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Jeopardy

Jeopardy. Choose a category. English 10 Final Review. Click to begin. Choose a point value. Choose a point value. Click here for Final Jeopardy. Phrase Types. Emerson or Thoreau. Contemporary Literature. Poetic Devices. Grab Bag. 10 Point. 10 Point. 10 Point. 10 Point.

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Jeopardy

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  1. Jeopardy Choose a category. English 10 Final Review Click to begin.

  2. Choose a point value. Choose a point value. Click here for Final Jeopardy

  3. Phrase Types Emerson or Thoreau Contemporary Literature Poetic Devices Grab Bag 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points

  4. The world’s first books were made of clay and papyrus.

  5. Prepositional

  6. To help his team, he volunteered to give up his starting position.

  7. Infinitive

  8. Jenny hosted the bake sale to raise money for the local women’s shelter.

  9. Infinitive

  10. The famed football coach Knute Rockne was born in Norway.

  11. Appositive

  12. Scotland Yard is the headquarters of the London Police force.

  13. Prepositional

  14. Wrote “Nature”

  15. Emerson

  16. Wrote “Resistance to Civil Government”

  17. Thoreau

  18. Became famous for his Walden pond experiment

  19. Thoreau

  20. Used the image of the transparent eyeball

  21. Emerson

  22. Alluded to Jesus, Copernicus and Socrates to show that great men are sometimes misunderstood

  23. Emerson

  24. The setting of “Speaking of Courage” by Tim O’Brien

  25. July 4th, near a lake; probably late 1960s or early 1970s

  26. Waverly Jong’s claim to fame in “The Rules of the Game”

  27. Chess prodigy

  28. Name at least two allusions from “The Nicest Kid in the Universe”

  29. King Midas, Pearl Harbor, Immaculate Conception, Wise Men, Original Sin

  30. How does the style of “Girl” match the content?

  31. Reinforces the repetitive nature of the tasks, shows how little voice she has in her role in society, etc.

  32. What does Alice Walker feel her mother’s garden represents?

  33. Creativity

  34. No rhythm and no rhyme

  35. Free verse

  36. Thought continuing onto next poetic line

  37. Enjambment

  38. Idea or feeling a word evokes in addition to literal meaning

  39. Connotation

  40. Emily Dickinson referencing the Bible in her poems

  41. Allusion

  42. Direct address to missing person, inanimate object, or concept

  43. Apostrophe

  44. Everyone has done (Their/His or Her) homework.

  45. His or Her

  46. She loves watching movies, playing soccer and (to eat/eating) pizza.

  47. Eating

  48. I plan on visiting some friends from college while I am (there/their).

  49. There

  50. I am going to my cousin (Ashlie’s/Ashlies’) wedding this July.

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