1) While they are walking outside, what does Benvolio suggest? a) They should go get a beverage b) They should go to a party c) They should go to a friend's house d) They should go inside to avoid a fight 2) Who starts taunting and provoking Tybalt? a) Tybalt b) Benvolio c) Mercutio d) Romeo e) Escalus f) Balthasar 3) Why is it ironic that Tybalt wants to fight Romeo? a) He doesn’t know that Romeo and Tybalt are now related through marriage. b) Romeo hates him c) Benvolio isn't there to stop the fight d) Mercutio doesn't want to fight e) Benvolio and Mercutio are not related 4) He decides to fight Tybalt because Romeo will not? a) Escalus b) Mercutio c) Benvolio d) Sampson e) Balthasar f) Lawrence 5) Who gets between Mercutio and Tybalt? a) Sampson b) Escalus c) Gregory d) Romeo e) Benvolio f) Lawrence 6) What happens to Mercutio? a) He is stabbed by Benvolio and dies b) He is stabbed by Paris and dies c) He is stabbed by Escalus and dies d) He is stabbed by Juliet and dies e) He is stabbed by the Nurse and dies f) He is stabbed by Tybalt and dies 7) What happens to Tybalt? a) Juliet kills him b) Romeo kills him c) Lord Montague kills him d) Lord Capulet kills him e) Escalus kills him f) Friar Lawrence kills him 8) What is Romeo’s punishment for killing? a) He is given poison b) He is stabbed and dies c) He is put in prison d) He is hung in the square e) He is exiled from Verona f) He is arrested 9) Who tells Juliet about all the bad stuff that day? a) Lady Capulet b) the Nurse c) Lady Montague d) Lord Capulet e) Lord Montague f) Friar Lawrence 10) What advice does Friar Lawrence give Romeo? a) Tell his father everything and ask for help b) Confess his sins and tell the Prince about it c) Go spend the night with Juliet, then go to Mantua d) Ignore Juliet and go after Rosaline e) Ask Mercutio for advice f) Ask Benvolio for advice 11) When does Lord Capulet tell Paris the wedding will happen? a) Thursday morning b) Tuesday morning c) Thursday afternoon d) Tuesday afternoon e) Sunday morning f) Sunday afternoon 12) What do we call the parting remarks Romeo and Juliet have for each other, saying they each look like they are at the bottom of a tomb? a) Irony b) Monologue c) Soliloquy d) Flashback e) Foreshadowing f) Fried chicken 13) Who tells Juliet about the plan for her to marry Paris? a) Lady Montague b) the Nurse c) Lord Capulet d) Lady Capulet e) Friar Lawrence f) Prince Escalus 14) What is Lord Capulet’s response to Juliet’s determination not to marry Paris? a) He becomes enraged and threatens to disown her if she refuses b) He understands his daughter's choice and agrees with her c) He sends her to a convent to be a nun d) He changes his mind and says she is too young to be married 15) What does Juliet decide to do about her situation? a) Ignore Romeo and marry Paris b) Marry Mercutio instead of Paris c) Go to Friar Lawrence to get advice d) Run away to Mantua forever e) Go to Friar Escalus to get advice 16) What does Juliet finally tell her parents? a) She confesses that she is married and that is why she can't marry Paris b) She goes to tell the Prince why she can't marry Paris and ask for help c) She lies to them and says she is sorry and being bad and going to confession d) She lies to everyone and goes to Mantua e) She runs away to be a nun f) She goes to Disneyland, because that is better than anything 17) What does the Nurse advise Juliet to do about the marriage? a) Ignore her parents and run away b) Become a Nurse and never get married c) Tell her parents everything and ask for help d) Pretend Juliet is not married and go ahead and marry Paris e) Tell the Prince everything and ask for help f) Get a divorce so she can marry Paris legally 18) What does IRONY mean? a) a character who provides a contrast to another character. In Romeo and Juliet, the fiery temper of Tybalt serves as a foil to the good nature of Benvolio. b) a conversation between characters that may reveal their traits and advance the action of a narrative. In fiction or nonfiction, quotation marks indicate a speaker's exact words, and a new paragraph usually indicates a change of speaker. c) a work of literature, especially a play, that results in a catastrophe or great misfortune for the main character, or tragic hero. d) in a play is a speech by one character that, unlike a soliloquy, is addressed to another character or characters. e) information given prior to the beginning of an Act; used to establish background and provide information about the Act. f) A literary technique by which the full importance of a character’s words or actions are clear to the audience, but unknown to the character themselves. 19) What does FOIL mean? a) a character who provides a contrast to another character. In Romeo and Juliet, the fiery temper of Tybalt serves as a foil to the good nature of Benvolio. b) a conversation between characters that may reveal their traits and advance the action of a narrative. In fiction or nonfiction, quotation marks indicate a speaker's exact words, and a new paragraph usually indicates a change of speaker. c) a work of literature, especially a play, that results in a catastrophe or great misfortune for the main character, or tragic hero. d) in a play is a speech by one character that, unlike a soliloquy, is addressed to another character or characters. e) information given prior to the beginning of an Act; used to establish background and provide information about the Act. f) A literary technique by which the full importance of a character’s words or actions are clear to the audience, but unknown to the character themselves. 20) What does DIALOGUE mean? a) a character who provides a contrast to another character. In Romeo and Juliet, the fiery temper of Tybalt serves as a foil to the good nature of Benvolio. b) a conversation between characters that may reveal their traits and advance the action of a narrative. In fiction or nonfiction, quotation marks indicate a speaker's exact words, and a new paragraph usually indicates a change of speaker. c) a work of literature, especially a play, that results in a catastrophe or great misfortune for the main character, or tragic hero. d) in a play is a speech by one character that, unlike a soliloquy, is addressed to another character or characters. e) information given prior to the beginning of an Act; used to establish background and provide information about the Act. f) A literary technique by which the full importance of a character’s words or actions are clear to the audience, but unknown to the character themselves.

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