Student ID: 21973473
Exam: 986830RR - Lesson 7 Drama
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Questions 1 to 20: Select the best answer to each question. Note that a question and its answers may be split across a page break, so be sure that you have seen the entire question and all the answers before choosing an answer.
1. Which characters exchange these lines—and in what order—in Act I, Scene 1 of A Midsummer Night's Dream? I frown up him, yet he loves me still. O that your frowns would teach my smiles such skill! A. Oberon followed by Titania
B. Helena followed by Hermia
C. Hermia followed by Helena
D. Titania followed by Oberon
2. Before the Renaissance, virtually all dramas focused on A. family relationships.
B. life-and-death plots.
C. religious themes.
D. the human condition.
3. Regarding the nature of drama, which statement is false? A. Drama is meant to present a story through action and dialog.
B. In reading drama, some elements have to be imagined by the reader.
C. Modern dramas, such as films, are not structured in the manner of stage plays.
D. Drama is like poetry, in that it is meant to been seen and heard.
4. To whom is Helena speaking when she says, "If you were civil and knew courtesy,/You would not do me thus much injury" (act 3, scene 2)? A. Demetrius and Hermia
B. Hermia and Lysander
C. Hermia only
D. Lysander and Demetrius
5. The craftsmen in the play speak in prose because A. that kind of common language symbolizes their status in life.
B. Theseus would have forbidden them to use verse.
C. it's the language of love.
D. too much blank verse gets tiresome.
6. In Act IV, Scene 1, of A Midsummer Night's Dream, as the drama nears resolution, to whom does Demetrius address these lines? My love to Hermia, Melted as the snow, seems to me now As the remembrance of an idle gaud A. Lysander
B. Theseus
C. Egeus
D. Helena
7. In Act III, Scene 1, who hears these words from Titania? Thou art as wise as thou art beautiful. A. Peaseblossom
B. Oberon
C. Puck
D. Bottom
8. In act 3, who says the following lines to Bottom?
Out of this wood do not desire to go: Thou shalt remain here, whether thou wilt or no. I am a spirit of no common rate. A. Cobweb
B. Titania
C. Oberon
D. Puck
9. In act 4, what do the following lines mean?
Fairy King, attend, and mark: I do hear the morning lark. A. Titania is about to fall in love with Bottom.
B. The enchantment on Bottom is about to end.
C. Theseus and Hippolyta are arriving.
D. The sun is coming up and the fairies should leave.
10. During the Renaissance, dramatists began writing about A. history.
B. religion.
C. everyday people.
D. science.
11. Using pairs of opposites, such as Helena and Hermia, is called A. foreshadowing.
B. doubling.
C. realism.
D. irony.
12. Dramatic irony means that A. things are going to end very badly for someone.
B. everything works out in the end.
C. the audience knows something the character or characters don't.
D. the cosmos, state, family, and individual follow the same pattern.
13. According to Renaissance philosophy, commoners often rep