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Test your basic knowledge |
Classical Literacy
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
literacy
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Goddess of love
Aphrodite/Venus
sedentary
et al./ et alii
Tiber
2. A state of disorganized matter from which the gods and the world were created
mores
fasces
post mortem
Chaos
3. Was chosen by Zeus to settle the argument of Who was the fairest of the goddesses; he chose Aphrodite because she promised him the most beautiful woman in the world if he chose her
A.D./anno Domini
Cronus/Saturn
errare humanum est
Paris
4. Good-humored & jolly (ancient astrologers thought that the planet Jupiter fostered cheerfulness)
Circus Maximus
Charon
Punic Wars
jovial
5. A polis (city-state) in Greece & center of art and philosophy & named after Athena (its patron goddess); the Acropolis was the hill in Athens where many temples (including the Parthenon & the temple to Athena) were located
Nike/Victoria
Pax Romana
finis
Athens/Acropolis
6. A polis (city-state) in Greece & center of art and philosophy & named after Athena (its patron goddess); the Acropolis was the hill in Athens where many temples (including the Parthenon & the temple to Athena) were located
Golden Fleece
marathon
cornucopia
Athens/Acropolis
7. The technical biological term for the human species
8. Goddess of love
status quo
Jove
toga
Aphrodite/Venus
9. 'Thus always & to tyrants.' Allegedly said by Brutus during the assassination of Caesar. John Wilkes Booth also shouted it after shooting President Lincoln. It is now the motto of Virginia.
sedentary
sic semper tyrannis
Pegasus
carpe diem
10. 'The things that must be done' - a to-do list
agenda
semper fidelis
via
Trojan Horse
11. 'one out of many' - found on most US minted coins and the back of the dollar bill
e.g./exempli gratia
e pluribus unum
papyrus
rostra
12. God of the Underworld/Tartarus
Hades/Pluto
Daedalus
Mt. Olympus
Ge/Gaea
13. A large horse and chariot racing track in Rome
magnanimous
Apollo/Apollo
Hades/Pluto
Circus Maximus
14. 'The end'
ex libris
finis
Dionysus/Bacchus
Icarus & Daedalus
15. 'A rare bird' - something unique/rare
verbatim
satyr
rara avis
sine qua non
16. 'under penalty' a written order for a person to come testify in court
sub poena
Icarus & Daedalus
in toto
Hades/Pluto
17. 'horn of plenty' a symbol of food and abundance
cornucopia
P.M./post meridiem
Ares/Mars
Pax Romana
18. A material prepared in ancient Egypt from the pithy stem of a water plant & used in sheets throughout the ancient Mediterranean world for writing or painting on
Theseus
Eros/Cupid
Palatine Hill
papyrus
19. The three goddesses who determine a person's life: when he will be born & how long he will live & and when he will die; one sister spins the thread of life & the second measures out a certain length & and the third cuts it at the end of the person's
Pan
P.M./post meridiem
the Fates
Aegean Sea
20. 'under penalty' a written order for a person to come testify in court
ex libris
sub poena
patrician
semper paratus
21. The Underworld; in early mythology & everyone went to Tartarus after they died; in later mythology & only bad people went to Tartarus after they died
Tartarus
Parthenon
sedentary
Pegasus
22. God of war
Tantalus
Ares/Mars
sub poena
the Odyssey
23. King of Troy during the Trojan War; father of Hector and Paris; begged Achilles to give his son Hector's body back to be properly buried (Achilles had been dragging it around the city)
V (Roman numeral)
Hannibal
p.o./ per os
Priam
24. A serpent-like monster with many heads and poisonous breath; when one head got cut off & it grew two more; killed by Hercules as his second labor
valedictorian
i.e./id est
labor vincit omnia
Hydra
25. The three goddesses who determine a person's life: when he will be born & how long he will live & and when he will die; one sister spins the thread of life & the second measures out a certain length & and the third cuts it at the end of the person's
veni & vidi & vici
terra firma
sine qua non
the Fates
26. The three-headed dog that guarded the gates of the Underworld
Cerberus
Priam
persona non grata
Delphic Oracle
27. 'per day'
sub rosa
Demeter/Ceres
per diem
Theseus
28. The technical biological term for the human species
29. The male head of a Roman family
Daedalus
Pompeii
paterfamilias
cave canem
30. Titan who had to hold up the heavens on his shoulders as punishment for rebelling against Zeus
Hephaestus/Vulcan
Delphic Oracle
Atlas
Uranus
31. 'one out of many' - found on most US minted coins and the back of the dollar bill
Zeus/Jupiter
e pluribus unum
Ithaca
consul
32. Lived in the Labyrinth; fed off of Athenian youths; killed by Theseus
Tantalus
Minotaur
Tartarus
C (Roman numeral)
33. 'great-souled & high-minded'
consul
terra firma
magnanimous
Troy
34. The food of the gods; some believe it kept them immortal
Carthage
ambrosia and nectar
Nike/Victoria
jovial
35. 10
et tu & Brute?
Chaos
X (Roman numeral)
plebeian
36. Another name for Zeus/Jupiter
Pax Romana
aqueduct
cave canem
Jove
37. Blind poet Who wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey
Orpheus & Eurydice
Homer
etc./et cetera
via
38. 'boyish &' 'childlike' (from puer- boy)
Demeter/Ceres
labor vincit omnia
agenda
puerile
39. 1
Eros/Cupid
ambrosia and nectar
Charon
I (Roman numeral)
40. 'That is' used for further explanation: 'in other words...'
Icarus & Daedalus
i.e./id est
in memoriam
rostra
41. Roman officials who were charged with protecting the people (the plebeians) from oppression; they were sacrosanct & meaning no one could harm them
sic transit gloria mundi
Caesar
tribune
Mt. Olympus
42. 'great-souled & high-minded'
lapsus linguae
Hestia/Vesta
Poseidon/Neptune
magnanimous
43. 'note well' i.e. take note
p.o./ per os
Priam
sub poena
N.B./nota bene
44. The river surrounding the Underworld
terra firma
Styx
errare humanum est
Tartarus
45. Sorceress & wife of Jason; killed their children to get revenge on Jason for leaving her
Colosseum
via
Mt. Parnassus
Medea
46. 1000
Homer
veto
M (Roman numeral)
per capita
47. 'in the year of the Lord &' designating the time period after Christ's birth
aqueduct
Elysian Fields/Elysium
ad nauseam
A.D./anno Domini
48. 'my fault' ; tua culpa -'your fault'
C (Roman numeral)
Mt. Parnassus
mea culpa
A.M./ante meridiem
49. Carthaginian general who attacked Italy by crossing the Italian Alps in the 2nd Punic War; He was eventually defeated by Scipio at the Battle of Zama
paterfamilias
Hannibal
Pompeii
lapsus linguae
50. Goddess of childbirth; married to Zeus; queen of the gods
Pax Romana
muses
Ariadne
Hera/Juno