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English II Pre-AP Final

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69170375Identify The Speaker: Do You blame me for flunking you boy?Mr. Spencer
69170376Identify The Speaker: If I write something down for you, will you read it carefully?Antolini
69170377Identify The Speaker: How 'Bout writing a composition for me?Stradlater
69170378Identify the Speaker: You grab your bags and scoot right on back here again.Antolini
69170379Identify the Speaker: Because you don't. You don't like any schools.Phoebe
69170380To Whom does Holden Speak: I Don't owe you five bucks.Maurice
69170381To Whom does Holden Speak: Did You ask her if she still keeps all her kings in the back row?Stradlater
69170382To Whom does Holden Speak: We'll stay in these cabins and stuff like that til the dough runs out.Sally Hayes
69170383Identify where Holden is when he makes this remark: Nobody'd be different. The only thing that would be different would be you.Museum
69170384Which Image is not a vital symbol in the novel? Ducks, Redcap, Gladstones MuseumGladstones museum
69170385When Holden feels he is disappearing, he makes believe he is talking to:Ally
69170386Identify The character holden does not associate with materialism:Spencer
69170387A literary character that reminds Holden of Allie is:Murcutio
69170388True or False: Holden writes a composition about Phoebe's baseball mitt.False
69170389True or False: Holden is fond of digressions.True
69170390Bitter, mockingsardonic
69170391sharp, incisivecaustic
69177233of or relating to rogues or rascalspicaresque
69177234A strong leaning or likingpenchant
69177235one who believes that human conduct is motivated solely by self-interestcynic
69177236Person lacking restraintrake
69177237Habits, customs, or moral attitudessocial mores
69177238not natural, not genuineaffectation
69177239With one's identity concealedin cognito
69177240one who attacks established beliefs or institutionsiconoclast
69177241Orpheus' giftmusic
69177242Philomela revealed the whole account of how she was wronged by tiresus in a:tapestry
69177243Identify the aged boatman:Charon
69177244The river of Forgetfulness:Lethe
69177245The device Procrustes uses on his victims:and iron bed
69177246The character who stole fire from the GodsPrometheus
69177247an archetype that applies to the sirenstemptress
69177248The power that makes the sirens so fatalTheir voice
69177249the goddess of loveAphrodite
69177250the sweet and mild west windZephyr
69177251The son of the god of sleep, SomnusMorpheus
69177252Item's given to Perseus by the Hyperboreans:Cap, Winged Sandals, Magic Wallet
69177253The animal that honors Arguspeacock
69177254the character who can foretell the future but is cursed by Apollo so that no one believes her.Cassandra
69177255the mortal characteristic that the Gods swiftly punisharrogance
69177256the character who lost his wife because he looked backOrpheus
69177257The character who flew too close to the sun and fell into the seaIcarus
69177258The messenger of the GodsHermes
69177259Names connected to the underworldHades, Charon, Styx, Adamantine, Tartarus, etc.
69177260The spring beloved to poetsHippocrane
69177261Who visited Baucis and Philemon?Jupiter and Mercury
69177262The Labyrinth was invented by:Deadulus
69177263Io was transformed into a:Hefer
69177264Who dies from a terrible wound to the forehead?Hyacinth
69177265The Character who is the victim of Selene's magic slumber?Endymion
69177266Who say "Love cannot live where there is no trust"?Cupid
69177267Who forges Zeus' thunderbolts?Cyclopes
69177268The Mulberry tree is associated with what character?Pyramis
69177269The labyrinth contains the:Minotaur
69177270Baucis and Philemon were transformed into:Trees
69198874Identify the Character who puts Joan on trial:Cauchon
69198875The inquisition charged Joan with:Heresy
69198876Identify the Character who represents the feudal system:warwick
69198877Dunois is waiting for what wind?The West Wind (Zephyr)
69198878When Joan burn at the stake what did the executioner note?Her heart did not burn
69198879Joan's mission is to crown:Charles VII
69198880Joan's mission is to unite:France
69198881Joan's first miracle involves:Eggs
69198882Joan tears her recantation when she finds out:she'd be punished with perpetual imprisonment
69198883The character who expresses much remorse at seeing Joan burn is the:Chaplain
69198884Identify the saints who speak to joan:Catherine and Margaret
69198885When Joan cuts her hair and dresses like a man she is going against:Social Mores
69198886Identify the Speaker: But nowadays instead of looking at books, people read them:Warwick
69198887Identify the Speaker: Not the least. An Arrant witch:Chaplain
69198888Identify the Speaker:I cannot burn her:Cauchon
69198889Identify the Speaker: Jack the World is too wicked for me:Joan
69198890Identify the Speaker: No, No this is irregularCauchon
69198891Identify the Speaker: Her Heart would not burn, my lord:The executioner
69198892Identify the Speaker: And I shall be the secular arm in this case:Warwick
69198893Identify the Speaker: The hens are laying like mad, sir:Steward
69198894Identify the Speaker: Oh Archbishop, do you know what Robert de Baudricourt is sending me from Vancouvers:Charles
69198895Identify the Speaker: West wind, wanton wind, willful wind, womanish wind...:Dunois
69198896arrogant prideHubris
69198897Of or pertaining to worldly things or to things not considered religious:secular
69198898Opinion or doctrine that differs from the orthodox or accepted doctrine of a church:heresay
69198899An official investigation of a political or religious nature:inquisition
69198900A confused mass, jumble:welter
69198901Offensively bold:impudent
69198902Rebellion or incitement against the governmentsedition
69198903stubbornobdurate
69198904Attractive, excellentbonny
69198905To withdraw with something previously said:recant
69198906Fluent in a superficial or insincere way:glib
69198907Mongrel, contemptible person:cur
69198908Full of contempt, arrogancesupersilious
69198909extreme example of something disapproved, notoriousarrant
69198910biased supportedpartisan
69198911to arouse to awareness or actiongalvanized
69198912A ringing of bellspeal
69198913desire for political independencenationalism
69198914social system that developed in Europe in the 8th centuryfeaudalism
69198915long narrow flagpennon
69198916Archetypes: But I am wiser now and nobody is any the worse for being wiser:loss of innocence
69198917Archetypes: The Wind has changed, God has spoken..divine intervention
69198918Archetypes: Ha! Praying! You believe she prays, you idiot.temptress
69198919Identify the Speaker: But this much I must warn you of beforehand: I shall not agree to take you out of this countryAegeus
69198920Identify the Speaker: How I wish the Argo never had reached the land of colchisNurse
69198921Identify the Speaker: No don't be foolish, and empty your hands of these.Jason
69198922Identify the Speaker: Do you think the palace is short of dresses to wear:Jason
69198923Identify the Speaker: But on me this thing has fallen so unexpectedlyMedea
69198924Identify the Speaker: There is nothing tyrannical about my nature:Creon
69198925Identify the Speaker: But this was the main reason that we might live well and not be short of anything:Jason
69198926Identify the Speaker: I went to inquire how children might be born to me:Aegeus
69198927Identify the Speaker: The finest words you have spoken:Medea to the messenger
69198928Identify the Speaker: Do you not trust me: What is it that rankles with you?Aegeus
69198929Identify the Speaker: Why is there no mark engraved upon mens bodies by which we could know the true ones from the false ones?Medea
69198930Identify the Speaker: No that will not. I will bury them myself.Medea
69198931Identify the Speaker: Old ties give place to new ones:Tutor
69198932Identify the Speaker: You have children of your own, It is natural for you to look kindly on them:Medea to Creon
69198933Identify to whom Medea speaks in the following line: "The finest words you have spoken."Medea to the messenger
69198934Select the literary term that applies in the following lines: That word is not in harmony with my tidings:Dramatic irony
69198935Select the literary term that applies in the following lines: But this much I must warn you of beforehand: I shall not agree to take you out of this country:Motif
69198936Select the literary term that applies in the following lines: Medea, a god has thrown suffering upon your in waves of despair:Metaphor
69198937Select the literary term that applies in the following lines: It would have been better far for men to have gotten their children in some other way and women not to have existed:misogny
69198938Select the literary term that applies in the following lines: Flow backward to your sources, sacred rivers:apostrophe
69198939To cause anger , irritationrankle
69198940To vacillate irresolutely between choices fitted or intended to teach.waver
69198941A purification:catharsis
69198942a verbally strong, sometimes abusive speech:diatribe
69198943A tragic flaw:hamartia
69198944When the words o actions of a character have a different meaning for the reader:dramatic irony
69198945The introductions to a play:prologue
69198946Traditional elements of an artistic genre:conventions
69198947"bait the hook well; this fish will bite." The fish refers to:benedick
69198948"Let there be the same net spread for her, and that must your daughter and her gentlewoman carry." The her in this line refers to:Beatrice
69198949"Not til God make men of some other metal than earth" is said by:Beatrice
69198950"How tartly that gentleman looks!" refers to:Don John
69198951"That young start-up hath all the glory of my overthrow" refers to:Claudio
69198952"In time the savage bull doth wear the yoke" The Yoke refers to:Marriage
69198953"Even to the next willow, about your own business, country" the word willow symbolizes:Unrequitted love
69198954"I will in the interim undertake one of Hercules' labors" This line contains:illusion
69198955"Any bar, any cross, any impediment will be med'cinable to me." The word Med'cinable suggest the archetype of:unhealable wound
69198956Identify the Speaker: She speaks poinards and every word stabs.Benedick
69198957Identify the Speaker: I had rather be a canker in a hedge than a rose in Grace.Don John
69198958Identify the Speaker: A man loves the meat in his youth that he cannot endure his age.Benedick
69198959Identify the Speaker: Friendship is constant in all other things. Save in the office and the affairs of love even she.Claudio
69198960Identify the Speaker: Leonato's Hero, your Hero, every man's Hero:Don John
69198961Identify the Speaker: Hath no man's dagger here a point for me?Leonato
69198962Identify the Speaker: Ha! Not for the wide world!Benedick
69198963Identify the Speaker: In the time the savage bull doth bear the yoke:Don Pedro
69198964Identify the Speaker: O, she is fallen into a pit of ink, that the wide se Hath drops too few to wash her clean again:Leonato
69198965Identify the Speaker: For many is a giddy thing!Benedick
69198966Identify the Speaker: No, an he were, I would burn my study.Beatrice
69198967Identify the Speaker: I will assume thy part in some disguise and tell fair Hero I am Claudio.Don Pedro
69198968Identify the Speaker: I whipt me behind the arras.Borachio

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