Exam 12: Rome: Ovid Flood
Exam 1: What Is Myth19 Questions
Exam 2: Ways of Understanding Myth14 Questions
Exam 3: Greece: Hesiod35 Questions
Exam 4: Rome: Ovid Creation20 Questions
Exam 5: The Bible: Genesis Creation19 Questions
Exam 6: Mesopotamia: Enuma Elish19 Questions
Exam 7: Icelandicnorse: Prose Edda Creation23 Questions
Exam 9: Africa: Uganda and Nigeria26 Questions
Exam 10: China: Nü Kwa, Kuan Yin, and Monkey40 Questions
Exam 11: Mesoamerica: Popol Vuh38 Questions
Exam 12: Rome: Ovid Flood24 Questions
Exam 13: The Bible: Genesis Flood21 Questions
Exam 14: Icelandicnorse: Prose Edda Ragnarok26 Questions
Exam 15: Theory: Joseph Campbell, the Hero With a Thousand Faces, Dave Whomsley22 Questions
Exam 16: Mesopotamia: the Epic of Gilgamesh23 Questions
Exam 17: Applying Theory: a Lévi-Straussian Analysis of the Epic of Gilgamesh, G S Kirk20 Questions
Exam 18: India: the Ramayana30 Questions
Exam 19: Icelandicnorse: Prose Edda Heroes20 Questions
Exam 20: Arthurian Legend: the Holy Grail, Donna Lynne Rondolone25 Questions
Exam 21: Africa: the Mwindo Epic21 Questions
Exam 22: Greece: Oedipus the King, Sophocles21 Questions
Exam 23: Theory: the Structural Study of Myth, Claude Lévi-Strauss20 Questions
Exam 24: North America: Raven20 Questions
Exam 25: African and African-American Trickster Stories20 Questions
Exam 26: Greece: Prometheus20 Questions
Exam 27: Applying Theory: Different Versions of Myths20 Questions
Exam 28: Theory: the Forest of Symbols, Victor Turner20 Questions
Exam 29: Greece: Demeter and Persephone20 Questions
Exam 30: Egypt: Isis and Osiris20 Questions
Exam 31: Applying Theory: Meals in the Bible, Mary Douglas17 Questions
Exam 32: Icelandicnorse: the Rituals of Iceland, Hr Ellis Davidson21 Questions
Exam 33: Greece: Heracles and Dionysus28 Questions
Exam 34: Theory: Man and His Symbols, Cg Jung29 Questions
Exam 35: Applying Theory: How to Perform a Jungian Analysis22 Questions
Exam 36: Theory: the Morphology of the Folktale, Vladimir Propp20 Questions
Exam 37: Applying Theory: a Proppian Analysis of the Wizard of Oz20 Questions
Exam 38: Germany: Grimms Household Tales20 Questions
Exam 39: Rome: Cupid and Psyche, Apuleius20 Questions
Exam 40: Applying Theory: Highlighting Different Aspects of the Same Tale Using Multiple Analyses20 Questions
Exam 41: Daniel Boone: Building the Myth Around the Man, Richard Slotkin20 Questions
Exam 42: Stagecoach and Firefly: the Journey Into the Unknown in Westerns and Science Fiction, Fred Erisman20 Questions
Exam 43: Harry Potter: a Rankian Analysis of the Hero of Hogwarts, M Katherine Grimes20 Questions
Exam 44: The Vampire As Hero: Tales of the Undead in a Contemporary Context, Eva M Thury26 Questions
Exam 45: Poetry and Myth23 Questions
Exam 46: Yellow Woman: Native-American Oral Myth in a Contemporary Context, Leslie Marmon Silko21 Questions
Exam 47: Narrative and Myth21 Questions
Select questions type
Lycaeon tested Zeus by __________________.
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(Multiple Choice)
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A
Although Ovid is retelling myths of the ancient Greeks, this flood story more likely comes from Mesopotamia because _______________________.
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B
____________________ jeered at Jove and the humans worshipping him when the god announced his divinity to them.
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(Short Answer)
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Correct Answer:
Lycaeon
Jove tells the other gods that he knows just how disrespectful humans are to the gods because ________________________.
(Multiple Choice)
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After failing to trick Jove, Lycaeon runs off in a frenzied panic and gradually turns into a__________________.
(Multiple Choice)
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According to Ovid's account, new humans were formed from ___________________ that Deucalion and Pyrrha tossed behind them as they walked.
(Short Answer)
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The goddess who helps cause the flood by fetching water to provide the clouds with more rain is _______________________.
(Multiple Choice)
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The first thing Deucalion and Pyrrha do when their boat lands is ____________.
(Multiple Choice)
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Jove's oath to get rid of the mortals is unbreakable because _____________________________________.
(Multiple Choice)
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By shaking his trident, Neptune aids the flooding by __________________.
(Multiple Choice)
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The only humans to survive the flood in Ovid's account are_____________________ and __________________________.
(Short Answer)
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Jove's lightning bolts were forged by _______________________.
(Multiple Choice)
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___________________, the Roman god of the sea, commands all water sources to "Set all your forces free."
(Short Answer)
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Jupiter FIRST intends to destroy the world by _____________________.
(Short Answer)
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According to Ovid, the gods decide to send a flood to destroy humanity because __________________.
(Multiple Choice)
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After the flood subsided and the sun dried the earth, both old and new ____________ emerged from it.
(Short Answer)
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After the flood that Ovid describes, all mankind descend from ______________.
(Multiple Choice)
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As punishment for testing him, Jove destroys Lycaeon's house by ________________.
(Multiple Choice)
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