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THIS IS With Host... Your 100 200 300 400 500 CharactersCommand ments Major Events Literary Elements...
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Transcript of THIS IS With Host... Your 100 200 300 400 500 CharactersCommand ments Major Events Literary Elements...
THIS
IS
With
Host...
Your
100 100 100 100 100 100
200 200 200 200 200 200
300 300 300 300 300 300
400 400 400 400 400 400
500 500 500 500 500 500
Characters Commandments
MajorEvents
LiteraryElements
Symbols/ History
Wild Card
The only animal to leave the farm voluntarily
A 100
Who is Mollie?
A 100
The animal who designed the windmill
A 200
Snowball
A 200
The animal responsible for coining the phrase:
“Napoleon is always right.”
A 300
Who is Boxer?
A 300
The smartest and most stubborn animal on the farm;
the one who could read fluently but chose not to help out his fellow animals until
the end
A 400
Who is Benjamin?
A 400
The animal that always talks about Sugarcandy Mountain.
A 500
Who is Moses?
A 500
Napoleon broke this commandment first when he
added the words “with sheets.”
B 100
What is the fourth commandment,
“No animal shall sleep in a bed?”
B 100
This commandment was revised in the eighth chapter after Napoleon was thought
to be dying
B 200
What is the commandment that stated “No animal shall
drink alcohol?”
B 200
The animal responsible for making the changes to the
commandments
B 300
Who is Squealer?
B 300
The maxim the sheep kept repeating because they
couldn’t remember all of the commandments
B 400
“Four Legs Good, Two Legs Bad!”
B 400
The final maxim that replaced all seven commandments
B 500
“All Animals Are Equal, But Some Are More Equal Than
Others”
B 500
The proper name of the first major battle
C 100
What is the “Battle of the Cowshed?”
C 100
Napoleon breaks the sixth commandment “No animal shall kill another animal” by betraying
this character
C 200
Who is Boxer?
C 200
The humans’ attempt to recapture the farm is known
as this battle
C 300
What is the “Battle of the Windmill?”
C 300
DAILY DOUBLE
C 400
DAILY DOUBLE
Place A Wager
These actions prompted the rebellion
C 400
Either of the following responses are correct:
•Jones did not feed the animals•Jones and his men did not care
for the animals
C 400
This animal was injured and was sent to the glue shop
C 500
Who is Boxer?
C 500
The animals find Squealer lying stunned by the barn
with a broken ladder and an overturned paint can nearby
D 100
What is dramatic irony?
D 100
The pigs celebrate Boxer’s death with liquor purchased with money from his sale
D 200
What is situational irony?
D 200
A story that is told usually by using animals as the central characters and some kind of
moral
D 300
What is a fable?
D 300
Napoleon becomes a tyrant and the animals blindly
accept him as an all-knowing prophet
D 400
What is satire?
D 400
A story that can be read on two levels
D 500
What is an allegory?
D 500
Mr. Jones represents by this character in history
E 100
Who is Czar Nicholas II?
E 100
Snowball represents this historical figure
E 200
Who is Leon Trotsky?
E 200
This man was represented by Napoleon
E 300
Who is Josef Stalin?
E 300
Sugarcandy Mountain represents this idea that
serves as a distraction for the animals
E 400
What is heaven?
E 400
Squealer represents this by spreading ideas and rules of
Napoleon
E 500
What is propaganda?
E 500
This is the Russian equivalent of Animalism
F 100
What is communism?
F 100
This character is the only human to help establish trade
with Animal Farm
F 200
Who is Mr. Whymper?
F 200
This was the name of the song all the animals sang
F 300
What is Beasts of England?
F 300
The deliberate attempt to influence a large group of
people to act or think a certain way
F 400
What is propaganda?
F 400
The pigs learned to do these two things at the end of the
novel
F 500
What is walk on their hind legs and whip other animals
F 500
The Final Jeopardy Category is:
EVENTS
Please record your wager.
Click on screen to begin
Final Jeopardy Question
What was the final argument between Napoleon and Mr.
Pilkington about?
Click on screen to continue
They both cheated at cards
Click on screen to continue
Thank You for Playing Jeopardy!