1 / 33

AP Language Terms Jeopardy

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

asuda
Download Presentation

AP Language Terms Jeopardy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AP Language Terms Jeopardy

  2. Appeal to emotion…(200) • satire • Rhetorical triangle • ethos • pathos

  3. Wrong! Back to question

  4. Right! Back to the board

  5. Draw a conclusion from data presented(300) • connotation • Infer • diction • metonomy

  6. Mercutio (400) Mercutio is a relative of … • Romeo • Tybalt • Prince Escalus • No characters mentioned in the play

  7. Mercutio (500) After he is mortally wounded Mercutio curses … • Tybalt • Romeo • The Montagues • The Capulets • The Montagues and the Capulets

  8. 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

  9. 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?”

  10. Romeo (200) Romeo… • Is in love when the play opens • Loves to fight • Is a Capulet • Starts a fight with Benvolio board

  11. 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

  12. 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

  13. 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

  14. 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

  15. 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?”

  16. Juliet (200) board Juliet is ____ years old . • 16 • 14 • 13 • 12 • 18

  17. 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

  18. 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

  19. 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

  20. 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

  21. 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

  22. 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

  23. 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

  24. 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

  25. 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

  26. 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

  27. 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

  28. Lord Capulet (200) When we first meet Lord Capulet he is talking to… • Juliet • Friar Lawrence • The Nurse • Parris • himself board

  29. 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

  30. 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

  31. 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

  32. 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

  33. 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

More Related