A Funny Man — Class 7 English (CBSE)
From the current NCERT Poorvi Grade 7 book, Unit 2: Wit and Humour, Chapter 5. A light, playful poem by Natalie Joan that makes us laugh and celebrates being a little different.
1. About the poem
- Text type: A humorous (nonsense) poem.
- Poet: Natalie Joan.
- Main theme: Fun, laughter, and the joy of being different.
2. Summary
"A Funny Man" describes a man who does everything in a funny, upside-down way. He wears his shoe on his head and his hats on his feet, and behaves in odd, mixed-up ways that make everyone laugh. The poem has no deep, serious message — it is nonsense verse meant simply to amuse us. Through its silly pictures, it gently reminds us that it is fine to be different and that laughter makes life happy.
3. Theme and poetic devices
- Theme: Humour, playfulness, and accepting differences.
- Rhyme: the poem has a light, sing-song rhythm and rhyme.
- Imagery: funny pictures (shoe on head, hats on feet).
- Tone: cheerful and playful.
4. New words and meanings
| Word | Meaning |
|---|---|
| funny | causing laughter; odd |
| upside down | the wrong way up |
| amuse | to make someone laugh or smile |
| peculiar | strange, unusual |
| giggle | to laugh in a silly way |
5. Let Us Think (comprehension)
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Why is the man called "funny"? Because he does everything in a strange, upside-down way.
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Give one example of his funny behaviour. He wears his shoe on his head (and his hats on his feet).
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What is the mood of the poem? Light, cheerful, and playful.
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Does the poem have a serious message? No — it is nonsense verse meant to make us laugh.
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What gentle idea does it leave us with? That it is fine to be different and that laughter makes life happy.
6. Language and poetry
Rhyming words
Find two pairs of rhyming words in the poem and write them.
Make your own nonsense line
Write one funny "upside-down" line of your own (e.g., "He drank his soup with a fork...").
7. Writing and speaking
- Writing: Write 4 funny lines about a peculiar person or animal.
- Speaking: Recite the poem with cheerful expression and actions.
8. Common mistakes
- Mistake: Looking for a deep, serious meaning. Fix: It is nonsense verse — its purpose is fun.
- Mistake: Mixing up the funny details. Fix: Shoe on the head, hats on the feet.
- Mistake: Reading it in a flat voice. Fix: Read it with a light, playful tone.
9. Practice set
- What does the funny man do with his shoe and his hats?
- What kind of poem is "A Funny Man"?
- What is its mood?
- Write two rhyming words from the poem.
- Why do people laugh at the man?
10. Answer key
- He wears his shoe on his head and his hats on his feet.
- A humorous / nonsense poem.
- Light, cheerful, and playful.
- Answers will vary; any correct rhyming pair from the poem.
- Because he does everything in a strange, upside-down way.
11. Quick revision
- Unit 2: Wit and Humour · Chapter 5 · poem by Natalie Joan.
- A man does everything upside down: shoe on head, hats on feet.
- It is nonsense verse meant to amuse.
- Mood: cheerful and playful.
- Gentle idea: it's fine to be different; laughter is good.
Unit 2: Wit and Humour
This chapter is part of Unit 2: Wit and Humour. The three chapters in this unit are:
- Chapter 4: Animals, Birds and Dr. Dolittle — a humorous story
- Chapter 5: A Funny Man — a humorous poem
- Chapter 6: Say the Right Thing — a humorous play
