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AP Language Terms Jeopardy. Appeal to emotion…(200). satire Rhetorical triangle ethos pathos. Wrong!. Back to question. Right!. Back to the board. Draw a conclusion from data presented(300). connotation Infer diction metonomy. Mercutio (400). Mercutio is a relative of … Romeo
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Appeal to emotion…(200) • satire • Rhetorical triangle • ethos • pathos
Wrong! Back to question
Right! Back to the board
Draw a conclusion from data presented(300) • connotation • Infer • diction • metonomy
Mercutio (400) Mercutio is a relative of … • Romeo • Tybalt • Prince Escalus • No characters mentioned in the play
Mercutio (500) After he is mortally wounded Mercutio curses … • Tybalt • Romeo • The Montagues • The Capulets • The Montagues and the Capulets
Mercutio (600) The “Queen Mab” speech by Mercutio.. • Is a wild story of a fairy • Is an angry tirade against love • Reveals Mercutio’s sensitive side • Ends with Romeo laughing wildly • Is none of the above
Mercutio (1000) Mercutio says… • “But my true love is grown to such excess I cannot sum up half my wealth.” • “Romeo, the love I bear thee can afford no better term than this: thou art a villain.” • “True, I talk of dreams, which are the children of an idle brain, begot of nothing but vain fantasy.” • “Uncle, this is a Montague, our foe.” • “Can I go forward when my heart is here?”
Romeo (200) Romeo… • Is in love when the play opens • Loves to fight • Is a Capulet • Starts a fight with Benvolio board
Romeo (300) In the beginning of Act I Romeo… • Fights with Capulet servents • Jokes constantly with Benvolio • Is mysteriously melancholy • Is banished at the end of the play board
Romeo (400) Romeo’s frustration with Rosaline is illustrated by which quote? • “Let me weep for such a feeling loss.” • “She hath Dian’s wit and in strong proof of chastity well armed.” • “What lady’s that which doth enrich the hand of yonder knight.” • “Arise fair sun and kill the envious moon, who is already sick and pale with grief.” board
Romeo (500) Which happens last? Romeo… • Kills Tybalt • Marries Juliet • Threatens suicide • Calls Juliet “the Sun” • Is given Juliet’s ring by the Nurse. board
Romeo (600) Which describes Romeo in Act I… • Carefree and spirited • Romantic and pure • Love-lorn and immature • Noble yet selfish • Selfish but dutiful to parents board
Romeo (1000) board Romeo says… • “A plague o’ both your houses!” • “That which we call a rose by any other word would smell as sweet.” • “But soft, what light through yonder window breaks?” • “Queen Mab…She is the fairies’ midwife.” • “Who is it that calls? It is my lady mother. Is she not down so late or up so early?”
Juliet (200) board Juliet is ____ years old . • 16 • 14 • 13 • 12 • 18
Juliet (300) Before the feast, Lady Capulet informs Juliet that she must… • Go to shrift at Friar Lawrence’s cell • Consider marrying Count Paris who will woo her this night • Behave modestly during the feast • Not dance with any of the maskers • Not speak to Romeo board
Juliet (400) Upon hearing that Romeo killed Tybalt, Juliet initially… • Is relieved that Romeo was not killed • Feels deceived by Romeo’s gentle appearance yet violent actions • Hopes that the Prince will execute her husband • Intends on accompanying Romeo to Mantua board
Juliet (500) Despite her consuming love for Romeo, Juliet fears that… • Their vow to marry is too sudden • He may marry someone else • Paris will challenge Romeo to a duel • Their marriage will not end the feud. board
Juliet (600) Just before consuming the Friar’s potion Juliet … • Asks for God’s forgiveness • Tells the Nurse about the plan • Expresses fear of the Capulet tomb • Secretly doubts of the purity of Romeo’s love board
Juliet (1000) Juliet says … • “I will make thee think thy swan a crow.” • “Death that hath sucked the honey of thy breath, hath had no power yet upon thy beauty.” • “Good night, good night. Parting is such sweet sorrow that I shall say ‘Good night’ till it be morrow. • “Rock on till the break ‘o dawn!” board
Friar Lawrence (200) The Friar warns both Romeo and Juliet… • To stay away from each other until the news of their marriage reaches their parents. • To take things slowly and to not be rash. • About the dangers of premarital sex. • About the poison ivy which grows rampantly in the area. board
Friar Lawrence (300) Friar Lawrence reluctantly agrees to marry Romeo and Juliet in order to… • Prevent Romeo from commiting suicide • End the feud between their families • Comply with religious doctrine • Please Juliet board
Friar Lawrence (400) Which of the Friars actions happens first? • Chiding Romeo for being girl crazy • Collecting herbs and flowers to make medicine • Agreeing to marry Romeo and Juliet • Lecturing Paris about marrying such a young girl. board
Friar Lawrence (500) The theme of the Friar’s soliloquy in the garden is that… • Morning is the best time to collect plant samples • Man perverts nature • Everything in nature contains good and evil • Flowers are not as harmless as they seem. board
Friar Lawrence (600) At the end of the play Friar Lawrence… • Denies any wrongdoing. • Blames Lord Capulet. • Blames impetuous young love. • Admits to giving Juliet the potion. • None of the above board
Friar Lawrence (1000) Friar Lawrence said… • “Keep it funky” • “Ask for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man.” • “A plague o’ both your houses!” • “But soft, what light through yonder window breaks?” • “Virtue itself turns vice being misapplied, and vice sometimes by action dignified.” board
Lord Capulet (200) When we first meet Lord Capulet he is talking to… • Juliet • Friar Lawrence • The Nurse • Parris • himself board
Lord Capulet (300) In the brawl in Act I, scene 1 Lord Capulet… • Fights with Benvolio • Searches for his daughter to protect her • Asks for his sword so he can fight too • Tries to stop the brawl • None of the above board
Lord Capulet (400) Lord Capulet’s relationship with Juliet can be described as… • Affectionate but strict • Unconditional love • Only cold and distant • physically abusive • None of the above board
Lord Capulet (500) Lord Capulet’s relationship with Lady Capulet can be described as… • Loving and affectionate • physically violent • Emotionally distant • The ideal model of love and devotion • None of the above board
Lord Capulet (600) At the end of the play, Lord Capulet promises to… • Have another child • Pay Montague for his loss • Punish his wife • Punish Friar Lawrence • Raise a gold statue of Romeo board
Lord Capulet (1000) Lord Capulet said… • “Farewell, God knows when we shall meet again.” • “Hang thee, young baggage, disobedient wretch!” • “What’s in a name? That which we call a rose by any other word would smell as sweet.” • “She hath Dian’s wit, and, in strong proof of chastity well armed…” • “My only love sprung from my only hate!” board