Exam in English 9
Exam in English 9
Exam in English 9
6. In the first scene with Linda, Willy contradicted himself twice. About what did he contradict
himself?
a. He called Biff lazy, but later describes him as hardworking. Later he contradicts himself about the
windshield of the car.
b. He says Ben made in his money in oil, but later says real estate. He says he remembers his boys'
birthdays, but later admits that he doesn't.
c. First he says he doesn't love Linda. Then he says he never said that. Then he says he had one
accident, although he knows he has had three.
d. He says he wants to retire, then says he wants to work for ten more years. Then he says Happy is his
favorite son, although he later tells Biff he is the favorite.
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English IV -- JMBiddle
8. Why doesn't Happy go west with Biff?
a. He is about to be married, and his wife-to-be won't let him go.
b. He has just applied to graduate school.
c. He wants to show the executives in his company that he can make the grade.
d. He is too insecure to try something that risky
11. Happy says, "I don't know what to do about him [Willy], it's getting embarrassing." What is
he referring to?
a. He is referring to Willy's growing obesity.
b. He is referring to Willy's crude gestures and language.
c. He is referring to Willy's excessive spending.
d. He is referring to Willy's mental lapses into a dream world.
12. What does Happy's thinking tell you about his character?
a. It shows that Happy really loves Willy.
b. It shows that Happy is more concerned about his own welfare than Willy's health.
c. Happy is admitting his ignorance, and acknowledging that he should have studied more in school.
d. Happy prefers his mother to his father.
14. Where did Biff get the football when he was a high school student?
a. Biff had stolen it from school. c. He borrowed it from Happy
b. Biff had received it as a gift from his mother. d. He had stolen it from a kid down the street
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English IV -- JMBiddle
16. Who is The Woman?
a. Linda c. Willy's best client
b. Someone with whom Willy and a brief affair d. Ben's wife
17. What does Willy mean, "I'll make it up to you, Linda, I'll --"? What does Linda think he
means?
a. Willy means that he'll make up for his infidelity; Linda thinks he is talking about his business and
will try to make more money for them.
b. Willy means that he will pay more attention to her when he's home. She is thinking the same thing.
c. Willy means he will make more money, Linda thinks he is talking about spending more time
together.
d. Willy means he'll spend more time with her and the boys. Linda thinks he is talking about his past
indiscretions.
19. Willy says, "The man knew what he wanted and went out and got it! Walked into a jungle,
and comes out, at the age of twenty one, and he’s rich..." about whom it he talking?
a. He is talking about Happy. c. He is talking about Ben.
b. He is talking about himself. d. He is talking about Charley.
22. Charley says, "To hell with it. When a deposit bottle is broken, you don't get your nickel
back." What does he mean?
a. One may invest a lot of time and money into a child, but if the child doesn't turn out well, you won't
get any satisfaction or rewards for your time spent. But, there's no use worrying about it; you just pick
up and go on with your life.
b. He's explaining to a client that he cannot accept returns for broken goods.
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English IV -- JMBiddle
c. If you don't live a good life, you won't have any rewards at the end of your life. In order to get to
heaven, you have to be good on Earth.
d. He is tired of listening to Willy whine about all that has gone wrong in his life, and he's just trying to
cut him off short so he doesn't have to listen to him anymore.
23. Charley and Willy are playing cards. Why does Charley leave?
a. Willy is being rude to him and not making any sense.
b. He has another appointment to go to.
c. He's just tired.
d. Willy and Ben have won all of his money, so he has to quit.
24. How is what Willy's father did for a living different from what Willy does?
a. Willy's father was a teacher. He traveled to teach short courses in different areas.
b. Willy's father made flutes and sold them. Willy sells someone else's product and doesn't have the
pride of craftsmanship that his father did.
c. Willy's father was uneducated, and was never able to advance. Willy has a degree in business,
although he had chosen not to make good use of it.
d. Willy's father was an intellectual and an inventor. He had brilliant ideas but was never able to make a
profit with them. Willy never thought much about ideas; instead, he concentrated on making money.
25. Why does Charley tell Willy "the jails are full of fearless characters"?
a. There has been a series of burglaries in their neighborhood. They have been discussing ways to scare
away the young hoodlums.
b. Charley's son has recently been sentenced to five years in jail for armed robbery. Charley is saving
face, pretending he is not afraid for his son's safety in prison.
c. Willy has just sent his sons across the road to a new construction site to steal more building supplies.
Willy is proud of their fearlessness, but Charley sees a more practical side to it, that what the boys are
doing is wrong.
d. Willy has shared a rather shady business scheme with Charley. Charley doesn't want to participate,
and Willy calls him a coward.
26. Linda says, "Attention, attention must be paid to such a person." What does she mean?
a. Willy deserves our attention, our interest, and caring. Even though he is misguided, he is trying to
muddle through life as well as he can.
b. Biff is having a difficult time, and his parents should help him instead of criticizing.
c. They would all do well to study Ben's methods for success and copy them.
d. She thinks Charley is dangerous, and wants Willy to stop talking to him. She cites several instances
that happened while Willy was away, Willy disagrees with his wife.
27. Linda tells the boys that Willy won't be all right. When the boys ask why he won't, what is
her reply?
a. He is dying of cancer.
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English IV -- JMBiddle
b. A psychiatrist has suggested that he go into a hospital for observation.
c. He is trying to kill himself.
d. She is planning to leave him, and her departure will be very difficult for him.
28. What advice does Willy give Biff on the evening before he goes to see Bill Oliver? Three of the
following sentences repeat some of the advice. Which does not?
a. Wear a business suit. c. Walk in seriously.
b. Ask for fifteen thousand dollars. d. Carry a leather briefcase.
34. "You can't eat the orange and throw the peel away -- a man isn't a piece of fruit!" Why does
Willy say this?
a. He is trying to convince his family he isn't crazy - "a fruitcake."
b. He is telling his family they have to accept him the way he is, and never expect to be rich.
c. He has spent the best years of his life working for the company, and now, in his old age, they are
letting him go since there is no use for him.
d. He finally realizes that he has to accept his own shortcomings as well as his son Biff's.
35. "This is no time for false pride, Willy. . . . You've got two great boys, haven't you?" Now that
Willy really needs the boys, the reality of their worthlessness crushes his idealized version, and
Willy is in a Catch-22, no win situation. Which literary element is being used here?
a. This is a rhetorical question. c. This is figurative language.
b. This is foreshadowing. d. This is irony.
36. Why didn't Willy go with Ben years ago when Ben offered him a job?
a. He wanted to make it on his own.
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English IV -- JMBiddle
b. He had inflated his own business worth to Linda, so that when the opportunity came, Linda didn't see
the need, since Willy was already on such a great career path.
c. They had a disagreement about the terms of the offer. Willy wanted to be partners, but Ben didn't.
Neither would compromise so they cancelled the deal.
d. Linda refused to leave her friends and familiar surroundings.
37. Ben says. "What are you building? Lay your hands on it. Where is it?" What is the point of
this line?
a. Every man must take care of himself.
b. Ben thinks Willy would have been better off as a construction worker.
c. In fact, Willy hasn't done much worthwhile with his life. He is in debt, he is a failure at business, and
his boys appear to be just like him.
d. Ben is trying to provoke Willy just enough to motivate him, but it doesn't work.
39. Willy wants to find out what went wrong with Biff, why he didn't do anything with his life
after the age of seventeen. Who does he ask?
a. He asks Bernard. c. He asks Charley.
b. He asks Linda. d. He asks Happy.
42. Biff says, ". . . I realized what a ridiculous lie my whole life has been." What does he mean?
a. He finally learns that he was adopted, and he is angry that his parents never told him.
b. He realized that he was raised on a false philosophy and that most of the things that happened were
glossed over and made far better than they were.
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English IV -- JMBiddle
c. He realized that he has wasted his life because he never admitted that he was afraid to be successful.
d. He realized that he really did love his father and it was time to admit it.
43. What was the result of Biff's meeting with Bill Oliver?
a. He got part of the money, with a promise of more if he made good.
b. He got brushed aside. He would never get the money and he would have no more meetings with Bill
Oliver.
c. He got all of the money and Bill's full support.
d. Oliver gave him a year to prove his could be responsible; then he would get the money.
45. Willy says, ". . . the woods are burning, boys. Can't you understand? There's a big blaze
going on all around." What does that mean?
a. Willy is having a flashback to a time in his youth when he set the woods in back of his house on fire.
b. Times are changing. He thinks he is on the brink of a wave of good fortune.
c. Willy's world is falling apart. He had lost his job and has no resources. He is getting trapped by the
years of lies he has lived.
d. Willy thinks he is dying, and he is contemplating the afterlife. He is afraid he will be punished for
his life.
46. What does Willy do while Biff is trying to explain the facts of his meeting with Bill Oliver?
a. He shouts curses to drown out Biff's voice. c. He washes and waxes the car.
b. He daydreams of the time Biff flunked math. d. He takes notes so he can refer to them later.
50. What is Biff's opinion of his father now, when he tells it to Miss Forsythe?
a. Biff says he is a "poor, wretched loser." c. Biff says he is a "gentle daydreamer."
b. Biff says he is a "fine, troubled prince." d. Biff says he is a "nasty, selfish braggart."
53. What happened in Boston? What do we finally find out is the problem, the secret between
Willy and Biff?
a. Biff discovered that Willy had embezzled some money. He lost his respect for Willy.
b. They went out drinking together. On the way home, Willy ran over a man and didn't stop to help
him. Biff never forgave him.
c. Biff went to talk to his father and walked in on Willy and the woman with whom he was having an
affair.
d. Biff discovered that Willy is an alcoholic. Willy denied it, and refused to get help.
55. Where does Willy go after he realizes that the boys have left him at the restaurant?
a. He goes to the park for a walk.
b. He buys some carrot seeds for his garden and goes home to plant them.
c. He goes to buy another life insurance policy.
d. He goes to his office to cry.
57. Willy says, "A man can't go out the way he came in, Ben, a man has got to add up to
something." What does he mean?
a. People have to take chances in life.
b. It is better to try a lot of different jobs than to stick to one for a lifetime; he is getting ready to switch
careers.
c. He is pleasant because he raised a family.
d. He feels like he should have contributed something to the world, and he didn't.
59. What does Biff want to tell Willy before he is ready to go?
a. He wants to tell Willy he was really a good father.
b. He wants to tell Willy he has decided to join the Army.
c. He wants to tell Willy that he (Biff) is nothing, that he accepts that now, and that he has no hard
feelings towards Willy.
d. He wants to tell Willy that he and Happy have decided to go into business together so they can take
care of Willy and Linda in their retirement years.
60. Biff says, "Will you take that phony dream and burn it before something happens?" What is
the significance of this line?
a. It shows that Biff is losing his temper; he is about to explode.
b. It foreshadows Willy's death.
c. It separates the dream/illusion motif from the "woods are burning" motif.
d. It is the final rift in the relationship between Biff and Happy.
61. What is Willy's response to Biff's whole scene when Biff ends up crying?
a. He tells Biff to dry up and act like a man.
b. He hugs Linda and asks her where they have gone wrong.
c. He thinks it is remarkable that Biff actually likes him.
d. He feels sorry for Biff, and asks Happy to talk to him.
62. Ben says, "The jungle is dark but full of diamonds, Willy." What does Ben mean?
a. Treasures are hidden. One must work to find them.
b. The jungle represents death; the diamonds are the insurance money.
c. Willy did not have the courage Ben had, which is why he failed.
d. The sales world is a jungle, but there are some good companies. Unfortunately, Willy worked for a
poor company.
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English IV -- JMBiddle
65. Biff realizes that Willy's philosophy was wrong and most of Willy's life was made up of
illusion. What does he say?
a. "He took a wrong turn miles back and never c. "He had all the wrong dreams. All, all
figured it out." wrong."
b. "He was a liar and a cheat. He tried to buy d. "His brother made millions, but he only
our love and he failed." made mistakes."
66. Based on the events of the play and our knowledge of the characters, what will probably
happen to Biff?
a. He will become a productive citizen in the real world.
b. He will become an alcoholic and drink himself to death.
c. He will steal money from Oliver and end up in jail.
d. He will follow in his father's footsteps.
69. Linda says, "We're free and clear." Which of these is not an interpretation of her statement?
a. Biff is free of Willy's influence. c. They are financially free because the
b. They all have free wills. mortgage on the house has been paid.
d. Willy is now free of worldly concerns.
Part 2 – Characters
Directions: Match the character with the description of the character. Mark your answers on your
scantron.
70. Linda A.Willy’s current employer who fires him
71. Willy Loman B. Willy’s protective wife
72. Bernard C.Willy’s very successful brother
73. Howard Wagner D.commits suicide for the insurance money
74. Uncle Ben E.successful lawyer who argues a case in front of the Supreme Court
Directions: Match the character with the description of the character. Mark your answers on your
scantron.
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English IV -- JMBiddle
75. Biff A. Willy’s neighbor who loans him money each week
76. Happy B. Willy’s son who is a dreamer like his father
77. Charley C. One of Willy’s sons had planned to ask this person for a loan.
78. Oliver D. The person that Willy cheats on his wife with in Boston.
79. The Woman E. Willy’s son who does not get along with him.
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English IV -- JMBiddle
Part 3 – Vocabulary
Directions: Below are the sentences in which the vocabulary words appear in the text. Read each
sentence. Use any clues you can find in the sentence combined with your prior knowledge. In the
space provided write what the underlined words mean.
1. BIFF, agonized: I don't know, I just--wanted to take something, I don't know. You gotta help me,
Hap, I'm gonna tell Pop.
4. Listen, kid, I took those balls years ago, now I walk in with his fountain pen? That clinches it, don't
you see? I can't face him like that! I'll try elsewhere.
5. What am I doing in an office, making a contemptuous, begging fool of myself, when all I want is out
there, waiting for me the minute I say I know who I am!
7. Hey, what're you doing up? Linda says nothing but moves toward him implacably. Where's Pop? He
keeps backing to the right, and now Linda is in full view in the doorway . . . .
8. WILLY, furiously: Casino! Incredulously: Don't you realize what today is?
9. She rises ominously and quietly and moves toward Happy, who backs up into the kitchen, afraid
raucous.
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English IV -- JMBiddle
10. I've been remiss. I know that, Mom. But now I'll stay, and I swear to you, I'll apply myself.
11. He's heading for a change. There's no question there simply are certain men that take longer to get--
solidified.
12. LINDA, her voice subdued: What'd you have to start that for?
13. In all he says, despite what he says, there is pity, and, now, trepidation.
1. What are the main conflicts in the play, and how is each resolved? (list and explain at least two)
2. What is the setting of the play? Why is it important? What does it add to the story?
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English IV -- JMBiddle
6. How would the story and its effect have changed if Willy hadn't died? Why did Arthur
Miller "kill off" Willy?
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English IV -- JMBiddle
8. Define "success” in your own words. According to your definition, was Willy successful? Explain
why or why not.
10. Illusion versus reality is a major theme in the play. Most people, like Willy, try to make themselves
appear in the best possible way to their families and friends. Why?
11. Do you ever feel "boxed in" like Willy does? Explain.
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English IV -- JMBiddle
MC Answers
1. A 37. B
2. C 38. C
3. B 39. D
4. D 40. A
5. B 41. C
6. A 42. A
7. D 43. B
8. C 44. B
9. A 45. A
10. B 46. C
11. D 47. B
12. B 48. B
13. C 49. A
14. A 50. C
15. D 51. B
16. B 52. D
17. A 53. A
18. A 54. C
19. B 55. D
20. C 56. B
21. A 57. C
22. B 58. D
23. A 59. A
24. A 60. C
25. B 61. B
26. C 62. C
27. A 63. B
28. C 64. A
29. D 65. D
30. A 66. C
31. C 67. A
32. B 68. C
33. D 69. B
34. A
35. C
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