H1 Start of Year Assessment

H1 Start of Year Assessment

8th Grade

15 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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H1 Start of Year Assessment

H1 Start of Year Assessment

Assessment

Quiz

World Languages

8th Grade

Practice Problem

Medium

DOK Level 1: Recall, DOK Level 2: Skill/Concept, DOK Level 3: Strategic Thinking

Standards-aligned

Created by

Aggy Kusunoki

Used 1+ times

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15 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What is the Hawaiian word for "this" when referring to something close to the speaker?

kēlā

kēnā

kēia

ke

Tags

DOK Level 1: Recall

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Translate the following sentence into Hawaiian: "I want to eat."

Makemake ʻoe i ka ʻai.

Makemake au e ʻai.

Makemake ʻoe e ʻai.

Makemake au i ka ʻai.

Tags

DOK Level 2: Skill/Concept

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Explain the difference between "kēia," "kēlā," and "kēnā" in Hawaiian. Provide examples for each.

"kēia" means "that (near)," "kēlā" means "this," and "kēnā" means "that (far)." Example: kēia pua (that flower near you), kēlā hale (this house), kēnā puke (that book far away).

"kēia" means "that (far)," "kēlā" means "this," and "kēnā" means "that (near)." Example: kēia pua (that flower), kēlā hale (this house), kēnā puke (that book near you).

"kēia" means "this," "kēlā" means "that (far)," and "kēnā" means "that (near)." Example: kēia pua (this flower), kēlā hale (that house), kēnā puke (that book near you).

"kēia" means "this," "kēlā" means "that (near)," and "kēnā" means "that (far)." Example: kēia pua (this flower), kēlā hale (that house near you), kēnā puke (that book far away).

Tags

DOK Level 3: Strategic Thinking

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What is the Hawaiian word for "family"?

ʻohana

hale

keiki

makua

Tags

DOK Level 1: Recall

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

How would you ask someone "How are you?" in Hawaiian?

Pehea ʻoe?

Aloha ʻoe?

Pehea au?

Aloha au?

Tags

DOK Level 1: Recall

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Translate the following sentence into Hawaiian: "That (n) is my book."

ʻO kēia koʻu puke.

ʻO kēlā koʻu puke.

ʻO kēnā koʻu puke.

Tags

DOK Level 2: Skill/Concept

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Describe the "ʻo pattern" in Hawaiian grammar and provide an example sentence.

The "ʻo pattern" is used to indicate possession. Example: ʻO kaʻu pua kēia (This is my flower).

The "ʻo pattern" is an equational pattern. Example: ʻO Keoni koʻu inoa (My name is Keoni).

The "ʻo pattern" is used to indicate location. Example: ʻO ka hale kēia (This is the house).

The "ʻo pattern" is used to indicate a question. Example: ʻO ʻoe? (Is it you?).

Tags

DOK Level 3: Strategic Thinking

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