Animals
Logical Fallacies
Seven Commandments
Plot
Miscellaneous
100

The class of people represented by animals (all) in Animal Farm

Workers 

OR

Working Class

100

Boxer's belief "Napoleon is always right" is an example of this

Hasty Generalization

100

The character that writes the Seven Commandments on the wall of the barn

Snowball

100

The song Old Major introduced the animals to at the beginning of the book, and the animals sing after each of their Sunday meetings

"Beasts of England"

100

Term by which the animals refer to each other

Comrade

200

The motherly mare in Animal Farm

Clover

200

An argument that claims a relatively small first step will inevitably lead to a chain of related events culminating in some significant, usually negative, consequence, without providing sufficient evidence for each step in the chain

Slippery Slope

200

The maxim the Seven Commandments are shortened to, once they realize all the animals can't memorize all Seven

"Four legs good, two legs bad"

200

The animals trained by Napoleon that he uses to run out Snowball.

Puppies 

200

Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread to influence people's opinions, emotions, and behaviors

Propaganda

300

The group Boxer represents in the story

Working class men

Specifically, those who bought into the idea of communism and worked hard to make it a success

300

The excuse that the pigs used when asked why they took the fresh apples and milk (or an excuse for anything)

"Surely there is no one among you that wants to see Jones come back?"

300

The commandment broken in chapter 7 when Napoleon "finds" animals that are secret agents for Snowball

No animal shall kill any other animal

300

The event that causes the first windmill to fall down

A Storm

300

A story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one

Allegory

400

The group represented by Benjamin in Animal Farm

Intellectual class people

Specifically, those who had the knowledge to see where the government was going wrong in the Russian Revolution, but did get involved

400

A fallacy where the speaker attacks the character, motive, or some other attribute of the person making the argument rather than the substance of the argument itself.

Ad Hominem

400

The commandment that Napoleon breaking causes him to believe that he is dying.

No animal shall drink alcohol

400

The purpose Snowball originally intended the windmill for.

Providing electricity and making life easier for the animals

400

Why do the Fredrick and Pilkington spread rumors about Animal Farm?

They fear their own animals will rebel against them.

500

The group represented by Squealer in Animal Farm

Propogandist


500

Squealer defends the pigs’ exclusive use of the milk by claiming, “Do you know what would happen if we pigs failed in our duty? Jones would come back!” 

This argument is an example of (a/an)

Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc

or 

False Cause and Effect

500

The overall goal of the Seven Commandments

To keep the animals from becoming like the humans and mistreating each other

OR

To simplify Old Major's speech into actionable rules that all Animals could understand and follow

500

The first event in the story foreshadowing the pigs disregard for the Seven Commandments 

The milk disappearing at the end of Chapter 2

500

What are 3 reasons the animals do not challenge the changes put forth by the pigs?

MULTIPLE POSSIBLE ANSWERS

Fear, Confusion, lack of education of ability to explain issues, loyalty, etc.