Description
This evaluation will cover the lessons in this unit. It is open book, meaning you can use your textbook, syllabus, and other course materials. You will need to understand, analyze, and apply the information you have learned in order to answer the questions correctly. To submit the evaluation, follow the directions in your online course.
Unformatted Attachment Preview
Purchase answer to see full attachment
Explanation & Answer
Hi, find attached the completed work for your review.Let me know if I should edit or change anything.Looking forward to working with you in future.Thank you.
Attached.
Unit 2 Evaluation
Twelfth Grade English 1
ENGH 043 060
This evaluation will cover the lessons in this unit. It is open book, meaning you can use your
textbook, syllabus, and other course materials. You will need to understand, analyze, and apply the
information you have learned in order to answer the questions correctly. To submit the evaluation,
follow the directions in your online course.
Part A: Multiple-Choice
Select the best answer for each question.
1. In “Twa Corbies,” what attitude toward death does the author present?
a.
b.
c.
d.
sadness and regret
darkly evil
acceptance
vengeful and angry
2. In “Lord Randall,” the comparison between love and poison
a.
b.
c.
d.
expresses an exaggerated sense of love’s power.
celebrates the love of marriage
emphasizes a realistic view of love and death.
mirrors the importance of a mother-son relationship.
3. What do “Twa Corbies” and “Lord Randall” suggest about medieval attitudes toward
women in romantic relationships?
a.
b.
c.
d.
Unit Evaluation 2
They are highly respected but unloved.
They are untrustworthy and dangerous.
They are unwitting victims of chivalry and romance.
They exist to save men from their evil ways.
1
ENGH 043
4. How do the events in “Barbara Allan” echo the medieval ideas presented in “Lord
Randall”?
a. The events in “Barbara Allan” equate love sickness with death in the
same way “Lord Randall” does.
b. “Lord Randall” and “Barbara Allan” express thoughts about the fleeting nature of
life.
c. “Barbara Allan” and “Lord Randall” investigate the importance of romance, chivalry,
and revenge.
d. Barbara Allan and Lord Randall are both murdered.
5. How is the perspective of medieval life presented in “Get Up and Bar the Door”
different from those presented in the other ballads?
a. This ballad expresses a more romantic view of life and love than the other ballads.
b. This ballad lacks the same sense of humor in addressing medieval attitudes as the
other ballads.
c. This ballad presents a humorous and exaggerated look at married life,
not a romanticized view of love.
d. This ballad tells more about medieval relationships than the other ballads do.
6. An iambic foot is
a.
b.
c.
d.
a refrain.
one unstressed and one stressed syllable.
an unbalanced line in a ballad.
a type of symbolism.
7. “Barbara Allan” laments
a.
b.
c.
d.
Sir John’s murder of Barbara.
that Sir John and Barbara were unable to express their love in life.
that Barbara was incapable of seeing Sir John before his death.
that Barbara knew what was happening, but Sir John did not.
8. “Get Up and Bar the Door” reflects real life because
a.
b.
c.
d.
people often fight about petty issues.
the pudding bree represents money.
people often miss opportunities.
the pudding bree is a symbol of wasted time.
9. A ballad stanza has how many lines?
a.
b.
c.
d.
Unit Evaluation 2
five
three
four
two
2
ENGH 043
10. Ballads are a reflection of
a.
b.
c.
d.
the times in which they were written.
musical tastes of the twentieth century.
all of the problems and troubles of a group of people.
none of the above.
11. “Lord Randall” is about
a.
b.
c.
d.
the loss of a dear friend.
the robbery of an elderly couple.
a poisoning that may be physical or metaphorical.
a noble involved in espionage.
12. Which statement would you include in a summary of the first section of Sir Gawain and
the Green Knight?
a.
b.
c.
d.
The Green Knight has a beard.
The Green Knight arrives in the middle of a New Year’s Eve feast.
Sir Gawain flinches when the Green Knight swings his ax.
King Arthur is disgusted by the Green Knight, but he does not show it.
13. Which of the following events from Sir Gawain and the Green Knight conveys a sense
of the supernatural?
a.
b.
c.
d.
The Green Knight challenges King Arthur’s knights.
Sir Gawain arrives at the Green Castle and finds it hideous.
The Green Knight does not die from Sir Gawain’s blow.
The Green Knight appears a year later.
14. Which plot element characteristic of medieval romances is missing in the excerpt you
read from Sir Gawain and the Green Knight?
a.
b.
c.
d.
castle life
adventure
chivalry
a woman in distress
15. In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, why does Sir Gawain volunteer to fight the Green
Knight?
a.
b.
c.
d.
Unit Evaluation 2
He wants to protect the honor of his king and fellow knights.
He wants to settle an old dispute he has with the Green Knight.
He wants to protect the queen.
He wants to prove that the Green Knight is not real.
3
ENGH 043
16. Which of the following events in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight represents a
deviation from the ideals of chivalry?
a.
b.
c.
d.
King Arthur accepts the Green Knight’s challenge.
Sir Gawain keeps the magic girdle.
Sir Gawain takes the Green Knight’s ax.
The Green Knight reminds Sir Gawain of his promise.
17. Which character is not essential to a summary of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight?
a.
b.
c.
d.
King Arthur
the lady of the castle near the Green Chapel
the lord of the castle near the Green Chapel
Guenevere
18. Sir Gawain’s internal conflict in Sir Gawain and the Gr...