MINOR CHARACTERS
WHO SAID IT?
SYMBOLS
S.E. HINTON
THE GREASERS
100
Enjoys sunsets; drives a bright red Corvette; has green eyes
Cherry
100
“Things are rough all over.”
Cherry
100
What the Greaser's long, well-oiled hair symbolized.
Their identity as a group
100
True/False: Hinton wrote the novel to glamorize gang life.
False
100
True/False: The Greasers wore English Leather cologne and madras shirts.
False
200
Different than other girls in her group; moves to Florida
Sandy
200
“I think I like it better when the old man’s hitting me. At least then I know he knows who I am.”
Johnny
200
The East side, Dingo's and Jay's represented where this group hung out.
The Greasers.
200
Most of Hinton's novels are set in these types of areas.
Rough, urban areas.
200
The Socs were cool, aloof, and careless while the Greasers were this.
Emotional
300
Straight black hair and big black eyes; cheap and hard-looking
Johnny's Mom
300
“Ponyboy, listen, don’t get tough. You’re not like the rest of us and don’t try to be.”
Two-Bit
300
What the Corvairs and Mustangs meant to the Greasers.
The wealth of the Socs.
300
Hinton wrote from a boy's point of view so she wrote using her __________.
Initials
300
These two Greasers worked at the gas station.
Steve and Sodapop.
400
Good sense of humor; gets along with Two-Bit; short dark hair
Marcia
400
“We gotta get even with the Socs for Johnny’s sake.”
Dally
400
This animal represented what Sodapop wanted but couldn't have.
Mickey Mouse the horse.
400
The emotion Dally is most comfortable with is _____________.
Anger
500
Beautiful and golden but wise and firm
Ponyboy's mom
500
“You get tough like me and you don’t get hurt.”
Dally
500
This symbol, to Cherry and Pony, represented something that could be shared by both the Socs and the Greasers.
Sunset.
500
This person was known for carrying around a switchblade.
Two-Bit