Quiz Questions
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Q1 of 45
What is Alfie?
- A bird
- A cat
- A small tortoise belonging to Mrs Silver
- A dog
Q2 of 45
What does 'Esio Trot' mean?
- It is 'tortoise' spelled backwards
- It is a made-up word
- It is a magic spell
- It is an African word
Q3 of 45
Who is Mr Hoppy in love with?
- His friend Mrs Jones
- Mrs Silver, his downstairs neighbour
- His neighbour Mrs Brown
- A woman at work
Q4 of 45
Why is Mrs Silver sad about Alfie?
- He is not growing
- He doesn't eat
- He is ill
- He escaped
Q5 of 45
What is Mr Hoppy's clever plan to win Mrs Silver's affection?
- He builds her a garden
- He buys her flowers
- He secretly replaces Alfie with progressively larger tortoises, making Mrs Silver think Alfie is growing
- He teaches Alfie tricks
Q6 of 45
How many tortoises does Mr Hoppy collect?
- About 10
- About 200
- About 50
- About 140
Q7 of 45
What does Mr Hoppy make to reach Mrs Silver's balcony from his?
- A bridge
- He uses a ladder
- A long pole with a special tortoise-grabbing device
- He drops a rope
Q8 of 45
What is the 'magic spell' that Mr Hoppy teaches Mrs Silver to make Alfie grow?
- He tells her to recite 'Esio Trot'
- A type of dance
- A song
- A real spell
Q9 of 45
What does Mrs Silver do with Alfie every night?
- Holds him and talks to him lovingly
- Feeds him special food
- Puts him in a box
- Takes him for a walk
Q10 of 45
At the end of the story, do Mr Hoppy and Mrs Silver get together?
- Yes, they get married and live happily ever after
- No, Mrs Silver discovers his trick
- No, they remain neighbours
- Yes, but Mrs Silver is angry first
Q11 of 45
What floor does Mr Hoppy live on relative to Mrs Silver?
- In the flat next door
- Below her
- On the same floor
- Above her
Q12 of 45
How does Mr Hoppy manage to swap the tortoises without Mrs Silver noticing?
- He uses magic
- He does it while she is out, reaching down from his balcony above hers
- He distracts her
- He does it at night
Q13 of 45
What is the charm of Mrs Silver that Mr Hoppy loves?
- Her cooking
- Her kindness and love for her tortoise
- Her intelligence
- Her garden
Q14 of 45
What happens to all the extra tortoises at the end?
- They are sold
- They are released into parks and gardens and given to local children
- They stay in Mr Hoppy's flat
- They are returned to the pet shop
Q15 of 45
This story is described as a 'love story.' What is unusual about it for a Roald Dahl book?
- It has no children
- It features elderly adult characters and a gentle, benign plot
- It is too short
- It is boring
Q16 of 45
Why is Mr Hoppy too shy to speak properly to Mrs Silver?
- He is deeply in love with her and too nervous to say what he feels
- He is rude and prefers to keep to himself
- He is embarrassed about the untidy state of his flat
- He disapproves of keeping tortoises as pets
Q17 of 45
What does Mrs Silver want more than anything?
- For her tortoise Alfie to grow bigger
- A companion to spend time with in her old age
- A new and larger flat
- A garden so Alfie has more space
Q18 of 45
How does Mr Hoppy plan to make Mrs Silver think Alfie is growing?
- He gives Mrs Silver a fake scientific explanation for rapid tortoise growth
- He builds a special cage that makes tortoises look bigger
- He quietly swaps Alfie for slightly larger tortoises over several weeks
- He secretly feeds Alfie special vitamins
Q19 of 45
What is 'Esio Trot' and where does it come from?
- It is 'tortoise' spelled backwards
- An ancient Greek phrase meaning 'beloved creature'
- A Norwegian word meaning 'grow quickly'
- A word Mr Hoppy invents to impress Mrs Silver
Q20 of 45
How does Mr Hoppy secretly acquire all the tortoises he needs?
- He finds them in the park and keeps them on his balcony
- He visits pet shops across London buying tortoises of gradually increasing sizes
- He borrows them from a local zoo
- He orders them by post from a specialist breeder
Q21 of 45
What is the moral problem at the heart of Mr Hoppy's plan?
- He is breaking the law by keeping so many tortoises
- He is wasting money he cannot afford
- He is putting the tortoises in danger by keeping them in a small flat
- He is deceiving someone he claims to love by secretly replacing her pet without her knowledge
Q22 of 45
How does Mrs Silver feel when she thinks Alfie has grown so quickly?
- She immediately tells all her friends about the miracle
- She worries that Alfie is ill and eating too much
- She is suspicious and takes Alfie to a vet
- She is overjoyed
Q23 of 45
How does the story end?
- Mrs Silver discovers the truth by accident but is not angry
- Mr Hoppy reveals his plan and Mrs Silver is so charmed that she agrees to marry him
- Mr Hoppy confesses and Mrs Silver forgives him
- The deception is never discovered and they begin a relationship built on a lie
Q24 of 45
Why does Dahl treat Mr Hoppy's deception gently rather than as a serious wrong?
- Because Mrs Silver is naive and deserves to be deceived
- Because the tortoises are unharmed
- Because it is clearly driven by love and results in happiness for everyone
- Because the deception is so absurd that the reader cannot take it seriously
Q25 of 45
What makes this story feel different in tone from Dahl's stories for younger children?
- Its quiet, romantic focus on adult loneliness gives it a tenderness that is unusual for Dahl
- It has no magic or unusual creature
- It is much longer and more complex
- It deals with themes of grief and loss that children cannot understand
Q26 of 45
What does Mr Hoppy grow on his balcony?
- Herbs and vegetables
- He has no plants
- Tomatoes and runner beans
- Flowers of all kinds
Q27 of 45
What tool does Mr Hoppy invent to help with the tortoise swaps?
- Long wooden tongs to reach down and swap the tortoises while Mrs Silver is away
- A basket he lowers on a rope
- A special trolley to lower the tortoises between balconies
- A pulley system attached to his railing
Q28 of 45
Why does Mrs Silver believe the chant is working?
- She trusts Mr Hoppy completely because he seems so knowledgeable
- She notices the tortoise eating more enthusiastically
- She measures Alfie every week and he seems slightly bigger
- She sees Alfie moving faster which she interprets as a sign of growth
Q29 of 45
What is the overall mood of 'Esio Trot'?
- Warm and gentle
- Dark and unsettling
- Funny but with a sad undertone
- Exciting and fast-paced
Q30 of 45
What does the story say about loneliness in old age?
- That it is inevitable and nothing can be done
- That small connections and small kindnesses can mean everything
- That elderly people should seek professional company
- That animals are the best cure for loneliness
Q31 of 45
Esio Trot is a gentle love story with no children as protagonists. How does this make it stand apart from Dahl's other work?
- It is just different
- Dahl always wrote about adults too, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- By focusing on elderly adults' loneliness and longing, Dahl shows his range and empathy beyond child characters
- It is a weaker book
Q32 of 45
Mr Hoppy deceives Mrs Silver throughout the story. Is this deception romantic or troubling? How does Dahl make the reader sympathise with a lie?
- It is completely romantic
- It is only troubling
- The deception is ethically complex
- It is only romantic
Q33 of 45
What does Alfie the tortoise represent in terms of Mrs Silver's emotional life?
- Alfie is a plot device
- Alfie represents love, constancy and companionship
- He is just a pet
- Tortoises make poor pets
Q34 of 45
The reversed word 'Esio Trot' is treated as magic. What does this suggest about how belief and love can transform ordinary things into the miraculous?
- It was a clever joke, and
- The 'magic' works because Mrs Silver's belief and hope are real
- It is just a trick
- Words have real power
Q35 of 45
How does the setting — two modest flat balconies — enhance rather than limit the story? What does small-scale intimacy add?
- Small scale creates intimacy
- Mr Hoppy needed more space
- A bigger setting would be better
- The setting limits the story
Q36 of 45
The ending is almost impossibly happy. Is this earned? What emotional need does it meet in the reader?
- For a story about loneliness and gentle, unreciprocated love, the happy ending feels genuinely cathartic
- It is too convenient
- It was earned through suffering
- The ending is too neat
Q37 of 45
Mr Hoppy speaks very few words to Mrs Silver before his plan. What does Dahl suggest about the difficulty of expressing love, particularly for shy or reserved people?
- He was rude, and
- He didn't love her really, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- Shy people always fail
- Mr Hoppy's shyness is deeply recognisable
Q38 of 45
How does Dahl use the repetition of swapping tortoises to create narrative momentum in an otherwise very gentle story?
- The plan was too complicated
- Repetition is unnecessary here
- The gradual process of substitution creates a kind of ticking clock
- The repetition is boring
Q39 of 45
Esio Trot was first published in 1990, near the end of Dahl's life. How might biographical context — including his own experiences of love and loss — inform the story's tenderness?
- He wrote it for a child, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- Dahl was always gentle, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- Biography doesn't matter
- Late-career tenderness often reflects personal reckoning
Q40 of 45
Is it significant that Mr Hoppy uses TORTOISES as the vehicle for his plan? What does the tortoise symbolise that another animal might not?
- Any animal would work
- Tortoises were convenient
- Tortoises are funny
- Tortoises represent patience, longevity and slow progress
Q41 of 45
How does Dahl balance comedy and genuine emotion in this story? Does one undermine the other?
- The book is funny, and
- They undermine each other
- The comedy (the absurdity of 140 tortoises in a flat) and the emotion (Mr Hoppy's genuine longing) coexist naturally
- The book is emotional, and
Q42 of 45
Mrs Silver loves Alfie deeply but does not know Mr Hoppy exists. What does this social invisibility of lonely people suggest?
- People in flats don't interact
- She was rude, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- Loneliness makes people invisible to others absorbed in their own world
- Mr Hoppy hid from her
Q43 of 45
What does the story suggest about the relationship between action and speech in expressing love? Is the plan better or worse than simply telling her how he feels?
- Telling her would be better
- Speaking would have been wrong
- Actions are always better
- The plan is a love letter expressed in action rather than words
Q44 of 45
The Quentin Blake illustrations give the characters warmth and gentle comedy. How important is illustration in creating the story's emotional tone?
- Blake's soft, slightly sketchy style creates immediate warmth for both characters
- Illustrations are decoration
- The text creates all the emotion
- Illustrations are separate from text
Q45 of 45
Could Esio Trot be seen as a fairy tale for adults? What elements does it share with the fairy tale tradition?
- Fairy tales are different
- Like a fairy tale, it features a wish (Mr Hoppy's love), a magical transformation (Alfie 'growing'), a patient hero and a happy ending
- Adults don't have fairy tales
- It is not a fairy tale