Quiz Questions
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Q1 of 45
What are the names of the three farmers in the story?
- Scratch, Sniff and Grub
- Boggis, Bunce and Bean
- Twitch, Clench and Brood
- Grubb, Snagg and Pill
Q2 of 45
What does Mr Fox do that makes the farmers so angry?
- He poisons their water supply
- He digs up their crops
- He frightens their workers
- He steals their chickens, ducks and other food
Q3 of 45
How do the farmers try to catch Mr Fox at the start?
- They hire hunters
- They use dogs to chase him
- They set traps
- They wait outside his hole with guns and shoot off his tail
Q4 of 45
What do the farmers decide to do after their initial plan fails?
- Flood the hole
- Burn the hillside
- Dig the foxes out with shovels and machines
- Give up
Q5 of 45
What part of Mr Fox is shot off?
- His tail
- His nose
- His paw
- His ear
Q6 of 45
Who helps Mr Fox by tunnelling underground to the various farms?
- Mr Fox and his four children
- Mr Fox, his family and Badger
- Just Mr Fox alone
- Mrs Fox and the children
Q7 of 45
What does Mr Fox find when he tunnels into Boggis's farm?
- Gold coins
- Three fat, plump chickens in a chicken house
- Cider barrels
- Grain and vegetables
Q8 of 45
What does Rat guard at Bean's cellar?
Q9 of 45
What is the big feast that Mr Fox organises at the end?
- A feast underground for all the tunnel animals using the stolen food
- A birthday party
- A party for the farmers
- A victory dinner above ground
Q10 of 45
What happens to the three farmers at the end of the story?
- They catch Mr Fox
- They go to prison
- They are defeated and give up, sitting miserably waiting outside
- They become friends with the fox
Q11 of 45
What type of food is Bunce famous for producing?
- Turkeys and ducks
- Pigs and cows
- Ducks and geese
- Chickens and geese
Q12 of 45
What is Mr Fox's key personality trait that helps him outwit the farmers?
- His strength
- His size
- His speed
- His cleverness and cunning
Q13 of 45
How does Mrs Fox keep the family's spirits up during the dig?
- She tells them stories
- She reminds them that Mr Fox has never let them down and they must trust him
- She brings food from the surface
- She sings to them
Q14 of 45
What does Bean mostly produce on his farm?
- Apple cider
- Turkeys
- Vegetables
- Wool
Q15 of 45
Where do all the tunnel animals meet for the feast?
- In Mr Fox's original burrow
- In Badger's sett
- In a large underground chamber beneath the trees
- In Bean's cellar
Q16 of 45
How is each of the three farmers described to show they are unpleasant?
- Boggis is hugely fat, Bunce is a small potbellied dwarf, Bean is thin and crafty
- They all mistreat their animals
- They all cheat their workers and refuse to pay fair wages
- They all live in dirty, rundown farmhouses
Q17 of 45
Why do the farmers decide they must catch Mr Fox at all costs?
- He has destroyed their fences
- He has been stealing their animals for years and they have finally had enough
- He has insulted them in the village
- He has been feeding their animals to his family
Q18 of 45
What is the farmers' first method of trying to catch the fox?
- They pour poison down the tunnel
- They wait with guns at the hole and shoot when he appears
- They use dogs to flush him out
- They set traps at the entrance to the den
Q19 of 45
Why does digging fail to catch the fox family?
- Mr Fox digs faster than the farmers can excavate and takes his family deeper
- The ground is too rocky for their diggers to work properly
- The badgers help block the machines
- Their machinery breaks down halfway through
Q20 of 45
What decision do the farmers make when digging fails?
- They try to smoke the foxes out
- They call in the army for help
- They flood the tunnels with water
- They sit and wait with guns, refusing to leave until the foxes either come out or starve
Q21 of 45
What does Mr Fox decide to do to find food while trapped underground?
- He digs a new tunnel directly into each of the three farms to steal food
- He finds underground mushrooms and roots for the family to eat
- He sends his cubs up at night when the farmers are asleep
- He asks Badger to fetch food above ground
Q22 of 45
Which animal joins Mr Fox underground and feels uncomfortable about the stealing?
- Mole, who keeps getting lost in the tunnels
- Badger, who considers stealing to be dishonest
- Rabbit, who is worried about getting caught
- Weasel, who is scared of the farmers
Q23 of 45
How does Mr Fox justify stealing from the farmers?
- He denies it is really stealing at all
- He says they have so much they will not notice
- He says he will repay them when his family is safe
- He argues they are cruel and horrible people who deserve to be stolen from
Q24 of 45
What does Mr Fox find in Bean's cellar that adds to the feast?
- Hundreds of bottles of strong cider
- Smoked fish and dried fruit
- Jars of preserves and pickles
- A large store of cured meats
Q25 of 45
Who does Mr Fox invite to the underground feast?
- Only his own family and Badger
- Every animal in the surrounding woodland
- Badger, Rat and the nearby rabbit families
- All the other hungry animals who live in the hill
Q26 of 45
What state are the three farmers in at the end of the story?
- They have called the police to report the theft
- They have accepted defeat and gone home
- They have agreed to a truce with the fox
- They are still sitting outside the hole, furious, growing hungrier and colder
Q27 of 45
What do we learn about Ash, Mr Fox's son, during the adventure?
- He is the fastest runner in the family
- He discovers the route to Bunce's storehouse
- He overcomes being small and weak to help carry food despite being injured
- He is the only one brave enough to approach the farmers' buildings
Q28 of 45
Why might readers cheer for Mr Fox even though he is a thief?
- Because he is stealing from cruel bullies to feed his family
- Because Mr Fox is so clever the reader cannot help admiring him
- Because the story never shows the farmers suffering
- Because foxes are naturally sympathetic animals
Q29 of 45
What does the underground world the animals create represent?
- A permanent home that is better than their old lives above ground
- A temporary escape that cannot last forever
- A community based on sharing and cooperation, safe from the cruelty above
- The natural world underneath human society
Q30 of 45
How does Dahl make the three farmers comic rather than genuinely frightening?
- By giving them silly names and making them obsessively stubborn rather than clever
- By showing they are too cowardly to use truly dangerous methods
- By showing them arguing with each other constantly
- By having animals make fun of them throughout the story
Q31 of 45
Boggis, Bunce and Bean are described in the opening rhyme as 'three of the nastiest villains.' Is it fair to see the farmers as villains? Consider their perspective.
- All three farmers are equally bad
- The story frames them as villains from the fox's viewpoint
- Yes, they are clearly evil
- The farmers are the heroes
Q32 of 45
How does Dahl use physical description of the three farmers to signal their moral character?
- Dahl's grotesque physical descriptions (Boggis as enormously fat, Bunce as a pot-bellied dwarf) suggest inner ugliness
- It is purely for comedy
- Their appearance has no meaning
- Their appearance is neutral
Q33 of 45
Mr Fox steals from the farmers. Does Dahl present this as wrong? What does the novel suggest about theft when driven by necessity?
- Dahl never addresses this, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- Mr Fox is a criminal in the story
- The novel frames theft as heroic when motivated by survival and the protection of family, suggesting that moral rules depend on context and power dynamics
- Theft is always wrong
Q34 of 45
How does Fantastic Mr Fox fit within the tradition of the trickster hero in folklore? What does Mr Fox share with characters like Brer Rabbit?
- Mr Fox is unique
- It doesn't share anything
- Tricksters are usually animals
- Like all trickster heroes, Mr Fox uses wit rather than force to overcome more powerful adversaries, celebrating intelligence as the weapon of the powerless
Q35 of 45
What might the underground feast at the end symbolise, and what does it suggest about community and survival?
- The feast represents community solidarity and shared resources
- It is just a nice ending
- It rewards Mr Fox
- It is just funny
Q36 of 45
The farmers are associated with above-ground, the foxes with underground. What might this contrast represent thematically?
- It has no meaning
- It is about hiding
- Foxes live underground, and
- Above ground = human power, control and aggression; underground = animal ingenuity, community and life. The underground world ultimately thrives, suggesting nature endures
Q37 of 45
How does Dahl create comedy from the farmers' increasing obsession and failure? What does their inability to catch the fox suggest?
- Their escalating, disproportionate response to a fox becomes satirical
- They are simply stupid
- The farming equipment broke
- They are unlucky unlucky
Q38 of 45
Mrs Fox is a relatively minor character but plays a crucial role. How does her quiet strength contribute to the family's survival?
- She is too passive
- Mrs Fox's steadfast belief in her husband, emotional support and endurance represent the quiet backbone that sustains families through crisis
- She is unimportant unimportant
- She does the cooking, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
Q39 of 45
Fantastic Mr Fox is one of Dahl's shortest novels. How does this brevity affect the pace and impact of the story?
- Dahl ran out of ideas, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- The tight structure creates relentless pace and urgency
- It is just a short story
- It means less quality
Q40 of 45
How does Dahl use repetition and escalation (guns → diggers → siege) to build tension in the novel?
- The escalation is realistic
- Repetition is stylistic, and
- Repetition is for children, and
- Each escalation raises the stakes and shows the farmers' growing desperation
Q41 of 45
The novel is dedicated 'to Olivia.' Dahl's daughter Olivia died aged seven. Does knowing this change how you read the story's themes of protecting one's children?
- Authors' lives don't matter
- It changes nothing
- It was a dedication, and
- Biographical context enriches reading
Q42 of 45
What does the character of Badger add to the story, and how does Mr Fox's relationship with him develop the theme of community?
- Badger represents doubt and caution
- Badger is funny, and
- Badger is a second hero
- Badger is unimportant
Q43 of 45
The farmers decide to sit and wait indefinitely for the fox to emerge. What does this willingness to waste their own lives suggest about the nature of obsessive revenge?
- They will eventually win
- It shows patience
- Obsessive revenge becomes self-destructive
- They are being sensible
Q44 of 45
How might a modern reader's attitudes to fox hunting and farming affect their reading of the novel compared to an original 1970 reader?
- Changing attitudes to animal welfare mean modern readers may bring stronger sympathy to the fox's plight, showing how context shapes interpretation
- 1970 readers liked foxes more
- Modern readers prefer farmers
- Readers are always the same
Q45 of 45
Mr Fox is celebrated as a hero by the other animals. Is he genuinely heroic, or does the novel give him an undeserved celebration? Discuss.
- He is completely heroic
- The animals are wrong to celebrate him
- He is not heroic at all
- Mr Fox acts from self-interest as much as altruism, but his courage, ingenuity and generosity in sharing the feast complicate simple judgement