By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Tell where Hekko comes from and what the word means
  • 2Retell the folk story of Aami and Aakho
  • 3State how the game is organised into teams
  • 4Use capital letters for names of places and games
  • 5Write about a traditional game from their area
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Why this chapter matters
Hekko introduces a folk story and traditional game from Nagaland, building cultural awareness. Children learn the meaning of the word, the tale of Aami and Aakho, and values of courage, teamwork, and fair play.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Hekko — Class 4 English (CBSE)

From the current Class 4 English Santoor textbook, Unit 3: Fun with Games, Chapter 9. A folk story and a traditional game from the beautiful state of Nagaland.


1. Chapter at a glance

  • Text type: A folk story that explains a traditional game.
  • Where it is from: Nagaland (the Mokokchung district).
  • Main "characters": Aami (the Man) and Aakho (the Tiger).
  • Main theme: Courage, teamwork, and fair play through a traditional game.

2. The Story and the game

Long ago in Nagaland, there was a friendly disagreement between Aami (the Man) and Aakho (the Tiger) about who was stronger and braver. This old folk tale gave birth to the game called Hekko.

The word "Hekko" means "challenging the tiger""Hek" means to challenge and "ko" means tiger. It is a well-known traditional sport of Nagaland, especially in the Mokokchung district.

In the game, there are two teams named after the story — Aami and Aakho — with eleven players in each team. The teams test their strength, courage, and teamwork, just like the Man and the Tiger in the tale. Hekko shows that traditional games are not only fun but also bring people together and make them strong and united.

3. Summary

"Hekko" is a folk story and traditional game from Nagaland. The word means "challenging the tiger". It comes from a tale about Aami (the Man) and Aakho (the Tiger) arguing about who is stronger. The game has two teams, Aami and Aakho, with eleven players each, who show courage and teamwork. The chapter teaches that traditional games keep people united, strong, and joyful.

4. Theme and values

  • Courage — facing a challenge bravely, like challenging the tiger.
  • Teamwork — eleven players working together.
  • Fair play — playing by the rules.
  • Pride in tradition — keeping local games and culture alive.

5. New words and meanings

WordMeaning
Hekkoa Naga game meaning "challenging the tiger"
challengeto invite someone to a contest of strength or skill
traditionalpassed down through generations
couragebravery; facing fear
uniteto come together as one

6. Let Us Think (comprehension)

  1. Where does the game Hekko come from? From Nagaland, especially the Mokokchung district.

  2. What does the word "Hekko" mean? "Challenging the tiger" — Hek means challenge and ko means tiger.

  3. Who are Aami and Aakho? Aami is the Man and Aakho is the Tiger in the folk story; the two teams are named after them.

  4. How many players are there in each team? Eleven players in each team.

  5. What values does the game teach? Courage, teamwork, and fair play.

7. Language and grammar practice

Word meanings from other languages

Hek + ko = Hekko (challenge + tiger). Many words are made by joining parts — like rain + bow = rainbow.

Capital letters for names of places and games

Write with capitals: Nagaland, Mokokchung, Hekko, Aami, Aakho.

8. Writing and speaking practice

  • Writing: Write 5–6 lines about a traditional game played in your area.
  • Speaking: Tell a friend what "Hekko" means and where it comes from.

9. Common mistakes

  • Mistake: Thinking Hekko is just a story, not a game. Fix: Hekko is both a folk story and a traditional game with two teams.
  • Mistake: Forgetting the meaning of the word. Fix: Hekko = "challenging the tiger" (Hek + ko).
  • Mistake: Writing place names in small letters. Fix: Nagaland and Mokokchung start with capital letters.

10. Practice set

  1. Where does Hekko come from?
  2. What does the word "Hekko" mean?
  3. Who are Aami and Aakho?
  4. How many players are in each team?
  5. Write the capital-letter words in: "hekko is played in nagaland."

11. Answer key

  1. From Nagaland (the Mokokchung district).
  2. "Challenging the tiger" — Hek (challenge) + ko (tiger).
  3. Aami is the Man and Aakho is the Tiger; the teams are named after them.
  4. Eleven players in each team.
  5. Hekko, Nagaland.

12. Fun activity

Games of India Map

On a map of India, mark Nagaland. Find and write one traditional game from two other states.

13. Quick revision

  • Unit 3: Fun with Games · Chapter 9 · a folk story and game from Nagaland.
  • Hekko means "challenging the tiger" (Hek + ko).
  • It comes from the tale of Aami (Man) and Aakho (Tiger).
  • Two teams, Aami and Aakho, with eleven players each.
  • Theme: courage, teamwork, and fair play.

Unit 3: Fun with Games

This chapter is part of Unit 3: Fun with Games. The three chapters in this unit are:

  • Chapter 7: Fit Body, Fit Mind, Fit Nation — a poem about fitness
  • Chapter 8: The Lagori Champions — a story about a traditional game
  • Chapter 9: Hekko — a folk story and game from Nagaland

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Text type
folk story explaining a traditional game
Read it for the tale of Aami and Aakho and the game Hekko.
Main theme
courage, teamwork, and fair play through a traditional game
Traditional games unite people and keep culture alive.
Answer habit
Use facts from the chapter
Support answers with a fact, such as Hekko meaning 'challenging the tiger'.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Thinking Hekko is just a story, not a game
Hekko is both a folk story and a traditional game with two teams.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting the meaning of the word
Hekko means 'challenging the tiger' (Hek + ko).
WATCH OUT
Writing place names in small letters
Nagaland and Mokokchung start with capital letters.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Recall
Where does Hekko come from?
Show solution
From Nagaland, especially the Mokokchung district.
Q2MEDIUM· Vocabulary
What does the word 'Hekko' mean?
Show solution
'Challenging the tiger' - Hek means challenge and ko means tiger.
Q3EASY· Comprehension
Who are Aami and Aakho?
Show solution
Aami is the Man and Aakho is the Tiger in the folk story; the two teams are named after them.
Q4EASY· Recall
How many players are there in each team?
Show solution
Eleven players in each team.
Q5EASY· Grammar
Write the capital-letter words in: 'hekko is played in nagaland.'
Show solution
Hekko, Nagaland.
Q6HARD· Writing
Write 5-6 lines about a traditional game played in your area.
Show solution
Mention the game's name, how it is played, and the values it teaches.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Hekko is Chapter 9 of Unit 3: Fun with Games in the Class 4 Santoor textbook.
  • Text type: a folk story and traditional game from Nagaland.
  • Hekko means 'challenging the tiger' (Hek + ko).
  • It comes from the tale of Aami (Man) and Aakho (Tiger).
  • Two teams, Aami and Aakho, with eleven players each.
  • Theme: courage, teamwork, and fair play.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 4-5 marks in school tests, oral checks, notebooks, and activities

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Very Short12-3Origin, teams, or capital letters
Short Answer21-2Meaning of Hekko or the folk story
Activity / Project30-1Map work or writing about a local game
Prep strategy
  • Learn the meaning and origin of Hekko
  • Recall the tale of Aami and Aakho
  • Practise capital letters for place and game names
  • Write about a traditional game you know

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Appreciating culture

Learning a Naga game builds respect for India's diverse traditions.

Teamwork and courage

The game teaches children to be brave and to work together.

Writing names correctly

Using capital letters for places and games improves writing.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Underline the command word: where, what, who, or write
  2. Give the exact meaning of Hekko
  3. Capitalise names like Nagaland and Mokokchung
  4. Answer in complete sentences

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Find one more traditional game from north-east India and write a line about it.
  • Make a word from two parts, like Hek + ko, and explain its meaning.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 4 School AssessmentHigh
Class 4 Foundation / Olympiad PracticeMedium
Notebook and Activity EvaluationHigh

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Hekko means 'challenging the tiger' and is a traditional game from Nagaland, especially the Mokokchung district.

In the folk story, Aami is the Man and Aakho is the Tiger who argue about who is stronger. The two teams in the game are named after them.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 31 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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