12 th grade jeopardy. hamlet quotes hamlet characters hamlet soliloquies slaughter- house five...
TRANSCRIPT
12th Grade
Jeopardy
Hamlet Quotes
Hamlet Characters
Hamlet Soliloquies
Slaughter- house Five
Vocabulary Vocabulary
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
600 600 600 600 600 600
700 700 700 700 700 700
800 800 800 800 800 800
• “More matter with less art”
• Gertrude – Talking about Polonius
Hamlet Quotes 100
• Why wouldst thou be a breeder of sinners
• Hamlet talking to Ophelia
Hamlet Quotes 200
• “Why look now, how unworthy a thin would seem to know my stops, you would play upon me, you would seem to know my stops, you would pluck out the heart of my mystery…”
• Hamlet speaking with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
Hamlet Quotes 300
• “He is dead and gone, lady, He is dead and gone; At his head a grass-green turf, at his heels a stone
• Ophelia singing to Gertrude
Hamlet Quotes 400
• Now cracks a noble heart; Goodnight sweet prince
• Horatio speaking to Hamlet right before Hamlet’s death
• *
Hamlet Quotes 500
• This bodes some strange eruption to our state
• Horatio speaking with Marcellus and Francisco
Hamlet Quotes 600
• Tis unmanly grief. It shows a will most incorrect to heaven
• Claudius speaking to Hamlet
Hamlet Quotes 700
• “A violet in the youth of primy nature, Forward, not permanent, sweet, not lasting, The perfume and suppliance of a minute, No more.”
• Laertes speaking to Ophelia
Hamlet Quotes 800
Characters 100
• Cannot truly resolve his sins because he wishes to still possess the things which he has stolen
• Claudius
Characters 200
• Falls in love with another man while she was still married
• Gertrude
Characters 300
• One of Hamlet’s many foils: His actions come before his plans or words
• Laertes
Characters 400
• Were guarding Elsinore during the opening of the play
• Marcellus and Francisco
Characters 500
• Realizes the King and Queen’s question is more of a command than question
• Rosencrantz
Characters 600
• Was once a jester among the court when Hamlet was young
• Yorick
Characters 700
• Another foil for Hamlet; Wishes to claim land in Poland
• Fortinbras
Characters 800
• Hamlet uses this Troy character to show the difference between his mother’s emotions after the death of her husband
• Hecuba
Soliloquies 100
• In Hamlet’s opening soliloquy he depicted King Hamlet and Queen Gertrude’s marriage as:
• Happy, ideal, pleasant
Soliloquies 200
• Hamlet’s main lament in the first soliloquy is that:
• He cannot deal with the haste in how his mother remarried
Soliloquies 300
• “Oh what a rogue and peasant slave am I!” - - What happens right before this soliloquy?
• The actor performs with more emotion than Hamlet
Soliloquies 400
• In his to be or not to be soliloquy – Hamlet uses the word “sleep” to refer to what?
• Death
Soliloquies 500
• What is a man soliloquy – Hamlet compares Humans to what?
• Beasts/Animals
Soliloquies 600
• Hamlet’s revenge is “dull” because:
• He still has not acted on it
Soliloquies 700
• “Ay, there’s the rub” - - Which soliloquy is this line in and what does it mean?
• To be or not to be; The conflict/problem/predicament
Soliloquies 800
• What are Hamlet’s last lines in his final soliloquy?
• May my thoughts be bloody or be nothing worth!
Slaughterhouse Five 100
• Mary O’Hare inspires Billy to change the title of his book to?
• The Children’s Crusade
Slaughterhouse Five 200
• Thoughts of Revenge make him happy
• Paul Lazzaro
Slaughterhouse Five 300
• The only soldier to stand up to Howard Campbell
• Edgar Derby
Slaughterhouse Five 400
• Science fiction writer that Rosewater and Pilgrim enjoy reading
• Kilgore Trout
Slaughterhouse Five 500
• The epigraph in Slaughterhouse Five refers to Billy as a
• Christ like figure
Slaughterhouse Five 600
• Kurt Vonnegut enters the novel during a scene – Describe this
• At the latrine – He says he lost his brains
Slaughterhouse Five 700
• Name two examples of Irony in the text
• Title of novel – The scouts that died - Others
Slaughterhouse Five 800
• What would make a “great’ epitaph for Billy Pilgrim and Vonnegut
• “Everything was beautiful and nothing was hurt.”
Vocabulary 100
• Originating in the country or region where found, native; inborn ; inherent
• Indigenous
Vocabulary 200
• A confused struggle, a violent free – for – all
• Melee (maylay)
Vocabulary 300
• To remove material considered offensive
• Bowdlerize
Vocabulary 400
• Narrow-minded or rigid, intolerant
• Hidebound
Vocabulary 500
• A learned person; one who gives authoritative opinions
• Pundit
Vocabulary 600
• Lacking in skill or dexterity
• Maladroit
Vocabulary 700
• To weaken, debase, or corrupt
• Vitiate
Vocabulary 800
• Conducive to health or well-being; wholesome
• Salubrious
Vocabulary 100
• Schism
• Rift or breach, a formal split/any division or separation of a group or organization into hostile factions
Vocabulary 200
• Obfuscate
• To darken or obscure
Vocabulary 300
• Maudlin
• Excessively or effusively sentimental
Vocabulary 400
• Vicissitude
• A change or variation, or alteration
Vocabulary 500
• Browbeat
• To intimidate; to bully
Vocabulary 600
• Panache
• A confident and stylish manner
Vocabulary 700
• Philippic
• Verbal attack
Vocabulary 800
• Contumelious
• Insolent or rude in speech or behavior