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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. A mural painted directly onto wet plaster (fresco means 'fresh' in Italian)
summa cum laude
fresco
tribune
Trojan Horse
2. 'Thus passes the glory of the world.' i.e. 'Worldly things are fleeting.'
sic transit gloria mundi
per annum
per diem
ex officio
3. A bundle of wooden sticks and an axe blade that the attendants of Roman magistrates carried; symbolized the magistrates' power to inflict capital punishment
Elysian Fields/Elysium
fasces
Augustus
Hera/Juno
4. Religion in Which many gods are worshipped (from Greek poly 'many' and theoi 'gods')
epic
per capita
polytheism
vs./versus
5. The technical biological term for the human species
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6. Speaker's platform in the forum & which was decorated with the prows of ships the Romans captured in war (rostrum means 'beak & prow of a ship')
in memoriam
toga
ambrosia and nectar
rostra
7. Icarus was the son of Daedalus who flew too close to the sun with the wings his father made him from wax and feathers & and fell to his death
Icarus & Daedalus
in toto
agora/forum
Hercules/Heracles
8. 'And the rest' usually seen at the end of a list of things & instead of listing everything
sic semper tyrannis
patrician
sine qua non
etc./et cetera
9. 'This for that &' a fair trade
jovial
mores
P.S./post scriptum
quid pro quo
10. The 200 year period of peace which began under the rule of Augustus
Ph.D./Philosophiae Doctor
pax vobiscum
Pantheon
Pax Romana
11. 'I refuse &' used by the president of the US to stop any bill he sees unfit from passing
Hydra
veto
Ithaca
Tantalus
12. The highest political office in the Roman Republic; 2 were elected every year
C (Roman numeral)
cornucopia
puerile
consul
13. The city in Northern Africa that the Romans fought and destroyed during the Punic Wars (264-146 BC.)
p.o./ per os
vice versa
Carthage
Pan
14. 'in the year of the Lord &' designating the time period after Christ's birth
the Fates
A.D./anno Domini
Ares/Mars
Mt. Olympus
15. 'boyish &' 'childlike' (from puer- boy)
A.D./anno Domini
puerile
status quo
Palatine Hill
16. The god of the sky; created the Titans with Gaia & Mother Earth
Uranus
homo sapiens- 'wise man'
Ides of March
Etruscans
17. The three-headed dog that guarded the gates of the Underworld
Cerberus
I (Roman numeral)
pontifex maximus
semper paratus
18. 'To infinity &' to continue forever & without limit
Nike/Victoria
ad infinitum
atrium
fasces
19. 'note well' i.e. take note
N.B./nota bene
Orpheus & Eurydice
Hercules/Heracles
fresco
20. 10
X (Roman numeral)
Ge/Gaea
carpe diem
Hestia/Vesta
21. Daughter of Demeter; kidnapped by Hades to make her his queen
Hannibal
P.M./post meridiem
Persephone/Proserpina
veni & vidi & vici
22. 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
the Fates
Zeus/Jupiter
Sisyphus
muses
23. 'Time flies/flees'
tempus fugit
Daedalus
aqueduct
Poseidon/Neptune
24. Writing after the body of a letter
Trojan Horse
P.S./post scriptum
Aphrodite/Venus
i.e./id est
25. Titan best known for stealing fire from the gods and giving it to humans; He was punished by being chained to a rock and having his liver eaten by a bird everyday
sine qua non
labor vincit omnia
puerile
Prometheus
26. A large horse and chariot racing track in Rome
Icarus & Daedalus
Circus Maximus
fasces
Hydra
27. 'The things that must be done' - a to-do list
agenda
Athens/Acropolis
Colosseum
Aphrodite/Venus
28. 'seize the day'
errare humanum est
terra firma
mosaic
carpe diem
29. Kingdom in Asia Minor which fought against Greece in Homer's Iliad
agora/forum
Atlas
per annum
Troy
30. 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
post mortem
Pantheon
ego
Athens/Acropolis
31. 'unknown land'
terra incognita
vs./versus
Icarus & Daedalus
mores
32. Home of the Greek gods
Mt. Olympus
Saturnalia
e.g./exempli gratia
via
33. Goddess of love
summa cum laude
Iliad
Aphrodite/Venus
ambrosia and nectar
34. God of metallurgy (metal working); married to Aphrodite
Hephaestus/Vulcan
Jason
puerile
status quo
35. 'To the point of sickness' - doing/saying something over and over until everyone is sick and tired of it
Gorgons
D (Roman numeral)
agenda
ad nauseam
36. The people in control of the Italian peninsula before Rome began to spread
Romulus and Remus
Augustus
Etruscans
Aegean Sea
37. Winged horse which flew from the neck of Medusa the Gorgon after Perseus cut off her head
mellifluous
mentor
Pegasus
V (Roman numeral)
38. 500
Athena/Minerva
Jove
magnanimous
D (Roman numeral)
39. '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.
quid pro quo
Hera/Juno
sic semper tyrannis
Parthenon
40. Goddess of wisdom
Pandora
Prometheus
agora/forum
Athena/Minerva
41. After midday/noon
Hermes/Mercury
rara avis
semper fidelis
P.M./post meridiem
42. Mother Earth; the wife of Uranus & the sky; she gave birth to the Titans & the Cyclopes & and the Hundred-Handed Ones
Hestia/Vesta
Excelsior!
Theseus
Ge/Gaea
43. Goddess of the hearth
Hestia/Vesta
labyrinth
Helen
fasces
44. A member of one of the original aristocratic families of Rome; 'aristocratic'
Sicily
the furies
patrician
mellifluous
45. Religion in Which many gods are worshipped (from Greek poly 'many' and theoi 'gods')
L (Roman numeral)
Hera/Juno
e.g./exempli gratia
polytheism
46. A mural painted directly onto wet plaster (fresco means 'fresh' in Italian)
fresco
A.M./ante meridiem
fasces
cornucopia
47. 'in memory of'
Pantheon
veni & vidi & vici
in memoriam
per annum
48. Speaker's platform in the forum & which was decorated with the prows of ships the Romans captured in war (rostrum means 'beak & prow of a ship')
veto
rostra
L (Roman numeral)
X (Roman numeral)
49. In early mythology & the resting place of heroes; the later mythology & where good people went in the afterlife
in toto
Uranus
Aegean Sea
Elysian Fields/Elysium
50. 1
I (Roman numeral)
i.e./id est
Homer
vs./versus