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Vocabulary Vocabulary
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Elements of Comedy
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Satire of the Victorian Age
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Oscar Wilde
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Plot Development
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Character Development
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$200 $300 $500 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500Vocabulary Satire of the Victorian Age Elements of Comedy Oscar Wilde Plot Development Character Development $100 $400 $100
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1 - 100 I hope I guess this question right – I mean, vocabulary is not really my forte.
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1 - 100 What is strength?
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My sentiments exactly…
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1 - 100 What is feelings, emotions, or thoughts?
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You have been under my tutelage for almost the entire school year.
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1 - 100 What is authority or instruction?
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Mr. Worthing, rise from that semi- recumbent position!
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1 - 100 What is halfway lying down?
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Young Cecily is my ward.
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1 - 100 What is someone under legal guardianship?
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1 - 100 The type of comedy depends largely on physical comedy.
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1 - 100 What is burlesque?
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A comedy primarily intended to make people laugh.
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1 - 100 What is farce?
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This type of character – such as Lady Bracknell – obstructs the relationship of another character.
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1 - 100 What is a blocking figure?
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In this element of comedy, every single character gets what he or she wants in the end.
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1 - 100 What is an all-inclusive resolution?
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A plot in which the protagonist, no matter how dissolute, reforms in the end.
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1 - 100 What is sentimental comedy?
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1 - 100 In the Victorian age, this class paradoxically had more freedom than the other classes.
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1 - 100 What is the lower class?
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In the Victorian Age, the first born son would inherit the wealth, while the second born son would do this.
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1 - 100 What is join the army or become a priest?
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This important social interruption usually took place at 4 PM in the Victorian Age.
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1 - 100 What is tea time?
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This is the British term for an apartment or floor.
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1 - 100 What is a flat?
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Upper class members of society usually had one house in the country and one house “in town” – here.
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1 - 100 What is London?
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1 - 100 Oscar Wilde lived during this century.
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1 - 100 What is the 19 th century?
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Oscar Wilde lived during this era, which was named for the queen of England.
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1 - 100 What is the Victorian Age?
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Oscar Wilde was sentenced to hard labor in prison for this reason.
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1 - 100 What is his homosexuality?
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Oscar Wilde was a leader in this movement, named for a word that refers to beauty.
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1 - 100 What is the aesthetic movement?
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Oscar Wilde was born in this country.
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1 - 100 What is Ireland?
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1 - 100 This is where Mr. Thomas Cardew found Jack when he was a baby.
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1 - 100 What is in a cloakroom at a railway station?
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This is the reason that Jack wants to be immediately christened.
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1 - 100 What is he wants to make his name Ernest to please Gwendolyn?
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The letters from Ernest that Cecily kept in a box tied with ribbons were actually written by this person.
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1 - 100 Who is Cecily?
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This is Lady Bracknell’s reaction when she discovers that Jack smokes.
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1 - 100 What is approval?
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This is Algernon’s term for one who creates fanciful stories to get out of societal commitments.
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1 - 100 What is a Bunburyist?
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1 - 100 “I’ve now realized for the first time in my life the vital importance of being earnest!”
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1 - 100 Who is Jack?
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“Oh! I killed Bunbury this afternoon. I mean poor Bunbury died this afternoon.”
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1 - 100 Who is Algernon?
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“Well, to speak with perfect candor, Cecily, I wish that you were fully forty- two, and more than usually plain for your age.”
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1 - 100 Who is Gwendolyn?
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“To lose one parent, Mr. Worthing, may be regarded as misfortune; to lose both looks like carelessness.”
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1 - 100 Who is Lady Bracknell?
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“There were no cucumbers at the market.”
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1 - 100 Who is Lane?
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Act 3 of the play could be considered this type of scene, as characters who have previously had mistaken roles finally discover or reveal their true identities.
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What is a recognition scene?
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