Header Ads

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - M.C.Q. (Mock Test)

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

Mark Twain

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - M.C.Q. (Mock Test)

M.C.Q. (Mock Test)

In the novel, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn readers meet Huckleberry Finn after Widow Douglas and his sister Miss Watson take him in, wanting to teach him religion and proper etiquette. Hack soon embarks on an adventure to help the widowed slave Jim escape to the Free states from Mississippi. By allowing Huck to tell his own story, Mark Twain addresses the painful conflict between racism and isolation in America's "colorless" and "equal" society.

Written By - Mark Twain

Type of work - Novel

Genre - Bildungsroman (the advent of the age novel)

First published- 1885

Placement - Originally on the Mississippi River

Characters in the novel: Huckleberry Finn; Jim; Duke; King; Pap Fin; Widow Douglas; Miss Watson; Tom Sawyer

Main thematic issues: racism; Freedom versus civilization; Slavery Realism versus idealism; Social stress; Expectations 

Motifs: realism; Self-doubt

Main landmarks: Mississippi River; Raft; Guilt

Film version: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1939); The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1960); Adventures of Hack Finn (1993); Tom and Hawk (1995)

There are three important aspects to the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn:

First, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was one of the first novels to be written in full dialect. Hack is an uneducated boy from a certain region of the country and reflects the language and sentence structure of the story he tells. Because of its plain voice, the book is considered by many to be one of the most influential works of fiction in American literature.

Second, the world of Huckleberry Finn is a ruthless one. From the shaking of his own father to the house of Janet Grangerford, apparently to the Phelps farm where Jim is enslaved and Tom is shot, Hawk is drowning in deadly violence. The only place he found was on the Pacific Jim River

Third, Mark Twain wrote Adventures of Huckleberry Finn as a consequence to his best-selling children's book, Adventures of Tom Sawyer. However, the language of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and its themes have made it very difficult for children to understand. Twain intends it for adults.

However, this section asks questions of MOCK TEST separately from Mark Twain' s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. The MOCK TEST consists of a total of 15 questions and each question has a time of 10 seconds. Results will be shown after completion of TEST.

So everyone is sincerely requested to complete the MOCK TEST with utmost patience and verify their knowledge.

 
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - M.C.Q. (Mock Test)

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

You'll Have 20 Second/Question.

Time's Up
score:

Quiz Result

Total Questions:

Attempt:

Correct:

Wrong:

Percentage:

Hey! if you enjoy this TEST, just share it to your friends. Good Luck!

*****

Read also:

👉 Leda and the Swan - Questions and Answers 

👉 Gora by Rabindranath Tagore - Summary 

👉 Ice Candy Man - as a trauma in Cracking India 

👉 The Final Solution - Summary 

👉 The Shadow Lines - as a Partition Play 

👉 Leave this Chanting and Singing - Tagore’s Devotion to God 

👉 Where the Mind is without Fear - Tagore’s view of Spirituality 

👉 I cannot Live with You - Theme of the poem 

👉 The Second Coming - Significance of the Title 

👉 The Hollow Men - significance of the Epigraph 

👉 The Hollow Men - as a modern poem 

👉 The Yellow Wallpaper - Introduction, Characters and Summary 

👉 The Yellow Wallpaper - as the story of feminist literature 

👉 The Yellow Wallpaper - Questions and Answers 

👉 The Yellow Wallpaper - Questions and Answers 

👉 J. Alfred Profrock’s Love Song - theme of confusion and isolation 

👉 Look Back in Anger - Introduction, Characters and Summary 

Post a Comment

0 Comments