english 9 lit review i round two - double jeopardy characterizationvocabulary novel characters...

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English 9 Lit Review I Round Two - Double Jeopardy Characteriza tion Vocabulary Vocabulary Novel Characters Vocabulary 60 60 60 60 60 70 70 70 70 70 80 80 80 80 80 90 90 90 90 90 100 100 100 100 100 © 2009 Orman Final Jeopardy

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English 9 Lit Review IRound Two - Double Jeopardy

Characterization

Vocabulary Vocabulary NovelCharacters

Vocabulary

60 60 60 60 60

70 70 70 70 70

80 80 80 80 80

90 90 90 90 90

100 100 100 100 100© 2009 OrmanFinal Jeopardy

A character that does not changed is called a ?

characterAnswer:static

a character that learns something about him/herself

and, therefore, changes is called ?

Answer: dynamic

The main character in a story is called ?

Answer: protagonist

? Is what drives a character’s actions

Answer: motivation

This type of character has only one or two character traits

Answer: flat

Rubbish/trash

Answer: debris

To get into a scrap

Answer:fight

The clouds looked ominous

Answer: threatening

A story that can be read on both a literal and an

interpretive (symbolic) level

Answer: allegory

Writing that ridicules some weakness in an individual or

society is called?

Answer: satire

To gingerly place the crystal glasses away

Answer: carefully; cautiously

DAILY DOUBLE!The Arena – Wager Your PointsName of the county where Of Mice and

Men takes place

Answer: Salinas

To talk in a dull, monotonous tone

Answer: drone

A derogatory remark

Answer: belittling; demeaning

She wore “mules” to the dance—not a smart decision.

Answer: shoes with no backs

“small and quick, dark of face, with restless eyes and sharp,

strong features

Answer: George

Old, tall, stoop-shouldered, missing his right hand?

Answer: Candy

A thin young man with a brown face, brown eyes, and head of tightly curled hair; he wore a

glove on his left hand ?

Answer: Curley

A huge man, shapeless of face, with large, pale eyes, with wide,

sloping shoulders?

Answer: Lennie

A proud, aloof man, his body was bent over to his left by his

crooked spine…thin, pain-tightened lips?

DAILY DOUBLE!The Gifts – Wager Your

Points

Answer: Crooks

The prince of the ranch…hatchet face was ageless…

might have been thirty-five or fifty ?

Answer: change

What Lennie has in his pocket when the story begins?

Answer: mouse

George and Lennie’s dream?

Answer: own their own piece of land

What is an odyssey?

Answer: a long journey marked by adventure

What George tells the boss about his and Lennie’s

relationship?

Answer: cousins

27

FINAL JEOPARDY ROUND

28

CATEGORY:

Literary Term

Write your name & how much you will wager on your slip of paper.

Then turn it in to teacher.

29

Writers often include minor characters who add depth and

complication to the plot. What are they called?

Answer: subordiinate

Answers - Round Two

The Tributes

60: Rue

70: Thresh

80: District 1 boy (Marvel--but students won’t know his name.)

90: Foxface--District 5 girl

100: Boy from District 9

The Games

60: tracker jacker nest

70: The seal of the Capitol

80:Claudius Templesmith

90: third

100: three (Katniss had one & the Careers had two pairs)

The Arena

60: golden Cornucopia

70: DAILY DOUBLE--a sheet of plastic, a loaf of bread, and the orange backpack she “grapples” for (she loses the loaf of bread during the struggle with the district 9 boy for the backpack)

80: fire & fireballs

90: the lake

100: mud along the banks of a stream

The Gifts

60: Lamb stew dinner

70: burn ointment

80: District 11 (sent Katniss a loaf of bread to thank her for being kind to Rue & killing the boy who killed her.)

90: The sleep syrup (which helped her knock out Peeta so she could retrieve the pack with medicine for him.)

100: DAILY DOUBLE--a pot of broth (NOT the feast!)

More Tributes

60: Cato from District 2

70: Glimmer, Career from District 1

80: District 3 boy (who rigged the supplies with the explosives from the platforms)

90: Districts 6 & 7

100: Boy from District 4

Final Jeopardy

The purpose of the Hunger Games is a yearly reminder that the Dark Days (the days of the districts uprising against the Capitol) must never be repeated; it is their repentance for the uprising.

© 2009, Tracee Orman

For educational purposes only.

Thank you!