One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min
This CBSE English Passage Assessment will be based on: One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min
Assessment Format:
• 2 Short Answer Questions (2 marks each) = 4 marks
• 2 Fill in the Blanks Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
• 2 Short Answer Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
• 2 Multiple Choice Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
Total: 8 Questions, 10 Marks
This CBSE English Grammar Assessment will be based on: One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min
Assessment Format:
• 10 Randomized Grammar Questions (1 mark each)
• Question Types: Fill in the Blanks, MCQs, Error Identification, Reported Speech, Sentence Completion
Total: 10 Questions, 10 Marks
This English Vocabulary assessment will be based on: One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min
Targeting Vocabulary & Usage with Intermediate difficulty.
Before You Read — One Centimetre
Anticipation Guide: "A person who bends the rules for themselves has no right to demand honesty from others." Do you agree or disagree? Give reasons.
Vocabulary Warm-Up: Match each word to its meaning — nonchalantly, flummoxed, astute, fracas, convoluted — before reading. Predict which situations in a mother-and-child outing might call for these responses.
Prediction: A story is titled "One Centimetre". The measurement presumably refers to a child's height. What conflict might hinge on a single centimetre? Who holds the power to decide the measurement — and what might be at stake beyond money?
Bi Shu-min's Social Realism & Unity of Thought
Unlike magical realism or stream of consciousness, Bi Shu-min works in a tradition of social realism — fiction that uses everyday, recognisable situations to expose how institutional power, class anxiety, and gender role expectations shape individual lives. The story achieves what critics call unity of thought: every incident (the bus fare, the melon, the temple gate, the measuring pole, the letter) circles back to a single moral question — can a flawed person be a genuine moral exemplar? The first sentence deliberately signals this ambivalence, inviting the reader to hold Tao Ying's hypocrisy and her sincerity simultaneously.
Part I — The Rule-Bending Commuter
1When astute Tao Ying rides the bus unaccompanied, she frequently skips buying a ticket. Her reasoning is perfectly self-contained: the bus runs its route regardless; the driver and conductor draw the same salary whether she boards or not; the petrol consumption remains identical. If the conductor looks sharp and vigilant she pays promptly, but if he appears careless she withholds the fare — treating his negligence as a private tax and her saving as a small reward for her own shrewdness. Social Realism
2Tao Ying earns her living as a cook in a factory canteen, standing beside an open flame all day, shaping sesame-butter wheat cakes. Today, however, her son Xiao Ye is with her. She follows him onto the bus and, as the doors snap shut, her jacket balloons behind her Simile — billowing like a tent — before she wrenches herself free.
3"Mama, tickets!" Xiao Ye insists. Children, the narrator notes, are often more scrupulous about ritual than adults — without a ticket in hand, a bus ride does not feel like a proper journey. On the peeling door someone has stencilled a pale pointing finger beside the number 1.10 m. Tao Ying studies her son's head: his hair is dry and straw-like despite all the nutritious food she has poured into him, the nourishment stubbornly refusing to travel past his hairline. She smooths it down as though brushing away topsoil to reach firm ground beneath. Simile
4She can feel the soft, rubbery give of his skull — the fontanelle, that gap at the crown where the two hemispheres have not yet fully sealed. Each time her fingers find that aperture, she is overtaken by a wave of responsibility. In the wider world she feels entirely unremarkable — her presence changes nothing. But to this one small person she is the gravitational centre of everything, and she is determined to be as close to flawless as she can manage. Imagery
5She places her fingers — lustrous from constant contact with cooking oil, curved and polished as the back of a seashell — between her son's head and the painted height marker. He is exactly one centimetre short. She says so quietly. Xiao Ye protests loudly, stamping the floor, reminding her of a promise. Twenty cents, Tao Ying reflects, is not trivial — it can buy a cucumber, two tomatoes, or four days' worth of spinach. But her son's face is tilted up toward her Simile like a half-open blossom waiting for sun. She buys two tickets.
Stop and Think
1. What reasoning does Tao Ying use to justify not buying a bus ticket when she travels alone?
2. Why does she insist on buying tickets for both herself and Xiao Ye on this occasion, despite the conductor telling her the child does not need one?
Part II — The Exhausting Performance of Perfection
6At the front exit a second conductor waits to examine tickets. Tao Ying hands them over with studied indifference. He asks whether she plans to reclaim the stubs — she says no. In fact she could have presented them as travel expenses at her next work outing, but Xiao Ye would certainly ask whether private trips can be claimed on expenses, and she would never lie to him. Social Realism Irony
7Living up to parenting manuals is exhausting, she concedes — it is like carrying a permanent invisible audience wherever you go. But her efforts are saturated with love. She refuses, for instance, to eat a watermelon down to the rind while Xiao Ye watches, even though she privately thinks the green flesh near the skin is perfectly refreshing and even medicinally cooling. One day she catches him gnawing a melon in precisely that manner and scolds him furiously, only to realise — with a jolt — that he learnt the habit entirely by watching her. Children, she understands, are the world's most accurate imitators. From that moment on, her private behaviour must match her public one. This goal is "like shooting down aeroplanes with a small gun" Simile — outlandish, almost impossible — but the clarity it gives her life feels like focus and purpose.
8Today she is taking Xiao Ye to a large city temple to see the Buddha for the first time. The tickets cost five dollars each — even temples are run like businesses now. Her ticket was a free gift from Lao Chiang at the meat counter, a well-connected man who circulates rumour-laden newsletters and speaks with the authority of someone who knows everything. He advised her to take her son since children under 110 cm enter free. So here they are. Social Realism
9A rare patch of city green rises ahead of them. Even before the temple comes into view, something cool and fresh moves in the air Imagery — the scent of a valley or waterfall. Xiao Ye snatches the ticket and runs towards the gilded gates like a small animal rushing to slake its thirst. Simile For a moment Tao Ying feels a pang — can the mere sight of a temple make her son forget her? She dismisses the thought: she brought him here for his happiness.
Part III — The Earthworm on the Wall
10At the gate a young man in a red top and black trousers bars her way. Xiao Ye has already passed through, moving among the crowd like a water droplet in a river current. Simile The guard demands her ticket. She points to her son. He wants her ticket. She is puzzled — she assumed children were exempt. A fracas begins.
11When Tao Ying reads the rules printed on the back of a spare ticket and tries to share them with the crowd, the guard turns sharp. He points to a faded red line on the wall — a mark that looks like "an earthworm inching across the road after a rainstorm" Simile — and insists Xiao Ye is taller than it. Tao Ying remains serene. She is sure her son is under the limit.
12Xiao Ye runs back and proudly stands himself against the mark. The crowd watches. The earthworm comes level with his ear. Tao Ying is horrified. She reaches out and pats his head — meaning to flatten his untidy hair, but the blow lands hard. Xiao Ye stares at her, stunned rather than weeping. The crowd erupts: mothers who hit children on the head are barbaric; she must be hiding her mistake; perhaps she is not even his real mother. Irony
13Even if he were completely bald, she realises, he would still stand taller than the worm. The guard has turned brutal now: he accuses her of using a complimentary ticket to sneak in an extra person, demands an apology and a full-price ticket, and cites the International Standard Ruler in Paris — made of pure platinum, he announces — as though the authority of an international metre-bar could settle a local dispute. Irony Tao Ying, flummoxed, knows only that two metres and eighty centimetres make a dress; she does not know where the world's master metre lives.
14Her son's warm small hand closes around her frozen one. "Mama, what is happening?" She can barely speak. For a moment she almost buys the ticket to end the scene — but something stops her. If she pays now she can never explain herself to Xiao Ye. She seizes his hand and walks away. Xiao Ye does not speak. He has suddenly grown older. Symbolism
Stop and Think
1. Did Tao Ying genuinely intend to cheat at the temple? What evidence supports your view?
2. Why does she change her mind about buying the ticket at the last moment?
Part IV — The Letter, the Flattering Scales, and Final Vindication
15Near an ice-cream seller, Xiao Ye asks for money, then runs to an old woman with weighing scales to be measured. The old woman announces: one metre eleven. Tao Ying wonders if she has met a ghost, or whether her son is growing like bamboo before her eyes. Then she discovers the truth: the old woman's scales are old and inaccurate, adjusted to make people appear taller and lighter — "fitness scales", she calls them with cheerful cunning — because mothers love to hear that their sons are growing. Irony But Xiao Ye, having heard only the result and not the explanation, now believes everyone accepts him as tall enough except his own mother. He runs from her, tripping and falling and refusing her hand. Tao Ying stops chasing: if she follows, he will only keep falling.
16Back home, she measures him properly in his sleep: one metre nine centimetres. Confirmed. She decides to write a letter of complaint to the temple administrators. Writing the letter is its own ordeal — she consults a factory colleague nicknamed "the Writer", a man who has had small pieces published and who covers his nicotine-stained fingers in literary authority. He rewrites her opening paragraph in ornate, sarcastic prose about the Buddha miraculously growing children by two centimetres on the threshold and shrinking them back on the return journey. Tao Ying memorises what she can and sends the letter.
17Then comes the long wait. She scours newspapers for her letter, listens to radio announcers imagining her words read aloud, checks the post office daily. None of the hundred scenarios she rehearses matches what actually happens: two officials in uniform arrive at her door, led there by Xiao Ye himself, who proudly shows them in. Irony The officials have investigated — the guard insisted he was right, but they have checked the earthworm marker and found it was not accurately drawn. They take a proper metal tape measure, draw a bold line from the top of Xiao Ye's head, measure to the floor: exactly one metre ten centimetres. Symbolism
18The officials offer a five-dollar note. Tao Ying refuses — that day's lost happiness cannot be bought back. They offer two temple tickets. She refuses — the place now carries only painful associations. "Which would you prefer?" both men ask together. Tao Ying pushes Xiao Ye forward, prompts him to greet the men as "Grandpa", and makes her request: take back the money and the tickets, do not punish the guard — he was only doing his job. Then she says, simply: "Gentlemen, would you be so kind as to explain to my son exactly what happened on that day. Please tell him that his mother has not done anything wrong." Social Realism
Key Vocabulary
Theme Web — One Centimetre
Maternal Dignity & Ambivalent Ethics
The story's deepest layer. Tao Ying is simultaneously morally compromised (she skips fares) and morally serious (she fights for her son's perception of her). Bi Shu-min refuses to resolve this contradiction — she is neither hero nor hypocrite, but a fully human figure whose love and self-interest coexist.Rules vs Justice
The temple gate incident exposes how arbitrary institutional rules can be — the earthworm marker was inaccurately drawn, yet it carried absolute authority in the moment. The story asks whether rules that are technically enforced but factually wrong still deserve obedience.Private vs Public Self
The bus ticket is the story's ironic anchor. Tao Ying's private conduct (skipping fares alone) is at odds with her public performance (insisting on buying two tickets with her son watching). The story does not condemn either self — it explores the gap between them as the essential human condition.Institutional Power
The young guard, the queue of strangers, the officials in uniform — all represent systems of power that press down on an ordinary working-class woman. Tao Ying's victory is not legal but moral: she does not defeat the system, she refuses to be diminished by it.Child's Moral Education
Everything Tao Ying does — buying the extra bus ticket, refusing the temple ticket, writing the letter, declining the compensation — is ultimately for one audience: her son. The story argues that a mother's most important legacy is not food or safety but a coherent moral example.The Cost of Dignity
Tao Ying refuses money and free tickets as compensation, because the lost afternoon of joy cannot be purchased back. Her final ask — tell my son I did nothing wrong — reveals that dignity for her is not about pride but about her son's lifelong memory of her.Measurement & Truth
Three measuring episodes — the bus finger-mark, the temple earthworm, the old woman's flattering scales — each produce different answers. Only the officials' precise metal tape produces the definitive truth. Bi Shu-min uses measurement as a metaphor for the difficulty of establishing any objective truth in a world of competing authorities.Notice These Expressions
Extract-Based Questions (CBQ Format)
L2 Understand What specific moral dilemma is Tao Ying facing at this moment? Why would buying the ticket amount to a lie?
L4 Analyse The narrator observes that following parenting rules is "exhausting" and "like carrying an audience wherever you go." What does this suggest about the relationship between idealism and ordinary life in the story?
L4 Analyse The guard cites the "International Standard Ruler in Paris, made of pure platinum" as his authority. What is the irony of this reference in context?
L5 Evaluate Tao Ying refuses both the five-dollar compensation and the free temple tickets offered by the officials. Evaluate whether her refusal is reasonable or excessive.
L6 Create The story opens with a sentence deliberately designed to make the reader uncomfortable. Rewrite the opening two paragraphs from Xiao Ye's point of view, ten years later, recalling what he remembers of his mother on the day of the temple.
Understanding the Text
1. How did Tao Ying's son influence the way she led her life?
2. Pick out instances from the story to show that official rules are often arbitrary.
3. Tao Ying was careful about spending money. What were her reasons for refusing the compensation offered by the temple officials?
4. Why was her final vindication important to Tao Ying?
Talking About the Text — Discussion Prompts
1. "The way a child looks at the world is very different from that of an adult." How does the story illustrate this through Xiao Ye's perspective?
2. "There is always a gap between what we really are and what we wish to appear to be to others." Discuss with reference to Tao Ying and the temple guard.
Grammar Workshop
A. Simile and Metaphor — From the Story
A simile makes a comparison explicit using "like" or "as": "her jacket ballooning up like a tent" (jacket ≈ tent). A metaphor replaces one thing with another without a marker: "to melt the ice in her son's eyes" (emotional distance = ice, not compared to ice).
(i) "Xiao Ye's face raised up like a half-open blossom, waiting to receive his promise from the sun."
(ii) "A crowd is beginning to gather, so many fishes swarming towards a bright light."
(iii) "The yellow tape in Tao Ying's hands has turned into a poisonous viper."
(iv) "She wanders back... the days have been like the white flour she works with."
Answers: (i) Simile — face / half-open blossom, (ii) Simile — crowd / fish, (iii) Metaphor — measuring tape / viper, (iv) Simile — days / white flour.
B. Pronunciation — Stress Shift in Dual-Function Words
Several English words can function as either a noun or a verb. When used as a noun, stress typically falls on the first syllable; as a verb, on the second syllable. The vowel quality of the first syllable also changes.
Practice set (mark stress and note vowel change):
conduct | protest | permit | progress | desertCON-duct (n.) vs con-DUCT (v.) | PRO-test (n.) vs pro-TEST (v.) | PER-mit (n.) vs per-MIT (v.) | PRO-gress (n.) vs pro-GRESS (v.) | DES-ert (n., arid land) vs de-SERT (v., to abandon)
Appreciation — Literary Analysis
1. Comment on the significance of the first sentence of the story to its theme.
2. Would you describe the author's portrayal of Tao Ying as sympathetic, critical, or realistic?
3. Identify the episodes that bring out the ambivalent attitude to ethics commonly seen in human life.
4. How effectively does the narrative technique of this story illustrate "unity of thought"?
Writing Workshop
Task 1 — Analytical Essay (350–400 words)
"One Centimetre explores what it costs an ordinary person to maintain dignity in the face of institutional power." Analyse this statement with close reference to the story.
Task 2 — Narrative Writing (250–300 words)
Write the scene from the young guard's perspective — his account of the temple gate incident, told to a friend that evening.
FAQ
What is One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min about?
One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min is a lesson from the NCERT English textbook covering important literary and language concepts with vocabulary, literary devices, and exercises.
What vocabulary is in One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min?
Key vocabulary words from One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min are highlighted with contextual meanings and usage examples throughout the lesson.
What literary devices are in One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min?
One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min uses various literary devices including imagery, symbolism, and figurative language identified with coloured tags.
What exercises are in One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min?
Exercises include extract-based comprehension questions, grammar workshops, vocabulary activities, and writing tasks with model answers.
How does One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min help exam prep?
One Centimetre — Bi Shu-min includes CBSE-format questions and model answers following Bloom's Taxonomy levels L1-L6.