English II Pre-AP Final
Terms : Hide Images [1]
69170375 | Identify The Speaker: Do You blame me for flunking you boy? | Mr. Spencer | |
69170376 | Identify The Speaker: If I write something down for you, will you read it carefully? | Antolini | |
69170377 | Identify The Speaker: How 'Bout writing a composition for me? | Stradlater | |
69170378 | Identify the Speaker: You grab your bags and scoot right on back here again. | Antolini | |
69170379 | Identify the Speaker: Because you don't. You don't like any schools. | Phoebe | |
69170380 | To Whom does Holden Speak: I Don't owe you five bucks. | Maurice | |
69170381 | To Whom does Holden Speak: Did You ask her if she still keeps all her kings in the back row? | Stradlater | |
69170382 | To Whom does Holden Speak: We'll stay in these cabins and stuff like that til the dough runs out. | Sally Hayes | |
69170383 | Identify where Holden is when he makes this remark: Nobody'd be different. The only thing that would be different would be you. | Museum | |
69170384 | Which Image is not a vital symbol in the novel? Ducks, Redcap, Gladstones Museum | Gladstones museum | |
69170385 | When Holden feels he is disappearing, he makes believe he is talking to: | Ally | |
69170386 | Identify The character holden does not associate with materialism: | Spencer | |
69170387 | A literary character that reminds Holden of Allie is: | Murcutio | |
69170388 | True or False: Holden writes a composition about Phoebe's baseball mitt. | False | |
69170389 | True or False: Holden is fond of digressions. | True | |
69170390 | Bitter, mocking | sardonic | |
69170391 | sharp, incisive | caustic | |
69177233 | of or relating to rogues or rascals | picaresque | |
69177234 | A strong leaning or liking | penchant | |
69177235 | one who believes that human conduct is motivated solely by self-interest | cynic | |
69177236 | Person lacking restraint | rake | |
69177237 | Habits, customs, or moral attitudes | social mores | |
69177238 | not natural, not genuine | affectation | |
69177239 | With one's identity concealed | in cognito | |
69177240 | one who attacks established beliefs or institutions | iconoclast | |
69177241 | Orpheus' gift | music | |
69177242 | Philomela revealed the whole account of how she was wronged by tiresus in a: | tapestry | |
69177243 | Identify the aged boatman: | Charon | |
69177244 | The river of Forgetfulness: | Lethe | |
69177245 | The device Procrustes uses on his victims: | and iron bed | |
69177246 | The character who stole fire from the Gods | Prometheus | |
69177247 | an archetype that applies to the sirens | temptress | |
69177248 | The power that makes the sirens so fatal | Their voice | |
69177249 | the goddess of love | Aphrodite | |
69177250 | the sweet and mild west wind | Zephyr | |
69177251 | The son of the god of sleep, Somnus | Morpheus | |
69177252 | Item's given to Perseus by the Hyperboreans: | Cap, Winged Sandals, Magic Wallet | |
69177253 | The animal that honors Argus | peacock | |
69177254 | the character who can foretell the future but is cursed by Apollo so that no one believes her. | Cassandra | |
69177255 | the mortal characteristic that the Gods swiftly punish | arrogance | |
69177256 | the character who lost his wife because he looked back | Orpheus | |
69177257 | The character who flew too close to the sun and fell into the sea | Icarus | |
69177258 | The messenger of the Gods | Hermes | |
69177259 | Names connected to the underworld | Hades, Charon, Styx, Adamantine, Tartarus, etc. | |
69177260 | The spring beloved to poets | Hippocrane | |
69177261 | Who visited Baucis and Philemon? | Jupiter and Mercury | |
69177262 | The Labyrinth was invented by: | Deadulus | |
69177263 | Io was transformed into a: | Hefer | |
69177264 | Who dies from a terrible wound to the forehead? | Hyacinth | |
69177265 | The Character who is the victim of Selene's magic slumber? | Endymion | |
69177266 | Who say "Love cannot live where there is no trust"? | Cupid | |
69177267 | Who forges Zeus' thunderbolts? | Cyclopes | |
69177268 | The Mulberry tree is associated with what character? | Pyramis | |
69177269 | The labyrinth contains the: | Minotaur | |
69177270 | Baucis and Philemon were transformed into: | Trees | |
69198874 | Identify the Character who puts Joan on trial: | Cauchon | |
69198875 | The inquisition charged Joan with: | Heresy | |
69198876 | Identify the Character who represents the feudal system: | warwick | |
69198877 | Dunois is waiting for what wind? | The West Wind (Zephyr) | |
69198878 | When Joan burn at the stake what did the executioner note? | Her heart did not burn | |
69198879 | Joan's mission is to crown: | Charles VII | |
69198880 | Joan's mission is to unite: | France | |
69198881 | Joan's first miracle involves: | Eggs | |
69198882 | Joan tears her recantation when she finds out: | she'd be punished with perpetual imprisonment | |
69198883 | The character who expresses much remorse at seeing Joan burn is the: | Chaplain | |
69198884 | Identify the saints who speak to joan: | Catherine and Margaret | |
69198885 | When Joan cuts her hair and dresses like a man she is going against: | Social Mores | |
69198886 | Identify the Speaker: But nowadays instead of looking at books, people read them: | Warwick | |
69198887 | Identify the Speaker: Not the least. An Arrant witch: | Chaplain | |
69198888 | Identify the Speaker:I cannot burn her: | Cauchon | |
69198889 | Identify the Speaker: Jack the World is too wicked for me: | Joan | |
69198890 | Identify the Speaker: No, No this is irregular | Cauchon | |
69198891 | Identify the Speaker: Her Heart would not burn, my lord: | The executioner | |
69198892 | Identify the Speaker: And I shall be the secular arm in this case: | Warwick | |
69198893 | Identify the Speaker: The hens are laying like mad, sir: | Steward | |
69198894 | Identify the Speaker: Oh Archbishop, do you know what Robert de Baudricourt is sending me from Vancouvers: | Charles | |
69198895 | Identify the Speaker: West wind, wanton wind, willful wind, womanish wind...: | Dunois | |
69198896 | arrogant pride | Hubris | |
69198897 | Of or pertaining to worldly things or to things not considered religious: | secular | |
69198898 | Opinion or doctrine that differs from the orthodox or accepted doctrine of a church: | heresay | |
69198899 | An official investigation of a political or religious nature: | inquisition | |
69198900 | A confused mass, jumble: | welter | |
69198901 | Offensively bold: | impudent | |
69198902 | Rebellion or incitement against the government | sedition | |
69198903 | stubborn | obdurate | |
69198904 | Attractive, excellent | bonny | |
69198905 | To withdraw with something previously said: | recant | |
69198906 | Fluent in a superficial or insincere way: | glib | |
69198907 | Mongrel, contemptible person: | cur | |
69198908 | Full of contempt, arrogance | supersilious | |
69198909 | extreme example of something disapproved, notorious | arrant | |
69198910 | biased supported | partisan | |
69198911 | to arouse to awareness or action | galvanized | |
69198912 | A ringing of bells | peal | |
69198913 | desire for political independence | nationalism | |
69198914 | social system that developed in Europe in the 8th century | feaudalism | |
69198915 | long narrow flag | pennon | |
69198916 | Archetypes: But I am wiser now and nobody is any the worse for being wiser: | loss of innocence | |
69198917 | Archetypes: The Wind has changed, God has spoken.. | divine intervention | |
69198918 | Archetypes: Ha! Praying! You believe she prays, you idiot. | temptress | |
69198919 | Identify the Speaker: But this much I must warn you of beforehand: I shall not agree to take you out of this country | Aegeus | |
69198920 | Identify the Speaker: How I wish the Argo never had reached the land of colchis | Nurse | |
69198921 | Identify the Speaker: No don't be foolish, and empty your hands of these. | Jason | |
69198922 | Identify the Speaker: Do you think the palace is short of dresses to wear: | Jason | |
69198923 | Identify the Speaker: But on me this thing has fallen so unexpectedly | Medea | |
69198924 | Identify the Speaker: There is nothing tyrannical about my nature: | Creon | |
69198925 | Identify the Speaker: But this was the main reason that we might live well and not be short of anything: | Jason | |
69198926 | Identify the Speaker: I went to inquire how children might be born to me: | Aegeus | |
69198927 | Identify the Speaker: The finest words you have spoken: | Medea to the messenger | |
69198928 | Identify the Speaker: Do you not trust me: What is it that rankles with you? | Aegeus | |
69198929 | Identify the Speaker: Why is there no mark engraved upon mens bodies by which we could know the true ones from the false ones? | Medea | |
69198930 | Identify the Speaker: No that will not. I will bury them myself. | Medea | |
69198931 | Identify the Speaker: Old ties give place to new ones: | Tutor | |
69198932 | Identify the Speaker: You have children of your own, It is natural for you to look kindly on them: | Medea to Creon | |
69198933 | Identify to whom Medea speaks in the following line: "The finest words you have spoken." | Medea to the messenger | |
69198934 | Select the literary term that applies in the following lines: That word is not in harmony with my tidings: | Dramatic irony | |
69198935 | Select 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 | |
69198936 | Select the literary term that applies in the following lines: Medea, a god has thrown suffering upon your in waves of despair: | Metaphor | |
69198937 | Select 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 | |
69198938 | Select the literary term that applies in the following lines: Flow backward to your sources, sacred rivers: | apostrophe | |
69198939 | To cause anger , irritation | rankle | |
69198940 | To vacillate irresolutely between choices fitted or intended to teach. | waver | |
69198941 | A purification: | catharsis | |
69198942 | a verbally strong, sometimes abusive speech: | diatribe | |
69198943 | A tragic flaw: | hamartia | |
69198944 | When the words o actions of a character have a different meaning for the reader: | dramatic irony | |
69198945 | The introductions to a play: | prologue | |
69198946 | Traditional 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 | |
69198956 | Identify the Speaker: She speaks poinards and every word stabs. | Benedick | |
69198957 | Identify the Speaker: I had rather be a canker in a hedge than a rose in Grace. | Don John | |
69198958 | Identify the Speaker: A man loves the meat in his youth that he cannot endure his age. | Benedick | |
69198959 | Identify the Speaker: Friendship is constant in all other things. Save in the office and the affairs of love even she. | Claudio | |
69198960 | Identify the Speaker: Leonato's Hero, your Hero, every man's Hero: | Don John | |
69198961 | Identify the Speaker: Hath no man's dagger here a point for me? | Leonato | |
69198962 | Identify the Speaker: Ha! Not for the wide world! | Benedick | |
69198963 | Identify the Speaker: In the time the savage bull doth bear the yoke: | Don Pedro | |
69198964 | Identify 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 | |
69198965 | Identify the Speaker: For many is a giddy thing! | Benedick | |
69198966 | Identify the Speaker: No, an he were, I would burn my study. | Beatrice | |
69198967 | Identify the Speaker: I will assume thy part in some disguise and tell fair Hero I am Claudio. | Don Pedro | |
69198968 | Identify the Speaker: I whipt me behind the arras. | Borachio |