Chapter 5 I, Kensuke
The old man is walking toward me, he is saying something. I don't know the language, maybe Chinese or Japanese. Stella seamed to think he was a friend or something, considering she hadn't barked at him. The man drew something in the sand, it's the island. Oh ok, splitting the island in half. I was to stay on my half of the island and not to set fires. Trying to lull myself to sleep with thoughts of the Peggy sue returning, but that wasn't enough to keep the mosquitoes away. As I was trying to sleep, I felt a sharp pain as something brushes against my hip, my fire glass! I can rebuild my fire, and this time somewhere the old man won't find it. Trying to remember what the old man said his name was, I fell asleep. When I woke up, I knew that the old man had been here. Food and water was there. He would keep me alive and he would keep Stella alive, but if only I lived by his rules. He drew the boundary line in the sand, I was not to cross over it but Stella always did. I tried to find fruit for myself so I didn't have to live by the old man's rules, and I could light fires, but I occasionally found fruit, but it wasn't enough. The mosquitoes still bite me, which makes me itch until I am raw, the only cure is to soak in the ocean. I tried to find another cave which the bugs wouldn't find me, but as soon as I found out that bats infested the cave I was out of there. The other day, Stella and I were coming back from watch hill, and we spotted something in the sand. We raced up to it, it was a sleeping mat, and a sheet! He knew I was being tormented by the bloodsucking bugs, did this mean that he had forgiven me for lighting the fire? I yelled a loud Thank-You! I went to sleep on my new mat, it was wonderful, I almost missed the ship that was passing by the island. I yelled to the ship that had passed 'Get out of here, I dont need you's to come for me anymore' ! Then I thought I really miss my parents and the peggy sue ... what am I to do ?
Thank you for getting me to tell you what Chapter 5 was about ... I'm truly honoured :) joking x Enjoy the rest of the book It's absoulootly amazing !
A young boy, Michael, travels with his parents around the world on the yacht Peggy Sue. Michael's parents teach him what he would have normally learnt at school themselves. When he is on lookout one night, steering the boat, Michael and his dog, Stella Artois, are washed overboard. They awake to discover that they are stranded on a desert island in the Pacific Ocean.
While Michael is struggling to survive on the island, food is regularly left for him. To his surprise, he learns that an old man called Kensuke is also living on the island. Kensuke helps Michael to survive. He sets guidelines that Michael thinks are just annoyances. When he is nearly killed by a giant jelly fish, Kensuke tends to Michael, and Michael eventually befriends him.
Michael teaches Kensuke English, and Kensuke in return teaches Michael how to paint, how to fish and where to find the best food and water. He is eventually revealed to be a doctor and Survivor of ww 2, and he believes that his family died in nagasaki after the atomic bomb was dropped there on August 9, 1945. Over time Kensuke begins to understand how Michael feels and how he misses his family. They both build a beacon that would be lit to signal to ships, but for a long time they see no sign of any ships. Later, however Michael witnesses a Chinese junk and he consults Kensuke as to whether or not he should light the beacon, but Kensuke recognizes the ship as that of poachers and he and Michael rush to gather all the orangutans into the cave to protect them from the threat that lies in the ship. They nearly succeed but miss out one orangutan, that Kensuke calls Kikanbo, which they could not find. The ship arrives and they both hear gunshots. When the ship leaves they discover that some gibbon monkeys had been killed, but that Kikanbo was still alive. The next time they see a ship it is not the poachers and they both light the fire. The crew on the ship see the fire and change direction, heading towards the island. When the boat is closer, Michael sees that the boat is the Peggy Sue, with his parents on-board. Kensuke decides at that point, despite thinking otherwise earlier, that he would not be sailing home with Michael and tells him to keep everything a secret until 10 years had passed and Kensuke was dead. Michael runs out to the beach where the ship had landed and is reunited with his parents.
After the coke bottle incident, Kensuke doesn't talk to Michael, for he has been thinking. When Tomodachi, an orangutan mother, loses her baby, Kikanbo, Kensuke comes to think of Michael's mother. She too has lost her baby. Perhaps she even came looking for him but could never find him. Then, one night, when the moon was high in the sky, all the turtle babies came up from a hole in the sand and went down to the ocean. They were not all down at the sea until at least noon. Kensuke and Michael help them when they were turned up on their shells and carried the really weak ones who would not of otherwise made the journey.
Parana father's writing some thing in his blanket, Parana mother's told Parana to go shopping with her father
summary of chapter 6 of kensjke kingdom
Certainly! In chapter 5 of "Kensuke's Kingdom" by Michael Morpurgo, Michael and Kensuke bond over their shared experiences and develop a friendship despite the language barrier. Kensuke teaches Michael survival skills and they work together to overcome challenges on the remote island. Their relationship deepens as they learn to communicate through actions rather than words.
. To move up and down: a cork bobbing on the water.
To grab at floating or hanging objects with the teeth: bobbed for apples.
To fish with a bobber.
To curtsy or bow.
v.tr.
To cause to move up and down: bobbed my head in response to the question.
n.
A quick, jerky movement of the head or body.
A bobber used in fishing.
Phrasal Verb:
bob up
To appear or arise unexpectedly or suddenly.
[Middle English bobben, to move up and down, probably ultimately of imitative origin.]
bob 2 (bŏb)
n.
A small, knoblike pendent object, such as a plumb bob.
A small lock or curl of hair.
A haircut that hangs evenly above the shoulders, often around the chin, worn especially by women or children.
Informal Surgical shortening or reshaping of the nose.
The docked tail of a horse.
a. A bobsled.
b. A bob skate.
tr.v. bobbed, bob·bing, bobs
To cut short or reshape: bobbed her hair; had his nose bobbed.
[Middle English bobbe, cluster of fruit.]
bob 3 (bŏb)
n. pl. bob Chiefly British
A shilling.
[Origin unknown.]
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
bob (bɒb)
vb, bobs, bobbing or bobbed
to move or cause to move up and down repeatedly, as while floating in water
to move or cause to move with a short abrupt movement, as of the head
to make (a bow or curtsy): the little girl bobbed before the visitor.
(usually foll by: up) to appear or emerge suddenly
(intr; foll by under, below, etc) to disappear suddenly, as beneath a surface
(usually foll by: for) to attempt to get hold (of a floating or hanging object, esp an apple) in the teeth as a game
n
a short abrupt movement, as of the head
a quick curtsy or bow
(Music, other) bell-ringing a particular set of changes
(Angling) angling
a. short for bobfloat
b. the topmost fly on a cast of three, often fished bobbing at the surface
c. this position on a wet-fly cast
[C14: of uncertain origin]
bob (bɒb)
n
(Hairdressing & Grooming) a hairstyle for women and children in which the hair is cut short evenly all round the head
(Mechanical Engineering) a dangling or hanging object, such as the weight on a pendulum or on a plumb line
(Tools) a polishing disc on a rotating spindle. It is usually made of felt, leather, etc, impregnated with an abrasive material
short for bob skate, bobsleigh
a runner or pair of runners on a bobsled
(Angling) angling a small knot of worms, maggots, etc, used as bait
(Poetry) a very short line of verse at the end of a stanza or preceding a rhyming quatrain (the wheel) at the end of a stanza
(Poetry) a refrain or burden with such a short line or lines
(Breeds) a docked tail, esp of a horse
dialect Brit a hanging cluster, as of flowers or ribbons
vb, bobs, bobbing or bobbed
(Hairdressing & Grooming) (tr) to cut (the hair) in a bob
(Breeds) (tr) to cut short (something, esp the tail of an animal); dock or crop
(intr) to ride on a bobsled
[C14 bobbe bunch of flowers, perhaps of Celtic origin]
bob (bɒb)
vb, bobs, bobbing or bobbed
to tap or cause to tap or knock lightly (against)
n
a light knock; tap
[C13 bobben to rap, beat; see bop2]
Chapter 1
Michael's parents are made redundant and the father leaves, but the mother receives a phone call from him to say that he has an answer to their problem. Michael and his mother travel to Southampton and the father gives them the news_ they were going on a yachting trip around the world. They receive yachting lessons from Barnacle Bill, the mother becomes skipper, the father first mate and handyman, Michael is the ship's boy, and Stella Artois, Michael's dog, becomes ship cat.
micheal ate his mother and said i am hungry
Michael stay ay ke diles cabe
no
This is a huge book. I have it and can't give you a summary for each chapter. I suggest you get the book and read it.
no
k
Kensuke gives Michael and Stella coconuts to eat in Kensuke's Kingdom. He also catches fish for them to have seafood as well.
Gale Dies
she died
no cuz its not a question and you should read it
nope! :P
sure *wrote a whole summary* DONE! YOULL WELCOME~ ;)
i need help with that too. sorry got no review
stuff happens read the book