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Macbeth
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| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Duncans youngest son; flees to Ireland | donalbain |
| "[life] is a tale/told by an idiot, full of sound and fury/signifying nothing" | Macbeth |
| jokes that he is Hells gatekeeper | porter |
| goddess of witchcraft | hecate |
| narrowly escapes being murdered | fleance |
| far too trusting of others | duncan |
| accuses her husband of being a traitor | lady Macduff |
| Duncans named heir | Malcolm |
| will never be king, but will be the father of kings | banquo |
| becomes highly suspicious of Macbeth by act three | Lennox |
| hover through the "fog and filthy air" | the three witches |
| informs Macduff that his family was murdered | ross |
| "out, damned spot! out, I say!-out two. why, then, 'tis time to do't, hell is murky" | lady Macbeth |
| Macbeths servant, and the one he calls upon in his time of need | seyton |
| "tyrant, show thy face!/if thou best slain and with no stroke of mine,/my wife and childrens ghosts will haunt me still." | macduff |
| what does "false face must hide what the false heart doth know" mean? | you must hide your hide true feelings |
| lady Macbeths plan is to blame Duncans murder on | Duncans guards |
| why did the witches harm the fat lady's husband | she wouldn't share her chestnuts |
| at the beginning of the play, the war was between | Scotland and Norway |
| which character provides comic relief in the play | the porter |
| which of the following was NOT a prediction given by the apparitions | "thou shall get kings, though thou be none" |
| who joins Malcolm and macduff to over throw Macbeth at the end of the play | siward |
| where is Duncan killed | Inverness |
| who discovers Duncans body | macduff |
| what does lady macduff call her husband | traitor |
| who becomes king of Scotland at the end of the play | Malcolm |
| who was "for his mother's womb. untimely ripped"? | macduff |
| Macbeth sees all of the following apparitions EXCEPT | a child holding a burning cross |
| what is the prophecy given to Banquo | he will be the father of kings |
| lady Macbeth can best described as | ambitious and motivated |
| A little clears us of this deed how easy it is then | Lady macbeth |
| I grant him bloody luxurious avaricious false deceiving sudden malicious smacking of every sin that has a name | Malcolm |
| fathered he is and yet he's fatherless | lady macduff |
| He did command me to call timely on him I have almost slipped the hour | macduff |
| Damned fact how it did grieve call macbeth | Lennox |
| the devil could not pronounce a title more hateful to mine ear | young siward |
| Oh come in equivocator knock knock | porter |
| for brave macbeth well he deserves that name disdaining fortune with brandished steel which smoked with bloody execution like valors minion carve his bloody passage till he faced the slave | captain |
| My noble partner you greet with very present grace and great prediction of noble having and of Royal hope that he seems wrapped withal to me you speak not | banquo |
| Nay how will you do for a husband | young macduff |
| Fair is foul and foul is fair | witches |
| Come you spirits that tend on mortal thoughts unsex me here and fill me from the crown to the top full of direst cruelty | lady Macbeth |
| The hast it now king Cawdor Glamis all the weird woman promised and I fear thou playdst most foully for it | banquo |
| foul whisperings are abroad unnatural deeds do breed unnatural troubles infected minds to their death pillows will discharged their sick | Doctor |
| She has spoke what she should not I am sure of that heaven knows what she has known | attendant |
| The queen my Lord is dead | seyton |