Characters and Relationships
Plot and Events
Symbols and Themes
Literary Devices
Vocabulary
100

This curious teenager enjoys conversation and makes Montag question his life.
 (Hint: Think of the character who is different from others in her neighborhood.)

Clarisse McClellan


100

The job firemen perform in this society. (Short answer)

To burn books (enforce censorship)


100

 The mechanical creature used by the firemen to track and hurt people.

The Mechanical Hound


100

Identify the device in: “There must be something in books… you don’t stay for nothing.”

 symbol- books represent something powerful


100

Olfactory — this word relates to which sense?

Smell (the sense of smell)


200

Montag’s wife who is obsessed with the parlor walls and uses seashell radios.

Mildred Montag


200

What does Montag steal from a woman’s house after a burning that changes him?

 A book

200

The title of the section that represents the mind trying to hold knowledge (two words).

The Sieve and the Sand


200

Identify the device in: “[T]he flapping pigeon-winged books died on the porch…”

Metaphor


200

Define: condemn (short example and definition).

 Condemn — to strongly disapprove of or declare wrong


300

The fire captain who is well read but enforces book burning; he often quotes literature to Montag.

Captain Beatty


300

What happens to the woman who chooses to stay with her books when the firemen come?

She chooses to stay and is burned with the books (she lights herself)

300

The mythical bird symbol referenced in the novel that represents renewal and rebirth.

The Phoenix


300

Identify the device in: “He opened the bedroom door. It was like coming into the cold marbled room of a mausoleum…”

Simile


300

Use the vocabulary word “invigorate” in a sentence related to Montag’s experience. (Define and use it in a sentence)

Example: “After reading, Montag felt invigorated and more determined to learn.”


400

The former English professor who helps Montag understand books and gives him a device to communicate.

 Faber (Professor Faber)


400

Why does Montag kill Captain Beatty? (Brief explanation)

Beatty provokes and threatens Montag; Montag kills Beatty to protect himself and break Beatty’s control.


400

Explain one way the river functions as a symbol for Montag. (Short answer)

The river symbolizes escape, cleansing, and a new beginning.


400

Identify the device in: “The Mechanical Hound slept but did not sleep, lived but did not live …”

Paradox

400

Multiple choice — Which vocabulary word means “to smash, destroy”?
 a. jowls b. converge c. pulverize d. waft

 c. pulverize


500

The relative of Clarisse who most influences her, often talks with her, and was once arrested for being a pedestrian.

Clarisse’s uncle

500

How does Montag escape the city and what natural feature helps guide him to safety?

He follows the river to escape; the river helps hide him and guide him toward the Book People.

500

Identify two major themes of the novel and briefly explain how the plot shows each theme. (Two short sentences)

Censorship (book burning, suppression) and reliance on technology/alienation (parlor walls, seashell radios isolating people)

500

Name the device and explain how Beatty’s allusion to Icarus functions in the story. (Short explanation)

Allusion (to Icarus); Beatty’s allusion warns about the danger of reaching too far for knowledge and reveals Beatty’s own familiarity with literature.

500

Provide the best synonym for “imperceptible” from the list: (a) obvious (b) barely noticeable (c) loud (d) clear — then use that synonym in a sentence about the Hound pinging under the ocean.

(b) barely noticeable — Example sentence: “The Hound’s pinging became barely noticeable beneath the waves, so rescuers could not find the wreckage.”

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