Roald Dahl • Ages 7+ • KS2 • 45 questions

George's Marvellous Medicine KS2 Quiz (With Answers)

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Quiz Questions

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Q1 of 45

Why does George decide to make a new medicine for his grandmother?

  • Her medicine ran out
  • She is a horrid old woman who takes medicine that tastes awful, and he wants to give her something really special
  • She is very ill
  • His mother told him to

Q2 of 45

What kind of person is Grandma in the story?

  • Funny and adventurous
  • Quiet and gentle
  • Mean, grumpy, greedy and unkind to George
  • Sweet and kind

Q3 of 45

What is the first thing that happens when Grandma drinks George's medicine?

  • She grows enormously and bursts through the ceiling
  • She shrinks
  • She falls asleep
  • She turns blue

Q4 of 45

What household products does George use to make his medicine?

  • Just cooking ingredients
  • Only garden chemicals
  • Things from all over the house including floor polish, engine oil, shampoo, animal medicines and more
  • Only kitchen ingredients

Q5 of 45

What does George's father (Mr Kranky) want to do with the medicine?

  • Sell it to make money
  • Give it to the hospital
  • Destroy it
  • Use it to grow his farm animals to enormous sizes

Q6 of 45

Can George remember the exact recipe for Medicine Number One?

  • His mother wrote it down
  • He filmed himself making it
  • Yes, perfectly
  • No — he cannot recreate it exactly, no matter how hard he tries

Q7 of 45

What happens when one of the hens is given the medicine?

  • It grows enormously and produces enormous eggs
  • It lays golden eggs
  • It grows feathers in colours
  • It escapes

Q8 of 45

What happens when Grandma drinks Medicine Number Four (the final attempt)?

  • She shrinks down to nothing and disappears
  • She is cured
  • She becomes kind
  • She grows enormously

Q9 of 45

What is George's father's reaction when Grandma disappears?

  • He is devastated
  • He is horrified and guilty
  • He calls the police
  • He is not terribly upset

Q10 of 45

How does George's mother react to his marvellous medicine?

  • She is impressed
  • She helps him
  • She doesn't notice
  • She is horrified and constantly warned George not to touch things

Q11 of 45

What does the enormous pig get taken to?

  • The county fair
  • The market to be sold
  • The newspaper for a photo
  • The farm show where it wins prizes

Q12 of 45

What subject area does George essentially become when he makes the medicine?

  • An inventor
  • A farmer
  • A scientist or chemist, experimenting with ingredients
  • A chef

Q13 of 45

Which medicine causes animals to grow but explode?

  • Medicine Number One
  • Medicine Number Two
  • Medicine Number Three
  • Medicine Number Four

Q14 of 45

What is the last thing we see of Grandma in the novel?

  • She is in hospital
  • She was never real
  • She has shrunk so small she vanishes entirely
  • She has returned to normal

Q15 of 45

What is the moral stated or implied at the end of the novel?

  • Always be kind to old people
  • George was wrong
  • There is no moral deeper meaning
  • Medicines must not be tampered with

Q16 of 45

Why does George decide to make his own medicine?

  • He wants to help his grandmother get better
  • He thinks the doctor's medicine is too expensive
  • He is bored and looking for an experiment to try
  • He is furious with his horrid grandmother and wants to give her a fright

Q17 of 45

What kinds of things does George put in his medicine?

  • Herbs from the garden and kitchen spices only
  • Food colouring, sugar and vinegar
  • Animal medicines, engine oil, paint, shampoo and all sorts of household chemicals
  • Cooking ingredients mixed with bathroom medicines

Q18 of 45

What is the first effect of George's medicine on his grandmother?

  • She starts spinning round and round
  • She turns bright orange
  • She shoots up through the ceiling to a huge height
  • She falls asleep immediately

Q19 of 45

What does George's father see as the commercial value of the medicine?

  • He wants to give it to all the neighbours
  • He plans to sell it as a cure for all illnesses
  • He thinks it could make farm animals grow huge, increasing his farming profits
  • He plans to enter it in an invention competition

Q20 of 45

What goes wrong when George tries to recreate the medicine?

  • He cannot remember the exact ingredients and each new version produces different effects
  • His mother hides all the household chemicals
  • His grandmother destroys his notes
  • He runs out of key ingredients

Q21 of 45

What happens to Grandma after drinking several different versions of the medicine?

  • She shrinks smaller and smaller until she disappears completely
  • She keeps changing size unpredictably
  • She becomes kind and pleasant
  • She turns permanently tiny but survives

Q22 of 45

Why does Grandma deserve little sympathy when things go wrong?

  • She is suffering from a genuine illness
  • She is confused and does not understand what is happening to her
  • She is horrible
  • She was once kind but became bitter in old age

Q23 of 45

How does George's mother react to what has happened?

  • She is horrified by what happened to her mother and upset with George
  • She is more worried about the mess than about anyone
  • She is delighted and praises George
  • She sees the funny side and tells the neighbours

Q24 of 45

How does Dahl use exaggeration in this story?

  • By taking the idea of homemade medicine to an absurd extreme with impossible results
  • By making Grandma's behaviour slightly worse than it would really be
  • By making the farm animals react in human ways
  • By making George's parents unrealistically stupid

Q25 of 45

What does the story suggest about the consequences of acting out of anger?

  • That George's actions are completely justified and he suffers no real consequences
  • That anger can lead somewhere satisfying but you cannot always control where it ends up
  • That anger always leads to disaster and George is punished
  • That spite is harmless when directed at someone truly unpleasant

Q26 of 45

What does George add from the bathroom cabinet?

  • He does not go into the bathroom
  • Toothpaste, soap and bath salts
  • His father's shaving cream and his mother's face powder
  • Cough medicine, vitamins and antiseptic cream

Q27 of 45

What does this story share with other Dahl stories about children and authority?

  • That sometimes children take action against unjust adult authority
  • That adult power is always eventually restored
  • That parents are always wiser than children even when they seem foolish
  • That children should obey adults even when they disagree

Q28 of 45

What does George's reaction when the plan works beyond his expectations tell us?

  • That he is crueller than the reader realised
  • That George is a normal child who did not fully think through the consequences
  • That he is frightened because he realises he has real power
  • That he is proud and wants to show off to his parents

Q29 of 45

Why is the story satisfying for young readers despite its dark elements?

  • Because Grandma was never really in danger
  • Because George eventually apologises and learns a lesson
  • Because Grandma eventually becomes a better person
  • Because the consequences are funny and fantastical rather than truly serious

Q30 of 45

What do the giant farm animals represent in the story's plot?

  • A subplot that shows George did not mean to cause harm
  • Evidence that the medicine has useful properties after all
  • A warning that the medicine is dangerous for everyone
  • A shift from personal revenge to absurd commercial comedy when Father gets excited

Q31 of 45

George's grandmother is extremely unpleasant. Does Dahl justify George's actions, or does the story carry a cautionary element about revenge?

  • George was clearly wrong
  • There is no ambiguity
  • The novel balances satisfaction at Grandma's fate with the implicit warning that George's experiment gets out of control
  • George was totally justified, and

Q32 of 45

How does George's process of making the medicine reflect the joy of scientific curiosity in children? What does Dahl celebrate here?

  • George is naughty, and
  • Dahl celebrates the child's instinct to experiment, mix and create
  • George was being reckless
  • Science requires training

Q33 of 45

The ending sees Grandma shrink to nothing. Is this a satisfying or troubling conclusion? What does it suggest about Dahl's moral framework?

  • It is entirely satisfying
  • It is tragic tragic
  • It is deliberately unresolved
  • Grandma deserved it

Q34 of 45

Grandma claims to know about 'the dark arts' and warns George that she has powers. How does this establish atmosphere and influence the reader's sympathies?

  • Old women often say this
  • It makes Grandma interesting
  • It creates immediate unease and positions Grandma as a genuine source of menace
  • It was teasing, and

Q35 of 45

How does the novel satirise the adult obsession with medicine and miraculous cures?

  • There is no satire
  • By making Grandma dependent on bottles of medicine and George's concoction so powerful, Dahl parodies the faith placed in pharmaceutical quick fixes as solutions to ageing and unhappiness
  • Medicines are important
  • It celebrates medicine

Q36 of 45

George is left entirely alone with Grandma. What does Dahl explore about the vulnerability of children left in care situations they cannot escape?

  • Parents are always responsible
  • It is just a plot setup
  • Dahl captures a real childhood fear
  • George was fine

Q37 of 45

The other medicines produce comic, uncontrolled results. What does this suggest about the limits of scientific knowledge?

  • The ingredients were wrong
  • Science can do anything
  • Science without complete understanding produces unpredictable results
  • George was unlucky

Q38 of 45

How does Mr Kranky's commercial instinct (wanting to profit from the medicine) contrast with George's original creative impulse? What does this say about adult versus child motivation?

  • They want the same thing
  • Mr Kranky was right
  • Adults impose commercial frameworks on childhood creativity
  • George also wanted profit

Q39 of 45

The title calls it 'marvellous' medicine. How does Dahl use the word 'marvellous' throughout his work, and what does it signal about tone and wonder?

  • It is just a word
  • Dahl's titles are literal, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • 'Marvellous' signals Dahl's characteristic blend of wonder and irony
  • It was a random title

Q40 of 45

George's medicine contains dangerous substances including engine oil and animal medicines. Is there a responsibility concern in presenting this to child readers? How might Dahl have responded to this criticism?

  • It is completely safe
  • Children might try it
  • Dahl was irresponsible, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • The concern is legitimate but Dahl would argue that children understand fantasy logic

Q41 of 45

How does the short, punchy prose style of the novel match its subject matter?

  • The style is simple, and
  • Short sentences are easier to read
  • The style is unrelated to content
  • Short, energetic sentences mirror George's urgent, excited experimentation

Q42 of 45

Grandma is described as looking as if she had eaten too many of whatever you didn't like. What does this suggest about how Dahl creates memorable villains?

  • The description was random
  • Grandma is old, and
  • It is a physical description
  • Dahl creates villains through exaggeration that children recognise

Q43 of 45

The illustrations (by Quentin Blake) are central to the book's identity. Why is the Dahl–Blake partnership significant in British children's literature?

  • Blake added the pictures after
  • The pictures are decoration, and
  • The pictures are too simple
  • Blake's sketchy, energetic style perfectly captures Dahl's anarchic spirit

Q44 of 45

What does the novel suggest about the nature of creativity — is it reproducible or essentially a one-time accident?

  • George cannot recreate the exact medicine
  • He needed better notes, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • George forgot the recipe, and
  • Creativity is always reproducible

Q45 of 45

If we read George as a metaphor for the creative writer, what does his medicine represent, and what happens when adults try to reproduce or commercialise it?

  • George is not a metaphor
  • Dahl didn't intend metaphors, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • This is over-reading it
  • George's medicine = original creative work; his father's commercialisation = the corruption of art by commerce; the failed reproductions = the impossibility of formulaic creativity

All Answers

  1. Q1: She is a horrid old woman who takes medicine that tastes awful, and he wants to give her something really special
  2. Q2: Mean, grumpy, greedy and unkind to George
  3. Q3: She grows enormously and bursts through the ceiling
  4. Q4: Things from all over the house including floor polish, engine oil, shampoo, animal medicines and more
  5. Q5: Use it to grow his farm animals to enormous sizes
  6. Q6: No — he cannot recreate it exactly, no matter how hard he tries
  7. Q7: It grows enormously and produces enormous eggs
  8. Q8: She shrinks down to nothing and disappears
  9. Q9: He is not terribly upset
  10. Q10: She is horrified and constantly warned George not to touch things
  11. Q11: The county fair
  12. Q12: A scientist or chemist, experimenting with ingredients
  13. Q13: Medicine Number Three
  14. Q14: She has shrunk so small she vanishes entirely
  15. Q15: Medicines must not be tampered with
  16. Q16: He is furious with his horrid grandmother and wants to give her a fright
  17. Q17: Animal medicines, engine oil, paint, shampoo and all sorts of household chemicals
  18. Q18: She shoots up through the ceiling to a huge height
  19. Q19: He thinks it could make farm animals grow huge, increasing his farming profits
  20. Q20: He cannot remember the exact ingredients and each new version produces different effects
  21. Q21: She shrinks smaller and smaller until she disappears completely
  22. Q22: She is horrible
  23. Q23: She is horrified by what happened to her mother and upset with George
  24. Q24: By taking the idea of homemade medicine to an absurd extreme with impossible results
  25. Q25: That anger can lead somewhere satisfying but you cannot always control where it ends up
  26. Q26: Toothpaste, soap and bath salts
  27. Q27: That sometimes children take action against unjust adult authority
  28. Q28: That George is a normal child who did not fully think through the consequences
  29. Q29: Because the consequences are funny and fantastical rather than truly serious
  30. Q30: A shift from personal revenge to absurd commercial comedy when Father gets excited
  31. Q31: The novel balances satisfaction at Grandma's fate with the implicit warning that George's experiment gets out of control
  32. Q32: Dahl celebrates the child's instinct to experiment, mix and create
  33. Q33: It is deliberately unresolved
  34. Q34: It creates immediate unease and positions Grandma as a genuine source of menace
  35. Q35: By making Grandma dependent on bottles of medicine and George's concoction so powerful, Dahl parodies the faith placed in pharmaceutical quick fixes as solutions to ageing and unhappiness
  36. Q36: Dahl captures a real childhood fear
  37. Q37: Science without complete understanding produces unpredictable results
  38. Q38: Adults impose commercial frameworks on childhood creativity
  39. Q39: 'Marvellous' signals Dahl's characteristic blend of wonder and irony
  40. Q40: The concern is legitimate but Dahl would argue that children understand fantasy logic
  41. Q41: Short, energetic sentences mirror George's urgent, excited experimentation
  42. Q42: Dahl creates villains through exaggeration that children recognise
  43. Q43: Blake's sketchy, energetic style perfectly captures Dahl's anarchic spirit
  44. Q44: George cannot recreate the exact medicine
  45. Q45: George's medicine = original creative work; his father's commercialisation = the corruption of art by commerce; the failed reproductions = the impossibility of formulaic creativity
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