Jeopardy Board Characters Persuasion Plot Literary Devices $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Final Jeopardy FUTURE Characters.

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Presentation transcript:

Jeopardy Board Characters Persuasion Plot Literary Devices $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Final Jeopardy FUTURE Characters

$100 Answer from CHARACTERS This character describes himself as being “constant as the Northern Star”

$100 Question from Characters Who is Julius Caesar?

$200 Answer from Characters This character is “with himself at war,” experiencing several internal conflicts over the course of the play.

$200 Question from Characters Who is Brutus?

$300 Answer from Characters Caesar distrusts this man because he has “a lean and hungry look.”

$300 Question from Characters Who is Cassius?

$400 Answer from Characters This character speaks in prose as he recounts Caesar’s near-coronation at the Capitol; he is the first to stab Caesar, with the words, “speak, hands, for me!”

$400 Question from Characters Who is Casca?

$500 Answer from Characters In a famous soliloquy, this character hopes that Caesar’s spirit will “Cry ‘Havoc!’ and let slip the dogs of war!”

$500 Question from Characters Who is Antony?

$100 Answer from Characters Cont’d This young general is described by Cassius as a “peevish schoolboy;” he will go on to become the first Roman emperor, Augustus.

$100 Question from Characters Cont’d Who is Octavius?

$200 Answer from Characters Cont’d Antony calls this triumvir a “slight, unmeritable man” who is only useful for running errands and as a scapegoat.

$200 Question from Characters Cont’d Who is Lepidus?

$300 Answer from Characters Cont’d This character warns Brutus, “Thou shalt see me at Philippi!”

$300 Question from Characters Cont’d Who is Caesar’s ghost?

$400 Answer from Characters Cont’d This drowsy servant boy is one of the few sources of comic relief in the play.

$400 Question from Characters Cont’d Who is Lucius?

$500 Answer from Characters Cont’d This character commits suicide by eating hot coals.

$500 Question from Characters Cont’d Who is Portia?

$100 Answer from Vocabulary a logical appeal that uses facts to support a claim

$100 Question from Vocabulary What is logos?

$200 Answer from Vocabulary an expert or authority on a subject is used to convince you

$200 Question from Vocabulary What is ethos?

T $300 Answer from Vocabulary: an appeal based on emotion.

$300 Question from Vocabulary What is pathos ?

$400 Answer from Vocabulary A Honda Accord ad stating that the car gets 35 mpg and has the highest safety rating of any car in its class.

$400 Question from Vocabulary What is logos?

$500 Answer from Vocabulary Jessica Simpson saying that Proactive has helped clear up her skin.

$500 Question from Vocabulary What is ethos?

$100 Answer from Plot This is one of Caesar’s physical infirmities.

$100 Question from PLOT What is deafness? What is epilepsy? What is the inability to swim?

$200 Answer from Plot: This is the number of times Caesar refused the crown offered by Antony.

$200 Question from Plot What is THREE?

$300 Answer from PLOT These are the strategies Cassius uses to get Brutus’s support.

$300 Question from Plot What is flattery and forgery?

$400 Answer from Plot This is Portia’s way of demonstrating her strength and constancy to her husband.

$400 Question from Plot What is a voluntary wound to the thigh?

$500 Answer from PLOT These are two of the omens Casca describes in Act I.

$500 Question from Plot What are non-attacking lions, earthquake, slave’s hand burning, raining fire, owls out at day, and people on fire?

$100 Answer from Literary Devices “How like a deer stricken by many princes/Dost thou here lie!”

$100 Question from Literary Devices What is a simile?

$200 Answer from Literary Devices The clock striking as the conspirators are meeting, or Brutus’s book

$200 Question from Literary Devices What is anachronism?

$300 Answer from Literary Devices “O Caesar, read mine first, for mine’s a suit/That touches Caesar nearer” (hint: the audience knows that reading this message could save Caesar’s life)

$300 Question from Literary Devices What is dramatic irony?

$400 Answer from Literary Devices When Caesar asks him to stay close to him, Trebonius says, “I will, my lord.” He then adds, “and so near will I be, That your best friends shall wish I had been further…” This is said “under his breath;” Caesar is not intended to hear it.

$400 Question from Literary Devices What is an aside?

$500 Answer from Literary Devices After the assassination, Antony gives a speech alone onstage, revealing his true thoughts about the conspiracy.

$500 Question from Literary Devices What is a soliloquy?

Final Jeopardy

Final Jeopardy Question: This is Brutus’s philosophy, which dictates that people should not show emotion or allow themselves to be affected by circumstances outside their control.