throughout with contextual meanings, usage examples, and interesting facts. Click any highlighted word to see its full definition and example sentence.
What literary devices are used in From the Diary of Anne Frank — 1?
From the Diary of Anne Frank — 1 uses various literary devices including imagery, symbolism, and figurative language. These are identified with coloured tags throughout the text for easy recognition and understanding by students.
What exercises are included for From the Diary of Anne Frank — 1?
Exercises include extract-based comprehension questions in CBSE board exam format, grammar workshops connected to the passage, vocabulary activities, and creative writing tasks with model answers provided.
How does From the Diary of Anne Frank — 1 help in board exam preparation?
From the Diary of Anne Frank — 1 includes CBSE-format extract-based questions, long answer practice with model responses, and grammar exercises that mirror board exam patterns. All questions follow Bloom's Taxonomy levels L1-L6.