English II Pre AP-Mr. Cardona
Terms : Hide Images [1]
26782967 | Gladstones | All of the following images are vital to the novel except: | |
26782968 | Rudolph Schidmt | When Holden speaks to Mrs. Marrow, he tells her his name is | |
26782969 | a record (for his sister Phoebe) | Little shirley Beans refers to | |
26782970 | Dick Slagle | The "inexpensive suitcases" involve | |
26784127 | Mr. Spencer | Identify the speakers, "Do you blame me for flunking you boy?" | |
26784128 | Mr. Antollini | Identify the speakers, "If I write something down for you, will you read it carefully? and keep it?" | |
26784129 | Mr. Antollini | Identify the speakers,"You grab your bags and scoot right on back here again: I'll leave the door unlatched." | |
26784130 | Phoebe | Identify the speakers, "Because you dont. You don't like any schools. You don't like a million things." | |
26784131 | Stradlater | Identify the speakers, "How about writing a composition for me, for English?" | |
26784132 | Mr. and Mrs. Spencer | Select the character Holden does not associate with materialism | |
26784133 | Mercutio | A literary character that reminds Holden of Allie is | |
26784134 | Sally Hayes | Identify to whom Holden speaks, "We'll stay in these cabins and stuff like that till the dough runs out." | |
26784135 | Maurice | Identify to whom Holden speaks, "I dont owe you five bucks." | |
26784136 | Stradlater | Identify to whom Holden speaks, "Did you ask her if she still keeps all her kings in the back row?" | |
26784137 | Museum | Identify where Holden is when he makes this remark: " Nobody'd be different. The only thing that would be different would be you." | |
26784138 | Shocked | "Enkidu's face was pale." From this line we can infer that | |
26784139 | Intitation | Identify the part of the hero's journey that the following passage axemplifies: " He entered the Road of the sun/ which was so shrouded in darkness/ that he could see neither/ What was ahead of him nor behind." | |
26784140 | Outcast | Idenitfy the archetype in the following passage: "His friends/Had left him to a vast aloneness/He has never felt before." | |
26784141 | set him straight, god-like (both a & c) | Enkidu goes to see Gilgamesh because | |
26784142 | Extreme happiness | "In the silence of the people they began to laugh and clutched each other in their breathless exaltation." The word "clutched" means | |
26784143 | The voice of reason & callous | "no one grieves that much, she said./Your friend is gone. Forget him. No one remembers him. He is dead." In this passage the speaker appears to be | |
26784144 | Ishtar & Siduri | "There is no fury like a woman scorned." This statment refers to | |
26784145 | Loaves of bread | Which of the following does not apply to Urshanabi? | |
26784146 | "Into the ship bring seed of all living creatures" | Which of the following statements by Utnapishtim does not relate to Gilgamesh? | |
26785364 | "No one grieves that much." | Identify the line that does not apply to Ishtar: | |
26785365 | Transmutation | " He looked at the walls, awed at the heights His people had achieved" The best word that applies to this passage is | |
26785366 | personification | "When he saw the plant Of rich rose color and ambrosial Shimmering in the water like a prism Of sunlight" Identify the term that does not apply to the passage: | |
26785367 | hubris | Identify the term that best applies to the following line: "We must prove ourselves more powerful than he." | |
26785368 | joy/woe man & elixir | Identify the term or phrase that best relates to the following line: "He was calling out, I have it! I have it!" | |
26785369 | great | Identify the word that does not to the atmosphere of Humbaba's description: They saw the great head of Humbaba/ Like a water buffalo's bellowing down the path, His huge and clumsy legs, hid flailing arms/ Trashing at phantoms in his precious trees. | |
26785370 | scorpion people | Their knowledge is awesome, "but whose glance is death." | |
26785371 | Humbaba | He was the slave who did the work of the gods. | |
26785372 | Ninsun | Asks the gods, "Why did you give my son a restless heart?" | |
26785373 | Utnapishtim | "I did not come out of desire like you. I was the choice of the others." | |
26785374 | Urshanabi | The boatman who "has stone images that will show you the way." | |
26785375 | music | Orpheus's gift: | |
26785376 | Ball of yarn | What given to Theseus for the maze? | |
26785377 | trapestry | Philomela revealed the whole account of how she was wronged by | |
26785378 | Charon | Identify the aged boatman that ferries the souls of the dead over a stretech of water: | |
26787490 | Lethe | Identify the river of forgetfulness: | |
26787491 | Simplegyties | Identify the term that does not refer to the underworld: | |
26787492 | Iron bed | Identify the device that Procrustes used for his victims: | |
26787493 | Prometheus | Identify the character who stole fire from the gods and gave it to the mortals: | |
26787494 | Temptress | Identify the archetype that applies to the sirens: | |
26787495 | their irresistible song | Identify the power that makes the sirens fatal: | |
26787496 | Aphrodite | Identify the goddess of love: | |
26787497 | Zephyr | Identify the sweet and mild west wind: | |
26789026 | Morepheus | Identify the son of the god of sleep, sommus: | |
26789027 | Winged Helmet | Identify the item that is not a gift given to Perseus by the Hyperboreans | |
26789028 | Peacock | Identify the animal that honors Argus: | |
26789029 | Cassondra | Identify the character who can foretell the future but was cursed by apollo so that no one believes her: | |
26789030 | Arrogance | Identify the mortal characteristic that gods and goddesses swiftly punished: | |
26789031 | Orpheus | Identify the character who lost his wife because he looked back to see if she was following him: | |
26789032 | Icarus | Identify the character who flew too close to the sun and fell into the sea: | |
26789033 | Dadelus | Who built the labyrinth? | |
26789034 | Hippocrene | Identify the spring beloved of poets: | |
26789035 | Jupiter and Mecury | Identify who visited Baucis and Philemon: | |
26789036 | Hermes | Who is the messanger? | |
26789037 | White hepher | Io ws transformed by Zeus into a | |
26789038 | Endymion | Identify the character who is the victim of Selene's magic slumber: | |
26789039 | Haycinth | Who dies from a terrible wound to the forehead? | |
26789040 | Cupid | "Love cannot live where there is no trust." This line is spoken by | |
26789041 | Cyclops | Who forges Zeus's thunderbolts? | |
26789042 | Peramise | The mulberry fruit is associated with | |
26789785 | Minotaur | The labyrinth contains | |
26789786 | Trees | baucis and philemon were transformed into: | |
26789787 | Benedick | "Bait the hook well; this fish will bite" The phrase "this fish" refers to | |
26789788 | Beatrice | "Let there be the same net spread for her, and that must your daughter and her gentlewomen carry" The "her" in this line refers to | |
26789789 | Wordplay | "Not till God make men of some other metal than earth." The word "metal" is an example of | |
26789790 | Don John | "How tartly that gentleman looks!" Identify to whom "that gentleman" refers | |
26789791 | Claudio | "That young start-up hath all the glory of my overflow." The speaker of the above line is referring to | |
26789792 | marriage | "In time the savage bull doth wear the yoke." The "yoke" refers to | |
26789793 | unrequited love | "Even to the next willow, about your own business, country." "Willow" symbolizes | |
26789794 | allusion | I will in the interim undertake one of Hercules' labors... This line contains | |
26789795 | unhealable wound | "Any bar, any cross, any impediment will be mad'cinable to me." "mad'cinable" suggests the archetype of | |
26789796 | Benedick | Identify the speakers, she speaks poiards, and every word stabs. | |
26789797 | Don John | Identify the speakers, i had rather be a canker in a hedge than a rose in his grace. | |
26789798 | Benedick | Identify the speakers, A man loves the meat in his youth that he cannot endure in his age. | |
26789799 | Claudio | Identify the speakers, friendship is constant in all other things/ Save in the office and affairs of love. | |
26793197 | Don John | Identify the speakers, Even she: Leonato's hero, your hero, every man's hero | |
26793198 | Leonato | Identify the speakers, Hath no man's dagger here a point for me? | |
26793199 | Benedick | Identify the speakers, Ha! Not for the wide world! | |
26793200 | Don Pedro | Identify the speakers, in time the savage bull doth bear the yoke. | |
26793201 | Leonato | Identify the speakers, O, she, is fallen/ Into a pit of ink, that the wide sea/ Hath drops too few to wash her clean again, | |
26793202 | Benedick | Identify the speakers, For man is a giddy thing! | |
26793203 | Beatrice | Identify the speakers, No. An he were, I would burn my study. | |
26793204 | Don Pedro | Identify the speakers, I will assume thy part in some disguise/And tell fair Hero I am Claudio | |
26793205 | Boranio | Identify the speakers, I whipt me behind the arras | |
26793206 | Warwick | Identify the speakers, But nowdays, instead of looking at books, people read the. | |
26793207 | Chaplain | Identify the speakers, Not the least. An arrant witch. | |
26793208 | Cauchion | Identify the speakers, I cannot burn her. | |
26793209 | St. Joan | Identify the speakers, Jack the world is too wicked for me | |
26793210 | Cauchion | Identify the speakers, No, no: this is irregular. | |
26793211 | Excectioner | Identify the speakers, Her heart would not burn, my lord. | |
26793212 | Warwick | dentify the speakers, I shall be the secular arm in this case | |
26793213 | Steward | Identify the speakers, The hens are laying like mad, sir. Five dozen eggs! | |
26793214 | Charles | Identify the speakers, Oh, Archbishop, do you know what Rober de baudricourt is sending me from vaucouleurs? | |
26793215 | Dunious | Identify the speakers, West wind, willful wind, woanish wind, false wind from over the water, will you ever blow again? | |
26793216 | Lost of innocence | But I am wiser now; and nobody is any the worse for being wiser | |
26793217 | Divine intervention | The wind has changed. God has spoken | |
26793218 | temptress | Praying! Ha! you believe she prays, you idiot. I know the sort of girl that is always talking to soldiers | |
26793219 | Aegeus | But this much I must warn you of beforehand: I shall not agree to take you out of this country | |
26793220 | Medea | But on me this thing has fallen so unexpectedly... | |
26793221 | Creon | There is nothing tyrannical about my nature | |
26793222 | Jason | But this was the main reason that we might live will and not be short of anything | |
26793223 | Aegeus | I went to inquire how children might be born to me | |
26793224 | Aegeus | Do you trust me? what is it that rankles you? | |
26793225 | Medea | Why is there no mark engraved upon men;s bodies/ By which we could know the true ones from the false ones? | |
26793226 | Medea | You have children of your own. It is natural for you to look kindly on them | |
26793227 | Dramatic Irony | That word is not in harmony with my tidings | |
26793228 | Hospitality Motif | But this much I must warn you of beforehand: I shall not agree to take you out of this country | |
26793229 | Metaphor | Meda, a god has thrown suffering/ Upon you in waves of despair | |
26793230 | Misogny | It would have been better far for men/ To have got their children in some other way, And women not to have existed | |
26793231 | apostrophe | Flow backward to your sources, sacred rivers | |
26793232 | Tutor | Identify the speaker: Old ties give place to new ones. | |
26793233 | messanger | Identify to whom Medea speaks in the following line: The fines words you have spoken |