Greasers
Socs
Setting
True or False?
Literary Terms
100

The youngest Greaser...

Ponyboy

100

The type of car owned by the Socs...

Mustang

100

This is where Ponyboy and Johnny ran away to...

The church

100

Darry beat up all of his brothers?

False

100

time and place in which the action of the story takes place...

                                                       


Setting

200

A guy from New York who gets in a lot of trouble...

Dally

200

The name of the girl Ponyboy really likes...

Cherry Valence

200

This is where the fight between the Greasers and Socs took place...

The park

200

Darry has a hard time expressing his feelings?

True

200

The main character struggles with another person or with an outside force (man vs man, man vs. nature, man vs society, man vs fate) ...

                                                       


External Conflict

300

He dropped out of school to get a job...

Sodapop

300

What object left many marks on Johnny's face during a fight?

Bob's ring

300

What is the name of the city where the church was located?

Windrixville

300

A fair fight included the use of knives?

False = only skin

300

The step by step process wherein an author introduces and then describes a character...

Characterization

400

He likes books and movies...

Ponyboy

400

Who are the two main Socs that were involved in the fights in the beginning of the novel?

Randy and Bob

400

Who lived on the East side and who lived on the West side?

East = Greasers

West = Socs

400

"Stay gold" means to stay sensitive and kind?

True

400

The main idea or message of the story that the author wants the reader to know; universal truth ...

                                                       


Theme

500

He stabbed and killed a Soc...

Johnny

500

A Soc that didn't respect PonyBoy or any Greaser until his best friend died...

Randy

500

Around what time period was this story written?

1960's

500

The main difference between Socs and Greasers was money?

False = Values

500

The author's attitude toward the subject, reader, or character; could be light-hearted, distant, humorous, creepy, mysterious ...

                                                       


Tone