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Get Into Character
Macbeth’s Many Moods
What Do I Do Around
Here?Symbols
Figurative Language
“By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked
this way comes.”
A 100
The Three Witches
A 100
“He’s here in double trust: first, as I am his kinsman and
his subject, strong both against the deed.”
A 200
Macbeth
A 200
“I have no spur to prick the sides of my intent, but only vaulting ambition, which
o’erleaps itself, and falls on th’ other…”
A 300
Macbeth
A 300
“Good sir, why do you start, and seem to fear things that
do sound so fair?”
A 400
Banquo
A 400
“The Thane of Fife had a wife; where is she now? What
will these hands ne’er be clean?”
A 500
Lady Macbeth
A 500
B 100
The three witches cause Macbeth to murder Duncan
True or False
B 100
False
In the beginning, Macbeth is torn between his moral side and his corrupt, ambitious
side.
True or False
B 200
True
B 200
Macduff leads and army against Macbeth so he can become king of Scotland.
True or False
B 300
False
B 300
Lady Macbeth is so heartless she doesn’t feel any guilt for
Duncan’s murder.
True or False
B 400
False
B 400
In Act IV, the witches seek out Macbeth to give him
more prophecies.
True or False
B 500
False
B 500
Macbeth hears the witches’ first set of prophecies.
C 100
Excited
Appropriate Synonyms:
Keyed up, eager, thrilled, animated, energized, wound
up
C 100
Macbeth considers murdering Duncan.
C 200
Conflicted
C 200
Macbeth goes off to kill Duncan.
C 300
Fills himself with “dark” courage.
C 300
DAILY DOUBLE
C 400
DAILY DOUBLE
Place A Wager
Macbeth talks to Lady Macbeth after murdering
Duncan.
C 400
Guilty
C 400
Macbeth visits the three witches for more prophecies.
C 500
Demanding and/or desperate
C 500
Act as contrasts to the Macbeths
D 100
The Macduff family
D 100
Divided between his morality and his corrupt ambition.
D 200
Macbeth
D 200
Set the opening mood
D 300
The three witches
D 300
Functions as Macbeth’s antagonist
D 400
Macduff
D 400
Spurs Macbeth to overcome his doubts
D 500
Lady Macbeth
D 500
What is the most used symbol and prop within the play?
E 100
Blood
E 100
What symbolic number appears over and over throughout the text of
Macbeth?
E 200
Three
E 200
What animal does the old man use to symbolize Duncan during his speech at the end
of Act II?
E 300
Falcon
E 300
What animal does the old man use to symbolize Duncan during his speech at the end
of Act II?
E 400
Owl
E 400
When the witches make their final prophecies for Macbeth
in Act IV, which of the apparitions symbolizes the
fact that Macduff was not of woman born?
E 500
What is the bloody baby
E 500
To which animal does Macduff’s son compare
himself when his mother asks him how he will fair without
a father?
F 100
What are birds?
F 100
“This avarice/Sticks deeper, grows with more pernicious root/Than summer-seeming lust, and it hath been/The sword of our slain kings.”
To which of the five senses does this quote appeal?
F 200
Touch and Sight
F 200
“This avarice/Sticks deeper, grows with more pernicious root/Than summer-seeming lust, and it hath been/The sword of our slain kings.”
What or whom is being referred to in the metaphor
above?
F 300
Macbeth
F 300
“This tyrant, whose sole name blisters our
tongues,/Was once thought honest.”
F 400
Taste, Touch, Sight
F 400
To which of the five senses does the underlined portion of
this quote appeal?“Nay, had I pow’r, I
should/Pour the sweet milk of concord into hell,/Uproar the
universal peace, confound/All unity on
earth.”
F 500
What is taste?
F 500
The Final Jeopardy Category is:
The Importance of Quotations
Please record your wager.
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Discuss the importance of the quote below. Give relevant details
and examples to support your answer.
And oftentimes, to win us our harm, the instruments of darkness tell us truths, win
us with honest trifles, to betray's in deepest consequence (1,3) --Banquo
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