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200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 Characters Plot Quotations Terms Themes

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Characters. Plot. Quotations. Terms. Themes. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 300. 300. 300. 300. 300. 400. 400. 400. 400. 400. 500. 500. 500. 500. 500. “In love” with Cesario . Who is Olivia?. Fool and wiseman . Who is Feste ?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Characters Plot Quotations Terms Themes

Page 2: 200

“In love” with Cesario.

Page 3: 200

Who is Olivia?

Page 4: 200

Fool and wiseman.

Page 5: 200

Who is Feste?

Page 6: 200

Believes men are fickle in love.

Page 7: 200

Who is Duke Orsino?

Page 8: 200

Puritan.

Page 9: 200

Who is Malvolio?

Page 10: 200

“Eunuch.”

Page 11: 200

Who is Cesario?

Page 12: 200

The trigger incident.

Page 13: 200

What is the shipwreck?

Page 14: 200

Olivia swears that no one will see her face for 7 years for this reason.

Page 15: 200

What is, she is in mourning for her brother?

Page 16: 200

Maria forges a letter from Olivia for this reason.

Page 17: 200

What is, to get revenge on Malvolio for his unfair treatment of her?

Page 18: 200

Antonio is an enemy of Orsino for this reason.

Page 19: 200

What is piracy?

Page 20: 200

The four things the letter tells Malvolio to do to show his love.

Page 21: 200

What is, wear yellow stockings, cross-gartered, smile all the time, and be rude to the other servants ?

Page 22: 200

The context and speaker of the following quotation: “Some are

born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon

them.”

Page 23: 200

Who is Malvolio when he is reading the letter from “Olivia” suggesting

that she “loves” him??

Page 24: 200

The literary devices used in the following quotation: “She never

told her love,/But let concealment, like a worm i’ th’

bud,/Feed on her damask cheek.”

Page 25: 200

What is simile and dramatic irony?

Page 26: 200

The context and the speaker of the following quotation: “If

music be the food of love, play on.”

Page 27: 200

Who is Orsino when he is pining over the Lady Olivia at the

beginning of the play?

Page 28: 200

The character who says, “O Time, thou must untangle this,

not I./ It is too hard a knot for me to untie

Page 29: 200

Who is Viola?

Page 30: 200

Speaker and context of “Out hyperbolic fiend.”

Page 31: 200

Who is “Sir Topas” when he is talking to Malvolio in his dark cell implying that he is mad?

Page 32: 200

The literary device used to create humour using double entendre.

Page 33: 200

What is “pun”?

Page 34: 200

The theatrical convention where a character on stage speaks his

thoughts to another character, or the audience, and other characters do not hear.

Page 35: 200

What is an aside?

Page 36: 200

Theatrical convention where the character shares his thoughts

with the audience alone on stage.

Page 37: 200

What is soliloquy?

Page 38: 200

The term used to describe the audience knowing something the

character does not.

Page 39: 200

What is dramatic irony?

Page 40: 200

The many references to Greek mythology in the play are examples of this device.

Page 41: 200

What is allusion?

Page 42: 200

Theme revealed through Orsino’s and Malvolio’s love for Olivia.

Page 43: 200

What is, love makes people do foolish things, or love is blind?

Page 44: 200

Theme revealed by the dramatic irony created by love triangle

(Orsino-Viola/Cesario-Olivia).

Page 45: 200

What is gender identity or appearances can be deceiving?

Page 46: 200

Theme revealed in Malvolio’s final speech.

Page 47: 200

What is practical jokes can go too far?

Page 48: 200

Theme revealed by Orsino’s developing love for Viola.

Page 49: 200

What is true love sees the soul of the beloved?

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The theme revealed in the relationships between servants

and their masters.

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What is servants sometimes have more wit and intelligence than

their masters despite their hierarchical position within the

Great Chain of Being,