Vocab
Grammar
'The Odyssey'
Literary Terms
Twelfth Night
100

The apex of something is the

Top, maximum, high point

100

"I want an oompa loompa right away!"

Part of Speech?


Verb

100

Odysseus's wife

Penelope

100

An archetype is a kind of character that _______ across texts from all times and places.

Reoccurs/repeats

100

The "fool" who is not foolish.

Feste

200

An extremely poor person

Pauper

200

"Where we're going, we don't need roads."

Sentence Function? 

a) Subject

b) Direct Object 

c) Indirect Object 

d) Predicate nominative

Direct Object

200

Turns men into swine

Kirke

200
If a character has a foil, what do they have?

A character near them who is very much the opposite.

200

At one point, he wonders if what is happening is even real, or if he has gone mad.

Sebastian

300

Disbelieving, careful, cautious to believe something

Skeptical

300

"I'm going to make him an offer he can't refuse."

Which type of phrase?

Infinitive Phrase

300
He is blinded by "Nohbody."
Polyphemus
300

A type of story marked by a departure, a transformations, and a return

Hero's Journey

300

If a character has an "aside," who is supposed to hear their lines?

The audience only.

400

Prone to fighting

Pugnacious

400

"Those are the shrieking eels!" 

a) Gerund

b) Infinitive

c) Preposition

d) Participle

Participle

400

Servant from Odysseus's childhood

Eurykleia

400
'The Odyssey' is called _____ Poetry.

Epic

400

These two characters, at different points, are both hoping to marry Olivia

Sir Andrew and Duke Orsino

500

To strengthen, make stronger

Fortify

500

"How come Andrew is allowed to stand up?  If he gets up, we'll all get up!  It'll be anarchy!"

Part of speech?

Adverb

500
Blind prophet from the Underworld

Tereiseus

500

This might come at the front of a book or chapter, sometimes in the form of a quotation.

Epigraph

500

What are two characteristics or features of the holiday, "Twelfth Night"?  

a) Eve of the Epiphany, or Three Kings Day

b) Feast of Misrule-- much disorder and revelry

c) Nobles and peasants switch places

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