Transcript Document

Unit One
In “The Cat Who Thought She Was a Dog,” the
word or phrase that best describes the
economic condition of the Skiba family is
• poor.
Jan Skiba’s refusal in “The Cat Who Thought
She Was a Dog” to let his dog and cat go
hungry shows that he
• loves the animals.
The best word to describe the relationship
between Burek the dog and Kot the cat in “The
Cat Who Thought She Was a Dog” is
• close.
In “The Cat Who Thought She Was a Dog,” the
dog acts like a cat and the cat acts like a dog
because neither has ever ________________or
any other animals, so each believes it is like
the other.
• seen its reflection
In “The Cat Who Thought She Was a Dog,” the
mirror causes an uproar in the Skiba family
because they _______________________
before and do not like what they see now.
• never saw themselves clearly
After the mirror arrives in “The Cat Who
Thought She Was a Dog,” the Skiba family
feels its poverty for the first time because their
_______________ with their appearances
makes them wish they could afford to buy
cosmetics to improve them.
• dissatisfaction
In “The Cat Who Thought She Was a Dog,” the
mirror causes the dog and the cat to turn on
each other and
• fight for the first time.
The best summary for the moral of “The Cat
Who Thought She Was a Dog” is that the true
worth of people lies not in their appearance but
in their
• generosity of spirit.
In “Two Kinds” the narrator’s mother takes her
to the Mission district to get her hair curled in
order to make her look like
• Shirley Temple.
In “Two Kinds,” the mother’s belief that “you
could be anything you wanted to be in
America” is an
• unrealistic expectation about America.
At first, Jing-mei, in “Two Kinds” is
enthusiastic about her mother’s ambitions for
her because she hopes that she will win
• approval from her parents.
In “Two Kinds,” the mother’s judgment of
the Chinese girl’s piano performance on
The Ed Sullivan Show is “Play note right,
but doesn’t sound good! No singing
sound.” By this the mother means that
the girl’s playing is perfect but
• shows no feeling for the music.
In “Two Kinds,” the phrase that best describes
Jing-mei’s relationship with her cousin
Waverly is
• jealous and competitive.
In “Two Kinds,” Jing-mei approaches her
performance at the talent show with
• confidence.
Jing-mei’s horrible performance at
the talent show in “Two Kinds” is
the first of many times that she
• disappoints her mother.
In “Two Kinds,” the mother’s offer to give Jingmei the piano for her thirtieth birthday shows
that the mother has finally gotten over her
bitterness and disappointment and wants to
___________________ toward her daughter.
• make a kind gesture
The theme, or central idea, of “Two Kinds” can
be stated as “an important part of growing up
is discovering one’s own _______________,
even if they conflict with the wishes of one’s
parents.”
• goals and desires
The title of Whitman’s poem “Song of Myself”
makes it likely that the speaker is
• Whitman.
In “I’m Nobody” Dickinson seems to regard
fame as
• a bad thing.
In “I’m Nobody” Dickinson compares being
famous to acting
• like a frog.
In “Me,” the way the speaker is most like a tree
is that both trees and the speaker are
• individual and unique.
The word that best summarizes Haley’s
memories of Grandma in “My Furthest-Back
Person” is
• “warm”.
At the beginning of “My Furthest-Back
Person,” Haley is visiting the National Archives
to do research about
• his family roots.
In “My Furthest-Back Person,” Haley’s
thoughts on returning from assignment in
London show that his curiosity about his
• African
family roots is becoming his major
____________________
concern.
In “My Furthest-Back Person,” Haley pays a
visit to Dr. Jan Vansina in order to seek expert
information on
• African dialects.
In “My Furthest-Back Person,” the most
unusual requirement for the trip upriver is the
• four musicians.
The villagers of Juffure swarm around Haley in
“My Furthest-Back Person” because they have
black person
never seen •anAmerican
________________________
before.
According to “My Furthest-Back Person,” the
Kinte clan originated in
• Old Mali.
The opening setting of “The Third Level” is a
• railroad terminal.
Given what you know about Charley’s situation
in “The Third Level,” his friends’ opinion that
his stamp collecting is a “temporary refuge
from reality” shows that they
• view his hobby negatively.
In “The Third Level,” Charley states that Grand
Central Station is a place where it is
• easy to get lost.
The presence of gaslights in “The Third
Level” is the first major clue that
Charley’s wrong turn has taken him
• into the past.
In “The Third Level,” the detail that first reveals
the exact time frame of the third level is the
• newspaper headline.
In “The Third Level,” by stressing how far in
the future World Wars I and II were from that
long-ago summer in Galesburg, Illinois,
Charley shows that the town’s chief attraction
for him is its
• peacefulness.
In “The Third Level,” Charley’s decision to
obtain two hundred dollars in old-style
currency shows that he intends to
• return to Galesburg.
As explained by Charley in “The Third Level,” a
first-day cover is a newly issued stamp mailed
to oneself to prove the
• date of issue by the postmark.
In “The Third Level,” the letter from Galesburg
is written by Charley’s
• psychiatrist.
The main idea of “The Third Level” is people
often
• yearn for a simpler, bygone era.
The first symptom of Schatz’s illness that is
revealed in “A Day’s Wait” is
• shivering.
In “A Day’s Wait,” Schatz’s resists his father’s
request that
• he go to bed.
In “A Day’s Wait,” after the doctor takes
Schatz’s temperature, he discovers that it is
• 102°.
In “A Day’s Wait,” the doctor’s reaction to
Schatz’s condition can best be described as
• mildly concerned.
In “A Day’s Wait,” believing that he is dying,
Schatz thinks it is probably difficult for his
father to be around him so Schatz tells his
father that he needn’t stay in the room
• “if it’s going to bother you”.
In “A Day’s Wait,” the fact that the father
leaves Schatz to go out hunting shows that the
father doesn’t think his son’s condition is very
• serious.
When his father returns from the hunt and sits
down to read a story to Schatz in “A Day’s
Wait,” the boy’s internal conflict is revealed to
the reader when Schatz asks
• when he is going to die.
In “A Day’s Wait,” the father compares the
difference between temperature scales to the
difference between
• miles and kilometers.
In “A Day’s Wait,” Schatz cries easily over
unimportant things the day after he learns that
he will not die because a great ______________
has been lifted from him.
• emotional weight
Growing up, Bill Cosby and his friends in “Was
Tarzan a Three-Bandage Man?” mainly
admired
• athletes.
In “Was Tarzan a Three-Bandage Man?,”
Cosby and his friends show their
admiration for their heroes by
• imitating them.
In “Was Tarzan a Three-Bandage Man?,”
when Cosby’s mother tells him to take off
that bandage right now “or I’ll have your
father move you up to stitches,” the humor
of her statement comes from
• exaggeration.
In “Oranges,” the boy offers to pay for a
ten-cent candy with
• two oranges.
In “Oranges,” when the boy makes his offer of
payment for the candy bar, the saleslady reacts
• With understanding.
The word “critical” best describes
Emily Dickinson’s attitude toward ____
in “I’m Nobody”.
• fame
In “Me,” when Walter de la Mare
writes that the self is “Like a
flower, / For its hour,” he is
saying that a human self is
• not permanent.
In “The Third Level,” the hobby that
leads Charley to believe that time
travel is really possible is
• stamp collecting.
Good Luck!
• Study Hard!