| A | B |
| Melancholy Dane | Hamlet |
| Foolish woman, few morals | Queen Gertrude |
| Foil character, wins the throne in the end | Fortinbras |
| Drowns herself since she is distraught | Ophelia |
| Brother who dies by his own poison-tipped sword | Laertes |
| Killed after watching his wife die from his own poison drink | King Claudius |
| Friends who betrayed Hamlet | Rosencrantz and Guildenstern |
| Hamlet's one loyal friend | Horatio |
| Character who had his throne robbed by his brother | King Hamlet |
| Who said, "The lady doth protest too much, me thinks." | Queen Gertrude |
| Who said, "Frailty, thy name is woman!" | Hamlet |
| Who said, This above all: to thine own self be true." | Polonius |
| Who said, "Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.: | Marcellus |
| Who said, "My lord, I think I saw your father last night." | Horatio |
| Who said, "Know this, noble youth: the serpent that stung your father's life away now wears his crown." | King Hamlet |
| Who said, "My lord, I have keepsakes of yours I have wanted to return to you for a long time." | Ophelia |
| Who said, "Captain, go greet the Danish king on my behalf. Tell him that as agreed I request safe conduct of my army through his kingdom." | Fortinbras |
| Who said, "It is here, Hamlet. ...The treacherous instrument is in thy hand, unbated and envenomed. The foul practice that turned itself on me. The king's to blame." | Laertes |
| What type of play is Hamlet? | Revenge and tragedy |
| What do Hamlet and Laertes do in Act V? | Die, beg each other for forgiveness and get proof that King Claudius is a snake! |