Romeo And Juliet Final Test Answer Key

Juliet’s cousin

ANSWER : Tybalt


was quarantined in a sick house and couldn’t deliver a message to Romeo

ANSWER : Friar John


put a curse on both houses as he was dying

ANSWER : Mercutio


asks permission of Juliet’s father to marry her

ANSWER : Paris


makes potions out of herbs he collects

ANSWER : Friar Lawrence


sells poison because he is poor

ANSWER : apothecary


Romeo’s father

ANSWER : Lord Montague


dies from grief over Romeo’s banishment

ANSWER : Lady Montague


wants Juliet to wait 2 years before marrying

ANSWER : Lord Capulet


girl Romeo loves at the beginning of the play

ANSWER : Rosaline


Romeo’s cousin and the play’s peacemaker

ANSWER : Benvolio


character who is a good host

ANSWER : Lord Capulet


the character who usually acts as messenger between Romeo and Juliet

ANSWER : Nurse


character who kills Mercutio


ANSWER : Tybalt


character who scatters flowers at Juliet’s grave

ANSWER : Paris


ruler of Verona

ANSWER : Prince Escalus


receives “confessions” of the two lovers

ANSWER : Friar Lawrence


apologizes to parents for disobedience

ANSWER : Juliet


dies by Tybalt’s sword

ANSWER : Mercutio


seeks parental consent to marry

ANSWER : Paris


dies from drinking poison

ANSWER : Romeo


brings wrong message to Romeo

ANSWER : Balthazar


dies by dagger

ANSWER : Juliet


How does Tybalt react when he sees Romeo at the Capulet party?

ANSWER : He is upset and wants to fight him


Which character ridicules the Nurse when she comes to deliver Juliet’s message to Romeo?

ANSWER : Mercutio


Who places Paris’s body near Juliet’s?

ANSWER : Romeo


Who runs away from the Capulet monument in fear?

ANSWER : Friar Lawrence


Who finds Juliet’s “dead” body in her bed chamber?

ANSWER : Nurse


Who might be considered the villain in the play?

ANSWER : Tybalt-mean, fighter, against Romeo. Makes him the true antagonist


Who kisses Juliet at the Capulet’s party?

ANSWER : Romeo


Who do Romeo’s friends think he might be with after the Capulet party?

ANSWER : Rosaline


What punishment does the Prince set for Romeo after the second street fight?

ANSWER : banishment


In what city does MOST of the play take place?

ANSWER : Verona


To what city does Romeo go near the end of the play?

ANSWER : Mantua


Whom does Mercutio call the King of Cats?

ANSWER : Tybalt


What fears does Juliet experience before taking the potion?

ANSWER : It wont work It’s poison She’ll suffocate in the tomb She’ll go mad waiting for Romeo in the 

tomb


Who gathers herbs and knows what to do with them?

ANSWER : Friar Lawrence


year of Shakespeare’s birth

ANSWER : 1564


year of Shakespeare’s death

ANSWER : 1616


Shakespeare’s nickname

ANSWER : The Bard


In what city was Shakespeare born?


ANSWER : Stratford-on-Avon


What was the name of Shakespeare’s theater?

ANSWER : The Globe


What percentage of Shakespeare’s plays are written in poetic form?

ANSWER : 72 percent


Name a reason his plays are difficult to read

ANSWER : *72 percent in poetic form *Language has changed so much from his time *Sentence 

structure was manipulated to fit the rhyme and meter of his poetry


Name of Shakespeare’s wife

ANSWER : Anne Hathaway


“Arise, fair sun, and kill the envious moon…”

ANSWER : Personification (the sun and the moon as ladies that are envious of each other)


Juliet’s speech just before she drinks the poison

ANSWER : soliloquy


“It were a grief so brief to part with thee”

ANSWER : Assonance (rhyming EE sound in grief, brief, thee)


“These violent delights have violent ends”

ANSWER : foreshadowing


“then love devouring death do what he dare”

ANSWER : personification (death eating) alliteration (repetition of D sound)


“He’s the courageous captain of compliments”

ANSWER : alliteration (repetition of C sound)


Benvolio and Tybalt in the same scene

ANSWER : Foil (they are opposite characters – peacemaker vs. fighter)


Act I

ANSWER : exposition


Act II

ANSWER : rising action


Act III

ANSWER : turning point/climax


Act IV

ANSWER : falling action


Act V

ANSWER : resolution (also known as denouement)


When Juliet is talking about Romeo and he is below the balcony but she doesn’t know it

ANSWER : dramatic irony


“You have dancing shoes with nimble soles. I have a soul of lead…”

ANSWER : pun (soles of shoes vs. sad inner soul)


“Death is my son-in-law, death is my heir”

ANSWER : personification


“Should in the farthest East begin to draw the shady curtains from Aurora’s bed”

ANSWER : allusion (Aurora – goddess)


“My only love sprung from my only hate! Too early seen unknown, and unknown too late”

ANSWER : rhyming couplet


“Speak to my gossip Venus one fair word”

ANSWER : allusion (Venus – goddess of love)


“Oh, then I see that Queen Mab hath been with you…”

ANSWER : Mercutio


“You kiss by the book…”

ANSWER : Juliet


“He jests at scars that never felt a wound”

ANSWER : Romeo


“There’s no faith, no trust, no honesty in men…”

ANSWER : Nurse


“Then, I defy you stars!”

ANSWER : Romeo


“Women may fall when there’s no strength in men…”

ANSWER : Friar Lawrence


“I tell thee what, get thee to church o’Thursday or never after look at me in the face”

ANSWER : Capulet


“Then hie you hence to Friar Lawrence’s cell. There stays a husband to make you a wife”

ANSWER : Nurse


“Ask for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man”

ANSWER : Mercutio


“For never was there a story of more woe than this of Juliet and her Romeo”

ANSWER : Prince


“My only love sprung from my only hate, too early seen unknown and known too late”

ANSWER : Juliet


“Did my heart love till now? Forswear it sight, for I ne’er saw true beauty till this night”

ANSWER : Romeo


“Compare her face with some that I shall show, and I will make thee think thy swan a crow”

ANSWER : Benvolio


“This by his voice should be a Montague. Fetch me my rapier, boy…”

ANSWER : Tybalt


“But soft, what light through yonder window breaks? It is the east, and Juliet is the sun”

ANSWER : Romeo


“What’s in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet”

ANSWER : Juliet


“He bears him like a portly gentleman, and, to say truth, Verona brags of him to be a virtuous and well-governed youth.”

ANSWER : Capulet




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