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Copy of A Separate Peace 4 (6/23/2025)

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Last updated 8 months ago
24 questions
Chapter 4-7 Vocab
Review Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Homework: Chapter 7
1. . . . dead gray waves hissing mordantly along the beach, which was gray and dead-looking itself.

2. The beach shed its deadness and became a spectral gray-white . . . and finally it was totally white and stainless, as pure as the shores of Eden.

3. You are both even in enmity. You are both coldly driving ahead for yourselves alone.

4. There was a latent freshness in the air, as though spring were returning in the middle of the summer.

5. "If he jumps out of that tree I'm Mahatma Ghandi." . . . He had a way of turning cliches inside out like that.

6. "Yes." I let this drop curtly to bar him from telling me what to do about my work.

7. I went south for a month's vacation in my home town and spent it in an atmosphere of reverie and unreality, as though I had lived that month once already and had not been interested by it the first time either.
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1. We had been an idiosyncratic, leaderless band in the summer, undirected except by the eccentric notions of Phineas.

2. Then, an infinitesimal veering of the canoe, and the line of his body would break . . . and Phineas would tumble into the water . . . .

3. There is no such position officially, but it sometimes came into existence through necessity, and was the opposite of a sinecure. It was all work and no advantages.

4. He had a tough bantam body, easily detectable under the tight sweat shirt he wore.

5. He bent down to tighten the lacings on a puttee.

6. I bounced zestfully up the dormitory stairs.
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Trim End | 59:53
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Questions 8-13 | 24:41
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Questions 14-24 | 52:44
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Question 1
1.
Draggable itemarrow_right_altCorresponding Item
daydreaming
arrow_right_alt
latent
present but had not developed or activated
arrow_right_alt
curtly
trite or overused expressions
arrow_right_alt
spectral
ghostly
arrow_right_alt
reverie
rudely brief or abruptly
arrow_right_alt
mordantly
deep-rooted often mutual hatred
arrow_right_alt
cliches
bitingly sarcastic or painful
arrow_right_alt
enmity
Question 2
2.
Draggable itemarrow_right_altCorresponding Item
small but aggressive & spirited
arrow_right_alt
puttee
immeasurably small
arrow_right_alt
idiosyncratic
peculiar
arrow_right_alt
bantam
with spirit and energy
arrow_right_alt
zestfully
a paid position requiring little work
arrow_right_alt
infinitesimal
lower leg covering
arrow_right_alt
sinecure
Question 3
3.

How does Gene internally react to Finny's injury at the beginning of the chapter?

Question 4
4.

Describe the change in Finny’s outlook on life after his injury.

Question 5
5.

Why is Gene’s visit to Finny in the hospital significant?

Question 6
6.

Why didn't Gene tell Phineas the truth at the infirmary?

Question 7
7.

What is Phineas' reaction when Gene does confess?

Question 8
8.

"If you broke the rules, then they broke you." What did Gene mean?

Question 9
9.

Identify and describe Cliff Quackenbush.

Question 10
10.

How did Gene lose his job of Assistant Crew Manager?

Question 11
11.

From whom was Gene's long-distance call?

Question 12
12.

Why did Gene feel a sense of freedom when Phineas said, "Listen, pal, if I can't play sports, you're going to play them for me"?

Question 13
13.

What does the narrator mean when he reflects that “continuity was the keynote”? How does this idea relate to the theme of tradition versus change in the context of Devon School? Use evidence from the text to explain your reasoning. (USE APE/Evidence)

Question 14
14.

Based on the passage, which best describes Brinker Hadley's physical appearance?

Question 15
15.

How does the narrator initially respond to Brinker's accusations about Finny's accident?

Question 16
16.

What is significant about the setting of the Butt Room in the passage?

Question 17
17.

What contrast does Leper Lepellier represent in the passage?

Question 18
18.

How does the narrator's mood shift at the end of the passage?

Question 19
19.

What task is Gene volunteering for in Chapter 7?

Question 20
20.

How does Brinker react to Gene’s volunteering?

Question 21
21.

Why is Gene relieved to see Finny return to Devon?

Question 22
22.

What causes tension between Gene and Brinker?

Question 23
23.

Which character challenges the need for the war effort in Chapter 7?

Question 24
24.

In the passage, how does the narrator describe the differences between the Naguamsett River and the Devon? What does this comparison reveal about the narrator's feelings towards each body of water?