| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Category of Shakespearean play Coriolanus falls into | Tragedy/History | 100%
|
| Number of lines attributed to Coriolanus' son | 1 | 75%
|
| Class opposite to the Plebeians | Patricians | 75%
|
| Enemy city Coriolanus arrives in after being exiled from Rome | Antium | 50%
|
| Coriolanus' birth name | Caius Martius | 50%
|
| Position held by Cominius that Coriolanus tries to achieve | Consul | 50%
|
| Shakespeare's primary source for the events of the play | Plutarch | 50%
|
| New Plebeian political role; 5 exist, but only 2 are named | Tribune | 50%
|
| Term for an additional name given to a Roman, in this case, 'Coriolanus' | Agnomen | 25%
|
| City which Coriolanus singlehandedly fights his way through to earn his name | Corioles | 25%
|
| Patrician who notably describes the body politic metaphor | Menenius | 25%
|
| Actor who directed and starred in the 2011 film adaptation | Ralph Fiennes | 25%
|
| Character who says "What is the city but the people?" | Sicinius Velutus | 25%
|
| Enemies of the Romans; Aufidius' allegiance | The Volsces | 25%
|
| Character who critics have speculated shares a homoerotic relationship with Coriolanus | Tullus Aufidius | 25%
|
| Character who persuades Coriolanus to create peace between Rome and her enemy | Volumnia | 25%
|
| Phrase repeated by Coriolanus upon appearing, covered in blood in Act 1, Scene 6 | Come I too late | 0%
|
| Mythical creature to which Coriolanus is twice likened | Dragon | 0%
|
| Term which twice spurs Coriolanus into anger leading to both his exile and death | Traitor | 0%
|
| What the Plebeians give (and then take from) Coriolanus as a symbol for their votes | Voices | 0%
|