Which of the following inferences about Anne is best supported by her diary?
Anne Frank Play

Quiz
•
English
•
8th Grade
•
Hard
Charmagne Davis
Used 9+ times
FREE Resource
10 questions
Show all answers
1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 10 pts
She longs for a normal adolescence but hopes to maintain her selfhood through her diary.
She wants to plan an escape with her family from occupied Holland
She wants to write about what the Nazis did to her family to aid in their prosecution after the war.
She is in love with Hello and wants to record their romance
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 10 pts
The following passage in Anne’s second diary entry mainly shows that fill in the blank_________.
It seems like years since Sunday morning. So much has happened it’s as if the whole world had suddenly turned upside down. But as you can see, Kitty, I’m still alive, and that’s the main thing, Father says. I’m alive all right, but don’t ask where or how. You probably don’t understand a word I’m saying today, so I’ll begin by telling you what happened Sunday afternoon.
She knows events so extreme have taken place that she must completely re-orient her writing.
She is under the delusion that several years have passed in a matter of days.
She can’t remember how she managed to stay alive.
She thinks she is too scared for her writing to make much sense.
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 10 pts
The passage in the previous question is told in the fill in the blank___________ tense, from a fill in the blank____________ point of view.
Present tense; third person
Past tense; first person
Present tense; first person
Past tense; third person
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 10 pts
Which of these inferences about Anne’s feelings concerning Hello is best supported by the following passage?
Something unexpected happened yesterday morning. As I was passing the bicycle racks, I heard my name being called. I turned around and there was the nice boy I’d met the evening before at my friend Wilma’s. He’s Wilma’s second cousin. I used to think Wilma was nice, which she is, but all she ever talks about is boys, and that gets to be a bore. He came toward me, somewhat shyly, and introduced himself as Hello Silberberg. I was a little surprised and wasn’t sure what he wanted, but it didn’t take me long to find out. He asked if I would allow him to accompany me to school. "As long as you’re headed that way, I’ll go with you," I said. And so we walked together. Hello is sixteen and good at telling all kinds of funny stories.
He was waiting for me again this morning, and I expect he will be from now on.
She doesn’t like him.
His attention is not unwelcome.
His cousin Wilma is more interesting to talk to.
She fears he might be a Nazi spy.
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 10 pts
Which of the following best identifies a central idea of the text?
The Franks are afraid for their lives.
The Nazis exterminated six million Jews during World War II.
The suddenness of their need to flee plunged the Franks into a bizarre existence.
If the Franks aren’t very quiet so the neighbors might turn them in.
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 10 pts
Which sentence from the text best supports the correct answer to Question 5?
“It’s not the fault of the Dutch that we Jews are having such a bad time.”
“So much has happened it’s as if the whole world has turned upside down.”
“Father, Mother, and Margot still can’t get used to the chiming of the Westertoren clock…”
“Last night the four of us went down to the private office and listened to England on the radio.”
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 10 pts
Which of following inferences is best supported by the excerpt below?
I was stunned. A call-up: everyone knows what that means. Visions of concentration camps and lonely cells raced through my head. How could we let Father go to such a fate? “Of course he’s not going,” declared Margot as we waited for Mother in the living room. “Mother’s gone to Mr. van Daan to ask whether we can move to our hiding place tomorrow. The van Daans are going with us. There will be seven of us altogether.” Silence. We couldn’t speak. The thought of Father off visiting someone in the Jewish Hospital and completely unaware of what was happening, the long wait for Mother, the heat, the suspense - all this reduced us to silence.
The SS is on their way to arrest the Franks.
A call-up from the SS is not the worst thing that could happen.
If Anne’s father returns in time they will be safe.
They are horrified that Father is out, not knowing the SS has called for him.
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