Talking Toys — Class 3 English (CBSE)
From the current Class 3 English Santoor textbook, Unit 2: Toys and Games, Chapter 5. These notes help students read for meaning, name and describe toys, speak with expression, and write answers in their own words.
1. Chapter at a glance
- Text type: A make-believe (fantasy) story where toys can talk and feel.
- Where it happens: In a toy shop full of toys waiting to be sold.
- Main theme: Hope, patience, and the joy of a toy finding a loving home.
- What to notice while reading: Which toys are in the shop, how the toys feel when customers come and go, and which toys are chosen by the children.
2. The Story
The toy shop was full of toys — wooden toys, soft toys, board games, bats and balls and many others. Every toy wished for the same thing: to be taken home by a child who would love it and play with it.
One morning, two girls stopped and looked through the shop window. The toys grew excited and hoped the girls would come inside. But the girls only looked and walked away. "Oh, no!" cried all the toys together.
Soon it was a holiday, and many families came to the shop. One by one, the children began to choose:
- A child picked up the Snakes and Ladders board game.
- A little boy chose the Vande Bharat train.
- Someone bought a bag of marbles.
- A child took home an aeroplane.
- A small girl hugged the toy elephant.
- Another child chose the spinning top.
- Two children picked the dancing dolls.
As each toy left with a happy child, the other toys cheered for their friends. By evening the shelves were almost empty, and the toys that were chosen went off cheerfully to their new homes.
3. Summary
In a busy toy shop, the toys can talk to one another. They all share one wish — to be chosen by a child. When two girls look but do not buy, the toys feel disappointed and cry "Oh, no!". On a holiday, many families arrive and the children pick a board game, a train, marbles, an aeroplane, a toy elephant, a top, and dancing dolls. The toys are happy to be wanted, and by evening most of them have found new homes.
4. Theme and values
- Hope — every toy hopes to be chosen.
- Patience — the toys wait, even when a customer walks away.
- Joy of belonging — being wanted and cared for makes the toys happy.
- Friendship — the toys cheer when their friends find homes.
A good answer connects the theme to a moment in the story. For example, do not only write "the toys were happy"; also say why — the children chose them and took them home.
5. New words and meanings
| Word | Meaning |
|---|---|
| shop | a place where things are sold |
| customer | a person who comes to buy something |
| holiday | a day of rest when there is no school or work |
| cheerfully | in a happy way |
| disappointed | sad because something you hoped for did not happen |
| chose | past tense of "choose" — to pick one thing |
6. Let Us Think (comprehension)
-
What kinds of toys were in the shop? There were wooden toys, soft toys, board games, bats and balls, and many other toys.
-
What did every toy in the shop wish for? Every toy wished to be chosen and taken home by a child.
-
What did the toys say when the two girls walked away? All the toys cried out together, "Oh, no!"
-
Name three toys that found new homes. Any three of: Snakes and Ladders, the Vande Bharat train, marbles, the aeroplane, the toy elephant, the spinning top, the dancing dolls.
-
How did the toys feel when their friends were chosen? They felt happy and cheered for the toys that found new homes.
-
Why is the story called "Talking Toys"? Because in the story the toys can talk to each other and share their feelings, hopes, and excitement — just like friends.
7. Language and grammar practice
Naming words (nouns) for toys
Circle the naming words for toys in this story: train, elephant, top, doll, marbles, aeroplane — these all name toys.
Opposites
| Word | Opposite |
|---|---|
| empty | full |
| happy | sad |
| morning | evening |
| buy | sell |
One and many (singular / plural)
| One | Many |
|---|---|
| toy | toys |
| doll | dolls |
| ball | balls |
| child | children |
8. Writing and speaking practice
- Writing: Write 4-5 lines about your favourite toy — its name, how it looks, how you play with it, and why you like it.
- Speaking: Read the toys' excited lines aloud. Use a happy voice for excitement and a sad voice for "Oh, no!".
9. Common mistakes
- Mistake: Listing toys that are not in the story. Fix: Name only the toys from the text (train, marbles, aeroplane, elephant, top, dolls, board game).
- Mistake: Writing one-word answers for why/how questions. Fix: Use a full sentence with because or so.
- Mistake: Reading the story flatly. Fix: Change your voice for the toys' feelings and pause at full stops.
10. Practice set
- Name four kinds of toys that were in the shop.
- What did all the toys say when the two girls walked away?
- Write the meaning of "customer" and "cheerfully" and use each in a sentence.
- Why is the story called "Talking Toys"?
- Write 4-5 lines about your favourite toy.
- How would you read the toys' excited lines aloud?
11. Answer key
- Any four of: wooden toys, soft toys, board games, bats and balls, Vande Bharat train, marbles, aeroplane, toy elephant, spinning top, dancing dolls.
- They all cried together, "Oh, no!"
- Customer = a person who buys something; cheerfully = in a happy way. (Sentences will vary.)
- Because the toys can talk to each other and share their feelings in the story.
- Answers will vary — check for the toy's name, look, play, and reason.
- Read with a happy, eager voice; sound sad for "Oh, no!"; pause at punctuation.
12. Fun activity
My Own Toy Shop
Draw your own toy shop with at least five toys. Label each toy. Which toy would you take home first?
If My Toy Could Talk
Imagine your favourite toy could talk. Write two sentences about what it might say — for example, "Please play with me today!"
13. Quick revision
- Unit 2: Toys and Games · Chapter 5 · a make-believe story.
- Theme: hope, patience, and the joy of being chosen and loved.
- Toys: wooden/soft toys, board games, train, marbles, aeroplane, elephant, top, dolls.
- The toys cried "Oh, no!" when the girls walked away.
- Answer in full sentences and give one example from the story.
Unit 2: Toys and Games
This chapter is part of Unit 2: Toys and Games. The three chapters in this unit are:
- Chapter 4: Out in the Garden — a poem about playing outdoors
- Chapter 5: Talking Toys — a story about toys in a shop waiting for children
- Chapter 6: Paper Boats — a story about sharing and making friends through play
