Q. Here is a story about Swami and his grandmother. After reading the excerpt, change it into a conversation between Swami and his Grandmother.
After the night meal with his head on his granny's lap, nestling close to her, Swaminathan felt very snug and safe in the faint atmosphere of cardamom and cloves.
'Oh, Granny!' he cried ecstatically. 'You don't know what a great fellow Rajam is.' He told her the story of the first enmity between Rajam and Mani and the subsequent friendship.
'You know, he has a real police dress,' said Swaminathan.
'Is it? What does he want a police dress for?' asked Granny.
'His father is the Police Superintendent. He is the master of every policeman here.'
Granny was impressed. She said that it must be a tremendous office indeed. She then recounted the days when her husband, Swaminathan's grandfather, was a powerful sub-magistrate, in which office he made the police force tremble before him and the fiercest dacoits of the place flee. Swaminathan waited impatiently for her to finish the story. But she went on, rambled, confused, mixed up various incidents that took place at different times. 'That will do, Granny,' he saidungraciously. 'Let me tell you something about Rajam. Do you know how many marks he gets in arithmetic?'
'He gets all the marks, does he, child?' asked Granny.
'No silly. He gets ninety marks out of one hundred.'
'Good. But you must also try and get marks like him. You know, Swami, your grandfather used to frighten the examiners with his answers sometimes. When he answered a question, he did it in a tenth of the time that others took to do it. And then, his answers would be so powerful that his teachers would give him two hundred marks sometimes.
'Oh, enough, Granny! You go on bothering about old unnecessary stories. Won't you listen to Rajam?'
'Yes, dear, yes.'
'Granny, when Rajam was a small boy, he killed a tiger.'
Swaminathan started the story enthusiastically: Rajam's father was camping in a forest. He had his son with him. Two tigers came upon them suddenly, one knocking down the father from behind. The other began chasing Rajam, who took shelter behind a bush and shot it dead with his gun.
'Granny, are you asleep?' Swaminathan asked at the end of the story.
Now read the dialogue and complete the conversation
Swami:
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You don't know what a great fellow Rajam is! In the beginning I could not get along with him but now he is my good friend. And you know, he has a real police dress.
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Grandmother:
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Is it? What does he want a police dress for?
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Swami:
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His father is the Police Superintendent. He is the master of every policeman here.
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Grandmother:
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I think, it must be a tremendous office. Do you know, your
grandfather was a powerful sub-magistrate and the Police Force trembled before him? Even the fiercest dacoits of the place fled.
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Swami:
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That will do, Granny. It's so boring. Let me tell you something about Rajam. Do you know how many marks he gets in arithmetic?
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Grandmother:
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He gets all the marks doesn't he, child?
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