Quiz Questions
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Q1 of 45
What is the name of the boy who is terrified of the dentist?
Q2 of 45
What is the name of the evil dentist?
- Miss Sharp
- Miss Fang
- Miss Root
- Miss Drill
Q3 of 45
What does Zak find under his pillow instead of a coin from the tooth fairy?
- A letter
- His own teeth
- A spider
- Creepy crawlies and horrible things
Q4 of 45
What is wrong with Zak's father that means he cannot work?
- He was in an accident and has severe anxiety
- He is ill with a physical illness
- He is lazy
- He lost his job due to crime
Q5 of 45
What does Miss Root use her dental surgery to do secretly?
- Spy on the town
- Make poisons
- Steal from patients
- Extract children's teeth for dark magic purposes
Q6 of 45
What is the name of Zak's friend who is obsessed with sweets despite her terrible teeth?
Q7 of 45
What does Miss Root keep in her surgery that is not normal for a dentist?
- A laboratory
- A cauldron and dark magical equipment
- A dog
- Weapons
Q8 of 45
What clue helps Zak realise Miss Root is not what she seems?
- She has no qualifications
- Her receptionist warns him
- She smells wrong
- Strange things start happening to children who visit her
Q9 of 45
What is Miss Root ultimately revealed to be?
- An alien
- An escaped criminal
- A spy
- A witch using tooth fairy dark magic
Q10 of 45
Who helps Zak defeat Miss Root?
- His father
- His teacher
- The real tooth fairy
- The local police
Q11 of 45
What does Miss Root want to collect from children?
- Their hair
- Their blood
- Their teeth, which she uses for a dark spell
- Their fears
Q12 of 45
What is the name of Zak's father?
Q13 of 45
How does Zak eventually manage to face his fear of the dentist?
- He is tricked
- His fear disappears suddenly
- He is forced into it
- His love for his father and the need to save others gives him the courage to act despite his terror
Q14 of 45
What transformation occurs in Zak's relationship with his father by the end?
- Nothing changes
- His father leaves
- His father finds new strength and purpose, beginning to recover
- His father worsens
Q15 of 45
What happens to Miss Root at the conclusion of the novel?
- She is defeated and destroyed by the tooth fairy
- She turns good
- She escapes
- She is arrested
Q16 of 45
Why does Alfie refuse to see a dentist?
- He is deeply frightened and his father shares his fear
- He knows something is wrong with dentists from something he read
- He had a terrible experience as a toddler
- He once broke a dentist's drill and is afraid of being in trouble
Q17 of 45
What is strange about Miss Sprout, the new dentist?
- She gives all the children sweets and says brushing is unnecessary
- Children who visit her come back with their teeth worse and behaving oddly
- She charges enormous fees and locks children in the chair
- She works only at night and no one has seen her face clearly
Q18 of 45
What does Miss Sprout leave under children's pillows?
- Small stones painted to look like teeth
- Horrible things such as bugs, spiders and creepy-crawlies
- Rotten old teeth
- Notes warning children not to brush their teeth
Q19 of 45
What is revealed about Miss Sprout's true nature?
- She is a government spy testing a new water additive
- She is a demon whose mission is the exact opposite of a good dentist
- She is a witch conducting experiments
- She is a vampire
Q20 of 45
What is Alfie's relationship with his father?
- His father is a successful dentist which creates painful irony
- His father is strict and dismisses Alfie's fears as weakness
- His father is absent and Alfie has been raised mostly alone
- His father is ill and depends on Alfie, who feels guilty about worrying him
Q21 of 45
How does Alfie help defeat Miss Sprout?
- He brings back the old dentist to face her
- He organises the town's children to confront her
- He researches ancient dental demons
- He uses his knowledge of what she hates against her
Q22 of 45
How does Walliams use Alfie's fear of dentists in the plot?
- It makes the twist of the dentist being truly evil both funny and satisfying
- It is just a starting point
- He cannot fight Miss Sprout until he overcomes his fear first
- It represents his wider fear of all authority figures
Q23 of 45
What is the comic message of the story about dental hygiene?
- That dental anxiety is common and should be taken more seriously by adults
- That parents should take children to the dentist whatever their fears
- That brushing is actually unnecessary
- Good teeth are the literal weapon against evil
Q24 of 45
How does Alfie's father's illness affect the reader's view of Alfie?
- It creates a subplot that distracts from the main story
- It explains why Alfie is anxious about almost everything
- It makes his bravery more impressive
- It makes him seem more vulnerable and in need of rescue
Q25 of 45
What is the effect of setting a horror story inside a dental surgery?
- It trivialises a real issue about children's dental health
- It takes a common childhood fear and builds a comic horror story directly from it
- It lets Walliams include lots of gruesome details about teeth
- It makes the horror too realistic to be funny
Q26 of 45
What is the name of the kind elderly dentist Alfie used to visit?
- Mr Winshaw
- Mr Plaque
- Mr Loosen
- Mr Filling
Q27 of 45
Why does Miss Sprout want children to have rotten teeth?
- As a demon, ruining children's teeth is her purpose
- She is conducting a scientific experiment on dental decay
- She is paid by sweet manufacturers to encourage sugar consumption
- She wants to create false teeth for every child so they need her services permanently
Q28 of 45
How does the community first react to Miss Sprout?
- They welcome her
- They are suspicious of her immediately
- They are divided
- They refuse to use her because of the strange rumours
Q29 of 45
What detail about Miss Sprout's surgery should have warned people earlier?
- It was never properly lit and she always wore dark glasses
- The smell was wrong
- It had no sterilising equipment visible anywhere
- It was painted entirely black inside
Q30 of 45
What does Alfie's story suggest about facing fears?
- That fears are usually irrational and should be ignored
- That the only way past fear is through it, no matter the cost
- That sometimes fears point to real dangers
- That professional help is always needed to overcome a real phobia
Q31 of 45
How does Walliams use the universal childhood fear of dentists to explore the theme of facing fears?
- By making the dentist literally monstrous, Walliams externalises and validates the fear of dental visits, while the resolution
- The dentist setting is for horror, and
- The novel mocks children who are scared
- Dentist fear is irrational
Q32 of 45
What does the relationship between Zak and his father suggest about reversed roles within families affected by mental illness?
- Mental illness is not a theme
- Zak resents his father
- The father is weak, and
- Zak's role as the carer and protector of his anxious father shows how children in families affected by mental illness often assume adult responsibilities
Q33 of 45
How does Miss Root function as a metaphor for adult authority figures who abuse their power over children?
- The metaphor is too complex for children
- Miss Root
- Adults are always trustworthy
- She is just a witch
Q34 of 45
What does Gabz's sweet addiction and terrible teeth suggest about the consequences of self-indulgence?
- Nothing — she is a comic character, and
- Walliams is anti-sugar
- Her dental decay is both comic and a literal consequence of excess, giving Walliams a way to explore how indulgence has real physical costs in a way young readers viscerally understand
- Gabz has no significance
Q35 of 45
How does Walliams blend fairy-tale elements with contemporary realism in Demon Dentist?
- The tooth fairy mythology and witch villain give the story a fairy-tale structure, while Zak's real poverty, anxious father and council estate setting ground it in recognisable modern Britain
- The fairy-tale elements dominate completely
- The novel is realistic, and
- Fairy tales and realism cannot mix
Q36 of 45
What is Walliams suggesting about the experience of poverty through Zak's family situation?
- Poverty is unimportant
- Zak's poverty is irrelevant to the plot
- Poverty is shown not just as material hardship but as a trap that amplifies vulnerability
- Poor families are always in danger
Q37 of 45
How does the novel use the concept of the 'tooth fairy' — normally a comforting myth — in a subversive way?
- It uses the tooth fairy story, and
- By making the tooth fairy real but ambiguous, and showing dark forces exploiting the same mythology Miss Root corrupts, Walliams shows how comforting narratives can be weaponised
- The tooth fairy is silly, and
- Walliams mocks the tooth fairy tradition
Q38 of 45
How does Zak's overcoming of his fear in the climax relate to the novel's broader theme of inner strength?
- His terror is not magically removed
- He gets magical help to lose his fear, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- His fear was not real
- He is simply brave
Q39 of 45
What does the character of the real tooth fairy suggest about the existence of genuine good forces in the world to counter evil ones?
- Good and evil don't matter in this book
- She is just a plot device
- The tooth fairy represents the principle that authentic good exists to counter authentic evil
- The tooth fairy is not important
Q40 of 45
How does Walliams make a serious point about dental health through an entertaining story?
- The dental health message is preachy
- By showing the catastrophic consequences
- He makes dentistry fun, and
- Walliams doesn't address dental health
Q41 of 45
What does Zak's courage in the face of his greatest fear suggest to young readers about their own capacity for bravery?
- By making his hero genuinely terrified but capable of acting anyway, Walliams tells young readers that they do not need to be fearless to be brave
- Zak is special and different from ordinary children
- Fear disqualifies you from heroism
- naturally brave children can be heroes, and
Q42 of 45
How does the novel subvert the 'safe, professional adult' figure in a way that teaches critical thinking to young readers?
- It teaches that professional credentials and positions of trust should not automatically override a child's instincts
- The message is too dark for children
- It teaches children to distrust all adults
- Children should always distrust dentists
Q43 of 45
How does Walliams use the physical setting of the dental surgery to create atmosphere?
- The surgery is described minimally
- Setting is not important in this novel
- Clinical white surfaces, sharp instruments and the smell of antiseptic are transformed into gothic horror props
- The surgery is a comforting place
Q44 of 45
What does the resolution — father beginning to recover — suggest about the relationship between a child's courage and a parent's healing?
- They are unrelated unrelated
- Zak's courage and action model something for his father
- The father heals independently
- The father doesn't recover
Q45 of 45
In what ways does Demon Dentist follow the classic hero's journey structure?
- It doesn't follow any classic structure
- Zak is not a hero
- The hero's journey is too academic
- Zak receives a call to adventure (strange things happening), crosses a threshold (entering Miss Root's surgery), faces his deepest fear, receives supernatural aid and returns transformed