Title: Jeopardy
1Jeopardy
Check for Understanding
Foreshadowing
Irony
Tone
Mood
Q 100
Q 100
Q 100
Q 100
Q 100
Q 200
Q 200
Q 200
Q 200
Q 200
Q 300
Q 300
Q 300
Q 300
Q 300
Final Jeopardy
2100 Question from Foreshadowing
Death haunts the man with the vulture eye
How does the narrator hint at the old mans
fate in the sentence above?
3100 Answer from Foreshadowing
He states that death has haunted the old man
therefore, he is foreshadowing the his death.
4200 Question from Foreshadowing
I went down to open it with a light heart-for
what had I now to fear? There entered three men,
who introduced themselves, with perfect suavity,
as officers of the police. The narrators
question for what had I now to fear? may
foreshadow
5200 Answer from Foreshadowing
The fact that he will have something else to
fear, possibly getting caught by the police.
6300 Question from Foreshadowing
Not in the least, she said. I stuff all my
little pets myself when they pass away. Will you
have another cup of tea? What does the
landladys statement suggest will happen to Billy?
7300 Answer from Foreshadowing
She will stuff him because she seems to regard
him as one of her little pets.
8100 Question from Irony
Now this is the point. You fancy me mad. Madmen
know nothing. What is ironic about his
statement?
9100 Answer from Irony
The claim is ironic because its obvious that the
narrator is mad.
10200 Question from Irony
If still you think me mad, you will think so no
longer when I describe the wise precautions I
took for the concealment of the body. The night
waned, and I worked hastily but in silence. First
of all I dismembered the corpse. What is ironic
about the narrators insistence here that you
will no longer think him mad?
11200 Answer from Irony
The statement is ironic because it precedes clear
evidence that he is insane a clear description
of how he cuts up his victims body.
12300 Question from Irony
I loved the old man. He had never wronged me. He
had never given me insult. For his gold I had no
desire. I think it was his eye! Yes, it was this!
One of his eyes resembled that of a vulture-a
pale blue eye, with a film over it. Whenever it
fell upon me, my blood ran cold and so by
degrees-very gradually-I made up my mind to take
the life of an old man and thus rid myself of the
eye forever. In the above paragraph, what does
the reader realize that the narrator does not?
13300 Answer from Irony
The reader realizes that the narrator is insane,
since a sane person would not plot to kill an old
man because of his bad eye.
14100 Question from Tone
Which of the following words best describes the
tone of The Tell-Tale Heart? A. apathetic B.
pompous C. ominous D. humorous
15100 Answer from Tone
Ominous
16200 Question from Tone
- True!-nervous-very, very dreadfully nervous I
had been and am but why will you say that I am
mad? - In this sentence, the author uses the phrase
dreadfully nervous in order to show - the narrators unease.
- the narrators intelligence.
- the narrators excitement.
- the narrators arrogance.
17200 Answer from Tone
A. the narrators unease.
18300 Question from Tone
What is the narrators tone in the following
passage? I felt that I must scream or
die!---and now---again!---hark! louder! louder!
louder! louder!
19300 Answer from Tone
He is anxious and desperate.
20100 Question from Mood
do you mark me well? I have told you that I am
nervous So I am. And now at the dead hour of the
night amid the dreadful silence of that old
house, so strange a noise as this excited me to
uncontrollable terror. How do the details of
time and place contribute to the mood?
21100 Answer from Mood
Descriptive details such as the dreadful
silence of that old house enhance the mood of
terror and suspense.
22200 Question from Mood
- do you mark me well? I have told you that I am
nervous So I am. And now at the dead hour of the
night amid the dreadful silence of that old
house, so strange a noise as this excited me to
uncontrollable terror. - Which of the following examples best describes
the mood of this passage? - filled with terror and suspense
- filled with humor and melancholy
- filled with suspense and love
- filled with sadness and regret
23200 Answer from Mood
- filled with terror and suspense
24300 Question from Mood
- Which of the following words best describes the
mood of The Landlady? - Mellow
- Dreamy
- Harmonious
- Suspenseful
25300 Answer from Mood
Suspenseful
26100 Question from Check for Understanding
Why is the story called The Tell-Tale Heart?
27100 Answer from Check for Understanding
The title could refer to the beating-heart sound
responsible for the narrators confession.
28200 Question fromCheck for Understanding
Read the sentence below from the story The
Tell-Tale Heart.? The heartbeat caused fury in
the narrator the way the beating of a drum
stimulates the soldier into courage.
- This sentence is an example of which type of
figurative language? - Metaphor
- Idiom
- Analogy
- Simile
29200 Answer from Check for Understanding
C. Analogy
30300 Question from Check for Understanding
Write a one sentence summary of the story The
Tell-Tale Heart. Rememberinclude the most
important information from the Beginning-Middle-En
d!
31300 Answer from Check for Understanding
Answers will vary
32Final Jeopardy
- Define each of the following literary devices
- Foreshadowing
- Flashback
- Mood
- Tone
- Symbolism
33Final Jeopardy Answer
Foreshadowing-a technique of giving clues to
coming events in a narrative. Irony-a literary
technique in which the literal meaning is the
opposite of what is expected. Flashback-a
technique of interrupting the chronology of a
narrative by shifting to an earlier time in order
to introduce information. Mood-the overall
emotion of feeling emitted by a literary
work. Tone-the authors attitude toward his/her
audience and/or subject reflected in the style of
writing. Symbolism-a person, place, thing, or
event that represents something else.