| Iago’s wife | Emilia |
| Eager to court Desdemona | Roderigo |
| Plots against Othello | Iago |
| The loyal lieutenant framed as a lover | Cassio |
| The tragic figure of the play | Othello |
| City where the play begins | Venice |
| A wife believed to be unfaithful | Desdemona |
| Desdemona’s father | Brabantio |
| The second setting of the play | Cyprus |
| Where the play was written | England |
| Country that Shakespeare frequently sets his plays | Italy |
| The author | Shakespeare |
| T or F? Iago is deeply in love with Desdemona | False |
| T or F? Othello is so jealous that he questions his wife’s fidelity. | True |
| T or F? Desdemona gives her handkerchief to Cassio as a symbol of her devotion to him. | False |
| T or F? Cassio and Othello duel over the honor of Desdemona. | False |
| T or F? Without realizing it, Emilia aids in planting evidence against Desdemona. | True |
| T or F? Cassio becomes the loss of his reputation after his drunkenness. | True |
| T or F? Desdemona’s father is delighted by her marriage. | False |
| T or F? Othello has secretly wed Desdemona. | True |
| T or F? Cassio wounds Montano in a fight which leads to his demotion. | True |
| T or F? Othello stabs his wife. | False |
| T or F? Desdemona stands by her husband against her father’s wishes. | True |
| T or F? Othello is a harsh judge of the behavior of others. | True |
| “Mere prattle without practicee is all his soldiership” | Iago |
| “I am not what I am” | Iago |
| “an old black ram is tupping your white ewe | Iago |
| “I have charged thee not to haunt about my doors” | brabantio |
| Let him do his spite; My service which………his complaints” | Othello |
| “father hence,……… you see them act” | brabantio |
| “for if such actions be passage free……statsmen be” | brabantio |
| “and little of this great world can i speak” | othello |
| “to vouch this is no proof, without more wider……. against him” | Duke |
| “my noble father, I do perceive here a divided duty” | desdemonda |
| “I do here give thee that with all my heart…. I would keep from thee” | Brabantio |
| “she is abused, stolen from me and corrupted.. mountbanks” | brabantio |
| “the robb’d that smiled steal something from the thief… bootless grief” | duke |
| “heavens defend you good souls that you think I…. she is with me” | othello |
| “your son-in-law is far more fair than black” | Duke |
| “let us be conjunctive in our revenge against him” | Iago |
| “Therefore put money in thy purse…” | Iago |
| “throw your vile guesses in the devil’s teeth from……..some remembrance” | Cassio |
| “i do not think but Desdemona’s honest” | OTHELLO |
| “for if he be not one that truly loves you, that errs in ignorance…honest face” | Desdemona |
| “oh, beware, my lord of jealousy!…..the meat is feeds on” | IAgo |
| “what, keep a week away? Seven days and nights?….eight score times!” | Bionca |
| “she did deceive her father, marrying you, and when… she loved them most” | IAgo |
| “…ha! I like not that” | Iago |
| “I am glad I have found hsi napkins, this was her… from the moor” | Emilia |
| “they are all but stomachs, and we all but food…. they belch us.” | Emilia |
| “Marry sir, by many a wind instrument that i know.,,,,,. to make no more noise with it” | Clown |
| “ill see before I doubt, when I doubt, prove, and on the…..Love or Jealousy!” | Othello |
AP Lit: Othello Test
August 3, 2019