Polyandry in the Himalayas

Instructions:

Listen to the video carefully and answer the following questions. Choose the best answer for each question. Click “Submit Answers” when you’re done to see your results.

Polyandry in the Himalayas – Listening Comprehension Exercise

Polyandry in the Himalayas – Listening Comprehension Exercise

Instructions:

Listen carefully and choose the best answer for each question.

1. What does "polyandry" mean?
  • One man with many wives
  • One woman with several husbands
  • Several women sharing one husband
  • Multiple families living together
2. Where does polyandry still exist today?
  • In big cities of India
  • In isolated villages in the Himalayas
  • In most of Europe
  • In the United States
3. How many husbands does Sunita Kumari have?
  • One
  • Two
  • Three
  • Four
4. What is one main reason this community practices polyandry?
  • Religious tradition
  • Scarcity of arable land
  • To have more children
  • Because divorce is illegal
5. What do husbands in this community often do that is unusual in most of India?
  • Work in the military
  • Handle cooking and childcare
  • Travel abroad for work
  • Refuse to work
6. Who decides when a marriage will include younger brothers?
  • The wife
  • The whole family together
  • The village leader
  • Only the oldest brother
7. What does polyandry also function as in this society?
  • A way to divide land equally
  • A form of birth control
  • A type of education
  • A way to keep women at home
8. How is jealousy managed in polyandrous marriages, according to the transcript?
  • The wife avoids intimacy
  • The wife takes turns sleeping with each husband
  • The younger brothers must remain single
  • The brothers live in different homes
9. What recent development has linked the village to the outside world?
  • Television programs
  • A new road
  • The arrival of tourists
  • Internet cafes
10. What is seen as the biggest threat to polyandry today?
  • Climate change
  • Education and family planning
  • Religious leaders
  • Tourism
11. What do villagers predict will happen to polyandry in the future?
  • It will grow more common
  • It may disappear in two or three generations
  • It will spread to cities
  • It will become a law in India
12. How does the speaker describe life in a polyandrous family?
  • Difficult and unhappy
  • Peaceful and happy despite hardship
  • Lonely and sad
  • Chaotic and unfair

Your Results

Polyandry in the Himalayas – Vocabulary Quiz

Polyandry in the Himalayas – Vocabulary Quiz (B2 Level)

Instructions:

Choose the best answer for each question, then click "Check Answer" to see if you're correct. You can check each question individually before submitting the entire quiz.

1. The word "polyandry" means...
  • A man having several wives
  • A woman having several husbands
  • A marriage between two people
  • A secret relationship
2. The expression "an unusual arrangement" means...
  • A party or celebration
  • A type of relationship that is not common
  • A business agreement
  • A wedding decoration
3. The phrase "isolated villages" means...
  • Crowded cities
  • Modern neighborhoods
  • Tourist areas
  • Places that are far from cities and other towns
4. The word "dowry" refers to...
  • A wedding dress
  • A traditional meal
  • Money or goods a bride's family gives to the groom's family
  • A piece of land
5. The expression "what must their life be like?" means...
  • Judging their way of life negatively
  • Wondering how they live or what their lives are like
  • Talking about money
  • Explaining a tradition
6. The word "arable land" means...
  • Land that can be used for farming
  • Land with rocks or sand
  • Land owned by the government
  • Land used for housing
7. The phrase "to bring more people into the fold" (similar to the church example) in this context would mean...
  • To send people away
  • To sell the land
  • To divide families
  • To make people follow the same system or belief
8. The expression "with the consent of everyone" means...
  • Without anyone knowing
  • By force
  • With everyone's agreement or approval
  • By accident
9. The phrase "a form of birth control" means...
  • A way to limit how many children are born
  • A traditional dance
  • A marriage rule
  • A type of ceremony
10. The idiom "the forbidden core of a taboo" means...
  • A funny secret
  • A family argument
  • A type of religious symbol
  • The most sensitive or socially unacceptable part of something
11. The expression "a road now links the region to distant cities" means...
  • The road divides the area
  • People stopped traveling
  • The cities have moved closer
  • There is now a connection between remote villages and big cities
12. The phrase "this village has entered the modern world" means...
  • It has started to use modern technology and ideas
  • It has closed its borders
  • It has lost all traditions
  • It has become a big city

Your Results

it’s called polyandry one woman several
husbands it’s an unusual arrangement
today polyamory only persists in
isolated villages in the Himalayas
when it was time for Sunita Kumari to
Wed her family like many in India made
arrangements but they involved more than
a dowry of celebration Sunita has not
one husband not two systems but three
all brothers
what must their life be like
Westerners might find the practice
shocking but for this community it works
fine
one reason sheer practicality in the
Himalayas arable land of scarce farms
are tiny give each generation divided
each family’s holdings everyone would
starve polyandry preserves the farm and
the family’s future unlike most men in
India husband’s here handle domestic
duties they’re willing to help with the
cooking and childcare in fraternal
polyandry a family picks a wife for its
oldest son the marriage can also include
his younger brothers they don’t have to
join in but most do no one takes a
decision regarding one’s own marriage
everyone at home sits down together and
then it is decided with the consent of
everyone polyandry also functions as a
form of birth control no matter how many
husbands she has a wife can get pregnant
only so often if each man were to Wed
separately the population here would
explode but what about sex
the forbidden core of a polyandry taboo
in truth it’s a matter of scheduling and
on the wife’s part Baris tolerance is
very important the wife has to
understand everything up submissive be a
Cuby the older brothers nature if the
younger brothers Nature had taught over
kissing what about jealousy that bane of
even the most mundane marry if the wife
is smart she will take turns each night
and sleep with all the brothers
it’s not like the older brother wants a
whole time I thought that we will kneel
until recently no one here much cared
with the outside world far isolation had
preserved a way of life that had
withered everywhere else but a road now
links the region to distant cities and
on roofs once decorated only with prayer
flags
satellite dishes sprout this village has
entered the modern world whose images of
romance stand in sharp contrast to
polyamory but polyamory here faces a
bigger threat education as more people
are becoming more educated we are also
practicing family planning if a father
has only one son there will be no
question about the land therefore common
marriages will come to an end in two
perhaps three generations polyandry may
vanish here but for now those who
practices find comfort in the familiar
that common marriage is very good I feel
like everyone should live like our
family even if we do not have anything
to eat or drink we sit happily we live
peacefully