Characters
Vocabulary
Comprehension
Grammar
Literary Terms
100
Had a lonely childhood

Scrooge

100

gloomy and sad

morose

100
Scrooge's clerk 

Bob Crachit

100

prefix that means bad, wrongful, ill 

mal-

100

when the reader knows something that the characters do not know

dramatic irony

200

Scrooge's first boss

Fezziwig

200

greedy and jealous

covetous

200

The first place the Ghost of Christmas Past takes Scrooge

The Schoolhouse

200

If there is a compound subject, the verb must be _________

plural

200

Marley speaking to the audience when Scrooge can't see him is an example of this 

dramatic irony

300

Chained in regret 

Marley

300

mean, stingy with money

miser

300

The time of day the Ghost of Christmas Past was set to arrive at Scrooge's house

1 AM

300

True or False: The subject and verb agree

In A Christmas Carol, both Cratchit and Fred wish Scrooge a merry Christmas. 

TRUE

300

when characters speak to each other or themselves

dialogue

400

Scrooge's sister

Fan

400

being, living, or going alone without companions

solitary

400

What hung on Marley's chains

items representing wealth and money

400

True or False: the subject and verb agree

Marley or Fred speaks to Scrooge, but is the effort wasted?

TRUE

400

a conclusion based on evidence and reasoning

inference

500

Takes Scrooge to his childhood town

The Ghost of Christmas Past
500

determined

resolute

500

What Fred wanted to ask Scrooge

to come to dinner on Christmas Day with his family

500

TRUE or False: the subject and verb agree

Neither Grandma nor the distant relatives at our dinner table going hungry during the holidays. 

FALSE

500

This person spoke this dialogue in Act One, "I should like to be able to say a word or two to my clerk just now! That's all!"

Scrooge

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