The religion that Pi grew up with and was taught.
What is Hindu?
The animal representing a chef, and the feral side of humanity
What is a hyena?
Habving a jellylike consistency.
What is gelatinous?
The version of the journey in which investigators find hard to believe.
What is the Animal story?
The place where Pi grew up
What is a zoo?
The notion that Pi believes is nonsense and is a false conception of zoos.
What is the theory that animals are unhappy and unruly in zoos?
The animal representing hope and joy, very close to Pi.
What is a orangutan?
Non-religious
What is secular?
An item added onto the raft to make life more comfortable.
What is a chair/canopy?
The reason the Tiger got the name Richard Parker.
Who is the hunter who captured him?
In Pi’s mind, the only thing standing in the way of life.
What is fear?
The person who replaces the zebra in the alternate version of the story.
Who is the sailor?
Having a huge appetite, greedy, ravenous.
What is voracous?
The difference between Richard Parker’s sleep pattern and Pi’s sleep pattern.
What is Pi’s short sleeping pattern?
The name of the pastor who taught Pi Christianity.
Who is father Martin?
The rote that Pi fell into so he didn't lose hope.
What is the pattern of praying everyday?
The color orange represents this emotion throughout the journey.
What is hope and survival?
A principle demanding that the parts of any composition be arranged in order to find a greater meaning
What is coherence?
The action/process the island goes through at night.
What is becoming very acidic and creating fresh water?
The reason the main character has a nickname of Pi
Who are the kids that made fun of his original name and forced him to change it to not get made fun of?
The reason Pi believes that he survived at all.
Who is Richard Parker?
The representation of lost dreams, and false goals.
What is the algae island?
To be bloodthirsty, bloody.
What is sanguinary?
The final action of Richard Parker to symbolize a goodbye.
What is nothing?
The name of the main character’s mother.
Who is Gita?