Act I
Act II
Act III
Names
Figurative Language
100

The setting of the play. 

What is Verona?

100

Mercutio and Benvolio are looking for this person after the Capulet party.

Who is Romeo?

100

These two people die in the opening of Act III.

Who are Mercutio and Tybalt?

100

Daughter of the Capulet household.

Who is Juliet?

100

A man, young lady! Lady, such a man

As all the world. Why, he's a man of wax.

What is a metaphor?

200

The names of the feuding familes.

What are the Capulets and the Montagues?

200

Romeo goes into this person's backyard. 

Who is Juliet?

200

Romeo's punishment for murdering someone. 

What is banishment?
200

Cousin to Romeo. 

Who is Benvolio?

200

You are a lover. Borrow Cupid's wings

What is an allusion?

300

The feeling that Romeo experiences at the beginning of the play. 

What is depression?
300

This person marries Romeo and Juliet. 

Who is Friar Lawrence?

300

The reason that Juliet's parents think she is crying all night. 

What is Tybalt's death?

300

Killed Mercutio. 

Who is Tybalt?

300

The gray-eyed morn smiles on the frowning night, Check’ring the eastern clouds with streaks of light

What is personification?

400

The woman that Romeo loves. 

Who is Rosaline?

400

Juliet tells Romeo to not compare his love to this thing because it changes. 

What is the moon?

400

Juliet's plan to not have to marry Paris. 

What is to go to Friar Lawrence and if all else fails, she'll kill herself?

400

Where Romeo is to go after his punishment. 

Where is Mantua?

400

That “banishèd,” that one word “banishèd,” Hath slain ten thousand Tybalts.


(Find 2 Figurative Language Techniques)

What are personification and hyperbole?

500

The type of poem Romeo and Juliet share in their first exchange. 

What is a sonnet?

500

The nurse tells Juliet this to delay giving her news about Romeo. 

What is... 

She is out of breath, her back hurts, Juliet's mother calls

500

The two birds that Romeo and Juliet argue about hearing. 

What are the lark and the nightingale?

500

The meaning of "What's in a name? That which we call a rose by any other word would smell as sweet."

What is that names don't mean anything. If a rose were called something else, it would still be the same flower. 

500

He is not the flower of courtesy, but I’ll warrant him as gentle as a lamb. Go thy ways, wench. Serve God.

(Find 3 Figurative Language Techniques)

What are metaphor, simile, and allusion?