Title: Jeopardy
1Jeopardy
Blizzard! Words
Cause and Effect
Grammar and Writing
Literary Terms
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Q 500
Jeopardy
2100 Answer from Blizzard! Words
A severe storm that features incredibly high
winds large amounts of snow, and dramatic
temperature drops A __________ was rattling
their windowpanes and piling up snow against
their doors (Murphy 25).
3100 Question from Blizzard! Words
What is blizzard?
4200 Answer from Blizzard! Words
Devoutly religious The more _________ reached
for their family Bibles whenever the subject of
predicting the weather came up (13).
5200 Question from Blizzard! Words
What is pious?
6300 Answer from Blizzard! Words
Susceptible to injury at risk The employment
of female customs workers was still in the
experimental phase at that time and many of the
women felt their jobs were _____________ (36).
7300 Question from Blizzard! Words
What is vulnerable?
8400 Answer from Blizzard! Words
A death of something an end to something an
expiration As newspapers trumpeted the storms
_________, people used humor to show that they
had not been defeated by the blizzard (108).
9400 Question from Blizzard! Words
What is demise?
10500 Answer from Blizzard! Words
To saturate to overflow to overwhelm Over
four inches of rain __________ Pensacola,
Florida (3).
11500 Question from Blizzard! Words
What is deluged?
12100 Answer from Cause and Effect
The workers at the Signal Corps did not monitor
the weather for most of the Sabbath (8).
13100 Question from Cause and Effect
What caused most of the northeastern region of
the U.S. to be unprepared for the Blizzard of
1888?
14200 Answer from Cause and Effect
May Morrow felt that it was not proper to talk
to or be in close proximity with strange men (62).
15200 Question from Cause and Effect
What caused May to almost freeze to death on her
way home from the office?
16300 Answer from Cause and Effect
Roads in New York City became so bogged down by
snow that the only way to travel was to go by
wagons or by sleigh (47).
17300 Question from Cause and Effect
What caused the price of a taxi to rise to an
average of 50 per trip?
18400 Answer from Cause and Effect
Despite the blizzard, in many rural communities,
every student showed for school (53).
19400 Question from Cause and Effect
What was the effect of small-town children
realizing that they often had limited chances to
get an education before they had to work in the
fields?
20500 Answer from Cause and Effect
Despite Alfred Ely Beachs attempts to gain
support for a subterranean travel system in 1870,
NYC did not have a subway system during the
Blizzard of 1888 (48).
21500 Question from Cause and Effect
What is the effect of greedy city officials
extorting money from traditional means of travel?
22100 Answer from Grammar and Writing
The grammatical mistake in the following
sentence Their not listening to Beachs proposal
for a subway system.
23100 Question from Grammar and Writing
What is the fact that Their should be Theyre?
24200 Answer from Grammar and Writing
The grammatical mistake in the following
sentence The children all showed up to school
but the teachers stayed at home.
25200 Question from Grammar and Writing
What is the fact that a comma should precede but
because this is a compound sentence.
26300 Answer from Grammar and Writing
The grammatical mistake in the following
sentence Your going to make a handsome profit
with all of those snow shovels in this blizzard.
27300 Question from Grammar and Writing
What is the fact that Your should be Youre?
28400 Answer from Grammar and Writing
The grammatical mistake in the following
sentence Lets go to grandmas house, she will
be surprised.
29400 Question from Grammar and Writing
What is the fact that the comma should be a
period, and the S in she should be
capitalized because this is a run-on sentence.
30500 Answer from Grammar and Writing
The source Blizzard!, documented on a works cited
page
31500 Question from Grammar and Writing
What is the following entry Murphy, Jim.
Blizzard! The Storm That Changed America. New
York Scholastic Inc., 2000.
32100 Answer from Literary Terms
A perspective for which the narrator is not a
character and only follows the thoughts and
feelings of one character
33100 Question from Literary Terms
What is a third-person limited point of view?
34200 Answer from Literary Terms
A perspective for which the narrator is a
character in the story
35200 Question from Literary Terms
What is a first-person point of view?
36300 Answer from Literary Terms
The very unexpected In Blizzard!, John Meisinger
is ridiculed for buying many snow shovels but
ends up making a handsome profit whenever the
massive blizzard hits.
37300 Answer from Literary Terms
What is irony?
38400 Answer from Literary Terms
The type of perspective for which the narrator is
not a character in the story but is able to
reveal the thoughts and feelings of all of the
characters
39400 Question from Literary Terms
What is a third-person omniscient point of view?
40500 Answer from Literary Terms
The type of perspective for which the narrator is
not a character but does not reveal the thoughts
and feelings of any characters
41500 Question from Literary Terms
What is a third-person objective point of view?