Frankenstien
La LLorona
Monsters
Literary Terms
The Monkey's Paw
100

Is Victor Frankenstein the name of the doctor or the monster?

The doctor 

100

What color dress does La LLorona's ghost wear?

white

100

Click Clack the....

Rattlebag

100

a person in a novel, play, or movie.


character 

100

How does Herbert (Mr. and Mrs. White's son) die?

Crushed in a machine at work 

200

Why did the monster want revenge?

Because he was abandoned by his creator

200

What is La Llorna's nickname? 

The weeping woman 

200

 a corpse that leaves its grave at night to drink the blood of the living by biting the neck with long pointed canine teeth.




Vampire

200

where an event takes place

setting 

200

What was Mr. White's second wish?

For his son to alive again 

300

How does the monster learn to speak?

From spying on a family from a a shed attached to their cottage 

300

How did La Llorona kill her kids?

She drowned them in the river 

300

The name of the monster that killed Lester Billing's kids

The Bogeyman 

300

the narrator's outlook or view on events, characters, and the world.

Perspective

300

In what country did Sergeant Major Morris get the money's paw?

India

400

What does the monster want Victor to do to heal his loneliness?

A woman monster 

400

Of whom was Maria jealous?

Her children

400

What kind of monster was the main character in It?

A Clown 

400

 the general atmosphere or emotional complexion—in short, the array of feelings the work evokes in the reader.

Mood 

400

True or False:  One of the themes of the story is "Be careful what you wish for," 

True 

500

Who wrote Frankenstein 

Marry Shelly 

500

What is La Llorona's first name?

Maria

500

Who wrote Strawberry Spring?

Stephen King 

500

 the author’s attitude toward a certain topic. Through specific word choice, the author reveals their feelings and opinions to the reader, conveying the author’s intentions behind the text.

Tone

500

talisman means

A talisman is any object ascribed with religious or magical powers intended to protect, heal, or harm individuals for whom they are made.