Question 1
Question
Choose all the correct answers for the following question: What constitues plagiarism?
Answer
-
Using George Washington's birthday, without citing.
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Using Proverbs, without citing
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Quoting word-for-word a passage and citing the author.
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Putting the information in your own words and not citing.
Question 2
Question
What kind of things does William build, experiment with or design?
Answer
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Windmill
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plow
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toy trucks
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radios
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trebuchets
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bird traps
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rickshaws
Question 3
Question
What kind of figurative language is used in Hughes poem?
"What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore--
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over--
like a syrupy sweet?
Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.
Or does it explode?"
Answer
-
personification
-
aliteration
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onomatopoeia
-
simile
Question 4
Question
In what ways does Cholera spread?
Answer
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Hands
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Feet
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Soil
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Trees
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Flies
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Bees
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Water
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Honey
Question 5
Question
What style is The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind written in?
Answer
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Informal
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formal
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literary
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non-literary
Question 6
Question
The following sentence from chapter 5 is an example of what kind of figurative language? "My stomach must have also been fooled from last night's nsm
Answer
-
Simile
-
metaphor
-
personification
-
onomatopoeia
Question 7
Question
Which sentence(s) are punctuated properly?
Answer
-
Maria can I help you?
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After you ran out of money you called your parents, but only my sister was home, unfortunately.
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I’m a not-so-rich person, but I can do the following: offer you a small loan, offer you some temporary work or help you find a new job.
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"Yes I'll go to the store," said Dr. Winston, the guy with the top hat.
Question 8
Question
How does education influence William's ability to transform himself and the world around him.
Answer
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He turns into a butterfly
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He is able to provide electricity for himself and his household.
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He gives people hope.
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It shows that young people are capable of great things.
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It causes a divide between adults and children.
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He becomes more of a loner.
Question 9
Question
What are some reading strategies?
Answer
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Read past things you don't understand.
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Summarize what you have read by briefly restating the central ideas in your own words.
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Revisit events that you find confusing.
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Question the events described and their significance.
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Predict what will happen later in the selection.
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Highlight anything interesting.
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Doodle in your notebook when you are stuck.
Question 10
Question
In what way(s) do the poem and the story connect?
"What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore--
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over--
like a syrupy sweet?
Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.
Or does it explode?"
Answer
-
Williams dreams to build a windmill cause him to explode in anger when he can't build one.
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William's dreams to build a windmill become a heavy load because he can't build it.
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William's dreams of going to school cause him to be upset when he can't afford to go.
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William's dreams of learning are not interrupted by a lack of schooling because he is resourceful.
Question 11
Question
The following is an example of what kind of figurative language? "The mountain was getting higher for everyone."
Answer
-
simile
-
metaphor
-
personification
-
symbolism
Question 12
Question
The following sentence is an example of what kind of figurative language? "December arrived with heavy clouds, black as oil, that gathered for days o
Answer
-
Simile
-
metaphor
-
personification
-
alliteration
Question 13
Question
In what way(s) is William resourceful?
Answer
-
He uses animal parts and bones to help him build things.
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He gets parts from a scrap yard.
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He uses his mom's kitchen to build things.
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He takes parts from an old unused bathroom.
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He gets his parents to support him with money.
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He has traders donate parts for him.
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He builds his own tools.
Question 14
Question
Which is an example of a properly cited passage. Knox, Bernard. Introductuion. The Odyssesy of Homer. Trans. Robert Fagles.
Answer
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The third-century-B.C. geographer Eratosthenes, for example, thought that Homer’s story was totally imaginary (Knox 25).
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The great Alexandrian geographer Eratosthenes said that trying to identify Odysseus’ ports of call would be a wild goose chase.
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The third-century-B.C. geographer Eratosthenes, for example, thought that Homer’s story was totally imaginary (Knox, 25).
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The great Alexandrian geographer Eratosthenes said that trying to identify Odysseus’ ports of call would be a wild goose chase. (Knox)
Question 15
Question
Choose all the correct possibilities for the following question: What elements make up what a style is?
Answer
-
Mood
-
Tone
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Word Choice
-
Organization
-
Sentence structure
Question 16
Question
Literary Style uses which of the following elements?
Answer
-
uses sophisticated, abstract language
-
often includes long, elaborate sentences
-
may use complex sentence structures
-
may use contractions and slang
-
sounds like everyday conversation
-
carefully observes the rules of grammar
-
may use IMAGERY to convey MOOD
-
may use simple sentences and fragments
-
reader often gets to know the narrator (the voice that tells the story)
Question 17
Question
Formal Style uses which of the following elements?
Answer
-
uses sophisticated, abstract language
-
often includes long, elaborate sentences
-
may use complex sentence structures
-
may use contractions and slang
-
sounds like everyday conversation
-
carefully observes the rules of grammar
-
may use IMAGERY to convey MOOD
-
may use simple sentences and fragments
-
reader often gets to know the narrator (the voice that tells the story)
Question 18
Question
Informal Style uses which of the following elements?
Answer
-
uses sophisticated, abstract language
-
often includes long, elaborate sentences
-
may use complex sentence structures
-
may use contractions and slang
-
sounds like everyday conversation
-
carefully observes the rules of grammar
-
may use IMAGERY to convey MOOD
-
may use simple sentences and fragments
-
reader often gets to know the narrator (the voice that tells the story)
Question 19
Question
What things do readers look for to identify characterization?
Answer
-
What characters do
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What my friend says about the character
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What the author says about the character
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What characters say
-
What other people say about the character
Question 20
Question
What things characterize William in the book "The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind"?
Answer
-
"Quiet down," someone said. "Let's see how crazy this boy really is?
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I'd never seen a dead person, but I was too afraid to go look for fear it would never leave my mind.
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"That's our dog, Khamba," he said. "I figured we'd bring him along to watch the chickens and goats here."
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I didn't earn enough from our repairs to keep buying [batteries]. Instead, we'd walk to the trading center and look for used cells that had been tossed in the waste bins.
Question 21
Question
True or False: An autobiography is written by the person the story is about. It is in the first person.
Question 22
Question
True or False. When documenting the design process, I should use literary style to document it.
Question 23
Question
Choose all the following answers that are correct for the following question: What did William do to further his studies?
Answer
-
He never stopped going to school.
-
He borrowed his friends notes.
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He borrowed books from the library
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He learns from his mistakes
-
He learns from a wiseman in his village.
Question 24
Question
Choose all of the correct answers for the following question: What does the windmill symbolize for William?
Answer
-
Freedom
-
Hope
-
Love
-
Honor
-
Education
Question 25
Question
How does Gilbert help William?
Answer
-
He helps William make the windmill blades.
-
He buys the dynamo for William.
-
Gilbert doesn't laugh at William's going to the scrapyard like everyone else.
-
He helps William build the tower.
Question 26
Question
Choose all the correct answers to the following questions: What analogies are from this story.
Answer
-
Khamba's ribs like blades.
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The maize like the fruit of the Gods.
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The famine like the plague.
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The flies like flying diseases.
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The windmill like a light bulb.
Question 27
Question
Choose all the correct answers for the following question: Which of the following could be considered a theme for this book?
Answer
-
It takes a community to achieve greatness
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One can find freedom in education
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Friendship
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Failure breeds more failure
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Freedom
-
Treasure can be made from things you least expect
-
Resources
Question 28
Question
Choose all the correct answers for the following: What did the scrapyard symbolize?
Answer
-
Garbage
-
Parts for his windmill
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Treasure
-
Trash
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Resources