Mounds View HS 9th Grade Final for Romeo and Juliet
Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in
each of the black spaces below before clicking
on it to display the answer.
Help!
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show | Tybalt
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Which character tries to make peace and tries to make Romeo not so sad about love? | show 🗑
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show | Mercutio
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show | Prince Escalus
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show | Rosaline
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show | Juliet
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show | Romeo
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Which character has been invited to a party to meet and woo a young woman? | show 🗑
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Which character has been unable to discover what his/her child is so depressed about? | show 🗑
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Which character seems like a caring parent and is easily angered by challenges to his/her authority? | show 🗑
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show | Tybalt
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“But woo her, gentle Paris, get her heart. / My will to her consent is but a part.” | show 🗑
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show | Romeo
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“If he be married / My grave is like my wedding bed.” | show 🗑
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show | Romeo
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show | Juliet
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show | Friar Lawrence
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show | Juliet
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show | Juliet
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“Alack, there lies more peril in thine eye/Than twenty of their swords, Look though but sweet/And I am but proof against their enmity.” | show 🗑
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Literary Device: “O, speak again, bright angel, for though art as glorious to this night, being over my head, as is a winged messenger of heaven.” | show 🗑
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show | Rhymed Verse/Couplet
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show | Assonance/Alliteration
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Who becomes angry and fights when his friend is deliberately insulted? | show 🗑
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Who will no longer be a confidante by the end of Act III? | show 🗑
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Who blames fate rather than free will for his/her actions when saying, “I am fortune’s fool!” | show 🗑
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Who threatens to disown Juliet if she does not marry Paris? | show 🗑
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Who questions the Friar’s motives for a brief moment? | show 🗑
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Who thinks at first that Romeo has been killed? | show 🗑
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show | Friar Lawrence
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show | Tybalt
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show | Juliet
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show | Lady Capulet
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show | Benvolio
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Who moves the wedding day up one day? | show 🗑
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Who says grief is loving the dead ill; heaven is the better place to be? | show 🗑
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“Immoderately she weeps for Tybalt’s death, / And therefore have I little talked of love.” | show 🗑
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“Go, counselor! / Thou and my bosom henceforth shall be twain.” | show 🗑
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show | Mercutio
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show | Lady Capulet
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"O serpent heart, hid with a flowering face!” | show 🗑
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“Death lies on her like an untimely frost / Upon the sweetest flower of all the field.” | show 🗑
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show | Romeo
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“I have an ill-divining soul. / Methinks I see the, now thou art below, / As one dead in the bottom of a tomb.” | show 🗑
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show | Nurse
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True or False: Tybalt tries to stop the fighting between the Montague and Capulet servants. | show 🗑
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True or False: Romeo is lovesick over Rosaline in Act 1. | show 🗑
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True or False: Juliet is always falling in love. | show 🗑
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True or False: Juliet wishes to marry Paris. | show 🗑
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True or False: Lord Capulet remains unaware that Romeo is at the party. | show 🗑
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show | False
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True or False: Act II begins with a sonnet that explains what has happened so far in the play and the complications to Juliet and Romeo being together. | show 🗑
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True or False: Friar Lawrence decides to help Romeo mainly because he thinks the marriage will be good for the young couple. | show 🗑
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show | True
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show | True
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show | False
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True or False: Friar Lawrence advises Romeo to love moderately for a long and lasting love. | show 🗑
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show | False
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show | False
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show | False
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True or False: Romeo seems unconcerned—and later unaware—that Juliet’s kinsmen may want to kill him. | show 🗑
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show | Prince
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Who is killed while grieving for Juliet? | show 🗑
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Who dies of grief because of the exile? | show 🗑
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show | Balthasar
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show | Lord Montague
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show | Friar Lawrence
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Who commits suicide with a dagger? | show 🗑
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show | Friar Lawrence
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Who bribes a poor man to do something illegal? | show 🗑
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show | Juliet
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“For never was a story of more woe / Than this of Juliet and her Romeo.” | show 🗑
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“O happy dagger! This is thy sheath; there rest, and let me die.” | show 🗑
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show | Prince
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show | Juliet
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“O mischief, thou art swift / To enter in the thoughts of desperate men!” | show 🗑
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“O Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?” | show 🗑
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"Good night, good night! Parting is such sweet / sorrow that I shall say good night till it be morrow." | show 🗑
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"Within the infant rind of this small flower, / Poison hath residence and medicine power." | show 🗑
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“A plague on both your houses!” | show 🗑
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show | Juliet
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show | Hyperbole
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show | Prose & Pun
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show | Personification & Simile
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What does Shakespeare inform the audience in the Act 1 Prologue? | show 🗑
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show | He/she is acting out of arrogance or hubris.
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What is the speaker of the following passage displaying? 33. “O, swear not by the moon, th’ inconstant moon,/That monthly changes in her circled orb,/Lest that thy love prove likewise variable.” | show 🗑
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show | Romeo takes love seriously while Mercutio does not.
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Created by:
sara.fletcher22