Hyperbole

Quiz
•
English
•
7th Grade
•
Hard
Standards-aligned
Sarah Williams
FREE Resource
25 questions
Show all answers
1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
A flock of birds eating under a tree. There must have been a thousand of them, but they did not make any sound as they ate.
A hunter came along and threw a heavy net over the flock. The hunter was so hungry he could eat a horse. He was pleased to have found this meal. Suddenly the birds started flapping their wings. They worked together, rising high up in the air despite the weight of the net. The sound of their wings echoed for miles around. They settled onto a tree and let the nest rest in the branches. The birds were so tired they could have slept for a week, but now they were free.
"The strength of many birds acting together is far more powerful than one bird could be," the amazed hunter thought to himself. A single bird could have knocked him over. That's how surprised he was!
*(Hyperbole is an exaggeration to show that something is very important, funny, or dramatic.
In the passage, the phrase so hungry he could eat a horse is used to show that the hunter
hoped to eat sometime soon.
wanted to catch a meal.
hoped to find a horse for dinner,
was very hungry.
Tags
CCSS.L.11-12.5A
2.
OPEN ENDED QUESTION
1 min • Ungraded
I was nine years old when my parents told me they were selling our house. I felt as though a ton of bricks had landed on my chest. I could hardly breath. That house meant more to me than all the tea in China! I couldn't imagine life anywhere else. Why? Well, I was born there! I don't mean that I came home from the hospital to that house. I was literally born there. the night I was born my hometown was colder than the North Pole. It was actually the coldest night in our town's history. My dad went out to start the car, thinking that he couldn't expose my mother to the freezing temperatures. By the time he came back in to get her, like ten seconds later, there I was, lying in my mother's arms. My cries were louder than a foghorn. Good thing my grandmother was a doctor. Fortunately, I was a very healthy baby. The next day my parents took me to the hospital just to be sure. Now do you see why that house was more important to me than all the money in the world? The idea of selling our house just broke my heart. When something like that happens, you never forget it. *(A hyperbole is an exaggeration that can't possibly be true). Why does the narrator use so much hyperbole in this passage? What is the effect of all this hyperbole on the reader? Give one example of hyperbole from the passage, and rewrite it in your own words.
Evaluate responses using AI:
OFF
Tags
CCSS.L.11-12.5A
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
A flock of birds eating under a tree. There must have been a thousand of them, but they did not make any sound as they ate. A hunter came along and threw a heavy net over the flock. The hunter was so hungry he could eat a horse. He was pleased to have found this meal. Suddenly the birds started flapping their wings. They worked together, rising high up in the air despite the weight of the net. The sound of their wings echoed for miles around. They settled onto a tree and let the nest rest in the branches. The birds were so tired they could have slept for a week, but now they were free. "The strength of many birds acting together is far more powerful than one bird could be," the amazed hunter thought to himself. A single bird could have knocked him over. That's how surprised he was! In the passage, the phrase there must have been a thousand of them means
the birds were crowded togther
there was a great number of birds.
more birds came and joined the flock.
you could count a thousand birds.
Tags
CCSS.L.11-12.5A
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
A flock of birds eating under a tree. There must have been a thousand of them, but they did not make any sound as they ate.
A hunter came along and threw a heavy net over the flock. The hunter was so hungry he could eat a horse. He was pleased to have found this meal. Suddenly the birds started flapping their wings. They worked together, rising high up in the air despite the weight of the net. The sound of their wings echoed for miles around. They settled onto a tree and let the nest rest in the branches. The birds were so tired they could have slept for a week, but now they were free.
"The strength of many birds acting together is far more powerful than one bird could be," the amazed hunter thought to himself. A single bird could have knocked him over. That's how surprised he was!
*(Hyperbole is an exaggeration to show that something is very important, funny, or dramatic.
Which sentence contains an example of hyperbole?
A hunter came along and threw a heavy net over the flock.
Suddenly the birds started flapping their wings.
The sound of their wings echoed for miles around.
They worked together, rising high up in the air despite the weight of the net.
Tags
CCSS.L.11-12.5A
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
What does the hyperbole "If I don't get the perfect piece of apple pie, I'll die" mean?
They will be very upset if they don't get a perfect piece of apple pie.
They won't die.
They will actually die if they don't get the perfect piece.
Tags
CCSS.L.11-12.5A
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
A flock of birds eating under a tree. There must have been a thousand of them, but they did not make any sound as they ate.
A hunter came along and threw a heavy net over the flock. The hunter was so hungry he could eat a horse. He was pleased to have found this meal. Suddenly the birds started flapping their wings. They worked together, rising high up in the air despite the weight of the net. The sound of their wings echoed for miles around. They settled onto a tree and let the nest rest in the branches. The birds were so tired they could have slept for a week, but now they were free.
"The strength of many birds acting together is far more powerful than one bird could be," the amazed hunter thought to himself. A single bird could have knocked him over. That's how surprised he was!
*(Hyperbole is an exaggeration to show that something is very important, funny, or dramatic.
The phrase so tired they could have slept for a week describes
the hunter after the birds escaped.
the birds right before they were caught,
the birds after they escaped from the nest.
the hunter as he threw the net on the birds.
Tags
CCSS.L.11-12.5A
7.
OPEN ENDED QUESTION
1 min • Ungraded
A flock of birds eating under a tree. There must have been a thousand of them, but they did not make any sound as they ate.
A hunter came along and threw a heavy net over the flock. The hunter was so hungry he could eat a horse. He was pleased to have found this meal. Suddenly the birds started flapping their wings. They worked together, rising high up in the air despite the weight of the net. The sound of their wings echoed for miles around. They settled onto a tree and let the nest rest in the branches. The birds were so tired they could have slept for a week, but now they were free.
"The strength of many birds acting together is far more powerful than one bird could be," the amazed hunter thought to himself. A single bird could have knocked him over. That's how surprised he was!
*(Hyperbole is an exaggeration to show that something is very important, funny, or dramatic.)
Find the hyperbole in paragraph 3. Rewrite it in your own words.
Evaluate responses using AI:
OFF
Tags
CCSS.L.11-12.5A
Create a free account and access millions of resources
Similar Resources on Wayground
20 questions
Poem & Figurative Languages

Quiz
•
10th - 12th Grade
20 questions
Bud, Not Buddy Figurative Language Chapters 1-3

Quiz
•
6th - 7th Grade
20 questions
Fig Lang (Onomatopoeia/Personification/Alliteration/Hyperbole)

Quiz
•
6th - 7th Grade
20 questions
Figurative Language Review

Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
20 questions
Figurative Language/Poetic Devices

Quiz
•
7th - 8th Grade
20 questions
Figurative Language Terms & Examples

Quiz
•
7th Grade
20 questions
Figurative Language

Quiz
•
6th - 7th Grade
20 questions
Figurative Language

Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
Popular Resources on Wayground
55 questions
CHS Student Handbook 25-26

Quiz
•
9th Grade
18 questions
Writing Launch Day 1

Lesson
•
3rd Grade
10 questions
Chaffey

Quiz
•
9th - 12th Grade
15 questions
PRIDE

Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
40 questions
Algebra Review Topics

Quiz
•
9th - 12th Grade
22 questions
6-8 Digital Citizenship Review

Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
10 questions
Nouns, nouns, nouns

Quiz
•
3rd Grade
10 questions
Lab Safety Procedures and Guidelines

Interactive video
•
6th - 10th Grade
Discover more resources for English
15 questions
Genre Review

Quiz
•
6th - 7th Grade
17 questions
Common and Proper Nouns

Quiz
•
7th Grade
20 questions
Figurative Language REVIEW

Lesson
•
7th - 10th Grade
20 questions
Vocabulary

Quiz
•
7th Grade
10 questions
Counterclaims in Argumentative Writing

Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
20 questions
Parts of Speech

Quiz
•
7th Grade
19 questions
Language Arts Literary Terms

Quiz
•
7th - 8th Grade
10 questions
Figurative Language Definitions

Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade