This GCSE English Literature quiz will test you on language in The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare. The Merchant of Venice contains a mixture of poetry and prose. Its language is charged with the wealth of Venice, the flowery imagery of courtly love, the ugliness of social exclusion, and the brutality hidden beneath financial transactions.
The language choices in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice tell us how characters regard one another, how they are feeling and why they choose to follow a particular course of action. The themes of the play are evident not only through the plot and actions of characters, but often more subtly through the slow build-up of related language. It can be a useful revision technique to collect examples of vocabulary related to each of the themes of the play. Consider which character uses each of these collected examples and what the implications might be.
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Analysing language in a text
While performance, including an actor’s pace, tone and gesture, affects the audience’s understanding and interpretation of a play, language is the foundation and substance through which its meaning is conveyed. Like other texts, plays depend on the very words with which they are written.
Authors choose the language that they use with precision. Lying beyond the literal meaning of each word is a weight of symbolic meaning and other associations. The use of imagery, such as metaphor, simile and personification, adds shades and layers of meaning, sometimes subtly and at other times, not so subtly.
Paying close attention to language choices in a text is always worthwhile; deeper understanding will be the reward for your effort. Look beyond the surface meaning. Take time to consider what else is going on besides the obvious. Analyse the language that the author has put such care into choosing. This practice will help you to decipher the text’s deeper meanings.
Answer the questions below to develop your understanding of the way language choices affect our interpretation of The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare.
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1.
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At the beginning of the play, when Antonio tells Salerio of his sadness, Salerio assumes that he is worried about his ships, saying, "Your mind is tossing on the ocean". What makes this an effective phrase? |
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[ ] |
The phrase is effective because Salerio's view turns out to be incorrect |
[ ] |
The use of imagery makes the phrase effective |
[ ] |
The phrase is effective because it uses a metaphor |
[ ] |
The metaphor emphasises how thoroughly Antonio's mind is present with his ships, at least in Salerio's view |
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|
2.
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BASSANIO: Or is your gold and silver ewes and rams?
SHYLOCK: I cannot tell. I make it breed as fast.
What is significant about Shylock's use of the word "breed"? |
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[ ] |
Ewes and rams breed |
[ ] |
Gold and silver cannot reproduce themselves |
[ ] |
Breed is an archaic word |
[ ] |
All of the above |
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3.
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ANTONIO: ...for when did friendship take / A breed for barren metal of his friend?
What is the significance of the word "barren"? |
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[ ] |
Antonio reiterates the point that money cannot create more money |
[ ] |
The use of the word "barren" hints that Shylock has no friends |
[ ] |
Antonio believes that money is as valuable as life |
[ ] |
All of the above |
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4.
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Speaking of the men who hope to marry her, Portia says, "For there is not one among them but I dote on his very absence; and I pray God grant them a fair departure." What does she mean by this? |
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[ ] |
She loves them each dearly |
[ ] |
She hopes they go away quickly |
[ ] |
She is worried they will not have safe journeys home |
[ ] |
She wishes they would hurry up and choose one of the caskets |
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5.
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"For aught I see, they are as sick that surfeit with too much as they that starve with nothing." What does Nerissa mean by this? |
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[ ] |
Those who are rich are in danger of starvation |
[ ] |
It can be just as bad for people to be too rich as to be too poor |
[ ] |
Those who are poor are in reality much better off than those who are rich |
[ ] |
It is better to starve than to overeat |
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6.
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"My ships have all miscarried." What does "miscarried" mean here? |
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[ ] |
The ship has failed in its purpose |
[ ] |
The ship has lost the cargo it was carrying |
[ ] |
The ship was intended to reproduce and now cannot |
[ ] |
All of the above |
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7.
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Which one of the following statements does not logically follow the others? |
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[ ] |
"If you prick us do we not bleed?" |
[ ] |
"If you wrong us shall we not revenge?" |
[ ] |
"If you tickle us do we not laugh?" |
[ ] |
"If you poison us do we not die?" |
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8.
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Which of the following phrases implies that a person can be a possession? |
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[ ] |
"The gentleman that lately stole his daughter" |
[ ] |
"The offender's life lies in the mercy / Of the Duke" |
[ ] |
"I am married to a wife / Which is as dear to me as life itself" |
[ ] |
"Repent but you that you shall lose your friend" |
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9.
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"Here in her hairs / The painter plays the spider, and hath woven / A golden mesh t'untrap the hearts of men." What does Bassanio mean in these lines? |
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[ ] |
The portrait painter has not painted Portia very beautifully |
[ ] |
The portrait painter resembled a spider |
[ ] |
Portia's hair in her portrait is like a spiderweb, meant to catch unwary men |
[ ] |
Portia is wearing a golden mesh on her head |
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10.
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I should think of shallows and of flats,
And see my wealthy Andrew, decks in sand,
Vailing her hightop lower than her ribs
To kiss her burial.
How does Salerio speak of his ship in these lines? |
|
[ ] |
As if it were indestructible |
[ ] |
As if it were alive |
[ ] |
As if it were supernatural |
[ ] |
All of the above |
|
|
1.
|
At the beginning of the play, when Antonio tells Salerio of his sadness, Salerio assumes that he is worried about his ships, saying, "Your mind is tossing on the ocean". What makes this an effective phrase? |
|
[ ] |
The phrase is effective because Salerio's view turns out to be incorrect |
[ ] |
The use of imagery makes the phrase effective |
[ ] |
The phrase is effective because it uses a metaphor |
[x] |
The metaphor emphasises how thoroughly Antonio's mind is present with his ships, at least in Salerio's view |
|
|
2.
|
BASSANIO: Or is your gold and silver ewes and rams?
SHYLOCK: I cannot tell. I make it breed as fast.
What is significant about Shylock's use of the word "breed"? |
|
[ ] |
Ewes and rams breed |
[x] |
Gold and silver cannot reproduce themselves |
[ ] |
Breed is an archaic word |
[ ] |
All of the above |
|
|
3.
|
ANTONIO: ...for when did friendship take / A breed for barren metal of his friend?
What is the significance of the word "barren"? |
|
[ ] |
Antonio reiterates the point that money cannot create more money |
[ ] |
The use of the word "barren" hints that Shylock has no friends |
[ ] |
Antonio believes that money is as valuable as life |
[x] |
All of the above |
|
|
4.
|
Speaking of the men who hope to marry her, Portia says, "For there is not one among them but I dote on his very absence; and I pray God grant them a fair departure." What does she mean by this? |
|
[ ] |
She loves them each dearly |
[x] |
She hopes they go away quickly |
[ ] |
She is worried they will not have safe journeys home |
[ ] |
She wishes they would hurry up and choose one of the caskets |
|
|
5.
|
"For aught I see, they are as sick that surfeit with too much as they that starve with nothing." What does Nerissa mean by this? |
|
[ ] |
Those who are rich are in danger of starvation |
[x] |
It can be just as bad for people to be too rich as to be too poor |
[ ] |
Those who are poor are in reality much better off than those who are rich |
[ ] |
It is better to starve than to overeat |
|
|
6.
|
"My ships have all miscarried." What does "miscarried" mean here? |
|
[ ] |
The ship has failed in its purpose |
[ ] |
The ship has lost the cargo it was carrying |
[ ] |
The ship was intended to reproduce and now cannot |
[x] |
All of the above |
|
|
7.
|
Which one of the following statements does not logically follow the others? |
|
[ ] |
"If you prick us do we not bleed?" |
[x] |
"If you wrong us shall we not revenge?" |
[ ] |
"If you tickle us do we not laugh?" |
[ ] |
"If you poison us do we not die?" |
|
|
8.
|
Which of the following phrases implies that a person can be a possession? |
|
[x] |
"The gentleman that lately stole his daughter" |
[ ] |
"The offender's life lies in the mercy / Of the Duke" |
[ ] |
"I am married to a wife / Which is as dear to me as life itself" |
[ ] |
"Repent but you that you shall lose your friend" |
|
|
9.
|
"Here in her hairs / The painter plays the spider, and hath woven / A golden mesh t'untrap the hearts of men." What does Bassanio mean in these lines? |
|
[ ] |
The portrait painter has not painted Portia very beautifully |
[ ] |
The portrait painter resembled a spider |
[x] |
Portia's hair in her portrait is like a spiderweb, meant to catch unwary men |
[ ] |
Portia is wearing a golden mesh on her head |
|
|
10.
|
I should think of shallows and of flats,
And see my wealthy Andrew, decks in sand,
Vailing her hightop lower than her ribs
To kiss her burial.
How does Salerio speak of his ship in these lines? |
|
[ ] |
As if it were indestructible |
[x] |
As if it were alive |
[ ] |
As if it were supernatural |
[ ] |
All of the above |
|
|