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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. One of the 12 Titans & father of Zeus/Jupiter & who swallowed his children in an attempt to keep from being overthrown
Palatine Hill
quid pro quo
iota
Cronus/Saturn
2. The daughter of king Minos of Crete & who helped Theseus escape from the labyrinth after he killed the minotaur
Ariadne
ego
Parthenon
iota
3. Twin brothers & raised by a wolf; Romulus killed Remus and founded Rome
Hephaestus/Vulcan
Romulus and Remus
fresco
Hades/Pluto
4. Goddess of the hearth
Hephaestus/Vulcan
Ge/Gaea
Cerberus
Hestia/Vesta
5. 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
mea culpa
Hydra
pro tempore
sic transit gloria mundi
6. God of the sea
Iliad
ambrosia and nectar
mentor
Poseidon/Neptune
7. Goddess of victory
Nike/Victoria
Pax Romana
A.M./ante meridiem
Hera/Juno
8. 100
M (Roman numeral)
apple of discord
Mt. Olympus
C (Roman numeral)
9. Gladiator who led an uprising of slaves against the Romans in the 1st c. BC
Spartacus
Cerberus
veni & vidi & vici
labor vincit omnia
10. 'I refuse &' used by the president of the US to stop any bill he sees unfit from passing
agenda
P.S./post scriptum
veto
Parthenon
11. Female monsters who had snakes for hair and whose horrifying gaze could turn a man to stone if he looked at them (Medusa was one of the Gorgons)
summa cum laude
Gorgons
Hydra
errare humanum est
12. The norms or values of a society
Ph.D./Philosophiae Doctor
Tartarus
mores
Troy
13. Sailed with the Argonauts to take the Golden Fleece
cornucopia
Penelope
Jason
Trojan Horse
14. Kingdom in Asia Minor which fought against Greece in Homer's Iliad
Troy
Sparta
mosaic
Poseidon/Neptune
15. 'An unwelcome person' - used in diplomacy to indicate a person Who is barred from entering a certain country
persona non grata
Jason
D (Roman numeral)
Palatine Hill
16. One-eyed children of Ouranos/Uranus and Gaea (Mother Earth); sided with Zeus during the war with the Titans; were helpers of the smith-god Hephaestus
Cyclops
et tu & Brute?
Achilles' heel
X (Roman numeral)
17. 'The state in which'
Medea
sic semper tyrannis
status quo
semper paratus
18. 'And others'
satyr
et al./ et alii
P.M./post meridiem
vice versa
19. The three-headed dog that guarded the gates of the Underworld
pontifex maximus
Trojan Horse
Sisyphus
Cerberus
20. Characterized by sitting & inactive (from sedet- to sit)
sedentary
Helen
summa cum laude
finis
21. The 15th of March & the day in 44 BC Julius Caesar was assassinated
Ithaca
aqueduct
Ides of March
per capita
22. 'per year'
agora/forum
sic semper tyrannis
per annum
Athens/Acropolis
23. Goddess of love
Priam
the furies
Sisyphus
Aphrodite/Venus
24. 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)
apple of discord
Tiber
puerile
Priam
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
Pan
ad nauseam
the Fates
in memoriam
26. Homer's epic poem about Odysseus & kind of Ithaca & trying to find his way home from the Trojan War
the Odyssey
homo sapiens- 'wise man'
carpe diem
Poseidon/Neptune
27. Greek island in the Ionian Sea; the home of Odysseus
Ithaca
Homer
verbatim
Hestia/Vesta
28. Goddess of victory
Nike/Victoria
sub poena
Zeus/Jupiter
Orpheus & Eurydice
29. A hollow wooden horse built by the Greeks so that they could get into the walls of Troy. The Greeks pretended to pack up and leave from the war & but some hid in the horse which was later led into the walls of Troy by the Trojans (thinking it was a
Trojan Horse
sic transit gloria mundi
Elysian Fields/Elysium
Pompeii
30. First emperor of the Roman Empire; adopted son of Julius Caesar; member of the 2nd Triumvirate; also known as Octavian
D (Roman numeral)
apple of discord
Augustus
mentor
31. A state of disorganized matter from which the gods and the world were created
Chaos
finis
Hercules/Heracles
the furies
32. Goddess of grain & the harvest & and the seasons; mother of Persephone/Proserpina
omniscient
Delphic Oracle
Demeter/Ceres
Mt. Parnassus
33. 'seize the day'
C (Roman numeral)
carpe diem
sedentary
A.D./anno Domini
34. A picture made from small bits of glass or pottery
Hector
per annum
mosaic
Palatine Hill
35. A modern day race of 26.2 miles; from Marathon in Greece & the scene of a victory over the Persians in 490 BC; the modern race is based on the tradition that a messenger ran from Marathon to Athens (26 miles) with the news.
ad nauseam
marathon
errare humanum est
labor vincit omnia
36. 'Always prepared'
Mt. Parnassus
semper paratus
atrium
Aegean Sea
37. 'Time flies/flees'
labyrinth
iota
tempus fugit
Hector
38. 'Word for word'
Poseidon/Neptune
Hades/Pluto
verbatim
aqueduct
39. A series of three wars between Rome and Carthage & a Phoenician city in Northern Africa & for control of the Mediterranean (264-146 BC)
Hector
Punic Wars
vice versa
Pandora
40. 'from the office &' 'by right of office' - used to refer to someone Who is a member of a group (a board & committee & council & etc.) because they hold another office/position
Tantalus
vs./versus
ex officio
sine qua non
41. A large horse and chariot racing track in Rome
V (Roman numeral)
Minotaur
lapsus linguae
Circus Maximus
42. 'note well' i.e. take note
marathon
Nike/Victoria
N.B./nota bene
et al./ et alii
43. Perseus slayed Medusa the Gorgon
Iliad
Helen
Sisyphus
Perseus & Medusa
44. Prince of Troy Who was killed by Achilles in the Iliad; Achilles tied Hector's dead body to the back of his chariot and dragged it around the city walls three times
Arachne
rara avis
Hector
laurels
45. Mother Earth; the wife of Uranus & the sky; she gave birth to the Titans & the Cyclopes & and the Hundred-Handed Ones
Ge/Gaea
Helen
D (Roman numeral)
Ph.D./Philosophiae Doctor
46. The ninth letter of the Greek alphabet (i); commonly used in the phrase 'not one iota &' meaning 'not one bit'
Trojan Horse
polytheism
plebeian
iota
47. A hollow wooden horse built by the Greeks so that they could get into the walls of Troy. The Greeks pretended to pack up and leave from the war & but some hid in the horse which was later led into the walls of Troy by the Trojans (thinking it was a
SPQR
post mortem
Trojan Horse
plebeian
48. Writing after the body of a letter
A.D./anno Domini
P.S./post scriptum
Mt. Vesuvius
Eros/Cupid
49. 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
verbatim
papyrus
iota
per capita
50. 'doctor/teacher of philosophy' - an advanced academic degree
quid pro quo
ad infinitum
C (Roman numeral)
Ph.D./Philosophiae Doctor