ovid tests
TRANSCRIPT
Review Test Submission: Event 19D Ovid Poems 4.10 and 1.3"Tristia"
Question 12 out of 2 points
Poem 4.10 lines 93-99 OLR pp 196-197--Ovid was, the the time of his "offense" toward the emperor, an/a _________ man.Answer
Selected Answer:
aging
Question 22 out of 2 points
Poem 4 line 58 partially explains Ovid's exile as a "laesi principis." Translate.
Answer
Selected Answer:
offensed the emperor
Question 32 out of 2 points
Poem 4 line 57 says Ovid was exiled to ____________.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tomitas
Question 42 out of 2 points
Poem 1.3 lines 1-12 --Ovid's last night in Rome before his exile to the Black Sea area says "gutta meis." Translate.
Answer
Selected Answer:
tears fell
Question 5
2 out of 2 points
Ovid says he was "stupui." Translate.
Answer
Selected Answer:
dumbfounded (dazed)
Question 62 out of 2 points
Poem 1.3 lines 13-22 -Ovid bids farewell to his friends and wife but who seems to be in the most agony over the exile?
Answer
Selected Answer:
uxor acrius
Question 70 out of 2 points
According to the poem, it seemed like Ovid's departure was much like a ____________.
Answer
Selected Answer:
sad funeral
Question 82 out of 2 points
According to the poem, Ovid's wife says Caesar's anger drives Ovid from Rome but what makes the wife want to go with her husband into exile?
Answer
Selected Answer:
loyalty (devotion to duty)
Question 92 out of 2 points
Poem 1.3 lines 70-89 -Ovid 's wife wishes to follow him into exile but she finally decides to do what?
Answer
Selected Answer:
stay at home in Rome and work for Ovid's recall
Question 102 out of 2 points
Translate "pietas" as used twice in this poem line 86.
Answer
Selected Answer:
devotion
Review Test Submission: Event 20 Ovid Poem 1 "Ars Amatoria"
Question 12 out of 2 points
The "Ars Amatoria" was actually a what?
Answer
Selected Answer:
manual on the technique of seduction
Question 20 out of 2 points
This book of poems called "Ars Amatoria" consists of HOW MANY "MAIN" books (chapter content)? See website.
Answer
Selected
Answer:
18-20
Response Feedback:
There are about 57 sub-chapters within the "Main" chapters.
Question 32 out of 2 points
Which book of poems was probably the "mistake" that caused Ovid to be exiled from Rome for the rest of his life?
Answer
Selected Answer:
Ars Amatoria
Question 42 out of 2 points
Where is the first place that Ovid suggests looking for a "girlfriend?"
Answer
Selected Answer:
theater
Question 52 out of 2 points
Translate "spectatum veniunt, veniunt spectentur ut ipsae; ille locus casti damn a pudoris habet."
Answer
Selected Answer:
"To see and be seen in heaps they run, some to undo some to be undone."
Question 62 out of 2 points
"Ars Amatoria" 1.101-110 Oxford Latin Reader pp 204-205 and website: Who started all this "frisky" business according to Ovid?
Answer
Selected Answer:
Romulus with the rape of the Sabine women
Question 72 out of 2 points
"Ars Amatoria" 1.121-132 OLR pp 204-205 --websiteThe women were completely accepting of the Roman mens' sexual aggression.Answer
Selected Answer:
Fals
e
Question 82 out of 2 points
There seemed to be no laws of protection for women during the time in Rome's history that Ovid is referring to in Poem 1 lines 101-110.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tru
e
Question 92 out of 2 points
Many of the Sabine women shed tears during the attack.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tru
e
Question 102 out of 2 points
Some of the Roman men told the Sabine women during the attack that they (the men) would be "as your father (is) to your mother (i.e. loved).
Answer
Selected Tru
Answer: e
Review Test Submission: Event 20A Ovid 3.2.1-8 "Amores"
Question 12 out of 2 points
Amores 3.2 -says "tecumque sederem" translate into English.
Answer
Selected Answer:
sit anywhere you want
Question 22 out of 2 points
We know that Ovid favored elegiac couplets. Elegiac couplet's first line is a hexameter, how many feet (Latin name) are in the second (indented) line of the elegiac couplet?
Answer
Selected Answer:
pentameter
Question 32 out of 2 points
Ovid is very interested in horse racing.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Fals
e
Question 42 out of 2 points
Ovid says the best way to meet a girl at the Circus Maximus (races) is to "use friendly conversation."
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tru
e
Question 52 out of 2 points
The first line of an elegiac couplet allows the substitution of spondees in any of the first four feet. The second line (indented) permits substitution of spondees only in the first two feet.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tru
e
Review Test Submission: Event 20B Ovid 8 "Metamorphoses"
Question 12 out of 2 points
Define "metamorphoses."
Answer
Selected Answer:
shape shifting
Question 22 out of 2 points
This poem "Metamorphoses" is Ovid's __________ poem.
Answer
Selected
Answer: longest
Question 32 out of 2 points
This Poem 8 is one of how many "Metamorphoses" poems?
Answer
Selected Answer:
15
Question 42 out of 2 points
Poem 8 is narrated by a man named what?
Answer
Selected Answer:
Lelex
Question 52 out of 2 points
What shape did the main characters in Poem 8 lines 613-639 become?
Answer
Selected Answer:
tree
Question 61 out of 1 points
What was Jupiter (Jove) doing in this section of Poem 8?
Answer
Selected
Answer: wearing a mortal guise
Question 71 out of 1 points
What poetic figure of speech occurs in " mille domos adiere locum requiemque petentes?" "For at the harbor, a thousand doors they (Jupiter and Atlas) knocked"
Answer
Selected Answer:
zeugma
Question 81 out of 1 points
What trait do Baucis and Philemon possess (that all the others in the neighborhood did not)?
Answer
Selected Answer:
the are content to be poor
Question 91 out of 1 points
What does Ovid reveal about the couple's marriage in "dominos illic famulosne requiras; toto domus duo sunt, idem parentque iubentque?"
Answer
Selected Answer:
they are equal partners
Question 101 out of 1 points
What is the correct SCANSION of "tota domus duo sunt?"
Answer
Selected Answer:
dactyl-dactyl-spondee-spondee
Question 111 out of 1 points
What is the point of the figure of speech called anaphora used in "mille domos adiere locum requiemque petentes, mille domos clausere sera, tamen una recepit?"
Answer
Selected Answer:
it indicates that the same treatment awaited them everywhere
Question 121 out of 1 points
The use of the figure of speech metonymy is seen in the use of the word "penates" in the poem. What does "penates" mean in this poem?
Answer
Selected Answer:
the home
Question 131 out of 1 points
What happens at the end of this short section of Poem 8?
Answer
Selected Answer:
the gods rest with Baucis and Philemon
Question 141 out of 1 points
Translate the word "consenuere" from Poem 8.
Answer
Selected Answer:
gown old
Question 151 out of 1 points
Translate the word "caelicolae" from Poem 8.
Answer
Selected Answer:
heaven dweller
Review Test Submission: Event 20C Ovid 3.9 "Amores" Elegy
Question 12 out of 2 points
What is an "elegy?"
Answer
Selected Answer:
mourning poem
Question 22 out of 2 points
Who has died in this poem?
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tibullus
Question 32 out of 2 points
Translate the Greek "e legei" referring to lines 95-96 of Poem 3.9.
Answer
Selected Answer:
he cries woe
Question 42 out of 2 points
Use of the word "confide" in Poem 3.9 line 103 is ___________.
Answer
Selected Answer:
ironic
Question 52 out of 2 points
The requiem (conclusion) of Poem 3.9 calls the spirit (soul) of the deceased person a/an _______________.
Answer
Selected Answer:
umbra
Review Test Submission: Event 20D Ovid 1.5 Corinna "Amores"
Question 11 out of 1 points
What time of year is the setting or mood of Poem 1.5?
Answer
Selected Answer:
summer
Question 21 out of 1 points
Where was Ovid resting during his "siesta?"
Answer
Selected Answer:
bed
Question 31 out of 1 points
What was Corinna wearing when she enters the room?
Answer
Selected Answer:
long tunic
Question 41 out of 1 points
Translate "pugnabat tunica sed tamen ille tegi."
Answer
Selected Answer:
She struggled to be covered (modesty).
Question 51 out of 1 points
Ovid declares,"proveniant medii sic mihi saepe dies!" Translate. (Hint: verb is subjunctive)
Answer
Selected Answer:
I wish the gods send me more such afernoons as this!
Question 61 out of 1 points
Corinna had no "menda" on her body that Ovid could see.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tru
e
Question 71 out of 1 points
This Poem 1.5 could best be described as _____________.
Answer
Selected Answer:
hedonistic
Question 80 out of 1 points
"Singula quid referam" refers to Corrina's __________.
Answer
Selected Answer:
beauty
Response Feedback:
"Why should I mention each (of her charms) individually?"No mention in the poem that she was intelligent/witty/beautiful......just that she had certain things that attracted him--sexual charms---like wearing a gown that was see-through! He did not care about her intelligence, wit, or even her beauty--he was attracted to her "charms" he could see through her sheer gown.
Question 91 out of 1 points
Poem 1.5 is very boring.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Fals
e
Question 101 out of 1 points
Corinna was simply a "puritanical" girl in a "wild" world.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Fals
e
Review Test Submission: Event 20E - Unit 4 Test-- Ovid Question 1
2 out of 2 points
Ovid's full name is Publius Ovidius Naso
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tru
e
Question 22 out of 2 points
Ovid was exiled to the Caspian Sea.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Fals
e
Question 32 out of 2 points
Ovid was exiled by the emperor Tiberius.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Fals
e
Question 42 out of 2 points
Ovid was one of the last of the Augustan (Golden Age) poets.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tru
e
Question 52 out of 2 points
Ovid's dates are 43 bc - 17 ad.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tru
e
Question 62 out of 2 points
The Emperor Augustus loved Ovid's love poetry.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Fals
e
Question 7
2 out of 2 points
The emperor's daughter Clodia was also exiled for following Ovid.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Fals
e
Question 82 out of 2 points
Ovid's Metamorphoses was about farming.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Fals
e
Question 92 out of 2 points
Ovid didn't mind exile since he loved the weather at Tomi.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Fals
e
Question 102 out of 2 points
Ovid died in exile; he was never forgiven by the emperor.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tru
e
Question 110 out of 2 points
Ovid's poetry was not as serious and profound as Catullus'.
Answer
Selected Fals
e
Answer:
Question 122 out of 2 points
Ovid had one brother and was a member of the equestrian class.
Answer
Selected Answer:
Tru
e