Q.1
Which of the following does NOT illustrate the difference between outward appearance and inner reality?
  • Mr Darcy does not believe Jane to have strong feelings for Mr Bingley
  • Mr Wickham wins the hearts of Meryton and presents himself as having always wished to be a clergyman
  • Mrs Bennet retreats to her room to be waited upon while she worries about Lydia
  • In conversation with Elizabeth and the Gardiners, Mr Darcy's housekeeper paints a glowing picture of her employer
Q.2
Which of the following is NOT communicated by letter?
  • Mr Darcy's involvement in the finding of Mr Wickham and Lydia and in their subsequent marriage
  • Charlotte's intended marriage to Mr Collins
  • The elopement of Lydia and Mr Wickham
  • The true story of Mr Wickham and his attempted seduction of Miss Darcy
Q.3
Of the following characters, who displays little pride?
  • Charlotte Lucas
  • Elizabeth Bennet
  • Mr Darcy
  • Miss Bingley
Q.4
How does Elizabeth Bennet defy societal expectations?
  • She does not marry the first man who asks her, despite the promise of future poverty as a single woman
  • She refuses to please people in deference to their greater wealth
  • She takes long, wet walks without any care for maintaining an neat and ladylike appearance
  • All of the above
Q.5
Which one of the following does NOT prevent Elizabeth from perceiving Mr Darcy's virtuous character for a while?
  • Her own prejudice
  • Mr Wickham's deceit
  • Mrs Bennet's hatred of Mr Darcy
  • Mr Darcy's reluctance to defend his character with detailed explanation
Q.6
Which of the following is considered a serious impediment to the possibility of marriage between Jane and Mr Bingley?
  • The two characters have incompatible temperaments
  • There is distinction in class between the two characters
  • There is a great difference between the intellectual capacity of each character
  • There is a large difference in their ages
Q.7
Elizabeth worries that her prospects in life, as well as Jane's, will be tainted by the behavior of their sister Lydia. Mr Bennet tells her that she and Jane may rely on their own good reputations despite the silliness of their sisters. To which of the following themes is this conversation most directly related?
  • Economic inequality and gender
  • Private communication
  • Old and new wealth
  • Reputation and the relationship between the individual and the family
Q.8
"It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife." Which of the themes of is prominently highlighted in the novel's first sentence?
  • Money
  • Marriage
  • Society
  • All of the above
Q.9
The problem of the entailed Longbourn estate is related to which of the following themes?
  • Prejudice
  • Pride
  • Economic inequality and gender
  • The distinction between inner qualities and outward appearance
Q.10
In which of the following is money NOT an issue?
  • Mr and Mrs Bennet's agreement to allow Lydia to go to Brighton
  • Deciding whom to marry
  • Choosing with whom to socialize
  • Deciding how to speak to another
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