Novel from Boys Life

Quiz
•
English
•
6th Grade
•
Hard
Margaret Anderson
FREE Resource
6 questions
Show all answers
1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
5 mins • 1 pt
Part A Read the sentence from paragraph 31 in the passage from Boy’s Life.
I ran out along the corridor, my arms unencumbered by books, my mind unencumbered by facts and figures, quotations and dates.
What does the word unencumbered mean as it is used in the sentence?
not burdened
not excited
not hurried
not aged
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
5 mins • 1 pt
Part A Read the sentence from paragraph 31 in the passage from Boy’s Life.
I ran out along the corridor, my arms unencumbered by books, my mind unencumbered by facts and figures, quotations and dates.
What does the word unencumbered mean as it is used in the sentence?
Part B
Which sentence from the passage best supports the answer to Part A?
"Have a good summer," Mrs. Neville said, and I realized suddenly that I was free."
"Before I got out, though, I look ed back at Mrs. Neville."
"Mrs. Neville suddenly looked awfully old."
"Have a good summer, Mrs. Neville!' I told her from the doorway."
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
5 mins • 1 pt
Part A Read the sentence from paragraph 5 in the passage from Boy’s Life.
"The world was out there, waiting beyond the square metal-rimmed windows."
How does the sentence help develop the plot of the passage?
It presents the climax
It represents the conflict.
it indicates how the action changes.
It establishes how the speaker learns a lesson
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
5 mins • 1 pt
Part A Read the sentence from paragraph 5 in the passage from Boy’s Life.
"The world was out there, waiting beyond the square metal-rimmed windows."
How does the sentence help develop the plot of the passage?
Part B
Which detail from the passage best supports the answer to Part A?
"The sun had grown steadily hotter..."
"...the baseball field had been mowed."
"...and how much we'd learned..."
"...sat with one eye fixed to the clock."
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
5 mins • 1 pt
Part A
In the passage from Boy’s Life, how does the narrator’s attitude toward Mrs. Neville gradually change?
from confused to angry
from worried to comforted
from pitying to discouraged
from impatient to understanding
6.
MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION
5 mins • 1 pt
Part A
In the passage from Boy’s Life, how does the narrator’s attitude toward Mrs. Neville gradually change?
Part B
Which two sentences from the passage best support the gradual change in the answer to Part A?
"In spite of what the calendar says, I have always counted the last day of school as the first day of summer."
"From the hallway we heard a stirring and rustling followed by laughter and shouts of pure, bubbling joy."
"My insides quaked at the injustice of it."
"She wanted to hold us as long as she possibly could, not out of sheer teacher spite but maybe because she didn't have anyone to come home to, and summer alone is not summer at all."
"Having your teacher talk to you like a regular person is disconcerting feeling."
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