StudySync "The Refusal" quiz

StudySync "The Refusal" quiz

10th Grade

6 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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StudySync "The Refusal" quiz

StudySync "The Refusal" quiz

Assessment

Quiz

English

10th Grade

Medium

9-10.RL.KID.1 , 9-10.RL.KID.3 

Standards-aligned

Created by

Cheyenne Perkins

Used 14+ times

FREE Resource

6 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Which of these statements best describes how the setting establishes conflict and advances the plot of "The Refusal?"

The geographic distance between the capital and the town emphasizes the oppression of a government that is out of touch with its people.

The small size of the town helps highlight a close-knit community of villagers who rely on each other in times of need.

The hot climate contributes to an unsettling, uncomfortable mood, and causes the soldiers to feel irritable.

The vivid description of the tax-collector’s elaborate home reveals how wealthy and uncaring he is.

Answer explanation

The town is run by a faraway government that treats the townspeople unfairly.

Tags

9-10.RL.KID.3 

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Which of these inferences is best supported by the passage below (paragraph 7)?

In all important matters, however, the citizens can always count on a refusal. And now the strange fact is that without this refusal one simply cannot get along, yet at the same time these official occasions designed to receive the refusal are by no means a formality. Time after time one goes there full of expectation and in all seriousness and then one returns, if not exactly strengthened or happy, nevertheless not disappointed or tired. About these things I do not have to ask the opinion of anyone else, I feel them in myself, as everyone does; nor do I have any great desire to find out how these things are connected.

The townspeople don’t mind the refusal because there’s nothing they really want.

The people of the town have come to expect—and even rely on—the refusal.

The townspeople blindly follow the orders of the government without questioning.

The narrator prefers to mind his own business and not pay attention to the ceremony or the refusal.

Answer explanation

The first sentence of this passage states that citizens come to “count on” the refusal.

Tags

9-10.RL.KID.1 

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Which of these inferences about the soldiers is best supported by the passage below (paragraph 5)?

A soldier, for example, enters a shop, buys some trifling object, and stays there leaning against the counter; he listens to the conversations, probably does not understand them, and yet gives the impression of understanding; he himself does not say a word, just stares blankly at the speaker, then back at the listeners, all the while keeping his hand on the hilt of the long knife in his belt. This is revolting, one loses the desire to talk, the customers start leaving the shop, and only when it is quite empty does the soldier also leave. Thus wherever the soldiers appear, our lively people grow silent. That's what happened this time, too. As on all solemn occasions the colonel stood upright, holding in front of him two poles of bamboo in his outstretched hands. This is an ancient custom implying more or less that he supports the law, and the law supports him.

The soldiers act as spies who bring back incriminating information to the capital.

The presence of soldiers in the small town intimidates its inhabitants.

The soldiers exercise violence on the citizens of the town.

The soldiers enjoy a calm, welcoming relationship with the villagers.6

Answer explanation

The townspeople demonstrate fear and discomfort when the soldiers are nearby.

Tags

9-10.RL.KID.1 

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Which of the following pieces of evidence supports the idea that the townspeople are intimidated by the soldiers in paragraph 5?

“A soldier, for example, enters a shop, buys some trifling object, and stays there leaning against the counter…”

“... all while keeping his hand on the hilt of the long knife in his belt.”

“This is revolting, one loses the desire to talk, the customers start leaving the shop…”

“... and only when it is quite empty does the soldier also leave…”

Answer explanation

This shows the fearful reaction the townspeople have when soldiers are nearby.

Tags

9-10.RL.KID.1 

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Which of these inferences about the refusal is best supported by the passage below (paragraphs 7-8)?

In all important matters, however, the citizens can always count on a refusal. And now the strange fact is that without this refusal one simply cannot get along, yet at the same time these official occasions designed to receive the refusal are by no means a formality. Time after time one goes there full of expectation and in all seriousness and then one returns, if not exactly strengthened or happy, nevertheless not disappointed or tired. About these things I do not have to ask the opinion of anyone else, I feel them in myself, as everyone does; nor do I have any great desire to find out how these things are connected.

As a matter of fact, there is, so far as my observations go, a certain age group that is not content—these are the young people roughly between seventeen and twenty. Quite young fellows, in fact, who are utterly incapable of foreseeing the consequences of even the least significant, far less a revolutionary, idea. And it is among just them that discontent creeps in.

The citizens who attend the ceremony hope for a refusal, and are happy when it occurs.

The narrator does not seem to care one way or the other about the refusal.

The tax-collector is an older, stoic man with a strong allegiance to the distant capital.

Young people, who don’t fully understand the risk of opposing the capital, are upset about the refusal.

Answer explanation

The narrator says that young fellows between the ages of seventeen and twenty are the most discontent.

Tags

9-10.RL.KID.1 

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Which piece of textual evidence best supports the idea that the younger citizens are more upset than the older citizens about the refusal?

“... yet at the same time these official occasions designed to receive the refusal are by no means a formality.”

“... and in all seriousness and then one returns, if not exactly strengthened or happy, nevertheless not disappointed or tired.”

“About these things I do not have to ask the opinion of anyone else, I feel them in myself, as everyone does; nor do I have any great desire to find out how these things are connected.”

“Quite young fellows, in fact, who are utterly incapable of foreseeing the consequences of even the least significant, far less a revolutionary, idea.”

Answer explanation

This piece of evidence confirms that young people are frustrated by the refusal.

Tags

9-10.RL.KID.1