Quiz Questions
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Q1 of 45
What does the enormous crocodile want to eat?
- Other animals
- Fish
- Plants
- Juicy children
Q2 of 45
Who argues with the enormous crocodile at the start?
- The Notsobig One
- The elephant
- A hippo
- A monkey
Q3 of 45
What is the crocodile's first disguise?
- A bench in the park
- A roundabout
- A flower bed
- A see-saw
Q4 of 45
Which animal first stops the crocodile from eating a child?
- The Trunky elephant
- Muggle-Wump the monkey
- The Roly-Poly Bird
- The elephant
Q5 of 45
What does Trunky the elephant do to the crocodile at the very end?
- Chases him into the river
- Calls the other animals
- Swings him round by his tail and throws him into the sun
- Sits on him
Q6 of 45
How many 'secret plans and clever tricks' does the crocodile boast about?
- More than he can count
- Three
- Five
- Two
Q7 of 45
What is the second disguise the crocodile uses?
- A garden bench
- A flower
- A see-saw
- A palm tree / coconut tree
Q8 of 45
Which bird helps stop the crocodile?
- A flamingo
- A parrot
- The Roly-Poly Bird
- An eagle
Q9 of 45
What does the crocodile pretend to be near the park bench scene?
- A see-saw
- A log
- A colourful carousel horse
- A garden seat
Q10 of 45
What happens when a child almost sits on the crocodile disguised as a see-saw?
- Muggle-Wump warns the children
- The child is eaten
- The Roly-Poly Bird warns them
- The crocodile falls over
Q11 of 45
What does the crocodile use for his disguise as a coconut tree?
- Painted wood
- Branches and leaves from the forest
- His claws and a branch as arms with nuts
- Real coconuts
Q12 of 45
How many animal friends work together to stop the crocodile throughout the story?
Q13 of 45
What does the crocodile say he will do to the children if he catches them?
- Give them a fright
- Just scare them
- Crunch them and munch them and chew them and do all sorts of other things
- Tickle them
Q14 of 45
What is the name of the hippopotamus in the story?
- Hugo
- Muggle-Wump
- Trunky
- There is no hippopotamus
Q15 of 45
Who saves children in the final scene before Trunky ends the story?
- The Roly-Poly Bird
- Trunky
- Muggle-Wump
- An elephant who is not named
Q16 of 45
What does the Enormous Crocodile plan to do in the town?
- Steal food from the market
- Find a friend among the humans
- Frighten the adults away so crocodiles can take over
- Eat one or more of the children playing in the town
Q17 of 45
What does the Enormous Crocodile boast about himself?
- That he is the cleverest and most cunning animal in the whole jungle
- That he can go invisible whenever he wants
- That he is the oldest crocodile in Africa
- That no one has ever defeated him before
Q18 of 45
What is the Enormous Crocodile's first disguise?
- A seesaw in the park
- A palm tree by a picnic area
- A roundabout at the fairground
- A bench outside a shop
Q19 of 45
What do Trunky the elephant, the Muggle-Wump and the Roly-Poly Bird have in common?
- They all follow the crocodile into town to keep an eye on him
- They all warn the children and foil the crocodile's plans at different moments
- They all dislike the crocodile but are too scared to confront him directly
- They all work together to build traps for the crocodile
Q20 of 45
How does Trunky finally defeat the Enormous Crocodile?
- He swings him by the tail and hurls him into the sun
- He throws him into the river on the far side of the jungle
- He ties him up and leaves him for the children to see
- He drops a large tree trunk on him
Q21 of 45
How does Dahl create comic repetition throughout this short story?
- By having the same children encounter the crocodile three times
- By using the same structure
- By making the crocodile give the same boastful speech each time he is stopped
- By repeating the same description of the crocodile's teeth
Q22 of 45
What is the Enormous Crocodile's attitude to hunting children?
- He is entirely cheerful and enthusiastic about it
- He feels some guilt but cannot help himself
- He prefers adult animals but will eat children when necessary
- He is cautious and careful because he is afraid of being caught
Q23 of 45
Why might younger children find this story satisfying?
- Because the animals make the crocodile look silly
- Because the story has a clear villain, clear heroes and a definite happy ending with justice served
- Because the children in the story are brave and fight back themselves
- Because the crocodile gets what he deserves in the end
Q24 of 45
What does the Notsobig One's reaction to the crocodile at the start of the story tell us?
- That not all animals agree with the crocodile's plans
- That even crocodiles have laws about what is and is not acceptable to eat
- That the crocodile is an outcast among animals
- That the crocodile is feared by all animals
Q25 of 45
How is this story simpler in structure than most of Dahl's other books?
- It has no magic or unusual creature
- The illustrations carry most of the plot
- It is the only Dahl story without any adults
- It is written for very young children
Q26 of 45
What does the Enormous Crocodile use as disguises in the town?
- A garden bench and a dustbin
- A lamppost and a park bench
- A shopping trolley and a statue
- A roundabout, a seesaw, a see-through merry-go-round and a palm tree
Q27 of 45
How many times does the crocodile attempt to catch a child?
- Three times
- Five times before the final defeat
- Twice
- Four times
Q28 of 45
What does the story teach about the danger of greed?
- That greedy animals always get punished
- That animals who are greedy eventually learn their lesson
- That greed only harms the greedy one
- That the crocodile's obsession with eating children makes him take risks that lead directly to his destruction
Q29 of 45
Why is the crocodile's defeat especially satisfying?
- Because the farmers who helped the crocodile are also punished
- Because all the animals celebrate together afterwards
- Because children in the story manage to defeat him themselves
- Because he is sent into the sun
Q30 of 45
How does Dahl establish the crocodile's character at the very beginning?
- By showing him sneaking up on a small animal
- By showing the other animals' fear of him
- Through his conversation with the Notsobig One
- By describing his enormous teeth in frightening detail
Q31 of 45
The crocodile boasts about his 'secret plans.' How does Dahl use dramatic irony — where the reader knows the plans will fail — to create comic tension?
- The reader's foreknowledge of failure makes the boasting comic
- Dramatic irony is too complex for this book
- There is no irony
- The plans might work
Q32 of 45
How does repetition function structurally in The Enormous Crocodile? What does each repeated rescue add?
- Each foiled plan follows the same rhythm
- Each rescue is completely different
- Repetition is simple, and
- Repetition is lazy
Q33 of 45
The crocodile is unambiguously villainous — he wants to eat children. Why might Dahl have chosen such a simple moral framework for this book compared to his others?
- The book is aimed at very young readers who benefit from clear moral frameworks. Simple villainy provides safe engagement with the idea of danger and threat without moral ambiguity
- All Dahl books are simple
- Dahl was being lazy, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- The crocodile has reasons
Q34 of 45
Community action defeats the crocodile — no single animal can stop him alone. What message does this send to young children about co-operation?
- One animal could have done it
- By requiring multiple animals working together, Dahl shows that collective action achieves what individuals cannot
- The moral is about being brave
- Animals are always co-operative
Q35 of 45
The ending — the crocodile being flung into the sun — is extreme and final. How does this satisfy the emotional requirements of the story's young audience?
- Young children need decisive, permanent solutions
- It is too frightening
- The crocodile should escape
- It is too violent
Q36 of 45
The Enormous Crocodile is illustrated in colour — unlike most early Dahl books. How does colour contribute to the reading experience for young children?
- Colour helps with reading
- Black and white would be better
- Bright colour creates joy and visual excitement that matches the story's energy, helping pre-readers and early readers engage with meaning through image before text
- Colour is decorative, and
Q37 of 45
Dahl uses alliterative phrases and rhythmic language ('crunch them and munch them'). How does this support early literacy and story engagement?
- It is just Dahl's style
- Rhythmic, alliterative language develops phonological awareness
- Alliteration is for older readers
- It is just fun language
Q38 of 45
How does the crocodile's confidence in his disguises create humour? What does this confidence reveal about arrogance?
- His disguises were actually good
- He was clever but unlucky, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- He is just silly
- His unshakeable confidence in plans that obviously won't work is comic arrogance
Q39 of 45
The other animals in the story have names; the crocodile does not. What is the effect of this namelessness?
- Names weren't needed
- It was an oversight
- Namelessness reduces the crocodile to a type
- He was forgotten, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
Q40 of 45
This is one of the few Dahl books where children are entirely passive — they need to be rescued. Does this make it less empowering than his other books?
- Children are empowered here
- Dahl always empowers children, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- Children are always passive in Dahl
- For very young readers, being rescued is reassuring rather than disempowering
Q41 of 45
How does the setting (an African jungle and town) create an exotic, adventurous atmosphere for young British readers?
- Africa is dangerous
- The setting is irrelevant
- The tropical setting removes the danger from familiar contexts, creating safe distance
- The setting was random
Q42 of 45
The book features animals helping children. What does this alliance between animals and children — against the crocodile — suggest about shared vulnerability?
- Both animals and children are vulnerable to larger, more dangerous forces. Their alliance reflects a shared position of needing protection and co-operation against those who would exploit them
- Animals in stories always help
- It was interesting, and
- Animals help children, and
Q43 of 45
The language of the book is simple but precise. How does Dahl write accessibly without being condescending to young readers?
- The language is too simple
- Dahl's simplicity is energetic rather than dulled-down
- Young readers need even simpler language
- Simple language is always condescending
Q44 of 45
If you were adapting this story for the stage, what staging techniques might you use for the crocodile's disguises? What does thinking about performance reveal about the story's theatrical structure?
- Staging is not relevant to reading
- The repeated disguise structure is inherently theatrical
- It would be difficult to stage
- It was written for stage
Q45 of 45
How does The Enormous Crocodile compare thematically to the folk tale tradition of animals outwitting predators? What does Dahl bring to this ancient story type?
- It has nothing in common with folk tales
- Folk tales are different
- Dahl invented this type of story, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- Like Aesop or African folk traditions, the story features animals working together to defeat a dangerous predator. Dahl adds his characteristic dark comedy and the empowerment of the vulnerable