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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. Figuratively 'secretly.' Aphrodite gave her son Eros a rose. Eros gave it to Harpocrates & the god of silence & to ensure that his mother's love affairs remained a secret.
lapsus linguae
P.M./post meridiem
Icarus & Daedalus
sub rosa
2. 'horn of plenty' a symbol of food and abundance
Aphrodite/Venus
i.e./id est
Cronus/Saturn
cornucopia
3. 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
Cyclops
Punic Wars
Ph.D./Philosophiae Doctor
Icarus & Daedalus
4. The plebs were the free but non-aristocratic citizens of Rome; today & plebeian means 'of a low class'
the Odyssey
plebeian
Paris
ad infinitum
5. Home of the Greek gods
patrician
fresco
Mt. Olympus
Arachne
6. Volcano which erupted in AD 79 and destroyed Pompeii and Herculaneum
Mt. Vesuvius
Dionysus/Bacchus
Hercules/Heracles
A.D./anno Domini
7. The people in control of the Italian peninsula before Rome began to spread
sic semper tyrannis
Sisyphus
Chaos
Etruscans
8. 5
Apollo/Apollo
mellifluous
the furies
V (Roman numeral)
9. Half-man & half-goat creatures; companions of Pan and Dionysus
Parthenon
Athena/Minerva
satyr
SPQR
10. The three-headed dog that guarded the gates of the Underworld
Cerberus
Helen
sine qua non
paterfamilias
11. 'Against' & used to show Who is up against who in sports matches & legal battles & etc.
Atlas
quid pro quo
Poseidon/Neptune
vs./versus
12. 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)
Gorgons
veni & vidi & vici
the furies
Sparta
13. A bundle of wooden sticks and an axe blade that the attendants of Roman magistrates carried; symbolized the magistrates' power to inflict capital punishment
mellifluous
N.B./nota bene
carpe diem
fasces
14. Winged horse which flew from the neck of Medusa the Gorgon after Perseus cut off her head
puerile
Pegasus
agora/forum
pontifex maximus
15. First emperor of the Roman Empire; adopted son of Julius Caesar; member of the 2nd Triumvirate; also known as Octavian
mores
Augustus
summa cum laude
p.o./ per os
16. A town on the western coast of Italy destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuius in AD 79
Spartacus
Pompeii
Palatine Hill
P.S./post scriptum
17. Eurydice died on their wedding day. Orpheus went down to the Underworld to bring her back. Hades agreed & on the condition that Eurydice would follow behind Orpheus on their way up to the mortal world and he couldn't check to make sure She was behind
sic semper tyrannis
sub poena
per annum
Orpheus & Eurydice
18. Doctor of medicine
M.D./Medicinae Doctor
Saturnalia
et tu & Brute?
labyrinth
19. A state of disorganized matter from which the gods and the world were created
Eros/Cupid
Chaos
marathon
Apollo/Apollo
20. Sea to the west of Greece; named after King Aegeus after he drowned himself in the sea thinking his son Theseus was dead
Hermes/Mercury
semper fidelis
Priam
Aegean Sea
21. Roman officials who were charged with protecting the people (the plebeians) from oppression; they were sacrosanct & meaning no one could harm them
Parthenon
Charon
tribune
P.M./post meridiem
22. 'Always prepared'
sedentary
sub rosa
semper paratus
Homer
23. Goddess of wisdom
Athena/Minerva
Persephone/Proserpina
Pompeii
agora/forum
24. After midday/noon
P.M./post meridiem
Palatine Hill
atrium
A.M./ante meridiem
25. 5
Pan
V (Roman numeral)
valedictorian
Arachne
26. 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)
Priam
Sparta
Golden Fleece
cave canem
27. A large horse and chariot racing track in Rome
finis
Colosseum
homo sapiens- 'wise man'
Circus Maximus
28. Goddess of the hunt
tribune
Ides of March
cave canem
Artemis/Diana
29. Goddess of childbirth; married to Zeus; queen of the gods
Hera/Juno
Iliad
mosaic
pontifex maximus
30. The 9 goddesses who looked after the arts and inspired men in those arts
pontifex maximus
muses
I (Roman numeral)
errare humanum est
31. Literally refers to the heel of Achilles (a character from the Iliad who killed Hector)
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32. Mother Earth; the wife of Uranus & the sky; she gave birth to the Titans & the Cyclopes & and the Hundred-Handed Ones
vice versa
lapsus linguae
terra incognita
Ge/Gaea
33. Out of her curiosity & she opened a box containing all the bad things in the world; she put the lid on just in time & so that hope did not escape from the box & too
Pandora
apple of discord
et al./ et alii
mores
34. God of the sun & light & reason & and the lyre
C (Roman numeral)
Colosseum
Apollo/Apollo
plebeian
35. Perseus slayed Medusa the Gorgon
status quo
labor vincit omnia
Perseus & Medusa
Mt. Parnassus
36. Home of the Greek gods
Mt. Olympus
finis
Palatine Hill
V (Roman numeral)
37. 'The end'
finis
semper paratus
P.S./post scriptum
Uranus
38. Good-humored & jolly (ancient astrologers thought that the planet Jupiter fostered cheerfulness)
Augustus
Hannibal
jovial
fasces
39. 'my fault' ; tua culpa -'your fault'
mea culpa
Hannibal
L (Roman numeral)
Tiber
40. God of metallurgy (metal working); married to Aphrodite
Hephaestus/Vulcan
satyr
et tu & Brute?
Trojan Horse
41. Inventor who created the Labyrinth where the Minotaur lived
e.g./exempli gratia
Artemis/Diana
Hercules/Heracles
Daedalus
42. The king of the gods; god of thunder and lightning
Aegean Sea
Prometheus
Zeus/Jupiter
epic
43. 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
Pan
M.D./Medicinae Doctor
Pax Romana
papyrus
44. Athenian prince who killed the Minotaur
sub rosa
Odysseus/Ulysses
Theseus
Tiber
45. God of the sun & light & reason & and the lyre
Hermes/Mercury
Sparta
Cerberus
Apollo/Apollo
46. Sweet-sounding (literally 'flowing like honey')
Golden Fleece
errare humanum est
pro tempore
mellifluous
47. The ninth letter of the Greek alphabet (i); commonly used in the phrase 'not one iota &' meaning 'not one bit'
Orpheus & Eurydice
patrician
iota
satyr
48. The plebs were the free but non-aristocratic citizens of Rome; today & plebeian means 'of a low class'
plebeian
Sicily
tribune
Cyclops
49. Goddess of the hunt
Atlas
Artemis/Diana
ambrosia and nectar
pro tempore
50. 'This for that &' a fair trade
Cyclops
Delphic Oracle
Homer
quid pro quo