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12 th Grade. Jeopardy. Hamlet Quotes 100. “More matter with less art” Gertrude – Talking about Polonius . Hamlet Quotes 200. Why wouldst thou be a breeder of sinners Hamlet talking to Ophelia. Hamlet Quotes 300.
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12th Grade Jeopardy
Hamlet Quotes 100 • “More matter with less art” • Gertrude – Talking about Polonius
Hamlet Quotes 200 • Why wouldst thou be a breeder of sinners • Hamlet talking to Ophelia
Hamlet Quotes 300 • “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 400 • “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 500 • Now cracks a noble heart; Goodnight sweet prince • Horatio speaking to Hamlet right before Hamlet’s death • *
Hamlet Quotes 600 • This bodes some strange eruption to our state • Horatio speaking with Marcellus and Francisco
Hamlet Quotes 700 • Tis unmanly grief. It shows a will most incorrect to heaven • Claudius speaking to Hamlet
Hamlet Quotes 800 • “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
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