A | B |
Who kills Macbeth | MacDuff |
Whom does Lady Macbeth frame for the murder of Duncan? | Duncan's drunken chamberlains |
Who kills Banquo? | a group of murderers hired by Macbeth |
Which of the following best describes Lady Macbeth's death? | she dies offstage |
Who discovers Duncan's body? | Macduff |
Whom does Macbeth see sitting in his chair during the banquet? | Banquo’s ghost |
What vision does Macbeth have before he kills Duncan? | He sees a floating dagger pointing him to Duncan’s chamber |
With whom are the Scots at war at the beginning of the play? | Norway |
Which nation’s army invades Scotland at the end of the play? | England |
Who is the goddess of witchcraft in the play? | Hecate |
Who kills Donalbain? | No one |
What happens to Lady Macbeth before she dies? | She is plagued by fits of sleepwalking |
Who kills Lord Siward’s son? | Macbeth |
ACT 4-5 Where are Scottish kings crowned? | Scone |
ACT 4-5 Why is Macduff able to kill Macbeth despite the witches’ prophecy? | He was born by cesarean section |
ACT 4-5 Where is Duncan killed? | In his bedchamber at Macbeth’s castle |
ACT 4-5 Who flees Scotland to join Malcolm in England? | Macduff |
ACT 4-5 What was the weather like the night Duncan was murdered? | Stormy and violent |
ACT 4-5 Who kills Lady Macbeth? | Lady Macbeth |
ACT 4-5 Who flees Scotland immediately after Duncan’s death? | Malcolm and Donalbain |
ACT 4-5 Who jokes that he works at “hell gate”? | The porter |
ACT 4-5 What title is Macbeth given after his victory described in Act I? | Thane of Cawdor |
ACT 4-5 Who tells Macduff that his family has been killed? | Ross |
ACT 4-5 How does Birnam Wood come to Dunsinane? | Malcolm’s army hides behind cut-off tree branches |
ACT 4-5 Who said the following: "Come you spirits that tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here" | Lady Macbeth |
ACT 4-5 Who said the following: "Glamis hath murdered sleep . . . Macbeth will sleep no more." | Macbeth |
ACT 4-5 In Scene 1, the witches are | stirring foul ingrediants into a cauldron |
ACT 4-5 Macbeth responds to the first three apparitions with | enthusiasm |
ACT 4-5 When Macbeth is presented with the line of kins he becomes | angry |
Macbeth's visit to the witches reveals | his willingness to profit from their witchcraft at any cost |
When Macbeth orders the murder of Macduff family, the reader realizes that | Macbeth is now committing murders he doesn't need |
Why does Malcolm list the vices that make him unworthy of being king, in his dialogue with Macduff? | He wants to test Macduff's integrity and loyalty to the throne |
Malcolm achieves his purpose when Macduff | rebukes him |
Whne Malcolm tells him not to grieve for his family, Macduff | says that he must feel his grief if he is a man |
In what meter is the following quotation written? "Double, double, toil and trouble/Fire burn and cauldron bubble"? | trochaic tetrameter |
In what meter is the following quotation written? "I'll charm the air to give a sound/While you perform your antic round,/That this great king may kindly say/OUr duties did his welcome pay"? | iambic tetramether |
When Lady Macbeth is sleepwalking, she carries | a candle |
When Lady Macbeth's doctor sees her sleepwalking, he | is saddened to learn the truth of Duncan's murder |
In Scene 2, the reader learns that | Macbeth's nobles obey him from fear, not respect |
The final confrontation between Macbeth and Macduff reveals that | Macduff was not born of worman |
Themental state of Lady Macbeth in the sleepwalking scene can best be decribed as | guilt ridden |
Waht seems to bother Lady Macbeth the most is that | she cannot get rid of the blood from her hands or its smell |
Macbeth no longer fears death because | the witches have told him to fear no man born of woman |
When Malcolm orders his soldiers to chop boughs from Birnam Wood to carry before themselves, | Macbeth begins to feel he might win the battle |
What does Macbeth reveal in his famous soliloquy beginning, "Tomorrow, tomorrow, tomorrow. . ." | He sense of the wastefullness of life |
Macbeth's death is part of the | falling action |