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Jeopardy

Jeopardy. English II Midterm Review. Categories. Puritans. Revolutionary Writers. Romanticism. Quack! Vocabulary. More Romanticism. The Crucible. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 300. 300. 300. 300. 300. 300. 400. 400. 400. 400. 400. 400.

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Jeopardy

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  1. Jeopardy English II Midterm Review

  2. Categories Puritans Revolutionary Writers Romanticism Quack! Vocabulary More Romanticism The Crucible 100 100 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500 500 500

  3. Puritans for 200This was the town that held infamous witch trials. What is Salem?

  4. Puritans for 100The Puritans settled in this state. What is Massachusetts?

  5. Puritans for 300This anti-transcendentalist had (in)famous Puritan ancestors. Who is Nathaniel Hawthorne?

  6. Puritans for 400This was an early history of the Puritan settlement. What is William Bradford’s Of Plymouth Plantation?

  7. Puritans for 500Name the three key Puritan beliefs. What are Simplicity, Grace, and Divine Mission?

  8. Revolutionary Writers 200These two persuasive strategies are used by Patrick Henry in his speech. What are appeal to emotion and appeal to logic?

  9. Revolutionary Writers 100This person said, “Give me liberty or give me death!” Who is Patrick Henry?

  10. Revolutionary Writers for 300Name two persuasive devices. What are repetition, parallelism, allusion, rhetorical question, or aphorism?

  11. Revolutionary Writers for 400Patrick Henry advocates this in his speech. What is revolution against the British?

  12. Daily Double

  13. Revolutionary Writers for 500These methods were used to express feelings to society during the Revolutionary Period. What are speeches or pamphlets?

  14. Romanticism for 100This Romantic author and poet features insanity prominently in his stories. Who is Edgar Allan Poe?

  15. Romanticism for 200Name two topics on which Romantic writers focused. What are imagination, nature, the past, human nature, emotion, intuition, the unknown, or self-expression?

  16. Romanticism for 300This is how the philosophies of Romanticism differed from previously-held beliefs. What are less emphasis on structure/hierarchy, abelief in human potential, and an elevation of imagination above logic?

  17. Romanticism for 400This is how Roderick Usher dies at the end of Poe’s “The Fall of the House of Usher.” What is he dies of fright when his sister seemingly returns from the dead?

  18. Romanticism for 500In Washington Irving’s “The Devil and Tom Walker,” this is what the devil look like. What are dark skin, covered in soot, red sash, red eyes, carries an axe?

  19. Quack! for 100This is the definition for OBLITERATE. What is “to destroy completely”?

  20. Quack for 200This is the definition for GLUTTONOUS. What is excessively greedy or overindulgent?

  21. Quack! for 300Use the word KINDLED correctly in a sentence. Answers will vary such as: This slow computer kindles my rage!

  22. Quack! for 400Use the word TOUT correctly in a sentence. Answers will vary such as: I am touting my ability to run, jump, and compete in track meets!

  23. Quack! for 500Define EXTOL and use the word correctly in a sentence. What is “to praise enthusiastically”? Answers will vary: The principal extolled the top student’s performance at the spelling bee.

  24. More Romanticism for 100This is one gothic literary element that Poe uses in “The Fall of the House of Usher.” What are a bleak/remote setting, supernatural occurrences, etc.?

  25. More Romanticism for 200 In Walt Whitman’s “When I Heard a Learn’d Astronomer,” the speaker does this when he gets bored listening to the astronomy lecture. What is wanders out and looks at the stars?

  26. More Romanticism for 300Edgar Allan Poe influenced these two genres (as seen in some films and television shows today). What are horror and mystery?

  27. More Romanticism for 400 This is why Poe’s “A Sonnet to Science” is ironic. Hint: Think about why someone typically receives a sonnet from a poet. Sonnets are usually written for a loved one, friend, or significant other. It is ironic because the narrator is critical of science and certainly not expressing his love for it.

  28. More Romanticism for 500This is how “Thanatopsis” illustrate the “circle of life.” What is in death, we return to nature and our bodies nourish new life?

  29. The Crucible for 100This character had an affair that filled him with shame. Who is John Proctor?

  30. The Crucible for 200This cranky old man was crushed with stones when he wouldn’t plead guilty or innocent. Who is Giles Corey?

  31. The Crucible for 300This kind old woman was accused of murdering Ann Putnam’s babies. Who is Rebecca Nurse?

  32. The Crucible for 400This prominent Salem resident “murdered his neighbors for their land.” Who is Thomas Putnam?

  33. The Crucible for 500Name the author of The Crucible and the events in his own lifetime which he was responding to when he wrote The Crucible. Who is Arthur Miller and what is The Red Scare / House Un-American Activities Committee/ McCarthyism?

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