Download romeo and juliet act ii test key

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Love Story (Taylor Swift song) wikipedia , lookup

Characters in Romeo and Juliet wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Romeo
and
Juliet
Act
II
Test
Section
I:
Multiple
Choice
1. What
does
Juliet
want
Romeo
to
do
as
she
speaks
from
her
balcony?
a. deny
his
father
and
refuse
his
name
b. fall
in
love
with
someone
else
c. change
his
name
to
Capulet
d. give
up
his
friends
2. Why
does
Juliet
tell
Romeo
not
to
swear
his
love
by
the
moon?
a. because
swearing
by
the
moon
is
bad
luck
b. because
the
moon
is
small
and
weak
c. because
the
moon
is
inconstant
and
variable
d. because
the
moon
is
a
heavenly
body
3. What
does
Romeo
ask
Friar
Lawrence
to
do?
a. persuade
Juliet
to
marry
him
b. tell
Rosaline
that
he
loves
Juliet
c. talk
to
the
Capulets
about
Juliet
d. marry
him
and
Juliet
that
day
4. Whom
does
Juliet
send
to
Romeo
as
a
messenger?
a. Mercutio
b. Peter
c. her
nurse
d. Friar
Lawrence
5. At
the
end
of
Scene
6,
what
does
Friar
Lawrence
intend
to
do?
a. separate
Romeo
and
Juliet
b. marry
Romeo
and
Juliet
c. hide
Romeo
and
Juliet
in
his
cell
d. tell
Romeo’s
and
Juliet’s
parents
about
their
secret
romance
Section
II:
Fill
in
the
blanks.
Sonnets
are
poems
of
(6)
__________
lines
that
are
written
in
(7)
__________
__________.
Each
sonnet
is
made
up
of
three
(8)
__________
and
one
(9)
__________.
The
rhyme
scheme
of
a
sonnet
is
(10)
__
__
__
__
__
__
__
__
__
__
__
__
__
__.
Each
line
has
(11)
__________
syllables.
In
each
pair
of
syllables,
one
syllable
is
(12)
__________
and
the
other
is
(13)
__________.
fourteen;
iambic
pentameter;
quatrains;
couplet;
ABABCDCDEFEFGG;
ten;
stressed;
unstressed
Section
III:
Put
in
chronological
order.
Numbers
14‐19:
Indicate
the
order
in
which
the
following
events
occurred
in
the
play.
The
list
below
contains
events
from
both
Act
I
and
Act
II.
Write
the
letters
of
the
events
in
order
next
to
the
numbers
on
the
answer
sheet.
a. Romeo
and
Juliet
meet
at
the
feast,
talk
briefly,
and
kiss.
b. The
servants
of
Montague
and
Capulet
brawl
in
the
streets.
c. Romeo,
Benvolio,
and
Mercutio
prepare
to
visit
the
Capulet
feast.
d. Romeo
and
Juliet
are
married.
e. Romeo
sneaks
into
the
Capulets’
garden.
f. The
Nurse
is
sent
to
Romeo
to
find
out
when
&
where
the
marriage
will
take
place.
b,
c,
a,
e,
f,
d
Section
IV:
Matching
Match
the
character
with
his
or
her
description.
20.
Mercutio
e
21.
Friar
Lawrence
a
22.
Paris
b
23.
Peter
c
24.
Tybalt
d
25.
Benvolio
f
a. I
believed
marriage
between
Romeo
and
Juliet
would
solve
the
feud.
b. I
was
Romeo’s
rival
for
Juliet’s
hand.
c. I
accompanied
the
Nurse
when
she
asked
Romeo
when
and
where
he
and
Juliet
would
be
wed.
d. Others
are
envious
of
my
fencing
abilities.
e. I
mocked
Romeo
while
he
was
in
the
Capulets’
garden.
f. As
Romeo’s
cousin,
I
worried
Romeo
would
be
angered
by
his
friend’s
teasing.
Section
V:
Quotes
Which
character
uttered
each
line?
26.
“Wisely,
and
slow.
They
stumble
that
run
fast.”
Friar
Lawrence
27.
“Lady,
by
the
yonder
blessed
moon
I
vow,/That
tips
with
silver
.
.
.”
Romeo
28.
“He
jests
at
scars
that
never
felt
a
wound.
But
soft,
what
light
through
yonder
window
breaks?”
Romeo
29.
“Ah,
my
back,
my
back!/
Beshrew
your
heart
for
sending
me
about…”
Nurse
30.
“That
which
we
call
a
rose/
By
any
other
word
would
smell
as
sweet.”
Juliet
31.
“Love
goes
toward
love
as
schoolboys
from
their
books,/
But
love
from
love,
toward
school
with
heavy
looks.”
Romeo
32.
“Good
night,
good
night.
Parting
is
such
sweet
sorrow/That
I
shall
say
“Good
night”
till
it
be
morrow.”
Juliet
33.
“But
passion
lends
them
power,
time
means,
to
meet,/Temp’ring
extremities
with
extreme
sweet.”
Chorus
34.
“An
if
he
hear
thee,
thou
wilt
anger
him.”
Benvolio
35.
“Women
may
fall
when
there’s
no
strength
in
men.”
Friar
Lawrence
Section
VI:
More
Matching
Match
the
quotes
to
the
literary
terms
listed
below.
Not
all
terms
will
be
used.
alliteration
allusion
analogy
assonance
hyperbole
understatement
metaphor
simile
onomatopoeia
parallelism
personification
pun
soliloquy
36.
“[This
marriage
contract]
is
too
rash,
too
unadvised,
too
sudden,/
Too
like
the
lightning…”
simile
37.
The
Friar’s
lines
from
“The
gray‐eyed
morn
smiles
on
the
frowning
night,
…”
through
“I
must
upfill
this
osier
cage
of
ours/With
baleful
weeds
and
precious‐
juiced
flowers…”
to
“Virtue
itself
turns
vice,
being
misapplied,/And
vice
sometime
by
action
dignified.”
soliloquy
(also
includes
personification,
alliteration,
and
parallelism)
38.
“…Young
Abraham
Cupid,
he
that
shot
so
trim/When
King
Cophetua
loved
the
beggar
maid.“
allusion
39.
“But
soft,
what
light
through
yonder
window
breaks?/It
is
the
East,
and
Juliet
is
the
sun.”
metaphor
40.
“Arise,
fair
sun,
and
kill
the
envious
moon,…”
personification